Gecko Drwxrxrx Updated Instant

gecko$ chmod 755 /path/to/directory To apply recursively to all subdirectories (but not files):

Backup log for gecko-host: updating permissions for ~/.mozilla/firefox/xxxx.default/ old: drwx------ (700) new: drwxrxrx (755) -> actually means drwxr-xr-x Permissions updated. Why would Firefox update directory permissions? Occasionally, Firefox’s maintenance service or an add-on modifies access rights to allow shared usage between processes. If your server is named gecko , and you run a CMS like WordPress, plugin updates sometimes recursively change folder permissions to 755 . A cron job might log: gecko drwxrxrx updated

gecko$ find /path/to/directory -type d -exec chmod 755 {} \; gecko$ ls -ld /path/to/directory Now you should see: drwxr-xr-x — not drwxrxrx . Step 4: Log the update If you’re auditing, write to syslog: gecko$ chmod 755 /path/to/directory To apply recursively to

gecko kernel: type=1400 audit(1234567890.123:4): item=1 name="/volume1/web/" inode=123 dev=08:01 mode=040755 ouid=0 ogid=0 rdev=00:00 nametype=CREAT cap_fp=0000000000000000 cap_fi=0000000000000000 cap_fe=0 cap_fver=0 If you search logs for “updated” with grep updated /var/log/messages , you might see a line related to a directory mode change from drwxr-xr-x to drwxrwxrwx , but due to log formatting bugs, it truncates to drwxrxrx . Your Firefox profile directory (often named something like xxxx.default ) contains folders like storage/ , datareporting/ , etc. A system backup script could output: If your server is named gecko , and