When securing a Drupal or WordPress installation on a shared host that does not expose SSH access (a lousy situation, fwiw) lftp seems like the right approach to batch setting permissions for directories and files. The find command boasts that you can redirect its output, so one should be able to run a find, grep exclude to only match lines ending in "/" meaning a directory, and then set the permissions on such matches to 755 and perform the inverse on file matches and set to 644 and then fine tune specific files, such as settings.php and so forth.
lftp prompt> find . | grep "/$" | xargs chmod -v 755
Isn't working and I'm sure I have failed to chain these commands in the correct sequence and format.
How to get this to work?
Update: by "isn't working" I mean that the above command produces no output to the console, nor to the lftp error log. It isn't running these commands locally, fwiw. I'll reduce the command as a demonstration:
find . | grep "/$"
Will take the output of "find" and return matches, here, directories, by nature of the string match:
./daily/
./ffmpeg-installer/
./hourly/
./includes/
./includes/database/
./includes/database/mysql/
./and_so_forth_on_down
Which is cool, since I wish to perform a chmod (and internal command for lftp, with support varying by ftp server) So I expand the command like this:
find . | grep "/$" | xargs echo
Which outputs — nothing. No error output, either. The pipe from grep to xargs isn't happening.
My goal is to form the equivalent of:
chmod 755 ./daily/
chmod 755 ./ffmpeg-installer/
In lftp, the chmod command is performing an ftp-server-permissions change, not a local perms change.