lchown

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CHOWN(2)		  Linux Programmer’s Manual		     CHOWN(2)



NAME
       chown, fchown, lchown - change ownership of a file

SYNOPSIS
       #include <sys/types.h>
       #include <unistd.h>

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

DESCRIPTION
       The owner of the file specified by path or by fd is changed.  Only the
       super-user may change the owner of a file.  The owner of	 a  file  may
       change  the  group  of  the file to any group of which that owner is a
       member.	The super-user may change the group arbitrarily.

       If the owner or group is specified as -1, then that ID is not changed.

       When  the  owner	 or group of an executable file are changed by a non-
       super-user, the S_ISUID and S_ISGID mode bits are cleared. POSIX	 does
       not  specify whether this also should happen when root does the chown;
       the Linux behaviour depends on the kernel version.  In case of a	 non-
       group-executable	 file  (with clear S_IXGRP bit) the S_ISGID bit indi-
       cates mandatory locking, and is not cleared by a chown.


RETURN VALUE
       On success, zero is returned.  On error, -1 is returned, and errno  is
       set appropriately.

ERRORS
       Depending  on the file system, other errors can be returned.  The more
       general errors for chown are listed below:


       EPERM  The effective UID does not match the owner of the file, and  is
	      not zero; or the owner or group were specified incorrectly.

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

       EFAULT path points outside your accessible address space.

       ENAMETOOLONG
	      path is too long.

       ENOENT The file does not exist.

       ENOMEM Insufficient kernel memory was available.

       ENOTDIR
	      A component of the path prefix is not a directory.

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

       ELOOP  Too many symbolic links were encountered in resolving path.

       The general errors for fchown are listed below:

       EBADF  The descriptor is not valid.

       ENOENT See above.

       EPERM  See above.

       EROFS  See above.

       EIO    A low-level I/O error occurred while modifying the inode.

NOTES
       In versions of Linux prior to 2.1.81 (and distinct from 2.1.46), chown
       did  not follow symbolic links.	Since Linux 2.1.81, chown does follow
       symbolic links, and there is a new system call lchown  that  does  not
       follow  symbolic	 links.	  Since Linux 2.1.86, this new call (that has
       the same semantics as the old chown) has got the same syscall  number,
       and chown got the newly introduced number.

       The  prototype  for fchown is only available if _BSD_SOURCE is defined
       (either explicitly, or implicitly, by not  defining  _POSIX_SOURCE  or
       compiling with the -ansi flag).

CONFORMING TO
       The chown call conforms to SVr4, SVID, POSIX, X/OPEN.  The 4.4BSD ver-
       sion can only be used by the superuser (that is, ordinary users cannot
       give away files).  SVr4 documents EINVAL, EINTR, ENOLINK and EMULTIHOP
       returns, but no ENOMEM.	POSIX.1 does not  document  ENOMEM  or	ELOOP
       error conditions.

       The  fchown  call  conforms  to 4.4BSD and SVr4.	 SVr4 documents addi-
       tional EINVAL, EIO, EINTR, and ENOLINK error conditions.

RESTRICTIONS
       The chown() semantics are deliberately violated on  NFS	file  systems
       which  have  UID	 mapping enabled.  Additionally, the semantics of all
       system calls which access the  file  contents  are  violated,  because
       chown()	may  cause immediate access revocation on already open files.
       Client side caching may lead to a delay between the time where  owner-
       ship  have  been changed to allow access for a user and the time where
       the file can actually be accessed by the user on other clients.

SEE ALSO
       chmod(2), flock(2)



Linux 2.1.81			  1997-05-18			     CHOWN(2)