How to apply recursively chmod directories without affecting files?

After I apply chmod -R to a directory, permissions are changed for everything within (files and directories). How can I add execute/search (x) permissions to directories without modifying the files?

Answers:

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Method 1

You can use find.

find ./ -type d -execdir chmod 750 {} +

Where 750 is the mode you’d like to apply and “./” is the directory you will recursively search.

EDIT: Thanks to @Gilles and find(1), I’ve revised this for additional security and performance.

Method 2

In this particular case you can use X instead of x which only adds the bits to directories or files which already have the executable bit set for some user (i.e. chmod -R +X my_dir).

In general (e.g. if you wanted to make all directories readable without affecting the files), you could either use find with -type d or if you’re using zsh (or bash 4 with shopt -s globstar) the **/ glob (both without passing the -R flag to chmod).


All methods was sourced from stackoverflow.com or stackexchange.com, is licensed under cc by-sa 2.5, cc by-sa 3.0 and cc by-sa 4.0

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