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NAME

chown(), fchown(), lchown() — change owner and group of a file

SYNOPSIS

#include <unistd.h>

int chown(const char *path, uid_t owner, gid_t group);

int lchown(const char *path, uid_t owner, gid_t group);

int fchown(int fildes, uid_t owner, gid_t group);

DESCRIPTION

The chown() system call changes the user and group ownership of a file. path points to the path name of a file. chown() sets the owner ID and group ID of the file to the numeric values contained in owner and group respectively. A value of UID_NO_CHANGE or GID_NO_CHANGE can be specified in owner or group to leave unchanged the file's owner ID or group ID, respectively. Note that owner and group should be less than UID_MAX (see limits(5)).

Only processes with an effective user ID equal to the file owner or a user having appropriate privileges can change the ownership of a file. If privilege groups are supported, the owner of a file can change the ownership only as a member of a privilege group allowing CHOWN, as set up by the setprivgrp command (see setprivgrp(1M)). All users get the CHOWN privilege by default.

The group ownership of a file can be changed to any group in the current process's access list or to the real or effective group ID of the current process. If privilege groups are supported and the user has the CHOWN privilege, the file can be given to any group.

If chown() is invoked on a regular file by anyone other than the superuser, the set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits of the file mode are cleared. Whether chown() preserves or clears these bits on files of other types is implementation dependent.

If the path given to chown() contains a symbolic link as the last element, this link is traversed and path name resolution continues. chown() changes the owner and group of the symbolic link's target, rather than the owner and group of the link.

The fchown() system call functions exactly like chown(), exept that it operates on a file descriptor instead of a path name. fildes is a file descriptor.

The lchown() system call sets the owner ID and group ID of the named file just as chown() does, except in the case where the named file is a symbolic link. In this case, lchown() changes the owner and group of the symbolic link file itself.

Access Control Lists - HFS File Systems Only

A user can allow or deny specific individuals and groups access to a file by using the file's access control list (see acl(5)). When using chown() in conjunction with ACLs, if the new owner and/or group does not have an optional ACL entry corresponding to user.% and/or %.group in the file's access control list, the file's access permission bits remain unchanged. However, if the new owner and/or group is already designated by an optional ACL entry of user.% and/or %.group, chown() sets the file's permission bits (and the three basic ACL entries) to the permissions contained in that entry.

RETURN VALUE

chown() and fchown() return the following values:

0

Successful completion.

-1

Failure. The owner and group of the file remain unchanged. errno is set to indicate the error.

ERRORS

If chown() or fchown() fails, errno is set to one of the following values:

[EACCES]

Search permission is denied on a component of the path prefix.

[EBADF]

fildes is not a valid file descriptor.

[EFAULT]

path points outside the allocated address space of the process. The reliable detection of this error is implementation dependent.

[EINVAL]

Either owner or group is greater than or equal to UID_MAX, or is an illegal negative value.

[ELOOP]

Too many symbolic links were encountered in translating path.

[ENAMETOOLONG]

A component of path exceeds NAME_MAX bytes while _POSIX_NO_TRUNC is in effect, or path exceeds PATH_MAX bytes.

[ENOENT]

The file named by path does not exist.

[ENOTDIR]

A component of the path prefix is not a directory.

[EPERM]

The effective user ID is not a user having appropriate privileges and one or more of the following conditions exist:

  • The effective user ID does not match the owner of the file.

  • When changing the owner of the file, the owner of the file is not a member of a privilege group allowing the CHOWN privilege.

  • When changing the group of the file, the owner of the file is not a member of a privilege group allowing the CHOWN privilege and the group number is not in the current process's access list.

[EROFS]

The named file resides on a read-only file system.

AUTHOR

chown() was developed by AT&T.

fchown() was developed by the University of California, Berkeley.

STANDARDS CONFORMANCE

chown(): AES, SVID2, SVID3, XPG2, XPG3, XPG4, FIPS 151-2, POSIX.1

fchown(): AES, SVID3

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