tag:help-archives.hannonhill.com,2010-02-09:/discussions/how-do-i/77-maintain-linux-permissions-on-published-filesfoldersCascade CMS: Discussion 2011-04-07T22:12:02Ztag:help-archives.hannonhill.com,2010-02-09:Comment/23175102010-07-20T21:47:05Z2010-07-20T21:47:05ZMaintain Linux permissions on published files/folders<div><p>First, can you tell me if you're using FTP or SFTP to send the
files to the Linux server?</p>
<p>Cascade 6.7, the latest version, respects any umask specified
for the user connecting to the remote server when creating files
but only when using SFTP Transports. Previous versions had an issue
similar to what you're describing where only the user would have
write permissions to the file.</p></div>Bradley Wagnertag:help-archives.hannonhill.com,2010-02-09:Comment/23175102010-07-21T18:52:58Z2010-07-21T18:53:02ZMaintain Linux permissions on published files/folders<div><p>Thank you for the information, Bradley!</p>
<p>We are using SFTP to send the files to the Linux server.</p>
<p>I just talked with the people who are managing Cascade for us
and we are running version Cascade is 6.4.3. They plan to do an
upgrade sometime soon to version 6.7.</p></div>Alextag:help-archives.hannonhill.com,2010-02-09:Comment/23175102010-07-21T18:56:42Z2010-07-21T18:56:42ZMaintain Linux permissions on published files/folders<div><p>Great, the best solution will be to upgrade to that version and
set a <a href=
"http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/understanding-linux-unix-umask-value-usage.html">
umask</a> for the user connecting to the server that creates the
files with the correct permissions. Cascade should respect the
umask settings.</p></div>Bradley Wagner