Managing Access Control ListsTo control access to a directory and all of the files in it, AFS associates an access control list
(ACL) with it, rather than the mode bits that the UNIX file system (UFS) associates with individual files or
directories. AFS ACLs provide more refined access control because there are seven access permissions rather than UFS's three, and
there is room for approximately 20 user or group entries on an ACL, rather than just the three UFS entries (owner, group, and other).Summary of InstructionsThis chapter explains how to perform the following tasks by using the indicated commands:Examine access control listfs listaclEdit ACL's normal permissions sectionfs setaclEdit ACL's negative permissions sectionfs setacl with -negative flagReplace an ACLfs setacl with -clear flagCopy an ACLfs copyaclRemove obsolete AFS UIDsfs cleanaclProtecting Data in AFSprotection of file datasee also: ACLprotection of file dataAFS compared to UFSACLThis section describes the main differences between the AFS and UFS file protection systems, discusses the implications of
directory-level protections, and describes the seven access permissions.Differences Between UFS and AFS Data ProtectionUFSfile protection compared to AFSprotection of file dataAFS compared to UFSACLACLcompared to UNIX protectionThe UFS mode bits data protection system and the AFS ACL system differ in the following ways: Protection at the file level (UFS) versus the directory level (AFS)UFS associates a set of nine mode bits with each file element, three (rwx) for
each of the element's owner, owning group, and all other users. A similar set of mode bits on the file's directory
applies to the file only in an oblique way.An AFS ACL instead protects all files in a directory in the same way. If a certain file is more sensitive than
others, store it in a directory with a more restrictive ACL.Defining access at the directory level has important consequences: directory-level data protectionimplicationsThe permissions on a directory's ACL apply to all of the files in the directory. When you move a file to a
different directory, you effectively change the access permissions that apply to it to those on its new
directory's ACL. Changing a directory's ACL changes the protection on all the files in it.When you create a subdirectory, its initial ACL is created as a copy of its parent directory's ACL. You can
then change the subdirectory's ACL independently. However, the parent directory's ACL continues to control access
to the subdirectory in the following way: the parent directory's ACL must grant the l (lookup) permission to a user (or a group the user
belongs to) in order for the user to access the subdirectory at all.In general, then, it is best to assign fairly liberal access permissions to high-level directories
(including user home directories). In particular, it often makes sense to grant at least the l permission to the system:anyuser or system:authuser group on high-level directories. For further discussion, see Using Groups on ACLs.How the mode bits are interpretedMode bits are the only file-protection system in UFS. AFS allows you to set the UNIX mode bits on a file in
addition to the ACL on its directory, but it interprets them differently. See How AFS
Interprets the UNIX Mode Bits.Three access permissions (UFS) versus seven (AFS)UFS defines three access permissions in the form of mode bits: r (read), w (write), and x (execute). AFS defines seven permissions, which makes access
control more precise. For detailed descriptions, see The AFS ACL Permissions.
a (administer)d (delete)i (insert)k (lock)l (lookup)r (read)w (write)Three defined users and groups (UFS) versus many (AFS)UFS controls access for one user and two groups by providing a set of mode bits for each: the user who owns the
file or directory, a single defined group, and everyone who has an account on the system.AFS, in contrast, allows you to place many entries (individual users or groups) on an ACL, granting a different
set of access permissions to each one. The number of possible entries is about 20, and depends on how much space each
entry occupies in the memory allocated for the ACL itself.AFS defines two system groups, system:anyuser and system:authuser, which represent all users and all authenticated users, respectively; for further
discussion, see Using Groups on ACLs. In addition, users can define their own groups in
the Protection Database, consisting of individual users or machine IP addresses. Users who have the a permission on an ACL can create entries for the system groups as well as groups defined by
themselves or other users. For information on defining groups, see Administering the Protection
Database.When a user requests access to a file or directory, the File Server sums together all of the permissions that the
relevant ACL extends to the user and to groups to which the user belongs. Placing group entries on ACLs therefore can
control access for many more users than the ACL can accommodate as individual entries.The AFS ACL Permissionsaccesspermissions on ACL (see entries: permissions on ACL, ACL)permissions on ACLdefinedACLpermissions definedFunctionally, the seven standard ACL permissions fall into two groups: one that applies to the directory itself and one
that applies to the files it contains.The Four Directory PermissionsThe four permissions in this group are meaningful with respect to the directory itself. For example, the i (insert) permission does not control addition of data to a file,
but rather creation of a new file or subdirectory. The l (lookup) permissionThis permission functions as something of a gate keeper for access to the directory and its files, because a
user must have it in order to exercise any other permissions. In particular, a user must have this permission to
access anything in the directory's subdirectories, even if the ACL on a subdirectory grants extensive permissions.
lookup ACL permissionl ACL permissionl ACL permissionThis permission enables a user to issue the following commands: The ls command to list the names of the files and subdirectories in the
directoryThe ls -ld command to obtain complete status information for the
directory element itselfThe fs listacl command to examine the directory's ACLThis permission does not enable a user to read the contents of a file in the directory, to issue the ls -l command on a file in the directory, or to issue the fs
listacl command with the filename as the -path argument. Those
operations require the r (read) permission which
is described in The Three File Permissions.Similarly, this permission does not enable a user to issue the ls, ls -l, ls -ld, or fs
listacl commands against a subdirectory of the directory. Those operations require the l permission on the ACL of the subdirectory itself.The i (insert) permissionThis permission enables a user to add new files to the directory, either by creating or copying, and to create
new subdirectories. It does not extend into any subdirectories, which are protected by their own ACLs. insert ACL permissioni ACL permissioni ACL permissionThe d (delete) permissionThis permission enables a user to remove files and subdirectories from the directory or move them into other
directories (assuming that the user has the i permission on the ACL of the other
directories). delete ACL permissiond ACL permissiond ACL permissionThe a (administer) permissionThis permission enables a user to change the directory's ACL. Members of the system:administrators group implicitly have this permission on every directory (that is, even
if that group does not appear on the ACL). Similarly, the owner of a directory implicitly has this permission on its
ACL and those of all directories below it that he or she owns. administer ACL permissiona ACL permissiona ACL permissionThe Three File PermissionsThe three permissions in this group are meaningful with respect to files in a directory, rather than the directory
itself or its subdirectories. The r (read) permissionThis permission enables a user to read the contents of files in the directory and to issue the ls -l command to stat the file elements. readACL permissionr ACL permission)r ACL permissionThe w (write) permissionThis permission enables a user to modify the contents of files in the directory and to issue the chmod command to change their UNIX mode bits. writeACL permissionwrite ACL permissionw ACL permissionThe k (lock) permissionThis permission enables the user to run programs that issue system calls to lock files in the directory.
lock ACL permissionk ACL permissionk ACL permissionThe Eight Auxiliary Permissionsundefined ACL permissionsauxiliary ACL permissionsACLauxiliary permissionsAFS provides eight additional permissions that do not have a defined meaning, denoted by the uppercase letters
A, B, C, D, E, F, G, and H.You can write application programs that assign a meaning to one or more of the permissions, and then place them on
ACLs to control file access by those programs. For example, you can modify a print program to recognize and interpret the
permissions, and then place them on directories that house files that the program accesses. Use the fs
listacl and fs setacl commands to display and set the auxiliary permissions on
ACLs just like the standard seven.Shorthand Notation for Sets of PermissionsACLshorthand notation for grouping permissionsshorthand notationACL permissionsYou can combine the seven permissions in any way in an ACL entry, but certain combinations are more useful than
others. Four of the more common combinations have corresponding shorthand forms. When using the fs
setacl command to define ACL entries, you can provide either one or more of the individual letters that represent
the permissions, or one of the following shorthand forms: all shorthand for ACL permissionsallRepresents all seven standard permissions (rlidwka). none shorthand for ACL permissionsnoneRemoves the entry from the ACL, leaving the user or group with no permissions. readshorthand for ACL permissionsreadRepresents the r (read) and l (lookup) permissions. writeshorthand for ACL permissionswriteRepresents all permissions except a (administer): rlidwk.Using Normal and Negative PermissionsACLnormal vs. negative permissionsnormal ACL permissionsdefinednegative ACL permissionsdefinedACLs enable you both to grant and to deny access to a directory and the files in it. To grant access, use the fs setacl command to create an ACL entry that associates a set of permissions with a user or group, as
described in Setting ACL Entries. When you use the fs listacl
command to display an ACL (as described in Displaying ACLs), such entries appear underneath
the following header, which uses the term rights to refer to permissions:
Normal rights
There are two ways to deny access: The recommended method is simply to omit an entry for the user or group from the ACL, or to omit the appropriate
permissions from the entry. Use the fs setacl command to remove or edit an existing
entry, using the instructions in To add, remove, or edit normal ACL permissions. In most
circumstances, this method is enough to prevent access of certain kinds or by certain users. You must take care,
however, not to grant the undesired permissions to any groups to which such users belong.The more explicit method for denying access is to use the -negative flag to the
fs setacl command to create an entry that associates negative
permissions with the user or group; for instructions, see To add, remove, or edit
negative ACL permissions. The output from the fs listacl command lists negative
entries underneath the following header:
Negative rights
When determining what type of access to grant to a user, the File Server first compiles a set of permissions by
examining all of the entries in the Normal rights section of the ACL. It then subtracts
any permissions associated with the user (or with groups to which the user belongs) on the Negative
rights section of the ACL. Therefore, negative permissions always cancel out normal permissions.Using negative permissions reverses the usual semantics of the fs setacl command,
introducing the potential for confusion. In particular, combining the none shorthand
and the -negative flag constitutes a double negative: by removing an entry from the
Negative rights section of the ACL, you enable a user once again to obtain permissions
via entries in the Normal rights section. Combining the all shorthand with the -negative flag explicitly denies all
permissions.Note also that it is pointless to create an entry in the Negative rights section
if an entry in the Normal rights section grants the denied permissions to the system:anyuser group. In this case, users can obtain the permissions simply by using the
unlog command to discard their tokens. When they do so, the File Server recognizes them
as the anonymous user, who belongs to the system:anyuser group but does not match the entries on the Negative
rights section of the ACL.Using Groups on ACLsgroupACL entry, usefulness ofACLgroup entries, usefulnessAs previously mentioned, placing a group entry on an ACL enables you to control access for many users at once. You can
grant a new user access to many files and directories simply by adding the user to a group that appears on the relevant ACLs.
You can also create groups of machines, in which case any user logged on to the machine obtains the access that is granted to
the group. On directories where they have the a permission on the ACL, users can define their
own groups and can create ACL entries for any groups, not just groups that they create or own themselves. For instructions on
creating groups of users or machines, and a discussion of the most effective ways to use different types of groups, see Administering the Protection Database. system groupsusing on ACLsgroupsystem-defined on ACLsACLsystem groups onsystem:anyuser groupusing on ACLssystem:authuser groupusing on ACLsAFS also defines the following two system groups, which can be very useful on ACLs because they potentially represent a
large group of people. For more information about these groups, see The System Groups.
system:anyuserIncludes anyone who can access the cell's file tree, including users who have logged in as the local superuser
root, have connected to a local machine from somewhere outside the cell, and AFS
users who belong to a foreign cell. This group includes users who do not have tokens that are valid for the local AFS
servers; the servers recognize them as the user anonymous.Note that creating an ACL entry for this group is the only way to extend access to AFS users from foreign cells,
unless you create local authentication accounts for them. ACLforeign users onsystem:authuserIncludes all users who have a valid AFS token obtained from the local cell's authentication service.It is particularly useful to grant the l (lookup)
permission to the system:anyuser group on the ACL of most directories in the file system,
especially at the upper levels. This permission enables users only to learn the names of files and subdirectories in a
directory, but without it they cannot traverse their way through the directories in the path to a target file.A slightly more restrictive alternative is to grant the l permission to the system:authuser group. If that is still not restrictive enough, you can grant the l to specific users or groups, which cannot exceed about 20 in number on a given ACL.Another reason to grant certain permissions to the system:anyuser group is to enable
the correct operation of processes that provide services such as printing and mail delivery. For example, in addition to the
l permission, a print process possibly needs the r
(read) permission in order to access the contents of files, and a mail delivery process
possibly requires the i (insert) permission to deliver new
pieces of mail.The ACL on the root directory of every newly created volume grants all permissions to the system:administrators group. You can remove this entry if you wish, but members of the system:administrators group always implicitly have the a (administer), and by default also the l, permission on every
directory's ACL. The a permission enables them to grant themselves other permissions
explicitly when necessary. To learn about changing this default set of permissions, see Administering
the system:administrators Group.Displaying ACLsACLdisplayingdisplayingACL entriesTo display the ACL associated with a file, directory or symbolic link, issue the fs
listacl command. The output for a symbolic link displays the ACL that applies to its target file or directory, rather
than the ACL on the directory that houses the symbolic link.Note for AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit users: If the machine on which you issue the fs listacl command is configured to access a DCE cell's DFS filespace via the AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit,
you can use the command to display the ACL on DFS files and directories. To display a DFS directory's Initial Container and
Initial Object ACL instead of the regular one, include the fs listacl command's -id or -if flag. For instructions, see the OpenAFS/DFS
Migration Toolkit Administration Guide and Reference. The fs command interpreter
ignores the -id and -if flags if you include them when
displaying an AFS ACL. fs commandslistaclcommandsfs listaclTo display an ACLIssue the fs listacl command.
% fs listacl [<dir/file path>+]
wherelaIs an acceptable alias for listacl (and lista is the shortest acceptable abbreviation).dir/file pathNames one or more files or directories for which to display the ACL. For files, the output displays the ACL
for its directory. If you omit this argument, the output is for the current working directory. Partial pathnames are
interpreted relative to the current working directory. You can also use the following notation on its own or as part
of a pathname: .(A single period). Specifies the current working directory...(Two periods). Specifies the current working directory's parent directory.*(The asterisk). Specifies each file and subdirectory in the current working directory. The ACL
displayed for a file is always the same as for its directory, but the ACL for each subdirectory can
differ.The following error message indicates that you do not have the permissions needed to display an ACL. To specify a
directory name as the dir/file path argument, you must have the l (lookup) permission on the ACL. To specify a filename, you must also have the r (read) permission on its directory's ACL.
fs: You don't have the required access permissions on 'dir/file path'
Members of the system:administrators group and the directory's owner (as reported by
the ls -ld command) implicitly have the a (administer) permission on every directory's ACL, and can use the fs
setacl command to grant themselves the required permissions; for instructions, see Setting
ACL Entries.The output for each file or directory specified as dir/file path begins with the following header to identify it:
Access list for dir/file path is
The Normal rights header appears on the next line, followed by lines that each pair a
user or group name and a set of permissions. The permissions appear as the single letters defined in The AFS ACL Permissions, and always in the order rlidwka. If there
are any negative permissions, the Negative rights header appears next, followed by pairs of
negative permissions.The following example displays the ACL on user terry's home directory in the ABC
Corporation cell:
% fs la /afs/abc.com/usr/terry
Access list for /afs/abc.com/usr/terry is
Normal permissions:
system:authuser rl
pat rlw
terry rlidwka
Negative permissions:
terry:other-dept rl
jones rl
where pat, terry, and jones are individual users, system:authuser is a system group, and
terry:other-dept is a group that terry owns. The list of
normal permissions grants all permissions to terry, the r
(read), l (lookup), and
w (write) permissions to pat, and the r and l permissions to
the members of the system:authuser group.The list of negative permissions denies the r and l
permissions to jones and the members of the terry:other-dept
group. These entries effectively prevent them from accessing terry's home directory in any
way, because they cancel out the r and l permissions
extended to the system:authuser group, which is the only entry on the Normal
rights section of the ACL that possibly applies to them.Setting ACL EntriesACLsetting entriesACLediting entriesACLadding entriesACLremoving entrieschangingACL entriessettingACL entriesgrantingfile access by setting ACLcreatingACL entryaddingACL entrynormal permissionsremovingACL entryTo add, remove, or edit ACL entries, use the fs setacl command. By default, the command
manipulates entries on the normal permissions section of the ACL. To manipulate entries on the negative permissions section,
include the -negative flag.You must have the a (administer) permission on an ACL to
edit it. The owner of a directory (as reported by the ls -ld) command and members of the
system:administrators group always implicitly have it on every ACL. By default, members of the
system:administrators group also implicitly have the l
(lookup) permission.Note for AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit users: If the machine on which you issue the fs setacl command is configured to access a DCE cell's DFS filespace via the AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit,
you can use the command to set the ACL on DFS files and directories. To set a DFS directory's Initial Container and Initial
Object ACL instead of the regular one, include the fs setacl command's -id or -if flag. For instructions, see the OpenAFS/DFS
Migration Toolkit Administration Guide and Reference. The fs command interpreter
ignores the -id and -if flags if you include them when setting
an AFS ACL. fs commandssetaclcommandsfs setaclTo add, remove, or edit normal ACL permissionsVerify that you have the a (administer) permission
on each directory for which you are editing the ACL. If necessary, issue the fs listacl
command, which is fully described in Displaying ACLs.
% fs listacl [<dir/file path>]
Issue the fs setacl command to edit entries in the normal permissions section of
the ACL. To remove an entry, specify the none shorthand as the permissions. If an ACL
entry already exists, the permissions you specify completely replace those in the existing entry.
% fs setacl -dir <directory>+ -acl <access list entries>+
wheresaIs an acceptable alias for setacl (and seta
is the shortest acceptable abbreviation).-dirNames one or more directories to which to apply the ACL entries defined by the -acl argument. Partial pathnames are interpreted relative to the current working
directory.Specify the read/write path to each directory, to avoid the failure that results when you attempt to change a
read-only volume. By convention, you indicate the read/write path 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 Rules of Mount
Point Traversal.You can also use the following notation on its own or as part of a pathname:.(A single period). If used by itself, sets the ACL on the current working directory...(Two periods). If used by itself, sets the ACL on the current working directory's parent
directory.*(The asterisk). Sets the ACL on each of the subdirectories in the current working directory. You must
precede it with the -dir switch, since it potentially designates multiple
directories. The fs command interpreter generates the following error message
for each file in the directory:
fs: 'filename': Not a directory
If you specify only one directory or file name, you can omit the -dir and
-acl switches.-aclSpecifies one or more ACL entries, each of which pairs a user or group name and a set of permissions. Separate
the pairs, and the two parts of each pair, with one or more spaces.To define the permissions, provide either:One or more of the letters that represent the standard or auxiliary permissions (rlidwka and ABCDEFGH), in any orderOne of the four shorthand notations: all (equals rlidwka)none (removes the entry)read (equals rl)write (equals rlidwk)For a more detailed description of the permissions and shorthand notations, see The
AFS ACL Permissions.On a single command line, you can combine user and group entries. You can also use individual letters in some
pairs and the shorthand notations in other pairs, but cannot combine letters and shorthand notation within a single
pair.Either of the following examples grants user pat the r
(read) and l (lookup)
permissions on the ACL of the notes subdirectory in the issuer's home directory. They
illustrate how it is possible to omit the -dir and -acl
switches when you name only one directory.
% fs sa ~/notes pat rl
% fs sa ~/notes pat readThe following example edits the ACL for the current working directory. It removes the entry for the system:anyuser group, and adds two entries: one grants all permissions except a (administer) to the members of the terry:colleagues group and the other grants the r (read) and l (lookup) permissions to
the system:authuser group. The command appears on two lines here only for legibility.
% fs sa -dir . -acl system:anyuser none terry:colleagues write \
system:authuser rlfs commandssetaclwith -negative flagcommandsfs setaclwith -negative flagcreatingACL entry in negative permissions sectionaddingACL entrynegative permissionsdenyingfile access with negative ACL entryTo add, remove, or edit negative ACL permissionsVerify that you have the a (administer) permission
on each directory for which you are editing the ACL. If necessary, issue the fs listacl
command, which is fully described in Displaying ACLs.
% fs listacl [<dir/file path>]
Issue the fs setacl command with the -negative
flag to edit entries in the negative permissions section of the ACL. To remove an entry, specify the none shorthand as the permissions. If an ACL entry already exists for a user or group, the
permissions you specify completely replace those in the existing entry.
% fs setacl -dir <directory>+ -acl <access list entries>+ -negativewheresaIs an acceptable alias for setacl (and seta
is the shortest acceptable abbreviation).-dirNames one or more directories to which to apply the negative ACL entries defined by the -acl argument. Specify the read/write path to each directory, to avoid the failure that
results when you attempt to change a read-only volume. For a detailed description of acceptable values, see To add, remove, or edit normal ACL permissions.-aclSpecifies one or more ACL entries, each of which pairs a user or group name and a set of permissions. Separate
the pairs, and the two parts of each pair, with one or more spaces. For a detailed description of acceptable values,
see To add, remove, or edit normal ACL permissions. Keep in mind that the usual
meaning of each permission is reversed.-negativePlaces the entries defined by the -acl argument on the negative permissions
section of the ACL for each directory named by the -dir argument.The following example denies user pat the w (write) and d (delete) permissions for
the project subdirectory of the current working directory.
% fs sa project pat wd -negCompletely Replacing an ACLACLreplacing all entriesACLclearingreplacingall entries on ACLerasingall ACL entriesclearingall ACL entriesremovingall ACL entriesIt is sometimes simplest to clear an ACL completely before defining new permissions on it, for instance if the mix of
normal and negative permissions makes it difficult to understand how their interaction affects a user's access to the directory.
To clear an ACL completely while you define new entries, include the -clear flag on the
fs setacl command. When you include this flag, you can create entries on either the normal
permissions or the negative permissions section of the ACL, but not on both at once.Remember to create an entry that grants appropriate permissions to the directory's owner. The owner implicitly has the
a (administer) permission required to replace a deleted entry,
but the effects of a missing ACL entry (particularly the lack of the lookup permission) can be
so confusing that it becomes difficult for the owner to realize that the missing entry is causing the problems. fs commandssetaclwith -clear flagcommandsfs setaclwith -clear flagTo replace an ACL completelyVerify that you have the a (administer) permission
on each directory for which you are editing the ACL. If necessary, issue the fs listacl
command, which is fully described in Displaying ACLs.
% fs listacl [<dir/file path>]
Issue the fs setacl command with the -clear flag
to clear the ACL completely before setting either normal or negative permissions. Because you need to grant the owner of
the directory all permissions, it is better in most cases to set normal permissions at this point.
% fs setacl -dir <directory>+ -acl <access list entries>+ -clear \
[-negative]
wheresaIs an acceptable alias for setacl (and seta
is the shortest acceptable abbreviation).-dirNames one or more directories to which to apply the negative ACL entries defined by the -acl argument. Specify the read/write path to each directory, to avoid the failure that
results when you attempt to change a read-only volume. For a detailed description of acceptable values, see To add, remove, or edit normal ACL permissions.-aclSpecifies one or more ACL entries, each of which pairs a user or group name and a set of permissions. Separate
the pairs, and the two parts of each pair, with one or more spaces. Remember to grant all permissions to the owner
of the directory. For a detailed description of acceptable values, see To add, remove, or
edit normal ACL permissions.-clearRemoves all entries from each ACL before creating the entries indicated by the -acl argument.-negativePlaces the entries defined by the -acl argument on the negative permissions
section of each ACL.Copying ACLs Between DirectoriesACLcopying between directoriescreatingACL as copy of anothercopyingACL between directoriesThe fs copyacl command copies a source directory's ACL to one or more destination
directories. It does not affect the source ACL at all, but changes each destination ACL as follows: If an entry on the source ACL does not exist on the destination ACL, the command copies it to the destination
ACL.If an entry on the destination ACL does not also exist on the source ACL, the command does not remove it unless you
include the -clear flag to overwrite the destination ACL completely.If an entry is on both ACLs, the command changes the permissions on the destination ACL entry to match the source
ACL entry.Note for AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit users: If the machine is configured to enable AFS
users to access a DCE cell's DFS filespace via the AFS/DFS Migration Toolkit, then you can use the fs
copyacl command to copy ACLs between DFS files and directories also. The command includes -id and -if flags for altering a DFS directory's Initial Container and
Initial Object ACLs as well as its regular ACL; see the OpenAFS/DFS Migration Toolkit Administration Guide and
Reference. You cannot copy ACLs between AFS and DFS directories, because they use different ACL formats. The
fs command interpreter ignores the -id and -if flags if you include them when copying AFS ACLs. fs commandscopyaclcommandsfs copyaclTo copy an ACL between directoriesVerify that you have the l (lookup) permission on
the source ACL and the a (administer) permission on each
destination ACL. To identify the source directory by naming a file in it, you must also have the r (read) permission on the source ACL. If necessary, issue the
fs listacl command, which is fully described in Displaying
ACLs.
% fs listacl [<dir/file path>]
Issue the fs copyacl command to copy a source ACL to the ACL
on one or more destination directories. (The command appears here on two lines only for legibility.)
% fs copyacl -fromdir <source directory> -todir <destination directory>+ \
[-clear]
wherecoIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation for copyacl.-fromdirNames the source directory from which to copy the ACL. Partial pathnames are interpreted relative to the
current working directory. If this argument names a file, the ACL is copied from its directory.-todirNames each destination directory to which to copy the source ACL. Partial pathnames are interpreted relative
to the current working directory. Filenames are not acceptable.Specify the read/write path to each directory, to avoid the failure that results when you attempt to change a
read-only volume. By convention, you indicate the read/write path 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 Rules of Mount
Point Traversal.-clearCompletely overwrites each destination directory's ACL with the source ACL.The following example copies the ACL from the current working directory's notes
subdirectory to the plans subdirectory. The issuer does not include the -clear flag, so the entry for user pat remains on the plans directory's ACL although there is no corresponding entry on the notes directory's ACL.
% fs la notes plans
Access list for notes is
Normal permissions:
terry rlidwka
smith rl
jones rl
Access list for plans is
Normal permissions:
terry rlidwk
pat rlidwk
% fs copyacl notes plans
% fs la notes plans
Access list for notes is
Normal permissions:
terry rlidwka
smith rl
jones rl
Access list for plans is
Normal permissions:
terry rlidwka
pat rlidwk
smith rl
jones rl
ACLremoving obsolete AFS IDsremovingobsolete AFS IDs from ACLAFS UIDremoving obsolete from ACLAFS GIDremoving obsolete from ACLACLcleaningRemoving Obsolete AFS IDs from ACLsWhen you remove a user or group entry from the Protection Database, the fs listacl
command displays the user's AFS UID (or group's AFS GID) in ACL entries, rather than the name. In the following example, user
terry has an ACL entry for the group terry:friends (AFS GID
-567) on her home directory in the ABC Corporation cell, and then removes the group from the Protection Database.
% fs listacl /afs/abc.com/usr/terry
Access list for /afs/abc.com/usr/terry is
Normal permissions:
terry:friends rlik
system:anyuser l
terry rlidwka
% pts delete terry:friends
% fs listacl /afs/abc.com/usr/terry
Access list for /afs/abc.com/usr/terry is
Normal permissions:
-567 rlik
system:anyuser l
terry rlidwka
Leaving AFS IDs on ACLs serves no function, because the ID no longer corresponds to an active user or group. Furthermore,
if the ID is ever assigned to a new user or group, then the new possessor of the ID gains access that the owner of the directory
actually intended for the previous possessor. (Reusing AFS IDs is not recommended precisely for this reason.)To remove obsolete AFS UIDs from ACLs, use the fs cleanacl command. commandsfs cleanaclfs commandscleanaclTo clean obsolete AFS IDs from an ACLVerify that you have the a (administer) permission
on each directory for which you are cleaning the ACL. If necessary, issue the fs listacl
command, which is fully described in Displaying ACLs.
% fs listacl [<dir/file path>]
Issue the fs cleanacl command to remove entries for obsolete AFS IDs.
% fs cleanacl [<dir/file path>+]
whereclIs the shortest acceptable abbreviation of cleanacl.dir/file pathNames each directory for which to clean the ACL. If this argument names a file, its directory's ACL is
cleaned. Omit this argument to clean the current working directory's ACL.Specify the read/write path to each directory, to avoid the failure that results when you attempt to change a
read-only volume. By convention, you indicate the read/write path 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 Rules of Mount
Point Traversal.You can also use the following notation on its own or as part of a pathname:.(A single period). If used by itself, cleans the current working directory's ACL...(Two periods). If used by itself, cleans the ACL on the current working directory's parent
directory.*(The asterisk). Cleans the ACL of each of the subdirectories in the current working directory. However,
if you use the asterisk and there are obsolete AFS IDs on any directory's ACL, the following error message
appears for every file in the directory:
fs: 'filename': Not a directory
If there are obsolete AFS IDs on a directory, the command interpreter displays its cleaned ACL under the following
header.
Access list for directory is now
If a directory's ACL has no obsolete AFS IDs on it, the following message appears for each.
Access list for directory is fine.
How AFS Interprets the UNIX Mode BitsUNIXmode bits, interpretation in AFSUFSmode bits, interpretation in AFSmode bits (UNIX)interpretation in AFSAlthough AFS uses ACLs to protect file data rather than the mode bits that UFS uses, it does not ignore the mode bits
entirely. When you issue the chmod command on an AFS file or directory, AFS changes the bits
appropriately. To change a file's mode bits, you must have the AFS w (write) permission on the ACL of the file's directory. To change a directory's mode bits, you must have
the d (delete), i (insert), and l (lookup) permissions on
its ACL.AFS also uses the UNIX mode bits as follows:It uses the initial bit to determine the element's type. This is the bit that appears first in the output from the
ls -l command and shows the hyphen (-) for a file or the
letter d for a directory.It does not use any of the mode bits on a directory.For a file, the first (owner) set of bits interacts with the ACL entries that apply to the file in the following way:
If the first r mode bit is not set, no one (including the owner) can read the
file, no matter what permissions they have on the ACL. If the bit is set, users also need the r (read) and l permissions on
the ACL of the file's directory to read the file.If the first w mode bit is not set, no one (including the owner) can modify the
file. If the w bit is set, users also need the w and
l permissions on the ACL of the file's directory to modify the file.There is no ACL permission directly corresponding to the x mode bit, but to
execute a file stored in AFS, the user must also have the r and l permissions on the ACL of the file's directory.