Linux: Give Write permission to another user [closed] - linux

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Closed 8 years ago.
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I have a "user1" main user. its home directory is /home/user1/
I want to give write permission to my another user "user2" to inside a specific folder like "/home/user1/www/download"
How I can do it?

sudo chmod -R ugo+w /home/user1/www/download

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My raspberry Pi Won't let me log in as a superuser [closed]

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Closed last year.
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Here's the code I'm Using:
'''pi#raspberrypi:~ $ su
'''
And here's what I'm getting:
'''Password:
su: Authentication failure
'''
su implies that you know the root password:
Try sudo -i instead.

how to remove accidentally created ~ in my other linux directory while using wq~ in vi [closed]

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Closed 3 years ago.
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when I exit my vim, I accidentally typed wq~, and it created my home directory in my other linux directory which I am working on, anyway to remove it?
Quote it
rm '~'
You can also rename it to the name you want:
mv '~' correctname

Location of .bashrc in linux [closed]

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Closed 6 years ago.
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I made some changes in the .bashrc file some time ago.
In which directory is this file supposed to be located exactly?
In your home directory:
# ls -la ~

In Linux, how to unlink a softlink from the actual file if both have same names [closed]

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Closed 9 years ago.
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I have a softlink mistakenly created as this:
/backup_rmbeir1 -> /backup_rmbeir1
I want to delete the soft link now. If I do :
rm /backup_rmbeir1
will this delete the link, or the actual file ? If not what will be the best way to achieve this ? I tried the unlink command but didn't help.
The soft link is /backup/backup_rmbeir1, so delete that by rm /backup/backup_rmbeir1.

Ubuntu symbolic link going to source location when up folder [closed]

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Closed 7 years ago.
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The problem is the following - I`ve created a symbolic link to a folder /home/user1/folder1 in /home/user2/. When user2 follows this link, he comes to the /home/user1/folder1, but when he goes up folder he comes to /home/user1/ not /home/user2/. Is it possible to change this behavior?
Thanks. Solved by mount --bind

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