% CST8207 Assignment 09 - setting permissions, mode, `umask` % Ian! D. Allen - - [www.idallen.com] % Fall 2013 - September to December 2013 - Updated 2017-05-31 12:15 EDT - [Course Home Page] - [Course Outline] - [All Weeks] - [Plain Text] Due Date and Deliverables ========================= > **Do not print this assignment on paper!** > > - On paper, you will miss updates, corrections, and hints added to the > online version. > - On paper, you cannot follow any of the [hyperlink URLs] that lead you > to hints and course notes relevant to answering a question. > - On paper, scrolling text boxes will be cut off and not print properly. - **Due Date**: `08h00 (08:00am) Monday November 18, 2013 (start of Week 12)` - Your next assignment will be due at the end of Week 12. Don't delay. - Late assignments or wrong file names may not be marked. Be accurate. - **Available online**: - Version 1 -- 03:00am Sunday November 3, 2013 - Version 2 -- 13:45pm Friday November 9, 2013 - new due date - Version 3 -- 18:15pm Monday November 11, 2013 - new due date - **Prerequisites**: - [Lab Worksheet #08 ODT] - All [Class Notes] since the beginning of term. - All your previous [Assignments]. - an ability to **READ ALL THE WORDS** to work effectively - **Deliverables**: 1. One text file uploaded to Blackboard according to the steps in the [Checking Program] section below. 2. Directory structure created and left for marking on the [Course Linux Server] (**CLS**).\ **Do not delete any assignment work from the CLS until after the term is over!** **WARNING:** Some inattentive students upload Assignment #9 into the Assignment #8 upload area. Don't make that mistake! Be exact. Purpose of this Assignment ========================== > Do not print this assignment on paper. On paper, you cannot follow any of > the hyperlink URLs that lead you to hints and course notes relevant to > answering a question. This assignment is based on your weekly [Class Notes][All Weeks]. 1. Practice with [Permissions] in [Lab Worksheet #08 ODT] 2. Practice setting [Umask]. Remember to **READ ALL THE WORDS** to work effectively and not waste time. Introduction and Overview ========================= This is an overview of how you are expected to complete this assignment. Read all the words before you start working. 1. Complete the **Tasks** listed below. 2. Verify your own work before running the [Checking Program]. 3. Run the [Checking Program] to help you find errors. 4. Submit the output of the [Checking Program] to Blackboard before the due date. 5. **READ ALL THE WORDS** to work effectively and not waste time. Create directory and file structure with the given [Permissions]. Record the numeric (octal) permissions of each of the directories and files you create in the given record file. Using various [Umask] settings, create new directories that have a given set of symbolic permissions. Assignments may be re-marked at any time on the CLS; you must have your term work available on the CLS right until term end. > Since I also do manual marking of student assignments, your final mark may > not be the same as the mark submitted using the current version of the > [Checking Program]. I do not guarantee that any version of the [Checking > Program] will find all the errors in your work. Complete your assignments > according to the specifications, not according to the incomplete set of the > mistakes detected by the [Checking Program]. The Source Directory -------------------- All references to the "Source Directory" below are to the CLS directory `~idallen/cst8207/13f/assignment09/` and that name starts with a *tilde* character `~` followed by a userid with no intervening slash. The leading tilde indicates to the shell that the pathname starts with the HOME directory of the account `idallen` (seven letters). Tasks ===== - Do the following tasks in order, from top to bottom. - These tasks must be done in your account on the [Course Linux Server]. - **READ ALL THE WORDS!** and do not skip steps. - Your instructor will mark on the due date the work you do in your account on the CLS. Leave all your work on the CLS and do not modify it. - **Do not delete any assignment work from the CLS until after the course is over.** Set Up ------ 1. Create the following directory structure in your CLS HOME directory and record (for study purposes) the series of Unix commands you used to create it. Spelling and capitalization must be exactly as shown: CST8207-13F `-- Assignments `-- assignment09 **This directory is the base directory for most pathnames in this assignment. Store your scripts and answers here.** 2. There is a [Checking Program] named `assignment09check` in the [Source Directory] on the CLS. Follow the instructions in the first two steps at the start of [Checking Program] to create a working symbolic link to this program. Run the [Checking Program] to verify your work so far. Part A -- A file to record your permissions ------------------------------------------- You need to record the [Permissions] you set on each of the directories and files you create in the next Part, below. You will record these permissions by copying and editing a file that you get from your instructor. You can record each of the permissions as you create things step-by-step below, or you can record all of the permissions after you have finished, before you run the checking program. 1. Copy the file `record.txt` from the [Source Directory] into your own file `abcd0001``.txt` (no spaces) where the text *abcd0001* is replaced by your *own* eight-character userid in the file name. This file copy should be located directly under your `assignment09` directory. 2. Fix the [Permissions] on the file so that you can edit it and nobody else (group or other) has any permissions at all. 3. As you work on the next Part below, edit your copy of the file with a text editor. (The `vim` editor is recommended, since that is the universal text editor for system administrators.) *Replace* each string of three underscores in the file with the correct three-digit numeric (octal) permission value that you record in the next Part below. Do not change anything else in the file. Note the word count at the bottom of the file. Your count must match exactly, at all times. If not, re-copy the file and start over. Part B -- Creating structure with permissions --------------------------------------------- Do the [Permissions] section of [Lab Worksheet #08 ODT] before continuing. Record all your answers for later quizzes. Now you will create some directories and files, then set the correct permissions on them. The permissions to set are described below. **Because you are applying [Permissions] to directories as a non-`root` user, be careful not to lock yourself out of directories by restricting permissions on them too soon.** First, create all the file and directory structure from the top of the directory tree down, and then apply restrictive permissions afterward from the bottom of the tree upward. If you don't apply permissions last, from the bottom up, you will deny yourself permissions that will prevent you from entering some directories lower down. **Assign permissions from the bottom toward the top.** 1. Create a directory named `head` under `assignment09` a) Directory `head` has no permissions for others. The group can use `ls` to see the content, but cannot create files or `cd` into the directory. The user has full permissions. Record the permissions for `head` in the Record file. 2. Underneath directory `head` create three three-letter directories named: `usr grp oth` a) Directory `usr` has no permissions for group or other. The user can `cd` into it, but cannot create any new content nor use `ls` to see any files in it. Record the permissions. b) Directory `grp` has no permissions for user or other. The group can `cd` into it and use `ls` in it, but cannot create any new content. Record the permissions. c) Directory `oth` has no permissions for user or group. Others have full permissions. Record the permissions. 3. Underneath directory `usr` create three two-letter *files* named: `rd wr xc` (You did create *files*, right?) a) None of the files have any permissions for group or other. b) File `rd` has read permission (only) for the user. Record the permissions. c) File `wr` has write permission (only) for the user. Record the permissions. d) File `xc` has execute permission (only) for the user. Record the permissions. 4. Underneath directory `grp` create three two-letter *files* named: `rw wx rx` a) None of the files have any permissions for user or other. b) File `rw` has read and write permission (only) for the group. Record the permissions. c) File `wx` has write and execute permission (only) for the group. Record the permissions. d) File `rx` has read and execute permission (only) for the group. Record the permissions. 5. Underneath directory `oth` create three three-character *files* named: `rwx ??? ***` *(Some characters are meta-characters that are special to the shell and will need careful handling. See the [Class Notes][All Weeks] about [Quoting].)* a) None of the files have any permissions for user or group. b) File `rwx` has full permissions for other. Record the permissions. c) File `???` has no permissions for other. Record the permissions. d) File `***` has only read permission for other. Record the permissions. Remember to read all the words above about working from top to bottom and then from bottom to top in this Part. Part C -- `umask` ----------------- 1. Use a text editor to create and edit the file `umask.txt` with this content: 1. drwxrwxrwx is created with umask 0___ 2. drwxrwxr-x is created with umask 0___ 3. drwxr-xr-x is created with umask 0___ 4. drwxr-xr-- is created with umask 0___ 5. drwxr-x--- is created with umask 0___ 6. drwxr----- is created with umask 0___ 7. drwx------ is created with umask 0___ 8. d--x------ is created with umask 0___ 9. d--------- is created with umask 0___ The file must have a word count of: `9 63 369 umask.txt` 2. Edit the file and replace the three underscores `___` with the correct `umask` value that would result in each set of symbolic permissions for a new directory. (Check your work by setting your `umask` and then creating and examining a directory.) The finished file must have a word count of: `9 63 369 umask.txt` All correct answers will give a file checksum of `15430`. Do *not* leave your `umask` set incorrectly after this exercise. When you are done ----------------- That is all the tasks you need to do. Check your work a final time using the [Checking Program] and save the output as described below. Submit your mark following the directions below. Checking, Marking, and Submitting your Work =========================================== **Summary:** Do some tasks, then run the checking program to verify your work as you go. You can run the checking program as often as you want. When you have the best mark, upload the marks file to Blackboard. 1. There is a [Checking Program] named `assignment09check` in the [Source Directory] on the CLS. Create a [Symbolic Link] to this program named `check` under your new `assignment09` directory so that you can easily run the program to check your work and assign your work a mark. Note: You can create a symbolic link to this executable program but you do not have permission to read or copy the program file. 2. Execute the above "check" program using its new symbolic link. (Review the [Search Path] notes if you forget how to run a program by pathname from the command line.) This program will check your work, assign you a mark, and display the output on your screen. (You may want to paginate the long output so you can read all of it.) You may run the "check" program as many times as you wish, to correct mistakes and get the best mark. **Some task sections require you to finish the whole section before running the checking program at the end; you may not always be able to run the checking program successfully after every single task step.** 3. When you are done with checking this assignment, and you like what you see on your screen, redirect the output of the [Checking Program] into the text file `assignment09.txt` under your `assignment09` directory on the CLS. Use the *exact* name `assignment09.txt` in your `assignment09` directory. Case (upper/lower case letters) matters. Be absolutely accurate, as if your marks depended on it. Do not edit the file. Make sure the file actually contains the output of the checking program! 4. Transfer the above `assignment09.txt` file from the CLS to your local computer and verify that the file still contains all the output from the checking program. Do not edit this file! No empty files, please! Edited or damaged files will not be marked. You may want to refer to your [File Transfer] notes. 5. Submit the `assignment09.txt` file under the correct Assignment area on Blackboard (with the exact name) before the due date. Upload the file via the **assignment09** "Upload Assignment" facility in Blackboard: click on the underlined **assignment09** link in Blackboard. Use "**Attach File**" and "**Submit**" to upload your plain text file. No word-processor documents. Do not send email. Use only "Attach File". Do not enter any text into the **Submission** or **Comments** boxes on Blackboard; I do not read them. Use only the "**Attach File**" section followed by the **Submit** button. (If you want to send me comments about your assignment, use email.) 6. Your instructor may also mark the `assignment09` directory in your CLS account after the due date. Leave everything there on the CLS. **Do not delete any assignment work from the CLS until after the term is over!** Use the *exact* file name given above. Upload only one single file of plain text, not HTML, not MSWord. No fonts, no word-processing. Plain text only. Did I mention that the format is plain text (suitable for VIM/Nano/Pico/Gedit or Notepad)? **NO EMAIL, WORD PROCESSOR, PDF, RTF, or HTML DOCUMENTS ACCEPTED.** No marks are awarded for submitting under the wrong assignment number or for using the wrong file name. Use the exact name given above. WARNING: Some inattentive students don't read all these words. Don't make that mistake! Be exact. **READ ALL THE WORDS. OH PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE READ ALL THE WORDS!** -- | Ian! D. Allen - idallen@idallen.ca - Ottawa, Ontario, Canada | Home Page: http://idallen.com/ Contact Improv: http://contactimprov.ca/ | College professor (Free/Libre GNU+Linux) at: http://teaching.idallen.com/ | Defend digital freedom: http://eff.org/ and have fun: http://fools.ca/ [Plain Text] - plain text version of this page in [Pandoc Markdown] format [www.idallen.com]: http://www.idallen.com/ [Course Home Page]: .. [Course Outline]: course_outline.pdf [All Weeks]: indexcgi.cgi [Plain Text]: assignment09.txt [hyperlink URLs]: indexcgi.cgi#Important_Notes__alphabetical_order_ [Lab Worksheet #08 ODT]: worksheet08.odt [Class Notes]: indexcgi.cgi#XImportant_Notes__alphabetical_order_ [Assignments]: indexcgi.cgi#XAssignments [Checking Program]: #checking-marking-and-submitting-your-work [Course Linux Server]: 070_course_linux_server.html [Permissions]: 500_permissions.html [Umask]: 510_umask.html [Source Directory]: #the-source-directory [Quoting]: 440_quotes.html [Symbolic Link]: 460_symbolic_links.html [Search Path]: 400_search_path.html [File Transfer]: 015_file_transfer.html [Pandoc Markdown]: http://johnmacfarlane.net/pandoc/