chmod
chmod
Changes file mode
bool **chmod** string $filename int $permissions
Attempts to change the mode of the specified file to that given in
.
permissions
filenamePath to the file.
permissions
Note that is not automatically
assumed to be an octal value, so to ensure the expected operation,
you need to prefix with a zero (0).
Strings such as "g+w" will not work properly.
permissions``permissions
```php
The parameter consists of three octal
number components specifying access restrictions for the owner,
the user group in which the owner is in, and to everybody else in
this order. One component can be computed by adding up the needed
permissions for that target user base. Number 1 means that you
grant execute rights, number 2 means that you make the file
writeable, number 4 means that you make the file readable. Add
up these numbers to specify needed rights. You can also read more
about modes on Unix systems with ''
and ''.
`permissions`
```php
<?php
// Read and write for owner, nothing for everybody else
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0600);
// Read and write for owner, read for everybody else
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0644);
// Everything for owner, read and execute for others
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0755);
// Everything for owner, read and execute for owner's group
chmod("/somedir/somefile", 0750);
?>
return.success
Upon failure, an is emitted.
E_WARNING
Opmerking: > The current user is the user under which PHP runs. It is probably not the same user you use for normal shell or FTP access. The mode can be changed only by user who owns the file on most systems.
chown``chgrp``fileperms``stat