CHMOD(2)CHMOD(2)NAMEchmod - change mode of file
SYNOPSIS
chmod(name, mode)
char *name;
DESCRIPTION
The file whose name is given as the null-terminated string pointed to
by name has its mode changed to mode. Modes are constructed by ORing
together some combination of the following:
04000 set user ID on execution
02000 set group ID on execution
01000 save text image after execution
00400 read by owner
00200 write by owner
00100 execute (search on directory) by owner
00070 read, write, execute (search) by group
00007 read, write, execute (search) by others
If an executable file is set up for sharing (-n or -i option of ld(1))
then mode 1000 prevents the system from abandoning the swap-space image
of the program-text portion of the file when its last user terminates.
Thus when the next user of the file executes it, the text need not be
read from the file system but can simply be swapped in, saving time.
Ability to set this bit is restricted to the super-user since swap
space is consumed by the images; it is only worth while for heavily
used commands.
Only the owner of a file (or the super-user) may change the mode. Only
the super-user can set the 1000 mode.
SEE ALSOchmod(1)DIAGNOSTIC
Zero is returned if the mode is changed; -1 is returned if name cannot
be found or if current user is neither the owner of the file nor the
super-user.
ASSEMBLER
(chmod = 15.)
sys chmod; name; mode
CHMOD(2)