Skip to main content
added 201 characters in body
Source Link
Yoric
  • 1.3k
  • 9
  • 13

What you need is to change the permissions of the folder containing the file. Better to use the Terminal for that.

First, set the group of the folder to me (the same group as your two users)

chown :me /Users/Shared

Second, set the SetGID bit of the folder

chmod g+s /Users/Shared

Now, when KeyPass will modify the database, it will stick with the group you defined on your folder.

As a bonus, any new file in the Shared folder will automatically belong to that same group.

What you need is to change the permissions of the folder containing the file. Better to use the Terminal for that.

First, set the group of the folder to me (the same group as your two users)

chown :me /Users/Shared

Second, set the SetGID bit of the folder

chmod g+s /Users/Shared

What you need is to change the permissions of the folder containing the file. Better to use the Terminal for that.

First, set the group of the folder to me (the same group as your two users)

chown :me /Users/Shared

Second, set the SetGID bit of the folder

chmod g+s /Users/Shared

Now, when KeyPass will modify the database, it will stick with the group you defined on your folder.

As a bonus, any new file in the Shared folder will automatically belong to that same group.

Source Link
Yoric
  • 1.3k
  • 9
  • 13

What you need is to change the permissions of the folder containing the file. Better to use the Terminal for that.

First, set the group of the folder to me (the same group as your two users)

chown :me /Users/Shared

Second, set the SetGID bit of the folder

chmod g+s /Users/Shared