# slskd-permissions-fixer This is a bash script meant to look at a certain directory and scan its contents according to a set interval. Then, when it detects new files, it changes their permissions and ownership automatically, leaving a log entry in the journal. ## Install To quickstart: 1. `git clone https://git.donaberger.xyz/mitch/slskd-permissions-fixer` 2. `cd slskd-permissions-fixer/` 3. `sudo chmod +x slskd-permissions-fixer.sh && sudo chmod +x install-as-systemd.sh` Then, either... 4a. Run the script alone (does not run in background): `/bin/bash slskd-permissions-fixer.sh` 4b. Install it as a `systemd` module: `/bin/bash install-as-systemd.sh` 4c. Copy `slskd-permissions-fixer.system` to `/etc/systemd/users/slskd-permissions-fixer.system` and then run `sudo systemctl daemon-reload && sudo systemctl status slskd-permissions-fixer` ## Okay, but, why write a script for this? Because the Docker container for `slskd` does not seem to respect the global Docker flags for active user/guid. So, I did the next best thing, and just had a script run as root and wait for newly downloaded files. Then it updates them according to the parameters set. Also, I am lazy. 🤷