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Hi I am running a centos server and I want to know how I can set the default chmod of a newly created file that is created by php like fopen. At the moment it is doing 644 but I want 666 so where can I specify this setting?

2 Answers 2

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You can use umask() immediately before the fopen() call, but umask shouldn't be used if you're on a multi-threaded server - it'll change the mask for ALL threads (e.g. this change is at the process level), not just the one that you're about to use fopen() in.

e.g.

$old = umask(000);
fopen('foo.txt', 'w'); // creates a 0666 file
umask($old) // restore original mask

It'd be easier to simply chmod() after the fact, however:

fopen('foo.txt', 'w'); // create a mode 'who cares?' file
chmod('foo.txt', 0666); // set it to 0666
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  • I only need umask($old) when I want to restore the original mask for the current script, right? Or does the umask call make a permanent change?
    – Adam
    Dec 6, 2016 at 20:11
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Like Linux, PHP has a chmod() command that can be invoked to change file permissions.

See the documentation here: http://php.net/manual/en/function.chmod.php

For a default setting you might try what Patrick Fisher states here: Setting the umask of the Apache user

[root ~]$ echo "umask 000" >> /etc/sysconfig/httpd
[root ~]$ service httpd restart
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  • Yes I know this but i am talking about the default value without changing it :)
    – user550
    May 21, 2013 at 14:27
  • I edited to better address your question. This is supposed to work with Centos.
    – Wes Crow
    May 21, 2013 at 14:32

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