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CHOWN(2) BSD System Calls Manual CHOWN(2)

NAME

cchhoowwnn, ffcchhoowwnn, llcchhoowwnn - change owner and group of a file

SYNOPSIS

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int cchhoowwnn(const char *path, uidt owner, gidt group); int ffcchhoowwnn(int fildes, uidt owner, gidt group); int llcchhoowwnn(const char *path, uidt owner, gidt group);

DESCRIPTION

The owner ID and group ID of the file named by path or referenced by fildes is changed as specified by the arguments owner and group. The owner of a file may change the group to a group of which he or she is a

member, but the change owner capability is restricted to the super-user.

The cchhoowwnn() system call clears the set-user-id and set-group-id bits on

the file to prevent accidental or mischievous creation of set-user-id and

set-group-id programs if not executed by the super-user. The cchhoowwnn()

system call follows symbolic links to operate on the target of the link rather than the link itself. The ffcchhoowwnn() system call is particularly useful when used in conjunction with the file locking primitives (see flock(2)).

The llcchhoowwnn() system call is similar to cchhoowwnn() but does not follow sym-

bolic links. One of the owner or group id's may be left unchanged by specifying it as

-1.

RETURN VALUES

Upon successful completion, the value 0 is returned; otherwise the

value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the

error. EERRRROORRSS The cchhoowwnn() and llcchhoowwnn() system calls will fail if: [EACCES] Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix.

[EFAULT] The path argument points outside the process's allo-

cated address space. [ELOOP] Too many symbolic links are encountered in translating the pathname. This is taken to be indicative of a looping symbolic link.

[ENAMETOOLONG] A component of a pathname exceeded 255 characters, or

an entire path name exceeded 1023 characters. [ENOENT] A component of path does not exist. [ENOTDIR] A component of the path prefix is not a directory. The ffcchhoowwnn() system call will fail if:

[EBADF] The fildes argument does not refer to a valid descrip-

tor. [EINVAL] The fildes argument refers to a socket, not a file. Any of these calls will fail if: [EINTR] Its execution is interrupted by a signal. [EIO] An I/O error occurs while reading from or writing to the file system. [EPERM] The effective user ID does not match the owner of the file and the calling process does not have appropriate (i.e., root) privileges.

[EROFS] The named file resides on a read-only file system.

SEE ALSO

chgrp(1), chmod(2), flock(2), chown(8) STANDARDS

The cchhoowwnn() system call is expected to conform to ISO/IEC 9945-1:1990

(``POSIX.1''). HISTORY

The cchhoowwnn() function appeared in Version 7 AT&T UNIX. The ffcchhoowwnn() sys-

tem call appeared in 4.2BSD. The cchhoowwnn() and ffcchhoowwnn() system calls were changed to follow symbolic links in 4.4BSD. The llcchhoowwnn() system call was added in FreeBSD 3.0 to compensate for the loss of functionality. BSD April 19, 1994 BSD




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