Hallo Benoit, Am Montag, 18. August 2003 um 23:50 schriebst du:
> But you tested on *YOUR* /usr/bin/bash, what is your id and > the permissions setted on your /usr/bin/bash program? Read > carefully the output I sent (especially file > mode/owner/group). May be you can make a similar test on > another program that you set the permissions/owner/group as > I have? I see, sorry. > As pointed out, that doesn't explain the matter with > /usr/bin/test which is also reporting /usr/bin/bash as > beeing non-executable. >>> $ ls -al /usr/bin/bash >>> -rwx------+ 1 Administ Domain U 531968 Mar 13 04:29 /usr/bin/bash* >>> As you can see, even if I am: >>> $ id >>> uid=17199(benoitr) gid=10513(Domain Users) groups=10513(Domain Users),11121(Exceed >>> Users) [EMAIL PROTECTED] /tmp/perl/perl-5.8.1 $ ls -al .patch -rwx------ 1 #gerrit Domänen-Admins 6 Aug 15 18:51 .patch* $ [ -x .patch ]; echo $? 0 $ /usr/bin/test -x .patch; echo $? 0 $ perl -e 'print -x ".patch" ? 0 : 1 , "\n"' 0 Hmm, the file is mine, I'm the domain-admin, I get '0', your file is owned by Administrastor and domain user is the group, you're not Administrator so you get 1 from this perl snippet, what is wrong about this? Well, you said you still can execute bash.exe, test reports it as executable. Since Windows ACLs are very fine grained you may have the permission to execute it, regardless what Cygwin ls displays , there is just a subset of the windows ACLs displayed, e.g. a file may be accessed by several groups and you may set the ACL different for each group. What are the bash.exe permissions beyond what ls is displaying? Which Windows version do you use? What says getfacl about your bash.exe? If I login as another user I get '1' and it is consistently: [EMAIL PROTECTED] /tmp/perl/perl-5.8.1 $ id uid=1008(ismene2) gid=513(Domänen-Benutzer) groups=513(Domänen-Benutzer),545(Benutzer),10513(Domänen-Benutzer) $ ls -al .patch -rwx------ 1 #gerrit Domänen-Admins 6 Aug 15 18:51 .patch $ [ -x .patch ]; echo $? 1 $ /usr/bin/test -x .patch; echo $? 1 $ perl -e 'print -x ".patch" ? 0 : 1 , "\n"' 1 If I try to execute as the other user I get: $ ./.patch -bash: ./.patch: Permission denied $ getfacl .patch # file: .patch # owner: #gerrit # group: Domänen-Admins user::rwx group::--- mask:rwx other:--- Gerrit -- =^..^= -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/