You don't have permission error in Apache in CentOS You don't have permission error in Apache in CentOS apache apache

You don't have permission error in Apache in CentOS


I solved the problem. After meddling with the permission of the system I found out that the user "anjan" who is owner of /home/anjan had read/write/execute permission on /home/anjan but the group "anjan", created when user "anjan" was created didn't have any permission at all.

ls -l /home/

showed

drwx------. 28 anjan anjan 4096 Jan 21 13:19 anjan

so I changed the permission with this command

chmod -R 770 /home/anjanls -l /home/drwxrwx---. 28 anjan anjan 4096 Jan 21 13:19 anjan

i found out under which user my apache is running from this thread. It was running under user "apache"

so I added user "apache" to group "anjan" with this command.

usermod -G anjan,apache apache

after that voila. No more Forbidden error.

P.S. I did everything as the root user.

UPDATEIt seems the provided link is broken now. Heres another one.

Just to be safe(to avoid future broken links), copying the command here. In terminal type -

ps axo user,group,comm | grep apache


This is (for me at least) a doubtful design. It basically means that the Apache user has WRITE access to all that user's files including secrets for example ssh-keys.

Not fun if a cracker attacks apache.

A simple modification would be while running as 'anjan':

chmod -R g-rwx ~ # undo the unsafe -R firstchmod g+rx ~ ~/workspacechmod -R g+rx ~/workspace/mfs

If apache is a member of the 'anjan' group.

My recommendation is to use ACL:s if the filesystem supports that.

Is SELinux running now ? It should be so and if is still the case that the SELinux policy blocks apache's access to workspace/mfs a number of messages from sealert should be evident in var/log/messages.This problem is usually fixed with a judicious usage of setsebol.

Disabling SELinux because something isn't working and recommending that method is njaa....

The original problem is that apache runs as itself and because of that is slumped in the other category when calculating permissions.

chmod o+rx ~anjan/ ~anjan/workspace/ ~anjan/workspace/mfs

should be enough.

CentOS 6 is a free (as in free beer) version of RedHat Enterprise Linux and as such RedHat's document https://access.redhat.com/site/documentation/en-US/Red_Hat_Enterprise_Linux/6/html/Managing_Confined_Services/ is a necessity.