Re: Multi-user and shared directories

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I looks like your explanation "chmod 002" was meant "umod 002" and thus
would be "chmod 775" which is correct.

But remember that you can only have one group to a file/directory, that
is a Linux limitation. Maybe you need an extra group...

Alain

Roberto Bechtlufft escreveu:
Ok, question number 327 :-)

Suppose I have users roberto and fatima. roberto is under the groups
roberto and dosemu, and fatima is under fatima and dosemu. When I do a
chmod 002 and as roberto create a new file all users under the group
roberto can read and write to it. However, I want my files to be
created under the dosemu group, and not roberto, so fatima can read
and write to it to. How can I do it?
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