fs setacl1fs setaclSets the ACL for a directorySynopsisfs setacl-dir <directory>+ -acl <access list entries>+
[-clear] [-negative] [-id] [-if] [-help]fs sa-d <directory>+ -a <access list entries>+
[-c] [-n] [-id] [-if] [-h]fs seta-d <directory>+ -a <access list entries>+
[-c] [-n] [-id] [-if] [-h]DescriptionThe fs setacl command adds the access control list (ACL) entries
specified with the -acl argument to the ACL of each directory named by
the -dir argument.If the -dir argument designates a pathname in DFS filespace (accessed
via the AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit Protocol Translator), it can be a file
as well as a directory. The ACL must already include an entry for
mask_obj, however. For more details, refer to the IBM AFS/DFS
Migration Toolkit Administration Guide and Reference.Only user and group entries are acceptable values for the -acl
argument. Do not place machine entries (IP addresses) directly on an ACL;
instead, make the machine entry a group member and place the group on the
ACL.To completely erase the existing ACL before adding the new entries,
provide the -clear flag. To add the specified entries to the Negative
rights section of the ACL (deny rights to specified users or groups),
provide the -negative flag.To display an ACL, use the fs listacl command. To copy an ACL from one
directory to another, use the fs copyacl command.CautionsIf the ACL already grants certain permissions to a user or group, the
permissions specified with the fs setacl command replace the existing
permissions, rather than being added to them.Setting negative permissions is generally unnecessary and not
recommended. Simply omitting a user or group from the Normal rights
section of the ACL is normally adequate to prevent access. In particular,
note that it is futile to deny permissions that are granted to members of
the system:anyuser group on the same ACL; the user needs only to issue the
unlog command to receive the denied permissions.When including the -clear option, be sure to reinstate an entry for
each directory's owner that includes at least the l (lookup)
permission. Without that permission, it is impossible to resolve the "dot"
(.) and "dot dot" (..) shorthand from within the directory. (The
directory's owner does implicitly have the a (administer) permission
even on a cleared ACL, but must know to use it to add other permissions.)Options-dir <directory>+Names each AFS directory, or DFS directory or file, for which the set the
ACL. Partial pathnames are interpreted relative to the current working
directory.Specify the read/write path to each directory (or DFS file), to avoid the
failure that results from attempting to change a read-only volume. By
convention, the read/write path is indicated by placing a period before
the cell name at the pathname's second level (for example,
/afs/.abc.com). For further discussion of the concept of read/write and
read-only paths through the filespace, see the fs mkmount reference
page.-acl <access list entries>+Defines a list of one or more ACL entries, each a pair that names:A user name or group name as listed in the Protection Database.One or more ACL permissions, indicated either by combining the individual
letters or by one of the four acceptable shorthand words.in that order, separated by a space (thus every instance of this argument
has two parts). The accepted AFS abbreviations and shorthand words, and
the meaning of each, are as follows:a (administer)Change the entries on the ACL.d (delete)Remove files and subdirectories from the directory or move them to other
directories.i (insert)Add files or subdirectories to the directory by copying, moving or
creating.k (lock)Set read locks or write locks on the files in the directory.l (lookup)List the files and subdirectories in the directory, stat the directory
itself, and issue the fs listacl command to examine the directory's
ACL.r (read)Read the contents of files in the directory; issue the ls -l command to
stat the elements in the directory.w (write)Modify the contents of files in the directory, and issue the UNIX chmod
command to change their mode bits.A, B, C, D, E, F, G, HHave no default meaning to the AFS server processes, but are made
available for applications to use in controlling access to the directory's
contents in additional ways. The letters must be uppercase.allEquals all seven permissions (rlidwka).noneNo permissions. Removes the user/group from the ACL, but does not
guarantee they have no permissions if they belong to groups that remain on
the ACL.readEquals the r (read) and l (lookup) permissions.writeEquals all permissions except a (administer), that is, rlidwk.It is acceptable to mix entries that combine the individual letters with
entries that use the shorthand words, but not use both types of notation
within an individual pairing of user or group and permissions.To learn the proper format and acceptable values for DFS ACL entries, see
the IBM AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit Administration Guide and Reference.-clearRemoves all existing entries on each ACL before adding the entries
specified with the -acl argument.-negativePlaces the specified ACL entries in the Negative rights section of each
ACL, explicitly denying the rights to the user or group, even if entries
on the accompanying Normal rights section of the ACL grant them
permissions.This argument is not supported for DFS files or directories, because DFS
does not implement negative ACL permissions.-idPlaces the ACL entries on the Initial Container ACL of each DFS directory,
which are the only file system objects for which this flag is supported.-ifPlaces the ACL entries on the Initial Object ACL of each DFS directory,
which are the only file system objects for which this flag is supported.-helpPrints the online help for this command. All other valid options are
ignored.ExamplesThe following example adds two entries to the Normal rights section of
the current working directory's ACL: the first entry grants r (read)
and l (lookup) permissions to the group pat:friends, while the other
(using the write shorthand) gives all permissions except a
(administer) to the user smith.
% fs setacl -dir . -acl pat:friends rl smith write
% fs listacl -path .
Access list for . is
Normal rights:
pat:friends rl
smith rlidwk
The following example includes the -clear flag, which removes the
existing permissions (as displayed with the fs listacl command) from
the current working directory's reports subdirectory and replaces them
with a new set.
% fs listacl -dir reports
Access list for reports is
Normal rights:
system:authuser rl
pat:friends rlid
smith rlidwk
pat rlidwka
Negative rights:
terry rl
% fs setacl -clear -dir reports -acl pat all smith write system:anyuser rl
% fs listacl -dir reports
Access list for reports is
Normal rights:
system:anyuser rl
smith rlidwk
pat rlidwka
The following example use the -dir and -acl switches because it sets
the ACL for more than one directory (both the current working directory
and its public subdirectory).
% fs setacl -dir . public -acl pat:friends rli
% fs listacl -path . public
Access list for . is
Normal rights:
pat rlidwka
pat:friends rli
Access list for public is
Normal rights:
pat rlidwka
pat:friends rli
Privilege RequiredThe issuer must have the a (administer) permission on the directory's
ACL; the directory's owner and the members of the system:administrators
group have the right implicitly, even if it does not appear on the ACL.See Alsofs_copyacl(1),
fs_listacl(1),
fs_mkmount(1)IBM AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit Administration Guide and ReferenceCopyrightIBM Corporation 2000. <http://www.ibm.com/> All Rights Reserved.This documentation is covered by the IBM Public License Version 1.0. It was
converted from HTML to POD by software written by Chas Williams and Russ
Allbery, based on work by Alf Wachsmann and Elizabeth Cassell.