117

It's hard to find Mac-specific answers to this question on the web, so I'm hoping someone out there can put this one to rest for me? My permissions are screwed up on my sites and I'm not sure how to fix them without just slamming a recursive 777 on everything which is quite obviously incorrect.

Thanks!

0

8 Answers 8

188

This is the most restrictive and safest way I've found, as explained here for hypothetical ~/my/web/root/ directory for your web content:

  • For each parent directory leading to your web root (e.g. ~/my, ~/my/web, ~/my/web/root):
    • chmod go-rwx DIR (nobody other than owner can access content)
    • chmod go+x DIR (to allow "users" including _www to "enter" the dir)
  • sudo chgrp -R _www ~/my/web/root (all web content is now group _www)
  • chmod -R go-rwx ~/my/web/root (nobody other than owner can access web content)
  • chmod -R g+rx ~/my/web/root (all web content is now readable/executable/enterable by _www)

All other solutions leave files open to other local users (who are part of the "staff" group as well as obviously being in the "o"/others group). These users may then freely browse and access DB configurations, source code, or other sensitive details in your web config files and scripts if such are part of your content. If this is not an issue for you, then by all means go with one of the simpler solutions.

12
  • 3
    I had to give read access in addition to the x flag with chmod go+rx DIR at the /Users/username directory level before ls stopped throwing permission error. Wonder why?
    – bhavinb
    Nov 29, 2012 at 13:50
  • 1
    @mike, All the files and directories will still be owned by you (the user) and still be writeable. The chgrp only allows the "_www" group to read the files.
    – dkamins
    Jun 30, 2013 at 0:00
  • 2
    For systems that expect the website scripts to create their own folders and write their own files within webroot (like many CMS do) I had to give write permissions to the _www group. So the last step becomes chmod -R g+rwx ~/my/web/root. Any objections or a better way to do this @dkamins ?
    – Jpsy
    Jun 25, 2014 at 15:27
  • 1
    @Jpsy That should work fine if your app needs to write to itself. It introduces other potential security issues if other code is running also as _www (and might maliciously alter the CMS code), so just be careful. If you can restrict writeable (g+w) to a deeper subdirectory, that's better yet.
    – dkamins
    Jul 11, 2014 at 5:06
  • 1
    This is a few years old now, time marches on, and OS X likes to change how its default Apache server works from time to time. So while this solution still works, I would at this point strongly recommend the alternate solution of creating local VMs to test your apps on instead of using OS X itself. See: vagrantup.com
    – dkamins
    Nov 7, 2014 at 22:14
33

If you really don't like the Terminal here is the GUI way to do dkamins is telling you :

1) Go to your user home directory (ludo would be mine) and from the File menu choose Get Info cmdI in the inspector :

Get Info window Sharing & Permissions section

2) By alt/option clicking on the [+] sign add the _www group and set it's permission to read-only :

Get Info add Users & Groups highlighted and World Wide Web Server highlighted

  • Thus consider (good practice) not storing personnal information at the root of your user home folder (& hard disk) !
  • You may skip this step if the **everyone** group has **read-only** permission but since AirDrop the **/Public/Drop Box** folder is mostly useless...

3) Show the Get Info inspector of your user Sites folder and reproduce step 2 then from the gear action sub-menu choose Apply to enclosed Items... :

Get Info action sub-menu Apply to enclosed Items... highlighted

Voilà 3 steps and the GUI only way...

6
  • 1
    This is the best way by far, alt+click shows the properly _www user
    – Entropyk
    Mar 22, 2015 at 1:08
  • This is true if you have guest file sharing activated or a malicious php script installed… Make sure there's only the Public and Sites folder which is "readable" by everyone. Step 3 applies only to the "Sites" folder… Thus normally others folders shouldn't be altered…
    – llange
    Aug 3, 2015 at 15:45
  • This shouldn't be needed. _www is in the everyone group.
    – DarkNeuron
    Mar 13, 2016 at 16:29
  • PS it seems that with Sierry the Alt trick doesn't work anymore (I still have to check if there's some GUI option to enable but I don't think so according to recent Apple policy/practice).
    – llange
    Mar 2, 2017 at 23:45
  • alt/opt + [+] still works for me in High Sierra 10.13.5, thanks
    – AamirR
    Jun 14, 2018 at 10:12
13

I know this is an old post, but for anyone upgrading to Mountain Lion (10.8) and experiencing similar issues, adding FollowSymLinks to your {username}.conf file (in /etc/apache2/users/) did the trick for me. So the file looks like this:

<Directory "/Users/username/Sites/">
  Options Indexes MultiViews FollowSymLinks
  AllowOverride All
  Order allow,deny
  Allow from all
</Directory>
1
  • I created a user "git" which I don't use, and that was all there was available in that directory to edit (git.conf). Once I updated the file as described above for user git - the directory I set up was served correctly by apache. This doesn't make sense to me because my user git has nothing to do with the created directories, or apache.
    – ktamlyn
    Sep 6, 2013 at 14:13
10

2 month old thread, but better late than never! On 10.6, I have my webserver documents folder set to:

owner:root
group:_www
permission:755

_www is the user that runs apache under Mac OS X. I then added an ACL to allow full permissions to the Administrators group. That way, I can still make any changes with my admin user without having to authenticate as root. Also, when I want to allow the webserver to write to a folder, I can simply chmod to 775, leaving everyone other than root:_www with only read/execute permissions (excluding any ACLs that I have applied)

3
  • You don't need to set the owner to 'root', but it's harmless. You definitely don't need the o+rx perms you have -- that lets any local user browse and read all your web content (including possibly configs with DB passwords, etc.)
    – dkamins
    Jun 21, 2011 at 2:11
  • 1
    (see my answer to this question below which is a much more complex version of this answer which may be interesting to those more paranoid about security)
    – dkamins
    Jun 21, 2011 at 2:23
  • In terminal how do we see what for example wordpress got installed with (regarding its own file permissions) as I want wordpress to be able to write its own media uploads...
    – landed
    Jul 27, 2016 at 12:00
5

On my 10.6 system:

vhosts folder:
 owner:root
 group:wheel
 permissions:755

vhost.conf files:
 owner:root
 group:wheel
 permissions:644
1
  • 1
    Great, thank you Steve, and for the web files themselves? /Library/WebServer/Documents /Library/WebServer/Documents/[file] /Library/WebServer/Documents/[directory] Jan 4, 2010 at 20:29
0

The user owner for me is the admin user and the group is _www and works with permissions set to 775 for dir and for files 664

0

Catalina Update / Desktop Permissions

I come across this once a year on macOS. I usually use apache2 for hosting a folder on my desktop.

If you are trying to give access to the desktop folder you need to follow this to allow httpd to have access to all folders: https://apple.stackexchange.com/a/373139/353465

-3

Open up terminal first and then go to directory of web server

cd /Library/WebServer/Documents

and then type this and what you will do is you will give read and write permission

sudo chmod -R o+w /Library/WebServer/Documents

This will surely work!

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.