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Original Question
Make dir-perm the cwd. How?Asked by Anonymous
Make dir-perm the cwd. How ___________________________________
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To make the directory permission the current working directory (cwd) in Linux, you can use the "chmod" command. Here are the steps:
1. Open the terminal and navigate to the directory you want to set as the cwd.
2. Use the "chmod" command with the "u+x" option to add execute permission to the directory for the current user. For example, if the directory is named "mydir", the command would be:
chmod u+x mydir
3. Use the "cd" command to change the current working directory to the directory you just modified. For example:
cd mydir
4. Verify that the directory permission is now the current working directory by using the "pwd" command. For example:
pwd
This should display the full path of the directory you just set as the cwd.
1. Open the terminal and navigate to the directory you want to set as the cwd.
2. Use the "chmod" command with the "u+x" option to add execute permission to the directory for the current user. For example, if the directory is named "mydir", the command would be:
chmod u+x mydir
3. Use the "cd" command to change the current working directory to the directory you just modified. For example:
cd mydir
4. Verify that the directory permission is now the current working directory by using the "pwd" command. For example:
pwd
This should display the full path of the directory you just set as the cwd.
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