Here's a short script that I use a lot. To make a new shell script executable, for example, I type:
%cx scriptfile
Using cw adds write permission; c-w takes it away. This is the single script file for all three commands:
#! /bin/sh case "$0" in *cx) chmod +x "$@" ;; *cw) chmod +w "$@" ;; *c-w) chmod -w "$@" ;; *) echo "$0: Help! Shouldn't get here!" 1>&2; exit 1 ;; esac
The script has three links. Put it in a file named cx . Then type:
%chmod +x cx
%ln cx cw
%ln cx c-w
The script tests the name it was called with, in
$0
, to decide which
chmod
command to run. This trick saves disk space. You can add other commands, too, by adding a line to the
case
and another link. Or
you can use aliases (
22.9
)
.
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22.9 Protect Important Files: Make Them Unwritable |
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22.11 A Loophole: Modifying Files Without Write Access |