148

In Java, I'm dynamically creating a set of files and I'd like to change the file permissions on these files on a linux/unix file system. I'd like to be able to execute the Java equivalent of chmod. Is that possible Java 5? If so, how?

I know in Java 6 the File object has setReadable()/setWritable() methods. I also know I could make a system call to do this, but I'd like to avoid that if possible.

1
  • 8
    Note for others: For existing files, since Java 7, you can use this one-liner: Files.setPosixFilePermissions(path, PosixFilePermissions.fromString("rwxr-x---"))
    – tom
    May 15, 2019 at 8:09

12 Answers 12

132

Full control over file attributes is available in Java 7, as part of the "new" New IO facility (NIO.2). For example, POSIX permissions can be set on an existing file with setPosixFilePermissions(), or atomically at file creation with methods like createFile() or newByteChannel().

You can create a set of permissions using EnumSet.of(), but the helper method PosixFilePermissions.fromString() will uses a conventional format that will be more readable to many developers. For APIs that accept a FileAttribute, you can wrap the set of permissions with with PosixFilePermissions.asFileAttribute().

Set<PosixFilePermission> ownerWritable = PosixFilePermissions.fromString("rw-r--r--");
FileAttribute<?> permissions = PosixFilePermissions.asFileAttribute(ownerWritable);
Files.createFile(path, permissions);

In earlier versions of Java, using native code of your own, or exec-ing command-line utilities are common approaches.

7
  • 4
    selecting this one as I don't have the ability to use Marty Lamb's answer.
    – Roy Rico
    Mar 20, 2009 at 0:44
  • 1
    I seriously cannot believe that it's been over six years since they started working on NIO.2 and it's still not in a shipping JRE.
    – clee
    Feb 3, 2010 at 7:49
  • 11
    Code example might be useful in your answer. Sep 16, 2013 at 16:00
  • 3
    This answer stackoverflow.com/a/32331442/290182 by @PixelsTech is superior since it provides example code
    – beldaz
    May 30, 2016 at 23:42
  • 1
    @SteveB All set.
    – erickson
    Jul 23, 2018 at 16:37
50

Prior to Java 6, there is no support of file permission update at Java level. You have to implement your own native method or call Runtime.exec() to execute OS level command such as chmod.

Starting from Java 6, you can useFile.setReadable()/File.setWritable()/File.setExecutable() to set file permissions. But it doesn't simulate the POSIX file system which allows to set permission for different users. File.setXXX() only allows to set permission for owner and everyone else.

Starting from Java 7, POSIX file permission is introduced. You can set file permissions like what you have done on *nix systems. The syntax is :

File file = new File("file4.txt");
file.createNewFile();

Set<PosixFilePermission> perms = new HashSet<>();
perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OWNER_READ);
perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OWNER_WRITE);

Files.setPosixFilePermissions(file.toPath(), perms);

This method can only be used on POSIX file system, this means you cannot call it on Windows system.

For details on file permission management, recommend you to read this post.

45

In addition to erickson's suggestions, there's also jna, which allows you to call native libraries without using jni. It's shockingly easy to use, and I've used it on a couple of projects with great success.

The only caveat is that it's slower than jni, so if you're doing this to a very large number of files that might be an issue for you.

(Editing to add example)

Here's a complete jna chmod example:

import com.sun.jna.Library;
import com.sun.jna.Native;

public class Main {
    private static CLibrary libc = (CLibrary) Native.loadLibrary("c", CLibrary.class);

    public static void main(String[] args) {
        libc.chmod("/path/to/file", 0755);
    }
}

interface CLibrary extends Library {
    public int chmod(String path, int mode);
}
2
  • 2
    JNA is such a nice tool for native calls!
    – erickson
    Mar 20, 2009 at 4:32
  • 4
    For correct error handling, CLibrary.chmod() must be declared to throw com.sun.jna.LastErrorException. That is the only thread-safe way of getting the errno value set by the chmod() call. Otherwise, you can get the success/fail status from the return value, but not the actual error code. Oct 14, 2013 at 3:23
22

For Windows 7 with NIO 2:

public static void main(String[] args) throws IOException {
    Path file = Paths.get("c:/touch.txt");
    AclFileAttributeView aclAttr = Files.getFileAttributeView(file, AclFileAttributeView.class);
    System.out.println(aclAttr.getOwner());
    for (AclEntry aclEntry : aclAttr.getAcl()) {
        System.out.println(aclEntry);
    }
    System.out.println();
    
    UserPrincipalLookupService upls = file.getFileSystem().getUserPrincipalLookupService();
    UserPrincipal user = upls.lookupPrincipalByName(System.getProperty("user.name"));
    AclEntry.Builder builder = AclEntry.newBuilder();       
    builder.setPermissions( EnumSet.of(AclEntryPermission.READ_DATA, AclEntryPermission.EXECUTE, 
            AclEntryPermission.READ_ACL, AclEntryPermission.READ_ATTRIBUTES, AclEntryPermission.READ_NAMED_ATTRS,
            AclEntryPermission.WRITE_ACL, AclEntryPermission.DELETE
    ));
    builder.setPrincipal(user);
    builder.setType(AclEntryType.ALLOW);
    aclAttr.setAcl(Collections.singletonList(builder.build()));
}
4
  • 2
    this works great. The only modification done was for the lookupPrincipalByName() method, I sent System.getProperty("user.name") instead of "user". Finally it looked like upls.lookupPrincipalByName(System.getProperty("user.name")); Thanks for the code! Aug 6, 2013 at 10:44
  • @bob.. can you give me AclFileAttributeView and UserPrincipalLookupService class.. bcz it cant resolve.. you answer seems to be working.. and i want to implement Jul 8, 2016 at 7:33
  • java.nio.file.attribute.AclFileAttributeView and java.nio.file.attribute.UserPrincipalLookupService, it require jdk 1.7+ to compile and run.
    – bob
    Jul 9, 2016 at 16:50
  • I'm having the strangest result with this approach. I printed out the user, and it is my current active user. Yet I get access denied both in java, but also in windows when going to that file. I can't currently explain what is happening.
    – Kalec
    Aug 31, 2021 at 14:27
13

Just to update this answer unless anyone comes across this later, since JDK 6 you can use

File file = new File('/directory/to/file');
file.setWritable(boolean);
file.setReadable(boolean);
file.setExecutable(boolean);

you can find the documentation on Oracle File(Java Platform SE 7). Bear in mind that these commands only work if the current working user has ownership or write access to that file. I am aware that OP wanted chmod type access for more intricate user configuration. these will set the option across the board for all users.

2
  • Cool, le sauveur!
    – khawarizmi
    Apr 18, 2019 at 10:34
  • I have tested it yet with Openjdk 11.0.6 under Debian, it works! Mar 10, 2020 at 13:10
12

If you want to set 777 permission to your created file than you can use the following method:

public void setPermission(File file) throws IOException{
    Set<PosixFilePermission> perms = new HashSet<>();
    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OWNER_READ);
    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OWNER_WRITE);
    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OWNER_EXECUTE);

    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OTHERS_READ);
    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OTHERS_WRITE);
    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OTHERS_EXECUTE);

    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.GROUP_READ);
    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.GROUP_WRITE);
    perms.add(PosixFilePermission.GROUP_EXECUTE);

    Files.setPosixFilePermissions(file.toPath(), perms);
}
2

You can use the methods of the File class: http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/io/File.html

1
  • 4
    Please have a second look at the question. Roy Rico knows about setReadable() and setWritable(), but they only let you change owner permissions, not group or everyone permissions, or any of the other flags.
    – Chrissi
    Jan 5, 2015 at 20:40
2

Apache ant chmod (not very elegant, adding it for completeness) credit shared with @msorsky

    Chmod chmod = new Chmod();
    chmod.setProject(new Project());
    FileSet mySet = new FileSet();
    mySet.setDir(new File("/my/path"));
    mySet.setIncludes("**");
    chmod.addFileset(mySet);
    chmod.setPerm("+w");
    chmod.setType(new FileDirBoth());
    chmod.execute();
2
import java.io.File;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.nio.file.Files;
import java.nio.file.Path;
import java.nio.file.Paths;
import java.nio.file.attribute.FileAttribute;
import java.nio.file.attribute.PosixFileAttributes;
import java.nio.file.attribute.PosixFilePermission;
import java.nio.file.attribute.PosixFilePermissions;
import java.util.Set;

public class FileAndDirectory1 {
    public static void main(String[] args) {
        
        File file = new File("fileTest1.txt");
        System.out.println(file.getAbsoluteFile());
        try {
            //file.createNewFile();
            if(!file.exists())
            {
                //PosixFilePermission is an enum class, PosixFilePermissions is a final class
                
                //create file permissions from string
                Set<PosixFilePermission> filePermissions = PosixFilePermissions.fromString("---------"/* "rwxrwxrwx" */);
                FileAttribute<?> permissions = PosixFilePermissions.asFileAttribute(filePermissions);
                Files.createFile(file.toPath(), permissions);
                // printing the permissions associated with the file
                System.out.println("Executable: " + file.canExecute());
                System.out.println("Readable: " + file.canRead());
                System.out.println("Writable: "+ file.canWrite());

                file.setExecutable(true);
                file.setReadable(true);
                file.setWritable(true);
            }
            else
            {
                //modify permissions
                
                //get the permission using file attributes
                Set<PosixFilePermission> perms = Files.readAttributes(file.toPath(), PosixFileAttributes.class).permissions();
                perms.remove(PosixFilePermission.OWNER_WRITE);

                perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OWNER_READ);
                perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OWNER_EXECUTE);
                perms.add(PosixFilePermission.GROUP_WRITE);
                perms.add(PosixFilePermission.GROUP_READ);
                perms.add(PosixFilePermission.GROUP_EXECUTE);
                perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OTHERS_WRITE);
                perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OTHERS_READ);
                perms.add(PosixFilePermission.OTHERS_EXECUTE);
                Files.setPosixFilePermissions(file.toPath(), perms);

                System.out.println("Executable: " + file.canExecute());
                System.out.println("Readable: " + file.canRead());
                System.out.println("Writable: "+ file.canWrite());

                file.delete();
            }
        } catch (IOException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
        Path path = Paths.get(String.valueOf(file));
        System.out.println(path);
    }
}
1

for Oralce Java 6:

private static int chmod(String filename, int mode) {
    try {
        Class<?> fspClass = Class.forName("java.util.prefs.FileSystemPreferences");
        Method chmodMethod = fspClass.getDeclaredMethod("chmod", String.class, Integer.TYPE);
        chmodMethod.setAccessible(true);
        return (Integer)chmodMethod.invoke(null, filename, mode);
    } catch (Throwable ex) {
        return -1;
    }
}

works under solaris/linux.

2
  • one should be aware that FileSystemPreferences spwans a Timer daemon thread once it's loaded. it also adds a shutdown hook, but for some applications this may still be problematic.
    – thrau
    Oct 16, 2016 at 12:08
  • It's almost always a bad idea to call internal methods like this.
    – A248
    May 29, 2021 at 17:11
1

There is an example class on Oracle Docs which works very much similar to the UNIX chmod. It works with java se 7+ though.

1

Permission 777 is the same as rwxrwxrwx which you can set as follows:

Files.setPosixFilePermissions(path, PosixFilePermissions.fromString("rwxrwxrwx"))

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