Date: Sat, 27 May 2006 11:12:19 +0200 From: Kyrre Nygard <kyrreny@broadpark.no> To: Beech Rintoul <beech@alaskaparadise.com> Cc: questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Sharing /usr/local/www Message-ID: <7.0.1.0.2.20060527111043.022bfb40@broadpark.no> In-Reply-To: <200605270046.04333.beech@alaskaparadise.com> References: <7.0.1.0.2.20060527102456.022a6fb0@broadpark.no> <200605270046.04333.beech@alaskaparadise.com>
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At 10:45 27.05.2006, Beech Rintoul wrote: >On Saturday 27 May 2006 00:32, Kyrre Nygard wrote: > > Hello! > > > > I have a team of designers working on web 2.0 like sites. > > > > I have added them all to this box, now I'm wondering what's the most > > convenient way of giving them all access to /usr/local/www? > > > > My temporary solution has been to add all users with UID and GID 80, > > and then ln -s /usr/local/www ~/collabo for each user. > > > > If users have their original UID instead of www's then somehow they can't > > read or write to /usr/local/www. I thought sharing the same GID was > > sufficient, but obviously it isn't. I find this very strange. > > > > Some of them prefer just using FTP, so then being able to click on collabo@ > > and go straight to /usr/local/www is very convenient for them. > > > > But is there a better way? > > > > Thanks, > > Kyrre > >CVS is your friend. But there are also a ton of php scripts out there to do >what you want. > >Beech >-- Yeah I hear a lot of people like CVS. But I fail to realize how it might assist me though. I'm not setting up a code repository, this is an actual WWW root where a lot of different websites are hosted. Please correct me if I'm wrong. And what PHP scripts are you talking about? Thanks a lot, Kyrre
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