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  • permissions - Use chown to set the ownership of all a folders . . .
    chown -r username: path to file To only change the user and leave the group as it is, just specify USERNAME and no group name and no colon: chown -R USERNAME PATH TO FILE
  • How to chown on an NTFS ( or FAT32 ) partition? - Ask Ubuntu
    But if you still need to "chown the NTFS partition" then change NTFS partitions mount option, either by : editing etc fstab using: sudo -e etc fstab or graphically, using disk utility; Either way, the options that you most have are: users,permissions, and you don't need to have nosuid option, since it's implied by users (cf Bovine comment)
  • chown: changing ownership of `. . . : Operation not permitted
    Besides being root, as others have pointed out, there is another more flexibile way to manage this privilige You can also give files away via chown if your process thread has the CAP_CHOWN Posix capability
  • chown - Difference between user and user:user - Ask Ubuntu
    The syntax of chown looks like this: chown [owner][:[group]] file chown can change the file owner and or the file group owner depending on the first argument of the command Here are some examples: chown owner file example: chown bob file --> Changes the ownership of the file from its current owner to user bob chown owner:group file example:
  • filesystem - How to restore the default chown permissions on a . . .
    pkexec chown root:root usr bin sudo In a situation like yours, that's mainly useful as a convenience measure to make it easier to perform whatever administrative tasks you need to get done before reinstalling (Or before attempting to apply some more complicated solution )
  • chown - file owner cannot chmod file, report operation not permitted . . .
    chown user:user a out, change a out owner to user; now change to user, su user; use user to chmod a out, chmod 755 a out; Ok, problem is here step 4 will output : chmod: a out: Operation not permitted; I run these step on SUSE, it's work And chmod can use by file owner or root So, i think this maybe a bug on Ubuntu Anyone know this?
  • Changing Ownership: Operation not permitted - even as root!
    The file might have the immutable flag (i) set in its extended attributes:% stat -c '%04a %U %G' ldlinux sys 0644 root root % lsattr ldlinux sys ----i----- ldlinux sys % sudo chown dev: ldlinux sys chown: changing ownership of 'ldlinux sys': Operation not permitted
  • chown - change ownership of all files from root to user - Ask Ubuntu
    sudo chown user:user filename For an entire directory it will be: sudo chown user:user dirName For recursive (i e files and folders inside a folder): sudo chown -R user:user dirName Note: user is, if you do pwd under any Documents, you will see the path: home jhon Documents Here user is jhon




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