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I was looking at the permission bits used in various functions like stat() and chmod(), and I wanted a description of what the macros defined actually are. For instance S_IRUSR says it's represented by 00400 (GNU/Linux). My question is, could someone describe what the 00400 actually is? Is it a number, what? I understand how to OR the macros, I just don't get what the macro actually is.

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  • The ultimate explanation.
    – user529758
    Nov 23, 2012 at 21:05
  • I actually understand what the permissions are, that's not the issue, I just want to know what the number represented by the macro is and how it works. Is it a bitfield or something, I'm just trying to understand that conceptually. I understand octal permission modes, that's not the question, what does the number represent in the macro. Nov 23, 2012 at 21:06
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    @Holden - "00400" is a number. An octal (base 8) number (you can tell by the leading "0"). Representing filesystem permissions.
    – paulsm4
    Nov 23, 2012 at 21:08
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    Hmpf. Everything is bits. in octal representation, the bits forming a word are grouped in groups of 3 bits, and these 3 bits can then be represented by numbers 0..7 (octal means that 8 dec is 10 in octal, like 10 dec is 10 in dec :-). So if you or 4 oct with 2 oct, that means you or 100 bin with 010 bin, which yields 110 bin, which translates into 6 oct. Want more confusion?
    – pbhd
    Nov 23, 2012 at 21:20
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    Don't forget that computer scientists are confused about Halloween and Christmas because Oct 31 = Dec 25. Nov 23, 2012 at 21:30

2 Answers 2

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I am going to describe the left most three numbers in permission and that would also explain about S_IRUSR,

So each of the numbers is an octal number. Each number could be from 0 to 7. Each octal number could be converted to 3-bit binary number. Each bit represents a permission.

Left most bit = Read permission
Middle bit    = Write permission
Right most bit= Execute permission

Lets write 0 to 7 into binary and see the permission bits:

Octal    Binary 
0        0 0 0 (No Read,  No Write,  No Execute) -- No permission
1        0 0 1 (No Read,  No Write,  Yes you can execute)
2        0 1 0 (No Read,  Can Write, No execute)
3        0 1 1 (No Read,  Can Write, Can execute)
4        1 0 0 (Can Read, No Write,  No Execute)
5        1 0 1 (Can Read, No Write,  Can execute)
6        1 1 0 (Can Read, Can Write, No execute)
7        1 1 1 (Can Read, Can Write, Can execute)

So each number represents permissions. Now next part is for who these pemmissions are. Let the left most three number be XYZ: Now,

X means permission given to the owner of the file.
Y means permission given to the group of the owner.
Z means permission given to all other users in system , outside of user's group.

Given that, Z_ISUSR = 00400, now 4 means readable by user IRUSR = Is Readable by user.

These three are the important numbers in permissions, and these only specify the permissions given to the file.

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  • Thanks for the octal - binary chart, I found that helpful. Nov 27, 2012 at 6:14
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Wiki has very good explanations here

From the linked page:

0 --- no permission
1 --x execute
2 -w- write
3 -wx write and execute
4 r-- read
5 r-x read and execute
6 rw- read and write
7 rwx read, write, and execute

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