How to create directory with right permissions using C on Posix

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Solution 1

As Eric says, umask is the complement of the actual permission mode you get. So instead of passing mask itself to mkdir(), you should pass 0777-mask to mkdir().

Solution 2

You seem to be misunderstanding what umask is used for. It sets/retrieves the process's file mode creation mask, which in turn is used to turn off bits in the file mode you specify in calls like mkdir, like this (pseduo-code):

real_mode = requested_mode & ~umask

So in your code, since you pass in the value of the umask itself, you end up specifying permissions as zero, which is exactly what you see.

Instead, you should specify the permissions you want in the call to mkdir, like this:

mkdir("trial", 0755)

Solution 3

Disclaimer: I extracted this answer from the OPs question. Answers should not be contained in the question itself.


Answer provided by yasar:

This is the working solution for me:

int main(int argc, const char *argv[])
{
    if (mkdir("trial",0777) == -1) {
        perror(argv[0]);
        exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
    }
    return 0;
}

Setting right permissions according to umask is automatically handled. So I only needed to call mkdir with full permissions, and that gets chopped according to current umask.

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yasar
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yasar

I am an economics student, who enjoys programming.

Updated on August 20, 2021

Comments

  • yasar
    yasar almost 3 years

    I am trying to write a simple C program that creates directories (a mkdir clone.). This is what I have so far:

    #include <stdlib.h>
    #include <sys/stat.h> // mkdir
    #include <stdio.h> // perror
    
    mode_t getumask()
    {
        mode_t mask = umask(0);
        umask (mask);
        return mask;
    }
    
    int main(int argc, const char *argv[])
    {
        mode_t mask = getumask();
        printf("%i",mask);
    
        if (mkdir("trial",mask) == -1) {
            perror(argv[0]);
            exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
        }
        return 0;
    }
    

    This code creates directory with d--------- but I want it to create it with drwxr-xr-x like mkdir do? What am I doing wrong here?

  • Crend King
    Crend King about 12 years
    I think yasar11732 wants to incorporate the current user's umask setting, not hard coding 0755. Just my guess.
  • yasar
    yasar about 12 years
    Thanks, I indeed wanted to incorporate umask to get correct permission. I changed 0777-mask to 0777 & ~mask though. :)
  • yasar
    yasar about 12 years
    I actually needn't use umask directly, since appearantly, mkdir already does that. So using 0777 results in a directory with drwxr-xr-x when my umask is 022
  • Daniel Roethlisberger
    Daniel Roethlisberger about 12 years
    There is normally no need to mess with the user's umask in an application; libc already does that for you in mkdir(). So hardcoding 0755 or 0775 is perfectly fine.
  • Crend King
    Crend King about 12 years
    What if I umask 0? Hardcoding 0755 will make it 0755 instead of desired 0777. Maybe hardcoding 0777 is more correct, as yasar11732 commented, but it is not harmful to 0777 & ~mask.
  • airdas
    airdas over 6 years
    I'm trying to create directories with drwxrwxr-x permissions, if I've understood the mkdir docs correctly then 0775 should give that but it doesn't. Do I need to be su?