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When I change any file, the system will deny me access. What's going on? How do I properly set permissions on Mac?

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18 Answers 18

148

It is generally not a good idea to run VS Code as sudo. Instead change the permission for the directory.

You can change the ownership of the directory so that you can open it without needing root privileges.

$ sudo chown -R <user-name> <directory-name>
5
  • @MertA.Can you elaborate on what you mean by "sudo command did not work on terminal"? Oct 31, 2018 at 10:00
  • This works. Specifying only the user name while in the directory did not work, but navigating to the parent and specifying the target directory did.
    – samcozmid
    Apr 2, 2019 at 19:52
  • 1
    This is just a hint for typing your "directory-name" quickly: dragging your target folder from Finder to Terminal :)
    – BetterTeng
    May 17, 2019 at 5:24
  • make sure you are not in the directory it self, but it's parent.
    – cnps
    Jul 18, 2019 at 19:25
  • Doesn't work either. I get "permission denied, mkdir"
    – Black
    Dec 9, 2022 at 8:55
44

First, take note of the current permissions of all files and folders by issuing the command:

ls -lR <project_dir_name> > old_permissions.txt

which will save the output of the command ls -l <project_dir_name> to the file old_permissions.txt in the current directory.

If you have no idea of how permissions work and what the results of the previous command represent, please, have a look at https://ss64.com/bash/syntax-permissions.html and https://ss64.com/bash/chmod.html.

At this point, to modify any of the files under <project_dir_name>, you can give full permission to all subfolders and files recursively by issuing the command:

sudo chmod -R 777 <project_dir_name>

Note that you're responsible for the changes your perform!

After having saved the updates, you can reset the previous permission settings of the folders by looking at the old permissions saved in the file old_permissions.txt. You should set the permissions manually (unless you create e.g. a script to do it automatically using the info saved in old_permissions.txt).

Note: it's probably a better idea to only modify the permissions of the specific files that you want to modify (and not of the whole folder).

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  • 1
    Chmod 777 is unsafe if you are on shared hosting.
    – Black
    Dec 9, 2022 at 8:55
23

I managed to fix this on Mac while running this in Terminal

sudo chown -R $(whoami) /Users/$(whoami)/.vscode

hope this helps someone

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  • Thank you! This helped me. What exactly is -R doing? Jan 22, 2021 at 18:01
  • 1
    - R parameter is shorthand for the recursive option so it applies the current user as owner for all the files in the folder (see devconnected.com/how-to-chown-recursive-on-linux)
    – Nilbog
    Jan 23, 2021 at 19:52
  • "/Users/xxx/.vscode": no such file or directory
    – Black
    Dec 9, 2022 at 8:56
12

Uninstall the code command from PATH in vscode and reinstall it.

  1. Open the command pallete (command + shift + P), search "uninstall 'code'" and select the first option to uninstall.
  2. Open the command pallete (command + shift + P), search "install 'code'" and click "Install 'code' command in PATCH
11

None of the above solutions solved this issue for me, here's what finally worked:

System Preferences > Security and Privacy > Privacy (tab) > (scroll down to) Files and Folders > Select Desktop Folder

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10

I found a fix. I simply uninstalled the code command from PATH in vscode and reinstalled. i.e open the command pallete, search "uninstall 'code' command in PATH" and select the first option to uninstall. Then do the same to install it back "install 'code'...". Do same for installing too. That should fix it

https://github.com/microsoft/vscode/issues/129884

props to lazy-poet

9

cd to the project directory and run cd .. to move back one folder run sudo chmod -R 777 <project_dir_name> it works for me vscode never asked me for password when saving my file again.

2
  • 5
    This isn't safe practice. You are opening up the file permissions to anyone. The loosest you should ever have to do is 775.
    – AJStacy
    Jan 22, 2020 at 15:09
  • Thanks for pin-pointing that @AJStacy 775 is more secure. Feb 14, 2022 at 12:21
5

If you want to fix permissions for the current user use sudo chown -R $(whoami) ~/.vscode/.

  • $(whoami) is a variable with the current user that's logged in
  • ~ is a shorthand for the home directory of the current user
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  • This command ran, now what is the next step? Jul 7, 2021 at 19:45
5

Easy fix is: go to visual studio code and press cmd+shift+p and then the type 'uninstall code' select that option and reinstall it again with cmd+shift+p and type 'install code' and click.

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3

Go to your project, double click on the app.js file and select 'Get info'. There will be an option of 'Sharing & Permission'. From there you can change access permissions for other users.

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3

In my case, it turned out that the VSCode application was in the Downloads folder, and not in the Applications folder.

After I moved it to the Applications folder, I deleted the /usr/local/bin/code symlink. Then, I closed and re-opened VSCode, and hit Command+Shift+P and typed code which brought up Shell Command: Install 'code' command in PATH and successfully added code to the path!

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2

I had a similar issue. I had error when I tried to create a new component. I just navigated to the path displayed in Finder. For me it was ProjectFolder/src/. So I did right click on "src" folder and selected "Get Info". In that change access to "Read&Write" for my user account. Thats it !!!

As you are trying to update a file, try to change access permission for that file (ie. app.component.css). If it didn't work try to change access for "app" folder.

Note: Changing the access of parent/super-parent folder won't work. So change the exact folder's access preferences.

2

In my case it was problems with mixed permissions within .git/objects directory. Some of them been my user, some - surprisingly - root.

This helped:

cd: .git/objects
sudo chown -R username:usergroup *

If mismatch with permissions occur not only within git objects but whole repo, chown command can be executed in upper directory.

1

This is the solution for me.

Open the Terminal and enter this command:

code --user-data-dir="./vscode-root"

This is for Ubuntu 16.04.

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0

Go to your terminal and input the command:

sudo "/Applications/Visual Studio Code.app/Contents/MacOS/Electron" ~/.bash_profile

It works for me.

However, according to the answers on the websites, it is not recommended to get super user permission when you launch the vs code. I am new to vs code as well so I don't know the right method to get permission.

Besides, on my mac, you will get only permission once when you type in the command and after you exit your vs code, you will not possess the permission if you open the vs code again. I am still working on it and try to fix.

But this answer should fix your problem.

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  • 3
    You should never need to run a program using sudo unless it's a special edge case and even then you should question why it's necessary. Fix the file permissions like Tin Nguyen suggested.
    – th3coop
    Sep 19, 2018 at 17:25
0

Here's the solution: You probably tried to save the file to "Macintosh Hd" which is the default place when you click on "Save as", so you can't just save a file to the computer inside itself, you have got to choose a directory, like you can save it to /Desktop or /users/your_username/... something like that. But saving to "Macintosh Hd" will always be unsuccessful.

0

I Fix this on my M1 mac using this command.

sudo chown -R <userName> *

This command will allow ownership to the user for all files.

0

The problem is, that you are probably trying to access a project which is owned by a another user e.g. the user which is not currently logged in.

You need to login as that user to work on the project.

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