CHMOD
CHMOD file, mode
Change permissions of a file. The string file
holds the
file name and follows OS file naming conventions. mode
provides the file permission and must be compatible with system call
chmod()‘s ’mode’ parameter.
See ACCESS to get information on file permissions.
Linux
mode
is a number best represented in octal: 0oUGO with
U: User; G: Group; O: Other
U, G and O are each defined the following way:
Value | Permission |
---|---|
0 | no |
1 | x (execute) |
2 | w (write) |
3 | w + x |
4 | r (read) |
5 | r + x |
6 | r + w |
7 | r + w + x |
Example
' Make myfile available to anyone (read/write)
CHMOD "myfile.bas", 0o666
' Make myfile available to anyone (execute/read/write)
CHMOD "myfile.bas", 0o777
' Make myfile available to user (read/write)
' All others only read
CHMOD "myfile.bas", 0o644
Windows
in Windows the read-only flag can be set with mode = 1
and unset with mode = -1
Example
' Make myfile read-only
CHMOD "myfile.bas", 1
' Make myfile read and write
CHMOD "myfile.bas", -1
Code samples using CHMOD
File
ACCESS
BGETC
BLOAD
BPUTC
BSAVE
CHDIR
CHMOD
CLOSE
COPY
DIRWALK
EOF
EXIST
FILES
FREEFILE
INPUT
INPUT
KILL
LOCK
LOF
MKDIR
OPEN
READ
RENAME
RMDIR
SEEK
SEEK
TLOAD
TSAVE
WRITE
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