After stumbling upon both a question which mentioned "I did chmod 777
"1 and an answer which recommended "do chmod 777
" yesterday I did a basic search and found quite a few answers which recommend this practice—some with a disturbing amount of upvotes.
This is especially dangerous since many of these answers revolve around web development, and recommendations such as "you need to run chmod -R 777 /var/www/wordpress
are not uncommon. I've had to clean up after an unwise chmod more than once, both through Stack Overflow answers, as well as outside of that.
Therefore I tried to fix this at least a little bit by leaving a comment on those answers. I felt that an edit would be inappropriate as it would change the meaning of the post too much (you can't always just change this to chmod 755
; usually the solution is to set the user
and/or group
, depending on the OP's situation/problem). In addition, a comment would hopefully be seen by the author of the answer, who would hopefully be educated by it.
This is the sort of comment that should have been created when the answer was first posted, but for whatever reason wasn't.
Adding these comments was, apparently, not appreciated by at least some moderators. To quote:
You did just carpet-bomb [pun intended? probably not] our site with 154 comments in a very short amount of time. Please don't do that. If there is a wider technological issue like this, bring it to Meta first, so the community can help figure out a response.
And subsequently, these comments were deleted.2
Yes, 154 are quite a few comments. But Stack Overflow has a whopping 18.3 million answers, so on that scale, it's really not that much. And if a comment pointing out a mistake on one answers is appropriate, then why not on 154 answers with the same mistake?
Without going into too much detail on my feelings about having >2 hours of what I see as constructive and meaningful, yet boring and thankless, work undone at the press of a button, I am bringing this to meta as suggested: what should we do about this?
Leaving it be doesn't strike me as a very appealing option.
This sort of stuff is a lot more dangerous than, for example, the "malicious sudo rm -rf" on which there are currently two meta questions and a reddit thread. Instead of clobbering all your files, it's much more insidious and the consequences may go undetected for weeks, months, and even years.
It doesn't just harm whoever runs it; compromised machines send out spam, malware, etc. and may (and have!) cause data leaks.
In some scenarios it may indeed clobber a significant part of your files; an unwise
rm -rf
or maliciousrm -rf
by another user will now remove those files.People read these Stack Overflow answers every day; even old ones. I see them being referenced in Stack Overflow questions mentioning "I did chmod 777 as recommended here".
The good folks at Server Fault have a more comprehensive list of why this is bad: Why is “chmod -R 777 /” destructive? (many of these issues also apply to
chmod 777
in general, and not just/
).
Editing also doesn't strike me as the best option, as it changes too much from the original intent, and doesn't (try to) educate the author about the mistake, but it's an option.
Adding a new answer doesn't "fix" anything. The answers will still be there. Upvoted. Accepted. Above my "good one". It will also not inform the author of the answer that they did something pretty silly.
Leaving a comment still strikes me as the best option, for the reasons outlined above: it doesn't change the meaning, it (tries to) educate the author, and it warns visitors. I should point out, that in the short time that the comments were there, a few of the authors replied with "Oops, sorry, I'll go fix it!" so they did have effect and were useful!
Footnotes
1 For those not familiar with Unix-y systems, this will give full read and write permissions to everyone on the system. A very bad idea. To be clear, there is practically never a reason to do this. Things like the /tmp
directory are an exception, and even then you need to make sure you set the sticky bit to make it secure. In fact, /tmp
and similar directories in combination with the sticky bit is the only valid use case I can think of; although I'm sure someone will point out another exceedingly rare use case in the comments soon.
2 To provide a brief clarification to @Shog9's response to this in his answer:
You obviously didn't read any of the answers you were commenting on, as evidenced by this same cookie-cutter comment left on answers that already urged readers not to use
chmod 777
Which is not true. I did read all of those answers, and probably skipped more than commented on. Although it's entirely possible I misunderstood a few (it's not possible for me to go back and check since it's deleted).
I don't want to go on about these comments though − that's not really why posted this thread − what's done is done and move on. But Shog9's answer is, unfortunately, rather wrong on this...
chmod 777
is downright dangerous. No, it is not good advice ever. It may be convenient, but it isn't good. And people here are not all experienced enough to recognize that there is danger.chmod 777
(I used to collect examples on rwxrwxrwx.net until I got bored of it). Yeah, usually crappy PHP crap (the usual...), but people read it and it sticks. And while we can't fix all of the world, we can fix our tiny corner, at least a little bit. A small improvement is sill ... an improvement...