Ana içeriğe geç
eLearner.app
Modül 4 · Ders 2 ders 2Kurstaki 9/11~10 min
Modül dersleri (2/2)

Sahiplik ve ayrıcalıklar (chown ve sudo)

In a multi-user operating system like Linux, every resource has an owner and belongs to a specific group. Managing ownership and temporarily acquiring elevated privileges are key to system security.


Modifying Owner and Group: chown and chgrp

The chown (change owner) command allows you to change the owner user and/or group of a file or directory. Only the system administrator (root) or the current owner (with sufficient privileges) can make this change.

chown Syntax

The primary syntax of chown allows specifying the new owner and optionally the group separated by a colon ::

Bash
chown admin report.txt           # Changes owner to 'admin'
chown admin:staff report.txt     # Changes owner to 'admin' and group to 'staff'
chown :staff report.txt          # Changes group only to 'staff' (equivalent to chgrp)

The chgrp (change group) command is dedicated exclusively to changing the group owner of a file or directory:

Bash
chgrp developers script.sh       # Sets the file group to 'developers'

Superuser Privileges: sudo

In Linux, the administrative user is named root and has complete control over the system. For security reasons, you should never work continuously as root. Instead, you use the sudo (superuser do) command.

sudo allows an authorized user to execute a single command with root privileges (or another user's privileges):

Bash
sudo chown root:root private.key  # Changes owner to root by requesting elevated privileges

When you run a command with sudo, the system usually asks you to enter your current user's password (not root's) to confirm your identity and authorize the operation.


Try it yourself

Exercise 1: Change owner

Egzersiz#linux.m4.l2.e1
Denemeler: 0Yükleniyor…

Modify the owner user of the 'script.sh' file to be 'admin'.

Düzenleyici yükleniyor…
İpucu göster

Use the command 'chown admin script.sh' to change the owner.

3 denemeden sonra çözüm mevcut

Exercise 2: Change group owner

Egzersiz#linux.m4.l2.e2
Denemeler: 0Yükleniyor…

Modify the group associated with the 'runner.sh' file, setting it to 'developers'.

Düzenleyici yükleniyor…
İpucu göster

Use the chgrp command followed by the 'developers' group and the 'runner.sh' file.

3 denemeden sonra çözüm mevcut

Exercise 3: Change owner and group with sudo

Egzersiz#linux.m4.l2.e3
Denemeler: 0Yükleniyor…

Modify both the owner and group of the file 'private.key' to 'root'. Since this is a protected system operation, run the command with administrator privileges using 'sudo'.

Düzenleyici yükleniyor…
İpucu göster

Run chown preceded by sudo. Specify 'root:root' as owner:group and 'private.key' as the file.

3 denemeden sonra çözüm mevcut