Content-type: text/html Man page of acl_totext

acl_totext

Section: File Access Control Library Functions (3SEC)
Updated: 6 Feb 2006
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NAME

acl_totext, acl_fromtext - convert internal representation to or from external representation  

SYNOPSIS

cc [ flag... ] file... -lsec [ library... ]
#include <sys/acl.h>

char *acl_totext(acl_t *aclp, int flags);

int acl_fromtext(char *acltextp, acl_t **aclp);  

DESCRIPTION

The acl_totext() function converts an internal ACL representation pointed to by aclp into an external ACL representation. The memory for the external text string is obtained using malloc(3C). The caller is responsible for freeing the memory upon completion.

The format of the external ACL is controlled by the flags argument. Values for flags are constructed by a bitwise-inclusive-OR of flags from the following list, defined in <sys/acl.h>.

ACL_COMPACT_FMT For NFSv4 ACLs, the ACL entries will be formatted using the compact ACL format detailed in ls(1) for the -V option.

ACL_APPEND_ID Append the uid or gid for additional user or group entries. This flag is used to construt ACL entries in a manner that is suitable for archive utilities such as tar(1). When the ACL is translated from the external format to internal representation using acl_fromtext(), the appended ID will be used to populate the uid or gid field of the ACL entry when the user or group name does not exist on the host system. The appended id will be ignored when the user or group name does exist on the system.

The acl_fromtext() function converts an external ACL representation pointed to by acltextp into an internal ACL representation. The memory for the list of ACL entries is obtained using malloc(3C). The caller is responsible for freeing the memory upon completion. Depending on type of ACLs a file system supports, one of two external external representations are possible. For POSIX draft file systems such as ufs, the external representation is described in acltotext(3SEC). The external ACL representation For NFSv4-style ACLs is detailed as follows.

Each acl_entry contains one ACL entry. The external representation of an ACL entry contains three, four or five colon separated fields. The first field contains the ACL entry type. The entry type keywords are defined as:

owner@ This ACL entry with no UID specified in the ACL entry field specifies the access granted to the owner of the object.

group@ This ACL entry with no GID specified in the ACL entry field specifies the access granted to the owning group of the object.

everyone@ This ACL entry specifies the access granted to any user or group that does not match any previous ACL entry.

user This ACL entry with a UID specifies the access granted to a additional user of the object.

group This ACL entry with a GID specifies the access granted to a additional group of the object.

The second field contains the ACL entry ID, and is used only for user or group ACL entries. This field is not used for owner@, group@, or everyone@ entries.

uid This field contains a user-name or user-ID. If the user-name cannot be resolved to a UID, then the entry is assumed to be a numeric UID.

gid This field contains a group-name or group-ID. If the group-name can't be resolved to a GID, then the entry is assumed to be a numeric GID.

The third field contains the discretionary access permissions. The format of the permissions depends on whether ACL_COMPACT_FMT is specified. When the flags field does not request ACL_COMPACT_FMT, the following format is used with a forward slash (/) separating the permissions.

add_file Add a file to a directory.

add_subdirectory Add a subdirectory.

append Append data.

delete Delete.

delete_child Delete child.

execute Execute permission.

list_directory List a directory.

read_acl Read ACL.

read_data Read permission.

read_attributes Read attributes.

read_xattr Read named attributes.

synchronize Synchronize.

write_acl Write ACL.

write_attributes Write attributes.

write_data Write permission.

write_owner Write owner.

write_xattr Write named attributes.

This format allows permissions to be specified as, for example: read_data/read_xattr/read_attributes.

When ACL_COMPACT_FMT is specified, the permissions consist of 14 unique letters. A hyphen (-) character is used to indicate that the permission at that position is not specified.

a read attributes

A write attributes

c read ACL

C write ACL

d delete

D delete child

o write owner

p append

r read_data

R read named attributes

s synchronize

w write_data

W write named attributes

x execute

This format allows compact permissions to be represented as, for example: rw--d-a-------

The fourth field is optional when ACL_COMPACT_FMT is not specified, in which case the field will be present only when the ACL entry has inheritance flags set. The following is the list of inheritance flags separated by a slash (/) character.

dir_inherit ACE_DIRECTORY_INHERIT_ACE

file_inherit ACE_FILE_INHERIT_ACE

inherit_only ACE_INHERIT_ONLY_ACE

no_propagate ACE_NO_PROPAGATE_INHERIT_ACE

When ACL_COMPACT_FMT is specified the inheritance will always be present and is represented as positional arguments. A hyphen (-) character is used to indicate that the inheritance flag at that position is not specified.

d dir_inherit

f file_inherit

F failed access (not currently supported)

i inherit_only

n no_propagate

S successful access (not currently supported)

The fifth field contains the type of the ACE (allow or deny):

allow The mask specified in field three should be allowed.

deny The mask specified in field three should be denied.

 

RETURN VALUES

Upon successful completion, the acl_totext() function returns a pointer to a text string. Otherwise, it returns NULL.

Upon successful completion, the acl_fromtext() function returns 0. Otherwise, the return value is set to one of the following:

EACL_FIELD_NOT_BLANK A field that should be blank is not blank.

EACL_FLAGS_ERROR An invalid ACL flag was specified.

EACL_INHERIT_ERROR An invalid inheritance field was specified.

EACL_INVALID_ACCESS_TYPE An invalid access type was specified.

EACL_INVALID_STR The string is NULL.

EACL_INVALID_USER_GROUP The required user or group name not found.

EACL_MISSING_FIELDS The ACL needs more fields to be specified.

EACL_PERM_MASK_ERROR The permission mask is invalid.

EACL_UNKNOWN_DATA Unknown data was found in the ACL.

 

EXAMPLES

Example 1: Examples of permissions when ACL_COMPACT_FMT is not specified.

user:joe:read_data/write_data:file_inherit/dir_inherit:allow

owner@:read_acl:allow,user:tom:read_data:file_inherit/inherit_only:deny

Example 2: Examples of permissions when ACL_COMPACT_FMT is specified.

user:joe:rw------------:fd----:allow

owner@:----------c---:------allow,user:tom:r-------------:f-i---:deny
 

ATTRIBUTES

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPEATTRIBUTE VALUE
Interface StabilityEvolving
MT-LevelSafe

 

SEE ALSO

ls(1), tar(1), acl(2), malloc(3C), aclfromtext(3SEC), acl(5), attributes(5)


 

Index

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
RETURN VALUES
EXAMPLES
ATTRIBUTES
SEE ALSO

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Time: 02:39:05 GMT, October 02, 2010