Linux: How to Change File Permissions as Readonly

This post will guide you how to set readonly permmissions for all files under a specific directory in your Linux server. How to change file permission as read only for specific files under a directory in Linux.

You can use chmod command to change file permission as readonly for all files on CentOS/RHEL/Ubuntu/Unix/MacOS system.

Set Readonly Permissions for All Files


To set readonly permissions for all files in your current directory, just type the following command:

# chmod 0444 ./*

To set readonly permission for all files in /root directory, type:

# chmod 0444 /root/*

To set readonly permissions for all .txt files in /var/log/html directory, type:

# chmod 0444 /var/log/html/*.txt

To set readonly permissions for all files only under /var/log/html directory and sub-directories, type:

# find /var/log/html/ -type f -iname "*" -print0 | xargs -I {} -0 chmod 0444 {}

Set Readonly Permissions For Directoreis Only


To set readonly permission for a specific directory, such as: set the current directory in readonly mode, type:

# chmod 0444 ./

To set readonly permission for /var/log/html/ directory only, type:

# chmod 0444 /var/log/html/

To set readonly permissions for all files and sub-directories under /var/log/html directory, type:

# chmod 0444 -R /var/log/html/

To set readonly permissions for all directories and sub-directories only under /var/log/html directory, type:

# find /var/log/html/ -type d -print0 | xargs -0 -I {} chmod 0444 {}

 

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