From: Corinna Vinschen Reply-To: To: Subject: Re: Bash: when is WinXP not
WinXP??
Date: Wed, 13 Oct 2004 11:06:30 +0200
On Oct 12 17:42, Brian Dessent wrote:
> Daniel Miller wrote:
> > I've already had *one* problem to solve under Home, for some reason
> > Executable flags are not set on files that I copy over the network; I
> > didn't even know Windows *had* executable flags, but I'd copy console
> > utilities which worked fine under XPPro (in both Bash and 4NT), but
when I
> > copied them to XPHome and tried to run them, I'd get "access denied".
I
> > ran 'chmod 777' on these files and they all worked fine after that.
>
> One of the things that MS removed from XP in creating the Home version
> was the ability to modify file ACLs. The "security" properties tab that
> is normally used is absent. I don't know if Windows uses some set of
> default/immutable ACLs under-the-hood, or if they simply removed the
> ability to query and set them from the front-end but left the underlying
> ACL machinery. I suspect the latter. In that case, when you copy files
You're right. Under the hood it's a normal kernel and a normal NTFS.
Just the UI is crippled. From the Cygwin perspective XP home and XP pro
is the same system.
> via native windows methods, who knows what the ACL gets set to, since
> that version of Windows ostensibly does not support that feature at
> all. Apparently since chmod and getfacl/setfacl still work then the low
AFAIR cacls is available also on XP home. But setfacl/getfacl are working
fine, too, if POSIX permission sets are sufficient for you.
Corinna
--
Corinna Vinschen Please, send mails regarding Cygwin to
Cygwin Project Co-Leader mailto:cygwin@cygwin.com
Red Hat, Inc.
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