Linux/Ubuntu File and Directory Permissions

Linux (and therefore Ubuntu) has file permissions on each file and directory for the owner, group and everyone else. Those permissions determine if the file can be viewed, executed or edited.

Only the owner of a file or directory (or a privileged user, root for example) may change its mode.

Ownership of a file

To change the ownership of the file or directory: chown new_owner_username directory

[bash]chown john public_html[/bash]

to change the ownership of directory (and all the files and folders in the directory) and also the group: chown -R new_owner_username:new_groupname directory

[bash]chown -R john:developers public_html[/bash]

to change the ownership of all the files in the current directory and also the group: chown -R new_owner_username:new_groupname *

[bash]chown john:developers *[/bash]

File permissions

The easiest way to set Linux file permissions is using a 3 digit sequence. The first digit designates owner permission; the second, the group permission; and the third, everyone else’s permission.

Read = 4
Write = 2
Execute = 1

The digit is the sum of those. So if you want to grant only read permission you use 4; read and execute 5; read, write and execute = 7.

[bash]chmod 775 index.html[/bash]

That will set the permissions on index.html so the owner, and a user in the group specified can read, write and execute the file and everyone else can read and execute.

[bash]chmod -R 755 public_html[/bash]

That will set the permissions on files and directories (recursively through all subdirectories) so the owner can read, write and execute; members of the group and everyone else can read and execute (but not write).

[bash]ls – l[/bash]

That will give you a list of files and directories, in a directory, with the owner and group settings and the permissions for all 3 (those 2 and everyone else), which will look something like:

[bash]-rw-r–r– 1 root developers 397 2008-05-25 20:33 index.html
-rw-r–r– 1 mary developers 9177 2010-05-02 22:18 unix_file_permissions.html
…[/bash]

The lines start with the permissions for the owner, group and then everyone else. There are 9 total characters, 3 for each. Taking the top line above:

rw-r--r--
rw-  (means the owner has read and write permission but not execute)
r--  (means the group has only read permission)
r--  (means everyone else has only read permission)

The next column tells you the number of hard links to the file or directory. Then column tells you the owner, then the group. Then the byte size of the file, the date it was last change and then the file name.

root
means the username of this file is named root

developers
group (means those users in the group named developers have the group permissions indicated)

Related: Ubuntu command line interface syntax examples

Using the Host File in Ubuntu

You can use the host file to have your computer route to whatever addresses you desire (instead of using your nameserver). For example, by putting

[bash]sudo nano /etc/hosts[/bash]

Then add a line to the file with the ip address and the name you will use.
[bash]204.11.50.136 wastetime[/bash]

One useful way to use this is to test out a website on a new host prior to changing the nameserver to point to the new host. In this case, if you want to make sure your host file is being read you can ping wastetime and if it is working it will show the results for a ping to 204.11.50.136

MySQL cli Syntax

Some MySQL cli syntax examples

How to create a MySQL database and import tables, data… from a sql file.

Login to the MySQL command line interface

[bash]mysql -u<username> -p[/bash]

[sql]mysql -uroot -p
mysql> create database some_database;
mysql> use some_database;
mysql> source some_database.sql;[/sql]

The third line runs the named sql file for the database you names.

Create a new user

[sql]mysql -uroot -p
mysql> USE ‘some_database’;
mysql> CREATE USER ‘new_user’@’localhost’ IDENTIFIED BY ‘user_password’;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.00 sec)
mysql> GRANT SELECT,INSERT,UPDATE,DELETE ON some_database.* TO ‘new_user’@’localhost’;
[/sql]

For some reason MySQL chooses to say 0 rows affected, when it succeeds and ads a row for the user. Anyway if you get that message, it worked.

Change password for a user

[sql]mysql -uroot -p
mysql> SET PASSWORD FOR ‘username’@’localhost’ = PASSWORD(‘new_password’);[/sql]

Restart mysql: [bash]sudo /etc/init.d/mysql restart[/bash]

Adding a Model in Ruby on Rails

for Rails 2.*
Not for Rails 3

How to add a model in rails

  • ./script/generate resource MODELNAME
  • [ruby]./script/generate resource article[/ruby]

  • edit migrate file
  • edit model.rb – to add associations and validations
  • edit controller.rb – add the 7 rest methods
  • rake db:migrate – to run the new migration
  • If you have to add a table (like a join table) you can do something like, for example
  • [ruby]./script/generate migration add_join_table_for_articles_and_authors[/ruby]

Update to the routes file should be taken care of by generate resource, but might want to check).