ACLs (like used by Windows) are even more flexible, but more complicated as well, and the commandline syntax is a PITA (in my humble opinion, of course) In Linux file systems, every entry is owned by exactly one user and exactly one group, and read/write/execution can be allowed for each of them, and for others.There is an equivalent to the Windows "directory" ( D) attribute (but it can't be changed anyway).There is no equivalent to the "executable" ( x) Linux attributes in the DOS/Windows file attributes.There is no equivalent to the Windows "archive" ( A) attribute, either.In Windows file systems, there are "hidden" ( H) and "system" ( S) attributes which don't have an equivalent in Linux there, files are hidden by prepending the name with a dot (.There (sadly) can't be an exact equivalent, since Linux und DOS/Windows use attributes for different purposes, and (as Chathuranga said before) the security model is different:
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