sudo is telling the computer to do this with root privileges.
chmod sets permissions.
Each digit of that three-digit number corresponds to the owner, the group, and other users, respectively. It’s 0–7, where 0 means no access and 7 means access to read, write, and execute. So 077 is the exact inverse of 700, where 077 means “the owner cannot access their own files, but everyone else can read, write, and execute them”. Corresponding 700 to asexuals is joking that nobody but the owner can even so much as touch the files.
/ is the root directory, i.e. the very top of the filesystem.
Just wait until you need to figure out what you want when you want something other than all or none for those permissions. 4 is read, 2 is write, 1 is execute. Add them up to get what you want for each owner/group/other portion.
sudo
is telling the computer to do this with root privileges.chmod
sets permissions.700
to asexuals is joking that nobody but the owner can even so much as touch the files./
is the root directory, i.e. the very top of the filesystem.This is the best comment I’ve come across in a while. Thank you so much for breaking it down so well.
Just wait until you need to figure out what you want when you want something other than all or none for those permissions. 4 is read, 2 is write, 1 is execute. Add them up to get what you want for each owner/group/other portion.
Thank you a lot.
The funny words have a useful meaning :D