Saturday, February 14, 2026

How Octal Permissions Work in Linux (With Examples)

Understanding Octal Permissions in Linux

Linux file permissions are often represented in two ways:

1. Symbolic notation → e.g., rwxr-xr--

2. Octal (numeric) notation → e.g., 754

Octal notation is simply a numeric shorthand for symbolic permissions.

1. Symbolic Permissions (The Long Form)

Linux permissions operate on three categories:


And each category can have these three permission types:

Example:

rwx r-x r--

Breaks down as:


2. The Numeric (Octal) System

For each of the permissions (r, w, x), Linux assigns a numeric value:

To convert symbolic to octal, add the values:

Examples:

  • rwx → 4 + 2 + 1 → 7
  • rw- → 4 + 2 + 0 → 6
  • r-x → 4 + 0 + 1 → 5
  • r-- → 4 + 0 + 0 → 4
  • --- → 0 + 0 + 0 → 0

3. Putting It Together: Octal Notation

A full permission set requires 3 octal digits (user, group, others):

  • (user)(group)(others)

Example:

  • 754

Breaks down to:

  • 7 = rwx (owner)
  • 5 = r-x (group)
  • 4 = r-- (others)

Symbolically:

Rwx r-x r--

4. Common Octal Permission Values

For Files

For Directories

5. Special Bits (Setuid, Setgid, Sticky Bit)

Sometimes you’ll see 4 digits (e.g., 4755).

The first digit is for special permissions:

Examples:

  • 4755 → setuid bit + rwx r-x r-x
  • 1777 → sticky bit + rwx rwx rwx (used on /tmp)

6. Setting Permissions with chmod

Use octal notation directly:

1. chmod 754 filename 

2. chmod 700 private_script.sh

3. chmod 1777 /shared/tmp

7. Why Use Octal Instead of Symbolic?

Octal is:

  • faster (chmod 755 file)
  • unambiguous
  • very common in scripts and system admin work

Symbolic mode is better for tweaking permissions:

1. chmod g+w file

2. chmod o-rwx file 

But octal mode is perfect for resetting permissions.

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