Manage Group Permissions
Understanding and managing Unix group permissions is essential when working in a shared computing environment. Each file or directory has a user owner and a group owner, and permissions control how these resources can be accessed or modified.
This guide explains how group ownership and permissions work on ARCH systems and how to manage them to support collaboration within research groups.
Overview
Unix permissions are important for:
Sharing data with other group members
Maintaining correct group ownership for quota tracking
Ensuring project members can read/write shared files
Every user belongs to one or more Unix groups, typically based on project membership. When a user creates a file, the group ownership is usually set to their current group, which can be changed as needed.
Checking File Permissions and Group Ownership
To inspect ownership and permissions:
ls -l
Example output:
-rw------- 1 alice projX 13511 Feb 14 10:00 data.txt
-rwxr--r-- 1 bob projY 215 Sep 19 09:21 run.sh
The third column shows the owner (user)
The fourth column shows the group owner
Permissions are shown in three sections: - User (owner) - Group - Others
If alice wants to share data.txt with other members of projX, she must ensure the group has the correct permissions:
chmod g+r data.txt
Changing Group Ownership
To change the group ownership of a file:
chgrp projX shared_results.txt
You can only change to groups you’re already a member of.
Viewing Your Group Membership
To list your current and supplementary groups:
groups
The first group listed is your current (active) group.
Setting the Active Group
To change your current group for a session:
newgrp projX
This is useful to ensure newly created files are assigned to the appropriate group.
You can also run a single command as a different group using:
sg projX <command>
Example:
sg projX mkdir new_folder
Default Group on Login
Your default group (first in the groups output) is used each time you log in. If this group is outdated or not associated with your current work, contact help@arch.jhu.edu to request a change.
Summary of Useful Commands
Command |
Purpose |
|---|---|
ls -l |
View file ownership and permissions |
chmod g+r file |
Add read access for the group |
chgrp groupname file |
Change file’s group owner |
groups |
Show your group memberships |
newgrp groupname |
Change your active group for the session |
sg groupname <command> |
Run one command using a different group context |