Skip to content

Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.

@jartaud
Forked from muhozi/Laravel-permission.md
Created March 9, 2021 16:56
Show Gist options
  • Star 0 You must be signed in to star a gist
  • Fork 0 You must be signed in to fork a gist
  • Save jartaud/231bf61c3be126ef4af647512184f6e4 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Save jartaud/231bf61c3be126ef4af647512184f6e4 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
Setting proper permissions to laravel directory

Setting up proper permissions to a laravel directory

There are basically two ways to setup your ownership and permissions. Either you give yourself ownership or you make the webserver the owner of all files.

Webserver as owner (the way most people do it):

Assuming www-data is your webserver user.

sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /path/to/your/laravel/root/directory

f you do that, the webserver owns all the files, and is also the group, and you will have some problems uploading files or working with files via FTP, because your FTP client will be logged in as you, not your webserver, so add your user to the webserver user group:

sudo usermod -a -G www-data ubuntu

Of course, this assumes your webserver is running as www-data (the Homestead default), and your user is ubuntu (it's vagrant if you are using Homestead).

Then you set all your directories to 755 and your files to 644...

SET file permissions

sudo find /path/to/your/laravel/root/directory -type f -exec chmod 644 {} \;

SET directory permissions

sudo find /path/to/your/laravel/root/directory -type d -exec chmod 755 {} \;

Your user as owner

I prefer to own all the directories and files (it makes working with everything much easier), so I do:

sudo chown -R my-user:www-data /path/to/your/laravel/root/directory

Then I give both myself and the webserver permissions:

sudo find /path/to/your/laravel/root/directory -type f -exec chmod 664 {} \; 
sudo find /path/to/your/laravel/root/directory -type d -exec chmod 775 {} \;

Then give the webserver the rights to read and write to storage and cache

Whichever way you set it up, then you need to give read and write permissions to the webserver for storage, cache and any other directories the webserver needs to upload or write too (depending on your situation), so run the commands from bashy above :

sudo chgrp -R www-data storage bootstrap/cache
sudo chmod -R ug+rwx storage bootstrap/cache

Source: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/30639174/file-permissions-for-laravel-5-and-others

Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment