Access permission (was: New (GNU) kernels--what I think)
Charlie Geyer
charlie at mica.stat.washington.edu
Sun Jun 11 09:14:45 AEST 1989
In article <TALE.89Jun9202950 at imagine.pawl.rpi.edu> tale at pawl.rpi.edu writes:
> With MTS I can always permit my files exactly the way I want to and
> limit or give as much permission to the file as is my wont. If I just
> want a particular account to have read access to a file, I can do it
> and not have to permit the entire project (group) access. If I want a
> certain programme to be able to access the file, I can permit it so.
> If I want a whole project to have access, no problem. And I don't
> have to go around making new groups for people to be in and setting
> GID or UID permissions; allowing the programme access rather than the
> project or person is much more secure this way.
So to change the subject from GNU OS, how DOES one do this in UNIX?
If I am writing a paper and I want to allow my coauthor, but not the rest
of the world, to edit the file, is there any way to do this without setting
up a new group?
More information about the Comp.unix.wizards
mailing list