- The
chgrp (from
change group)
command may be used by
unprivileged users on
various operating systems to
change the
group ****ociated with a file system...
- who wish to
change the
group membership of a file that they own may use
chgrp. The
ownership of any file in the
system may only be
altered by a super-user...
-
command used to
change the
owner of a file or
directory on Unix-like
systems chgrp, the
command used to
change the
group of a file or
directory on Unix-like...
- -rw-r--r-- 3
fjones editors 30405 Mar 2 12:52 edition-32 stat (Unix)
chown chgrp du (Unix) mdls User
identifier (Unix)
Group identifier (Unix) List of Unix...
- on a file or
directory chown –
change ownership on a file or
directory chgrp –
change group on a file or
directory uucp – unix to unix copy scp – secure...
- C
programming Optional (XSI)
Generate a C-language call
graph System V
chgrp Filesystem Mandatory Change the file
group ownership PWB UNIX
chmod Filesystem...
- Name
Description chcon Changes file
security context (SELinux)
chgrp Changes file
group ownership chown Changes file
ownership chmod Changes the permissions...
- stdout. catv chat
chattr —
Change file
attributes on a
Linux file system.
chgrp —
Change group of one or more files.
chmod —
Change mode of
listed files...
- addresses.
Installations "above 50". 6th
Edition May 1975
Includes ratfor, bc,
chgrp, cron, newgrp, ptrace(2), tbl, units, and wall.
First version widely available...
-
compatible s**** bash 5.2.37 2024-09-23
coreutils base
commands fileutils:
chgrp, chown, chmod, cp, dd, df, dir, du, ln, ls, mkdir, mkfifo, mknod, mv, rm...