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How do I get emacs to write to read-only files automatically?

I am finding myself editing a lot of files that are read-only. I usually hit Cx Cq to call toggle-read-only . Then I hit Cx Cs to save and get,

File foo.txt is write-protected; try to save anyway? (y or n)

After hitting y , the file is saved and the permissions on the file remain read-only.

Is there a way to shorten this process and make it so that simply saving a file with Cx Cs does the whole thing without prompting? Should I look into inserting chmod in before-save-hook and after-save-hook or is there a better way?

Adding a call to chmod in before-save-hook would be clean way to accomplish this. There isn't any setting you can change to avoid the permissions check.

Based on the follow-up question, it sounds like you'd like the files to be changed to writable by you automatically upon opening. This code does the trick:

(defun change-file-permissions-to-writable ()
  "to be run from find-file-hook, change write permissions"
  (when (not (file-writable-p buffer-file-name))
    (chmod buffer-file-name (file-modes-symbolic-to-number "u+w" (nth 8 (file-attributes buffer-file-name))))
    (if (not (file-writable-p buffer-file-name))
        (message "Unable to make file writable."))))

(add-hook 'find-file-hook 'change-file-permissions-to-writable)

Note: When I tested it on my Windows machine, the file permissions didn't show up until I tried to save the buffer, but it worked as expected. I personally feel uneasy about this customization, but it's your Emacs. :)

I agree with Trey that universally doing a chmod on write is risky -- read-only files are read-only for a reason, IMHO. Here's a way to specifically override things on a per-buffer basis. It's not ideal in that it overrides file-writable-p for the life of the buffer (or at least until you toggle my-override-mode-on-save back to nil), but it makes you make a conscious decision on a file-by-file basis (sort-of; it's really a buffer-by-buffer basis, which is fairly similar). Of course since you're looking to automatically toggle the read-only flag when the file is visited, you might not be interested in this distinction. Still, here it is; enjoy it or ignore it as you will.

(make-variable-buffer-local
 (defvar my-override-mode-on-save nil
   "Can be set to automatically ignore read-only mode of a file when saving."))

(defadvice file-writable-p (around my-overide-file-writeable-p act)
  "override file-writable-p if `my-override-mode-on-save' is set."
  (setq ad-return-value (or
                         my-override-mode-on-save
                         ad-do-it)))

(defun my-override-toggle-read-only ()
  "Toggle buffer's read-only status, keeping `my-override-mode-on-save' in sync."
  (interactive)
  (setq my-override-mode-on-save (not my-override-mode-on-save))
  (toggle-read-only))

PS Thanks to Trey for the ad-return-value pointer in the other SO question .

Since I find it useful to be constantly reminded that I am about to edit a file I do not have permissions to, when I open a file in a buffer I want to force myself to proactively make the buffer writable wit Cx q . Opening it with tramp by hand however is quite tedious so I advise save-buffer to prompt me for password if it fails to write. I totally recommend you put this snippet in your .emacs

(defadvice save-buffer (around save-buffer-as-root-around activate)
  "Use sudo to save the current buffer."
  (interactive "p")
  (if (and (buffer-file-name) (not (file-writable-p (buffer-file-name))))
      (let ((buffer-file-name (format "/sudo::%s" buffer-file-name)))
    ad-do-it)
    ad-do-it))

For a reason I could no determine the Trey Jackson solution does not work on my gnu emacs 25.2 under windows: the file-modes-rights-to-number called from file-modes-rights-to-number fails. If someone is stuck with the same problem he could use a less elegant but working solution replace block :

(chmod buffer-file-name (file-modes-symbolic-to-number "u+w" (nth 8 (file-attributes buffer-file-name))))

with block :

(cond ((or (eq system-type 'ms-dos) (eq system-type 'windows-nt))
              (progn
                (shell-command-to-string (concat "attrib -R " (buffer-file-name (current-buffer))))
                (message "Setting file and buffer to writeable (%s style)" system-type)
              ))
           ((eq system-type 'gnu/linux)
              (progn
              (shell-command-to-string (concat "chmod u+w " (buffer-file-name (current-buffer))))
              (message "Setting file and buffer to writeable (%s style)" system-type)
             ))
           (t (message "file permission change not handle for OS %s" system-type))               
)

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