Custom Access File Permissions

I"m using Snow Leopard Server 10.6.8, and we've been having some permission problems.  If you go into a folder that has read-write access and open a file and make a change in the file, the system requires you to save it as a new file rather than just letting you save it and replace the existing files.  I've found that the files that have this issue are setup with "Custom Access" showing in their permissions section under "Get Info".  I don't know why or how it creates Custom Access but I'd like to be able to change it or make the server stop doing it.  Any solutions?  Thanks.

I've just upgraded to Snow Leopard (don't laugh...I know I'm a dinosaur..) and sometimes I need to over-write a file 10 or more times when I'm doing corrections.  It saves as a new file and adds another '.' at the end which is extremely frustrating! 
Any help on how to go back to the old 'do you want to replace this file' box would be gratefully received!
Thanks...
Take care
Marianne

Similar Messages

  • How to fix custom access so permissions will work

    How to disable “custom” access setting on my hard drive which causes permissions problem?
    This is on a 2007 MBP with most recent OSX, etc.
    Here’s what I have tried based on posts I read on this forum:
    (1) I logged into admin account and typed into Terminal the following:
    sudo fsaclctl -p /Volumes/drivename -d
    sudo chmod -R +rwX /Volumes/drivename
    No go. Terminal does not recognize command fsaclctl
    (2) I also tried into terminal
    
sudo chflags nouch /Volumes/”drive-name”
    chmod 755 /Volumes/”drive-name”
    (3) I restarted with recovery disk and did repair permissions. No go.
    I saw a suggestion to erase the hard disk and reinstall OSX. I will do so (but would rather not) if it will solve the problem. Any advice is welcome.

    Try Settings > General > Reset > Reset Network Settings
    If that didn't helped:
    Do a reset (Hold Sleep/Wake and Home buttons about 10 secs or more till Apple logo appears)
    Note: You will not lose any data.

  • How to set owner-only access file permissions both on Linux and Windows

    Hi everybody.
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  • I transferred files from a NAS server to the Mac Mini Snow Leopard Server and now some of the files have Custom Access and can't  be opened by some users.  How do I fix this?

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    Oh, on the losing Internet, try this...
    Make a New Location, Using network locations in Mac OS X ...
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2712
    10.7 & 10.8…
    System Preferences>Network, top of window>Locations>Edit Locations, little plus icon, give it a name.
    10.5.x/10.6.x/10.7.x instructions...
    System Preferences>Network, click on the little gear at the bottom next to the + & - icons, (unlock lock first if locked), choose Set Service Order.
    The interface that connects to the Internet should be dragged to the top of the list.
    Instead of joining your Network from the list, click the WiFi icon at the top, and click join other network. Fill in everything as needed.
    For 10.5/10.6, System Preferences>Network, unlock the lock if need be, highlight the Interface you use to connect to Internet, click on the advanced button, click on the DNS tab, click on the little plus icon, then add these numbers...
    208.67.222.222
    208.67.220.220
    Click OK.
    PS. Your English is quite good & completely understandable.

  • After trying to change permissions on my computer so others on my network can access files, my external Hard Drive has a lock on it and I can't access files. I've tried repairing permissions, logging in under another Administrator account, using Terminal

    After trying to change permissions on my computer so others on my network can grab files, my external Hard Drive has a lock on it and I can't access files. I've tried repairing permissions, logging in under another Administrator account, using Terminal to fix the problem, downloaded BatChmod but nothing works… Any other suggestions? I have an Imac running OS10.6.8.

    There is suddenly a lock icon on my external backup drive!
    Custom Permissions

  • Help - Lion "custom access" permissions mess

    I should start with an apology... I know there are a lot of threads that dance around this very issue, but it's so much I can't make sense of it.
    So I'm asking anew...
    Here's the situation: After months of persuassion, I finally talked my wife into letting me upgrade her Macbook from Snow Leopard to Lion. After installing, I then ran software update and installed everything else recommended. Reboot and everythign seemed to go fine, but then when I tried to delete a few PowerPC apps, the computer kept asking for her password.
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    When I tried to log her back in to make her an admin again, I couldn't get the computer to accept her password. So I then logged out and tried to log back in with my admin account which is set up on the same computer. That worked to get me in, but still wouldn't allow me to upgrade her to an admin in the system prefs.
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    Okay... after a reboot and we're back in... and I run into a new problem with not having permission to do much of everything.
    So, I open the "Get Info" on the hard drive to look at the permissions at the bottom of the info window. It says I have "read only" access. I figure this must be an error so, perhaps foolishly (or should I say probably foolishly), I grant Read & Write access across the board, so it reads like this:
    System - Read & Write
    Wheel - Read & Write
    everyone - Read & Write
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    When this is done, I rebooted to the Lion Recovery partition and ran the Disk Utility "repair permissions" there, too.
    Upon reboot...  I remember Keychain First Aid and run that too. It has errors to fix but says it was able to repair them too.
    Right now... it all appears to be working fine, though it says I have "custom access" in the Get Info window for my HD.
    However, I can't shake the nagging feeling that I've just used a flamethrower to clean up the living room.
    For instance, I look now on my own Macbook and see that "wheel" and "everyone" in the Get Info window and see it's Read Only. And yet, I have no permissions problems right now at all.
    (Update: I tried setting hers back to match mine in the same way (via the Get Info window, apply, disk utility, reboot, etc.) and the permissions problems all came back. So I went and made it Read & Write for everyone again. However, this just can't be right.)
    Can anybody tell me (in easy terms, please) what I can do to get it back to what it should be?
    I've seen notes on a program on xnation.com that "fixes ACLs"... and a few posts with Terminal commands... but I'm hesitant to borrow somebody else's solution, just in case it's not so good of a fit or if I don't understand it.
    What do you think?
    P.S. I  promise to rate good solutions offered to up your point totals.

    Something like this?
    System - Read & Write
    Wheel - Read Only
    everyone - Read Only
    Yes.
    ...software from xnation.com that is designed to reset those ACLs?
    I've never heard of it. You already know how to reset user permissions.
    if the system seems to be working fine, does that mean something is still broken/in danger of corrupting or something?
    You set wide-open permissions on all files. That's insecure, and some things won't work at all, maybe not anything you use.

  • "You have custom access"??? (permissions issue)

    Apologies if this has been covered before but I have quite a few folders that say "You have custom access" in the Sharing & Permissions section of the "Get Info" Finder window, not "You can read and write" as I would expect. Some of these really do seem to have unusual permissions, such as an "(unknown user)" entry, but others appear to have identical permissions to those for which Get Info says "You can read and write."
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    Francine Schwieder wrote:
    This whole issue is very convoluted and confusing, with new bewilderments (at least bewildering to me) turning up every day.
    I agree completely! I keep hoping Apple will post some kbase articles or update Mac Help to explain more about the defaults & options, but so far the only things I have found are Mac OS X 10.5 Help: Sharing files on your network, Mac OS X 10.5 Help: Setting file-sharing options, & similar "lightweight" instructions which really don't say much more than I can discover by just poking around on my own.
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    Ironically perhaps, my Leopard install was done the same way (using Setup Assistant to copy everything possible from my Tiger clone, which is what I think you mean you used here) & it *did not* cause Spotlight to start indexing the Leopard volume or resolve any of the "unknown user" issues for me. This may have been because I messed around with permissions settings on some of my document files on the Tiger volume long ago when it had an additional standard account (since deleted), so that account's UID or GID could have been attached to a few files.
    Just to muddy the waters even more, I've discovered a file (/Library/Preferences/com.apple.preferences.accounts.plist) that contains an array of four essential properties of every account I've ever deleted since installing Tiger: the "UniqueID" (which appears to be the UID), the short & long user names, & the date deleted. This file apparently is created anew each time an account is deleted (except curiously its creation date is exactly one day later than that of the last account deletion) but it clearly includes the info from previous versions.
    Annoyingly, the Sharing Only user that I added that (I think) caused Spotlight to start indexing did not have the UID (& thus GID) of the deleted account I mentioned above, so the theory that the old account had something to do with it now looks dubious at best.
    The more I study this, the less it makes any sense.

  • Leopard install default permissions: Custom access

    Hello,
    I am a very new mac user. Only bought my first iMac 1 month ago. I really liked the experience so far.
    I recently upgraded to Leopard, and i had no problems at all (no blue screens, or locked users).
    The problem i am going through right now, is about user permissions.
    If i do 'Get Info' of my primary hard drive (the one Leopard is installed on), i get 'You have custom access'. I was expecting 'You can read & write'.
    I've read a lot about these permissions. I tried a lot of things but nothing worked for me.
    To be exact: i am using a leopard installation now, which has been installed from an empty hard drive (before the installation started, i erased everything. Just to make sure there is no conflict with the previous version, tiger).
    I've upgraded from tiger, clean installs, and fresh installs (like the one i am using now) all to get the same situation. I really hope this is not intended.
    Seen as I am a administrator, i really like to control where i want to write.
    I've tried the following:
    -i used Tinkertool System to change ACL's. Finally i got the '/' to show me 'read and write' but i had to change the ACL for every file manually, and at a certain moment i couldn't start my system preferences.
    -i tried the 'chown -R -N'. Didn't change a thing.
    -i tried the 'chown -a# 0 username' (username is babyCreative). Got a message telling me 'No ACL present'...
    Now i am working on a fresh format (so the permissions are still the ones, set by default). I can actually do the work i need to do, but i don't feel very 'okay' with this permissions-situation.
    PS: what really bothers me is the following: when launching leopard for the first time, and checking those permissions IMMEDIATELY, it tells me 'Read and write'. Only later on, all of a sudden, it changes into 'Custom access'. (right now it already is 'read only, yet i am copying files on it)...
    Is there somebody that can help me out with this?
    Any help is much appreciated.
    (excuse my bad english ;))
    Message was edited by: babyCreative

    This might be me turning crazy... but right now... My permissions on the primary drive have changed again... Permissions are now 'Read and write'.
    when i check out the owner of the drive, i see 'root' is the owner of the primary drive.
    I suspected to see my username there...
    Anyway: right now my permissions seem to be okay... Will evaluate this during a few days, and post the outcome here...
    (i feel pretty bad now: been wasting days to this... Only now realizing the following: patience is a virtue... (so far))
    thx for you reply though

  • Permissions: "everyone" doubled, custom access

    I'm having a series of permissions issues but I'll address just the urgent one here. Some files I'm attempting to edit and save won't because of (presumably) a permissions error. Let's call this file index.php. Its permissions look like this:
    I can't save the file when it says custom. And you see how "everyone" appears twice — weird — and I cannot delete either of them. If I change the "Custom" one to "Read & Write" I can save no problem (no longer "custom access"). But I have two dozen files like this identified so far. If I change all the files at the parent folder level, thinking it'll remove the extra "everyone" it just breaks anything I corrected manually.
    The folder permissions look like this
    I tried the resetpassword in the Recovery utility trick with no change.
    Help?!

    I also got "everyone personalized" permissions after restauring a Mavericks system on my Macbook pro.
    I finaly get rid of these permissions by using BatChmod, taking care of some precautions :
    1) one folder at a time, deposited on the Batchmod window (not on the file window)
    2) I usually unchecked the X permission of the all (or staff) group. It is necessary to click on at least one of these boxes. Otherwide Batchmod does nothing.
    I hope that these permissions will not come back in few days !

  • "Custom Access" permissions are locking me out of my own computer!

    "Custom Access" permissions are locking me out of my own computer!
    I have a Mac Book Pro which I can no longer access, due, I believe, to a problem with disk and file permissions. When I attempt to open up the volume, which I am able to put in FireWire target mode and mount on the desktop of a nearby iMac G5, I get an error message saying: "The folder 'MacBook Pro' could not be opened because you do not have sufficient access privileges."
    When I select the 'MacBook Pro' volume and run the Get Info command, I learn that the system, admin, and everyone else groups now have "custom access." I suppose that this newly acquired "custom access" is the reason that the volume icon now appears on the desktop with a lock at its lower left corner! Unfortunately, that lock is keeping me out, so I need help in finding the key back in!
    How all this came about overnight is a mystery wrapped in a enigma similar to my getting pneumonia last summer. Coming down with both diseases would require telling long stories that would only have as their common objective the desire to be cured. I might have gotten the pneumonia at my college reunion; my laptop computer might have caught a cold last night when I ran TechTool Pro and optimized my volume prior to installing its eDrive today. Or, my laptop computer may have choked when I tried to add Disk Warrior to the TechTool Pro eDrive and inadvertently issued some command that resulted in my normal permission settings getting changed and rendering everything on the computer completely inaccessible to me. Who knows for sure? Right now, the cause doesn't matter: finding the solution does.
    I used TechTool Pro to run a series of tests before (and after) I got locked out of my own computer and the volume passed all the tests for volume integrity and file integrity. TechTool also rebuilt the directory, defragged all the files, and optimized the hard drive into one, large, well-organized segment of files --that I unfortunately can no longer access!
    *What I think I need now are some very explicit, error-free, Terminal (UNIX) instructions telling me how to change the permissions on an external FireWire volume called "MacBook Pro" containing Leopard Mac OS X 10.5.7 from its current custom access privileges back to my settings before my poor computer caught this disabling cold.*
    I do have a SuperDuper clone of this MacBook Pro computer on an external FireWire, which I could probably use to relieve me of my pain. But, if at all possible, I would like to call upon that option only as a last resort for two reasons:
    (1) I am not entirely comfortable that the clone is completely reliable at this moment. My last cloning operation last night (before this corrupted permissions problem occurred) did not complete itself, leaving the cloned volume in an unknown, or unstable, state. (2) I would like to use this problem as an opportunity to grow and learn more about the Terminal and UNIX commands.
    I have read the relevant sections in David Pogue's missing manual on Mac OS X Leopard, so I am familiar (in theory) with the concepts he explained regarding ownership, file permissions, the root, Terminal, the CHMOD command, and the SUDO command. It's just that, considering the awesome power of the SuperUser Do command, I'm not all that confident yet that I could write the command(s) that could affect the state of my entire computer hard drive. So, *I'm asking for guidance from a UNIX guru to guide my hand this first time out.*
    I know about the idea of safe booting up as a single user, but since I do have my laptop computer mounted on the desktop of my iMac as a Firewire volume, I would prefer to use Terminal on the iMac to fix the permissions on that mounted volume, called "MacBook Pro".
    *Experts only, please*. Theories about what might have caused this problem would be nice, but what I really need is explicit command line code to cure this one. Since other people may occasionally encounter this problem of being locked out of their own computer, it would be fine with me if some knowledgeable guru wants to use this as a springboard to write a detailed tutorial on the topic along the way to the solution. Thanks.
    bowlerboy_jmb

    {I read that article you sent me to, Baltwo, but it does not seem appropriate, because the disk is not invisible. It's locked! I also went through all the discussions on flag changing you directed to me to look up, and I tried to apply something from there to my situation. But that's not working for me yet either. The topics there seem to be close enough to be relevant to my case, but none are exactly on the mark, and so far they deliver no cigar. Maybe I missed the one thread you had in mind from among the twenty I looked through: I can't be sure. You point it out, if you have one in mind. Anyway, in the absence of anyone providing me with specific Unix code or suggestions about my particular situation, I plunged ahead on my own, and I attempted to write some Unix code that might fix my problem. So far, I've had no success. This posting intersperses my comments along with the lines of Unix code which were displayed on my MacBook Pro during my recent attempts to tinker under the hood. My remarks are contained inside of curly brackets like { and } while the results of my Unix experimenting in Single User Mode on the laptop are presented without curly brackets. These were initially notes to myself, so I'm creating a post around my Unix dabbling to see if it triggers any feedback, corrections, and guidance for moving ahead. I'm stuck right now.}
    date
    Fri Jun 19 17:52:25 EDT 2009
    :/ root# sudo chflags nouchg /
    sudo: can't open /private/etc/sudoers: Permission denied
    :/ root# sendmail: warning: valid_hostname: empty hostname
    sendmail: fatal: unable to use my own hostname
    :/ root# ls -l
    {The screen filled up with rows of file names and their permissions, like...}
    drwxrwxr-x+ 43 root admin 1462 Jun 16 04:36 Applications
    :/ root# exit
    {Nothing happens for quite a while, then...}
    jettisoning kernel linker.
    {...and then several lines of replies fill up the screen, ending in that same loop regarding no such file or directory found, in regards to mDNSResponder. I had tried the {chmod 775 > solution recommended by a user at a web site I Googled to deal with the mDNSResponder problem he had. The chmod 775 / command worked for him, he reported, but it does not succeed for me. The mDNSResponderline continues to repeat itself ad infinitum, so I must force the Mac to turn off by holding down the power button for several seconds. Upon restart in Single User mode, I observe that, as before, "Root device is mounted read-only," so this time I try to amend permissions at the root level with...}
    :/ root# sudo chmod 755 /
    {If I understand what I've just learned about Unix, this tells the Mac to give me permission to do anything, but to give all others permission only to read and execute. Unfortunately, the command fails. The computer again responded with the same lines that it gave me when I had issued the command regarding no user flags, namely:}
    sudo: can't open /private/etc/sudoers: Permission denied
    :/ root# sendmail: warning: valid_hostname: empty hostname
    sendmail: fatal: unable to use my own hostname
    {So, to summarize, I have a MacBook Pro which I am apparently locked out of and cannot change. The hard disk is not invisible: it will appear as an external drive when placed in Target Mode and connected via a Firewire cable to an iMac. I tried to use Terminal on that iMac to change permissions on the MacBook Pro, but permission was denied.
    {So, I have tried to make changes on the MacBook Pro directly. I learned that it will neither start-up under normal circumstances nor via Safe Boot mode. It will, however, start-up under Single User mode. Based on my bleary-eyed crash course in Unix throughout all of last night and early this morning, I did gain some additional understanding about UNIX from some [free online books|http://www.scribd.com/doc/12747795/Made-Easy-Unix-for-Beginners] and articles, especially from a thorough and lucidly written article at Indiana University called [In Unix, how do I change the permissions for a file?|http://kb.iu.edu/data/data/abdb.html]
    {Also, I followed the links to the Apple discussions on user flags, and I cherry picked the most appropriate solutions suggested there to see if they will apply to my situation. However, none quite fit. None have thus far succeeded. I think I now know how to formulate the syntax of Unix commands in regards to modifying permissions, and I'm willing to plow ahead and try things out. But I'm only a rank beginner in this Unix realm, so maybe I'm doing something wrong in that department.
    {It just boggles my mind that someone can inadvertently be locked out of their computer without a way back in, so all I'm asking for is some trouble-shooting guidance to find the key back in. Anyone got it? Is this a problem that can be cured by writing some Unix commands to the system? Or, does the solution lie elsewhere?}
    bowlerboy_jmb

  • Leopard questions - Permissions and "Custom Access"

    I just (reluctantly) upgraded to Leopard (only because I wanted to install the iLife 09 which requires 10.5.6), and then the Permissions fun started. Install went fine and so did the updates. Then I ran Disk Warrior (new directory, repair permissions, check all files/folders).
    I tried to read all the posts I could find, but none dealt with these particular messages, so I thought I'd ask just to make sure....
    2. I have hundreds of "ACL found but not expected", but all of mine are on:
    "System/Library/User Template/" and then there seems to be every language listed.
    2. There are dozens of "permissions differ on" and they all relate to Front Row (should be -rw-r-r, they are lrw-r-r). I haven't even used Front Row....
    Can I safely ignore all of those?
    And, while I'm asking questions:
    Is the "You have custom access" showing in any Get Info window of any application a Leopard "feature" or what does it mean? When I first checked, I found that several apps (part of OS or third party) did not have me, the admin, with "read & write" access. Some had "read only" and some "no access", but all of them showed the custom access. I went through all the apps and made them "read & write", but the custom access remains. These are apps I use quite often such as Graphic Converter.
    Can I ignore the "custom access" or do I need to do something about it?

    2. There are dozens of "permissions differ on" and they all relate to Front Row (should be -rw-r-r, they are lrw-r-r). I haven't even used Front Row....
    Ignore per Mac OS X 10.5- Disk Utility's Repair Disk Permissions messages that you can safely ignore. They are innocuous and will recur each time you repair permissions.
    1. I have hundreds of "ACL found but not expected", but all of mine are on:
    "System/Library/User Template/" and then there seems to be every language listed.
    These are the result of upgrading instead of doing a fresh install of Leopard. They are basically harmless. Such errors in your Home folder can be repaired using the Reset Password selection from the Utilities menu after booting from the Leopard installer DVD. Check the bottom option to Reset ACLs and click the button. Do not make any other selections. This only affects ACLs in the Home folder. To fix all such items means you have to perform an Archive and Install of Leopard then run the 10.5.8 Combo Updater. If you don't want to do all this then just ignore the issue.
    The Custom Access is the result of the custom ACLs and simply means you've upgraded from Tiger which did not support ACLs while Leopard does.
    In fact there are literally thousands of topics and replies on these two topics throughout the Leopard forums that deal specifically with these particular messages which is why Apple issued the above linked tech note.

  • I get unwanted Custom Access on files and cannot remove them.

    Since I installed Snow on my iMac quad core, with 10.6.7 at present, I get irregular custom access permissions applied to files and cannot remove some of them. I have tried Tinker Tools System and sometimes that works and other times it does not.
    I have wiped my hard drive clean and zeroed it and reinstalled the system many times and it seems to make no difference.
    The latest occurance was my users folder had custom access applied to it for no obvious reason. I was able to remove it from the user folder but not able to remove it from my home folder.
    I have worked with Dr. Howard Oakley from Mac User magazine and he was unablr to solve my problem also. He has helped me on others with great success.
    HELP!!!!

    Are you using a machine with only one account (which then of course is the account with administrator authority)?  Rather than completely rebuilding the system, did you use Disk Utility to Repair Disk Permissions?
    To repair permissions, boot from the Install DVD while holding down the ‘C’ key. 
    Select your Language preference and when the OS Install screen appears, go to the Tools menu in the Apple menu at the top of the screen and select Disk Utility. 
    From there click on First Aid and then run Repair Disk Permissions a few times in succession.  There will be some error or warning messages left, but they usually can be ignored. 
    Did that help?

  • Permissions = "Custom access" ? ? ?

    How I got into this mess is a sorry tale, which is hardly worth recreating. What I need is a way OUT of the mess.
    SYMPTOMS:
    My G5 has a 500 GB boot drive, and a 500 GB internal data drive (only data; no OS). The permissions are so bolloxed up that Get-Info shows Sharing & Permissions as follows:
    John (Me) = Custom
    John (Me) = Custom
    (unknown) = Custom
    everyone = Custom
    If I open a Finder window, andlocate the offending drive in Column View -- and click on it -- I get the following dialog: "The folder "DATA" could not be opened because you do not have access privileges."
    If I run Disk Utility, and click on Veryfy Disk, or Repair Disk, the result is "The volume DATA appears to be OK."
    But it's not OK. I cannot get access to the drive, or to the data on it.
    I want to regain access to this data drive. Will someone please tell me, what buttons can I press, to make the devil go away?
    TIA.
    John

    Hi,
    I see you guys have got some insight into the whole "custom access" issue... and I desperately need your advice... in terms I can understand (I'm baffled by a lot of this talk about which permissions I need, etc.).
    Here's the back story...
    1) I had recently updated my Macbook Pro to 10.5.5. And I noticed that my Internet connection would either drop or run glacially slow. Meanwhile, my wife's Macbook ran fine. So I figured something was up.
    2) I tried turning the Airport connection on and off, demanding a new IP, and all that. No luck. Zapping the PRAM once seemed to help. But very shortly we were back to slow speeds. Then I saw something online about trashing many network related preferences and the 'SystemConfiguration" file.
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    Amit Tank | Exchange - MVP | Blog:
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