I want to quickly identify all writable files in the directory. What is the quick way to do it?
11 Answers
find -type f -maxdepth 1 -writable
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5
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2@Pavel, simply swap the
-type f
and-maxdepth 1
to get rid of the message Mar 22, 2010 at 12:39 -
if you remove all writable permission to a file and then use the command, does it still find the file? i am curious Mar 22, 2010 at 12:40
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3@vehomzzz For some reason the name of the flag is writable - without an e.– h0b0Apr 9, 2013 at 11:41
The -writable
option will find files that are writable by the current user. If you'd like to find files that are writable by anyone (or even other combinations), you can use the -perm
option:
find -maxdepth 1 -type f -perm /222
This will find files that are writable by their owner (whoever that may be):
find -maxdepth 1 -type f -perm /200
Various characters can be used to control the meaning of the mode argument:
/
- any permission bit-
- all bits (-222
would mean all - user, group and other)- no prefix - exact specification (
222
would mean no permssions other than write)
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That's a very elegant solution. How do I modify this to find files that are writable only by the owner.– kshenoyAug 18, 2015 at 23:40
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5
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to find writable files regardless of owner, group or others, you can check the w
flag in the file permission column of ls.
ls -l | awk '$1 ~ /^.*w.*/'
$1 is the first field, (ie the permission block of ls -l) , the regular expression just say find the letter "w" in field one. that's all.
if you want to find owner write permission
ls -l | awk '$1 ~ /^..w/'
if you want to find group write permission
ls -l | awk '$1 ~ /^.....w/'
if you want to find others write permission
ls -l | awk '$1 ~ /w.$/'
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the tilde is awk's regex operator for "match". much like Perl's
=~
regex operator Mar 22, 2010 at 12:50
-f
will test for a file
-w
will test whether it's writeable
Example:
$ for f in *; do [ -f $f ] && [ -w $f ] && echo $f; done
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1Also useless without saying what command these options are meant to be applied to.– bignoseMar 22, 2010 at 13:40
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@lexu/bignose - it's a
bash
question.-f
and-w
are bash operators. What more do you need ?– Paul RMar 22, 2010 at 13:51 -
@Paul R: look at murugaperumal's reply .. (your explanation + his example would receive a +1 from me)– lexuMar 22, 2010 at 14:02
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1I typed
-f
at the Bash prompt and got a command not found error. /sarcasm Mar 22, 2010 at 15:25 -
2@Paul R, the criticism was because you gave options without saying what command you're referring to. Those options are not "bash operators"; they are options to the
test
command, also spelled as the[
command.– bignoseMar 23, 2010 at 1:12
If you are in shell use
find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -writable
see man find
You will find you get better answers for this type of question on superuser.com or serverfault.com
If you are writing code not just using shell you may be interested in the access(2) system call.
This question has already been asked on serverfault
EDIT: @ghostdog74 asked if you removed write permissions for this file if this would still find the file. The answer, no this only finds files that are writable.
dwaters@eirene ~/temp
$ cd temp
dwaters@eirene ~/temp/temp
$ ls
dwaters@eirene ~/temp/temp
$ touch newfile
dwaters@eirene ~/temp/temp
$ ls -alph
total 0
drwxr-xr-x+ 2 dwaters Domain Users 0 Mar 22 13:27 ./
drwxrwxrwx+ 3 dwaters Domain Users 0 Mar 22 13:26 ../
-rw-r--r-- 1 dwaters Domain Users 0 Mar 22 13:27 newfile
dwaters@eirene ~/temp/temp
$ find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -writable
./newfile
dwaters@eirene ~/temp/temp
$ chmod 000 newfile
dwaters@eirene ~/temp/temp
$ ls -alph
total 0
drwxr-xr-x+ 2 dwaters Domain Users 0 Mar 22 13:27 ./
drwxrwxrwx+ 3 dwaters Domain Users 0 Mar 22 13:26 ../
---------- 1 dwaters Domain Users 0 Mar 22 13:27 newfile
dwaters@eirene ~/temp/temp
$ find . -maxdepth 1 -type f -writable
dwaters@eirene ~/temp/temp
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2I see the following error with your solution: find: invalid predicate `-writable'– vehomzzzMar 22, 2010 at 12:08
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sorry had . in wrong place , fixed now, look at man find to see how to user this command Mar 22, 2010 at 12:10
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if you remove all writable permission to a file and then use the command, does it still find the file? i am curious Mar 22, 2010 at 12:40
for var in `ls`
do
if [ -f $var -a -w $var ]
then
echo "$var having write permission";
else
echo "$var not having write permission";
fi
done
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1don't use ls with for loop to parse file names. also quote your variables in the if/else test. Mar 22, 2010 at 12:33
The problem with find -writable
is that it's not portable and it's not easy to emulate correctly with portable find
operators. If your version of find
doesn't have it, you can use touch
to check if the file can be written to, using -r
to make sure you (almost) don't modify the file:
find . -type f | while read f; do touch -r "$f" "$f" && echo "File $f is writable"; done
The -r
option for touch
is in POSIX, so it can be considered portable. Of course, this will be much less efficient than find -writable
.
Note that touch -r
will update each file's ctime (time of last change to its meta-data), but one rarely cares about ctime anyway.
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Have you tried
touch
on a read-only file as root or on a file that you own? The ability to update a timestamp does not imply that the file is writable. Mar 23, 2010 at 4:49 -
If you're root, read-only files on writable file systems are writable, so I don't see the problem there.– IdelicMar 23, 2010 at 5:57
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Find files writeable by owner:
find ./ -perm /u+w
Find files writeable by group:
find ./ -perm /g+w
Find files writeable by anyone:
find ./ -perm /o+w
Find files with defined permission:
find ./ -type -d -perm 0777
find ./ -type -d -perm 0755
find ./ -type -f -perm 0666
find ./ -type -f -perm 0644
Disable recursive with:
-maxdepth 1
I know this a very old thread, however...
The below command helped me: find . -type f -perm /+w
You can use -maxdepth based on how many levels below directory you want to search. I am using Linux 2.6.18-371.4.1.el5.
If you want to find all files that are writable by apache etal then you can do this:
sudo su www-data
find . -writable 2>/dev/null
Replace www-data with nobody or apache or whatever your web user is.