5

Drupal automatically changes the directory permissions of sites/default to 555 (i.e. read-only), which means that if I'm editing sites/default/settings.php, even if I've set the permissions for that file to read/write (which it again reverts on a page load), PhpStorm still gives me a permission denied error on the swap file it's attempting to create in the same directory.

  • Is there a more flexible way to update settings (especially on a dev machine) other than manually setting the file and directory permissions every time you need to edit those files?
  • Do I just have to do it via sudo?
  • Can I disable permissions checking for a specific environment?

2 Answers 2

7

If you are on Drupal 8, you can configure settings.php to include a settings.local.php with a simple environment check (to ensure you are running a local env).

In that file, you can add this:

$settings['skip_permissions_hardening'] = TRUE;

This will allow you to open and write to settings.php without it being locked back down.

2
  • Thanks - I'll add that this is included in the default settings of example.settings.local.php Commented Feb 5, 2017 at 15:19
  • along with this, I needed to make sure the owner was myself. example: sudo chown -R username rootdir Commented Feb 18, 2020 at 22:43
-3

Filezilla allowed me to change the permissions from the the Filezilla console when cpanel could not Drupal Docs

1
  • This isn't a question about cpanel permissions. Commented Feb 18, 2020 at 22:38

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