Date: Thu, 21 Sep 2006 05:39:20 -0400 From: Gerard Seibert <gerard@seibercom.net> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Default file creation permissions Message-ID: <20060921053436.00EA.GERARD@seibercom.net> In-Reply-To: <8944F1E6DB931D4681FF94706234BF71E95A@BB06.bolsabilbao.local> References: <45116D40.7020904@lidstrom.eu> <8944F1E6DB931D4681FF94706234BF71E95A@BB06.bolsabilbao.local>
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Aitor San Juan wrote: > I have a shell script whose execution is scheduled by CRON. The > command scheduled is of the form: >=20 > 50 23 * * 1-5 /apps/batch/cronjobs/bd_backup.sh > > /apps/batch/logs/bd_backup.log 2>&1 >=20 > This shell script runs under the id of root. The file permissions of > the log file created are 644 (owner: root, group: wheel). I'd like that > the file permissions of the log created be 600 (or 640 maximum). How > could I accomplish this? This is probably related to "umask", but I > don't dare changing anything in case that change could affect some > other security configuration as a side effect. >=20 > What would you recommend? I have a few shell scripts that are run from CRON also. To accomplish what you want, I have 'chmod' and 'chown' commands in the scripts. Perhaps you might be able to incorporate something like that into yours. --=20 Gerard "Health experts in Europe now say one carrot a day can keep you free= of colon cancer. You know, I just hope they mean you eat it."
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