[CentOS] chown command goof up
Ross S. W. Walker
rwalker at medallion.com
Mon Feb 12 22:10:32 UTC 2007
> -----Original Message-----
> From: centos-bounces at centos.org
> [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org] On Behalf Of MrKiwi
> Sent: Monday, February 12, 2007 4:50 PM
> To: CentOS mailing list
> Subject: Re: [CentOS] chown command goof up
>
> Ross S. W. Walker wrote:
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: centos-bounces at centos.org
> >> [mailto:centos-bounces at centos.org] On Behalf Of David A. Woyciesjes
> >> Sent: Monday, February 12, 2007 3:35 PM
> >> To: CentOS
> >> Subject: [CentOS] chown command goof up
> >>
> >> Basically, what I typed was:
> >> chown -R user2:user2 *
> >> chown -R user2:user2 .*
> >> chown -R user2:user2 *.*
> >> ...all in /home. Duh. I forgot which way recursive went.
> >> So, I then did:
> >> chown -R root:root *
> >> chown -R root:root .*
> >> chown -R root:root *.*
> >> ...this time in / to try and f things. Duh again. Other
> items need to
> >> have other owners & groups.
> >>
> >> So, how can I fix this? In MacOSX, there is a utility
> >> to fix all
> >> permissions on the system. Is there a similar item in CentOS?
> >>
> >> Here's what I originally wanted to do:
> >> Started with user1. Got everything setup just right. Then
> >> created user2.
> >> I wanted to use all the settings, mail, etc. from user1
> for user2. My
> >> thought was to just copy everything in /home/user1 to
> >> /home/user2, then
> >> use chown on all of the files. This is where I got myself
> into this
> >> pickle...
> >>
> >> Any ideas?
> >
> > In case nobody just comes out and says it.
> >
> > # rpm --setperms `rpm -qa`
> > # rpm --setugids `rpm -qa`
> >
> > Should fix it.
> >
> > -Ross
>
> Wow! Never knew this one.
>
> I have re-read TFM, but there isnt much about the --set*
> options - could this be used daily as a 'tidy up' sort of
> routine? or would it screw with *.conf ?
>
> rkhunter currently looks for sus executable files, this
> could reset perms on everything system related?
>
> This is what i love about the style of packaging with rpm -
> you know what happens in an install (and can repeat it!),
> rather than 'black box' installations with windose where you
> can never be sure what happened or if a 'refresh' will
> rewrite local configs.
These options are poorly documented and well needed.
They're basically aliases for compounded rpm commands, basically query
for specific package tags and execute chown/chmod with them.
Google for "rpm setperms setugids"
Some people have them well documented in their wikis.
I think the aliases are defined somewhere, maybe in /usr/lib/rpm or some
subdir there, you can probably add your own there too.
-Ross
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