'How to change permissions for a folder and its subfolders/files in one step
I would like to change the permissions of a folder and all its subfolders and files in one step (command) in Linux.
I have already tried the below command but it works only for the mentioned folder:
chmod 775 /opt/lampp/htdocs
Is there a way to set chmod 755 for /opt/lampp/htdocs and all of its content including subfolders and files?
Also, in the future, if I create a new folder or file inside htdocs, how can the permissions of that automatically be set to 755?
I had a look at this Stack Overflow question too:
Solution 1:[1]
Check the -R option
chmod -R <permissionsettings> <dirname>
In the future, you can save a lot of time by checking the man page first:
man <command name>
So in this case:
man chmod
Solution 2:[2]
If you want to set permissions on all files to a+r, and all directories to a+x, and do that recursively through the complete subdirectory tree, use:
chmod -R a+rX *
The X (that is capital X, not small x!) is ignored for files (unless they are executable for someone already) but is used for directories.
Solution 3:[3]
You can use -R with chmod for recursive traversal of all files and subfolders.
You might need sudo as it depends on LAMP being installed by the current user or another one:
sudo chmod -R 755 /opt/lampp/htdocs
Solution 4:[4]
The correct recursive command is:
sudo chmod -R 755 /opt/lampp/htdocs
-R: change every sub folder including the current folder
Solution 5:[5]
To set to all subfolders (recursively) use -R
chmod 755 /folder -R
And use umask to set the default to new folders/files
cd /folder
umask 755
Solution 6:[6]
chmod 755 -R /opt/lampp/htdocs will recursively set the permissions. There's no way to set the permissions for files automatically in only this directory that are created after you set the permissions, but you could change your system-wide default file permissions with by setting umask 022.
Solution 7:[7]
You might want to consider this answer given by nik on Super User and use "one chmod" for all files/folders like this:
chmod 755 $(find /path/to/base/dir -type d)
chmod 644 $(find /path/to/base/dir -type f)
Solution 8:[8]
Here's another way to set directories to 775 and files to 664.
find /opt/lampp/htdocs \
\( -type f -exec chmod ug+rw,o+r {} \; \) , \
\( -type d -exec chmod ug+rwxs,o+rx {} \; \)
It may look long, but it's pretty cool for three reasons:
- Scans through the file system only once rather than twice.
- Provides better control over how files are handled vs. how directories are handled. This is useful when working with special modes such as the sticky bit, which you probably want to apply to directories but not files.
- Uses a technique straight out of the
manpages (see below).
Note that I have not confirmed the performance difference (if any) between this solution and that of simply using two find commands (as in Peter Mortensen's solution). However, seeing a similar example in the manual is encouraging.
Example from man find page:
find / \
\( -perm -4000 -fprintf /root/suid.txt %#m %u %p\n \) , \
\( -size +100M -fprintf /root/big.txt %-10s %p\n \)
Traverse the filesystem just once, listing setuid files and direct?
tories into /root/suid.txt and large files into /root/big.txt.
Cheers
Solution 9:[9]
Use:
sudo chmod 755 -R /whatever/your/directory/is
However, be careful with that. It can really hurt you if you change the permissions of the wrong files/folders.
Solution 10:[10]
chmod -R 755 directory_name works, but how would you keep new files to 755 also? The file's permissions becomes the default permission.
Solution 11:[11]
For Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion), it is:
chmod -R 755 /directory
And yes, as all other say, be careful when doing this.
Solution 12:[12]
You want to make sure that appropriate files and directories are chmod-ed/permissions for those are appropriate. For all directories you want
find /opt/lampp/htdocs -type d -exec chmod 711 {} \;
And for all the images, JavaScript, CSS, HTML...well, you shouldn't execute them. So use
chmod 644 img/* js/* html/*
But for all the logic code (for instance PHP code), you should set permissions such that the user can't see that code:
chmod 600 file
Solution 13:[13]
For anyone still struggling with permission issues, navigate up one directory level cd .. from the root directory of your project, add yourself (user) to the directory and give permission to edit everything inside (tested on macOS).
To do that you would run this command (preferred):
sudo chown -R username: foldername .*
Note: for currently unsaved changes, one might need to restart the code editor first to be able to save without being asked for a password.
Also, please remember you can press Tab to see the options while typing the username and folder to make it easier for yourself.
Or simply:
sudo chmod -R 755 foldername
but as mentioned above, you need to be careful with the second method.
Solution 14:[14]
There are two answers of finding files and applying chmod to them.
The first one is find the file and apply chmod as it finds (as suggested by @WombleGoneBad).
find /opt/lampp/htdocs -type d -exec chmod 755 {} \;
The second solution is to generate a list of all files with the find command and supply this list to the chmod command (as suggested by @lamgesh).
chmod 755 $(find /path/to/base/dir -type d)
Both of these versions work nice as long as the number of files returned by the find command is small. The second solution looks great to the eye and more readable than the first one. If there are a large number of files, the second solution returns error: Argument list too long.
So my suggestion is
- Use
chmod -R 755 /opt/lampp/htdocsif you want to change permissions of all files and directories at once. - Use
find /opt/lampp/htdocs -type d -exec chmod 755 {} \;if the number of files you are using is very large. The-type xoption searches for specific type of file only, where d is used for finding directory, f for file and l for link. - Use
chmod 755 $(find /path/to/base/dir -type d)otherwise - Better to use the first one in any situation
Solution 15:[15]
I think Adam was asking how to change the umask value for all processes that are trying to operate on the /opt/lampp/htdocs directory.
The user file-creation mode mask (umask) is used to determine the file permissions for newly created files. It can be used to control the default file permissions for new files.
so if you will use some kind of FTP program to upload files into /opt/lampp/htdocs you need to configure your FTP server to use the umask you want.
If files / directories need be created, for example, by PHP, you need to modify the PHP code:
<?php
umask(0022);
// Other code
?>
If you will create new files / folders from your Bash session, you can set umask value in your shell profile ~/.bashrc file.
Or you can set up a umask in /etc/bashrc or /etc/profile file for all users.
Add the following to the file:
umask 022
Sample umask Values and File Creation Permissions
If umask value set to User permission Group permission Others permission
000 all all all
007 all all none
027 all read / execute none
And to change permissions for already created files, you can use find.
Solution 16:[16]
You can change permissions by using the following command:
sudo chmod go+rwx /opt/lampp/htdocs
Solution 17:[17]
It's very simple.
In Terminal, go to the file manager. Example: sudo nemo. Go to /opt/, and then click Properties ? Permission. And then Other. Finally, change to create and delete and file access to read and write and click on button Apply... And it works.
Solution 18:[18]
For already created files:
find . \( -type f -exec chmod g=r,o=r {} \; \) , \( -type d -exec chmod g=rx,o=rx {} \; \)
For future created files:
sudo nano /etc/profile
And set:
umask 022
Common modes are:
- 077: u=rw,g=,o=
- 007: u=rw,g=rw,o=
- 022: u=rw,g=r,o=r
- 002: u=rw,g=rw,o=r
Solution 19:[19]
Use :
chmod 775 -R /folder-name
in your case, it would be :
chmod 775 -R /opt/lampp/htdocs
Solution 20:[20]
Use:
sudo chmod -R a=-x,u=rwX,g=,o= folder
Owner rw, others no access, and directory with rwx. This will clear the existing 'x' on files.
The symbolic chmod calculation is explained in Chmod 744.
Sources
This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Overflow and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Source: Stack Overflow
