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man pages section 2: System Calls Oracle Solaris 11.1 Information Library |
- get or set a file's Access Control List (ACL)
#include <sys/acl.h> int acl(char *pathp, int cmd, int nentries, void *aclbufp);
int facl(int fildes, int cmd, int nentries, void *aclbufp);
The acl() and facl() functions get or set the ACL of a file whose name is given by pathp or referenced by the open file descriptor fildes. The nentries argument specifies how many ACL entries fit into buffer aclbufp. The acl() function is used to manipulate ACL on file system objects.
The following types are supported for aclbufp:
Used by the UFS and NFS file systems.
Used by the ZFS and NFSv4 file systems.
The following values for cmd are supported:
nentries aclent_t ACL entries, specified in buffer aclbufp, are stored in the file's ACL. All directories in the path name must be searchable.
Buffer aclbufp is filled with the file's aclent_t ACL entries. Read access to the file is not required, but all directories in the path name must be searchable.
The number of entries in the file's aclent_t ACL is returned. Read access to the file is not required, but all directories in the path name must be searchable.
nentries ace_t ACL entries, specified in buffer aclbufp, are stored in the file's ACL. All directories in the path name must be searchable. Write ACL access is required to change the file's ACL.
Buffer aclbufp is filled with the file's ace_t ACL entries. Read access to the file is required and all directories in the path name must be searchable.
The number of entries in the file's ace_t ACL is returned. Read access to the file is required and all directories in the path name must be searchable.
Upon successful completion, acl() and facl() return 0 if cmd is SETACL or ACE_SETACL. If cmd is GETACL, GETACLCNT, ACE_GETACL or ACE_GETACLCNT, the number of ACL entries is returned. Otherwise, -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
The acl() function will fail if:
The caller does not have access to a component of the pathname.
The pathp or aclbufp argument points to an illegal address.
The cmd argument is not GETACL, SETACL, ACE_GETACL, GETACLCNT, or ACE_GETACLCNT; the cmd argument is SETACL and nentries is less than 3; or the cmd argument is SETACL or ACE_SETACL and the ACL specified in aclbufp is not valid.
A disk I/O error has occurred while storing or retrieving the ACL.
A component of the path does not exist.
The cmd argument is GETACL and nentries is less than the number of entries in the file's ACL, or the cmd argument is SETACL and there is insufficient space in the file system to store the ACL.
The cmd argument is SETACL or ACE_SETACL and the file specified by pathp resides on a file system that does not support ACLs, or the acl() function is not supported by this implementation.
A component of the path specified by pathp is not a directory, or the cmd argument is SETACL or ACE_SETACL and an attempt is made to set a default ACL on a file type other than a directory.
The cmd argument is GETACL, but the ACL is composed of ace_t entries, and the ACL cannot be translated into aclent_t form.
The cmd argument is ACE_SETACL, but the underlying filesystem only supports ACLs composed of aclent_t entries and the ACL could not be translated into aclent_t form.
The effective user ID does not match the owner of the file and the process does not have appropriate privilege.
The cmd argument is SETACL or ACE_SETACL and the file specified by pathp resides on a file system that is mounted read-only.
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
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