Python module os.chmod(file, 664) does not change the permission to rw-rw-r-- but -w--wx----

Found this on a different forum

If you're wondering why that leading zero is important, it's because permissions are set as an octal integer, and Python automagically treats any integer with a leading zero as octal. So os.chmod("file", 484) (in decimal) would give the same result.

What you are doing is passing 664 which in octal is 1230

In your case you would need

os.chmod("/tmp/test_file", 436)

[Update] Note, for Python 3 you have prefix with 0o (zero oh). E.G, 0o666


So for people who want semantics similar to:

$ chmod 755 somefile

Use:

$ python -c "import os; os.chmod('somefile', 0o755)"

If your Python is older than 2.6:

$ python -c "import os; os.chmod('somefile', 0755)"

leading 0 means this is octal constant, not the decimal one. and you need an octal to change file mode.

permissions are a bit mask, for example, rwxrwx--- is 111111000 in binary, and it's very easy to group bits by 3 to convert to the octal, than calculate the decimal representation.

0644 (octal) is 0.110.100.100 in binary (i've added dots for readability), or, as you may calculate, 420 in decimal.