On Thu, Sep 19, 2002 at 10:17:37PM -0700, Paul Eggert wrote: > > From: Bill Moseley <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Date: Thu, 19 Sep 2002 19:53:57 -0700 > > > > I suppose I should know this, but what is it that's making the guid of > > files created in /tmp the guid of "wheel" (guid:0) instead of the users > > guid? Is that just only on BSD? > > Yes, it's the BSD tradition. On other systems (e.g. Solaris), you can > select the BSD tradition by setting the setgid bit of the directory.
Specifically: - in the cases Paul mentioned, a newly created file inherits its group from its parent directory. - on SysV/POSIX'ish systems, in a directory *without* setgid, a file's group is initialized to the creating process's effective gid; that's the behaviour you're used to seeing. -- | | /\ |-_|/ > Eric Siegerman, Toronto, Ont. [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | / The acronym for "the powers that be" differs by only one letter from that for "the pointy-haired boss".