I\'m trying to create a directory on my server using PHP with the command:
mkdir(\"test\", 0777);
But it doesn\'t give full permissions, on
For those who tried
mkdir('path', 777);
and it did not work.
It is because, apparently, the 0 preceding the file mode is very important which tells chmod to interpret the passed number as an Octal instead of a decimal.
Reference
Ps. This is not a solution to the question but only an add-on to the accepted anwser
The creation of files and directories is affected by the setting of umask. You can create files with a particular set of permissions by manipulating umask as follows :-
$old = umask(0);
mkdir("test", 0777);
umask($old);
Avoid using this function in multithreaded webservers. It is better to change the file permissions with chmod() after creating the file.
Example:
$dir = "test";
$permit = 0777;
mkdir($dir);
chmod($dir, $permit);
The mode is modified by your current umask
, which is 022
in this case.
The way the umask
works is a subtractive one. You take the initial permission given to mkdir
and subtract the umask
to get the actual permission:
0777
- 0022
======
0755 = rwxr-xr-x.
If you don't want this to happen, you need to set your umask
temporarily to zero so it has no effect. You can do this with the following snippet:
$oldmask = umask(0);
mkdir("test", 0777);
umask($oldmask);
The first line changes the umask
to zero while storing the previous one into $oldmask
. The second line makes the directory using the desired permissions and (now irrelevant) umask
. The third line restores the umask
to what it was originally.
See the PHP doco for umask and mkdir for more details.
Probably, your umask is set to exclude those
In my case, I have to use the following way for centos7, which solved the problem
$oldmask = umask(000);//it will set the new umask and returns the old one
mkdir("test", 0777);
umask($oldmask);//reset the old umask
More details can be found at https://www.php.net/manual/en/function.umask.php