NAME¶
nfs4_setfacl, nfs4_editfacl - manipulate NFSv4 file/directory access control
lists
SYNOPSIS¶
nfs4_setfacl [OPTIONS] COMMAND
file...
nfs4_editfacl [OPTIONS]
file...
DESCRIPTION¶
nfs4_setfacl manipulates the NFSv4 Access Control List (ACL) of one or
more
files (or directories), provided they are on a mounted NFSv4
filesystem which supports ACLs.
nfs4_editfacl is equivalent to
nfs4_setfacl -e.
Refer to the
nfs4_acl(5) manpage for information about NFSv4 ACL
terminology and syntax.
COMMANDS¶
- -a acl_spec [index]
- add the ACEs from acl_spec to file's ACL.
ACEs are inserted starting at the indexth position (DEFAULT: 1) of
file's ACL.
- -A acl_file [index]
- add the ACEs from the acl_spec in acl_file to
file's ACL. ACEs are inserted starting at the indexth
position (DEFAULT: 1) of file's ACL.
- -x acl_spec | index
- delete ACEs matched from acl_spec - or delete the
indexth ACE - from file's ACL. Note that the ordering of the
ACEs in acl_spec does not matter.
- -X acl_file
- delete ACEs matched from the acl_spec in acl_file
from file's ACL. Note that the ordering of the ACEs in the acl_spec
does not matter.
- -s acl_spec
- set file's ACL to acl_spec.
- -S acl_file
- set file's ACL to the acl_spec in
acl_file.
- -e, --edit
- edit file's ACL in the editor defined in the EDITOR
environment variable (DEFAULT: vi(1)) and set the resulting ACL
upon a clean exit, assuming changes made in the editor were saved. Note
that if multiple files are specified, the editor will be serially
invoked once per file.
- -m from_ace to_ace
- modify file's ACL in-place by replacing
from_ace with to_ace.
- -?, -h, --help
- display help text and exit.
- --version
- display this program's version and exit.
NOTE: if '-' is given as the
acl_file with the
-A/
-X/
-S flags, the acl_spec will be read from stdin.
OPTIONS¶
- -R, --recursive
- recursively apply to a directory's files and
subdirectories. Similar to setfacl(1), the default behavior is to
follow symlinks given on the command line and to skip symlinks encountered
while recursing through directories.
- -L, --logical
- in conjunction with -R/--recursive, a logical
walk follows all symbolic links.
- -P, --physical
- in conjunction with -R/--recursive, a
physical walk skips all symbolic links.
- --test
- display results of COMMAND, but do not save changes.
PERMISSIONS ALIASES¶
With
nfs4_setfacl, one can use simple abbreviations ("aliases")
to express generic "read" (
R), generic "write"
(
W), and generic "execute" (
X)
permissions,
familiar from the POSIX mode bits used by, e.g.,
chmod(1). To use these
aliases, one can put them in the
permissions field of an NFSv4 ACE and
nfs4_setfacl will convert them: an
R is expanded to
rntcy, a
W is expanded to
watTNcCy (with
D added
to directory ACEs), and an
X is expanded to
xtcy. Please refer
to the
nfs4_acl(5) manpage for information on specific NFSv4 ACE
permissions.
For example, if one wanted to grant generic "read" and
"write" access on a file, the NFSv4
permissions field would
normally contain something like
rwatTnNcCy. Instead, one might use
aliases to accomplish the same goal with
RW.
The two
permissions not included in any of the aliases are
d
(delete) and
o (write-owner). However, they can still be used: e.g., a
permissions field consisting of
Wdo expresses generic
"write" access as well as the ability to delete and change
ownership.
EXAMPLES¶
Assume that the file `foo' has the following NFSv4 ACL for the following
examples:
A::OWNER@:rwatTnNcCy
D::OWNER@:x
A:g:GROUP@:rtncy
D:g:GROUP@:waxTC
A::EVERYONE@:rtncy
D::EVERYONE@:waxTC
- -
- add ACE granting `alice@nfsdomain.org' generic
"read" and "execute" access (defaults to prepending
ACE to ACL):
$ nfs4_setfacl -a A::alice@nfsdomain.org:rxtncy foo
- -
- add the same ACE as above, but using aliases:
$ nfs4_setfacl -a A::alice@nfsdomain.org:RX foo
- -
- edit existing ACL in a text editor and set modified ACL on
clean save/exit:
$ nfs4_setfacl -e foo
- -
- set ACL (overwrites original) to contents of a
spec_file named `newacl.txt':
$ nfs4_setfacl -S newacl.txt foo
- -
- recursively set the ACLs of all files and subdirectories in
the current directory, skipping all symlinks encountered, to the ACL
contained in the spec_file named `newacl.txt':
$ nfs4_setfacl -R -P -S newacl.txt *
- -
- delete the first ACE, but only print the resulting ACL
(does not save changes):
$ nfs4_setfacl --test -x 1 foo
- -
- delete the last two ACEs above:
$ nfs4_setfacl -x "A::EVERYONE@rtncy, D::EVERYONE@:waxTC"
foo
- -
- modify (in-place) the second ACE above:
$ nfs4_setfacl -m D::OWNER@:x D::OWNER@:xo foo
- -
- set ACLs of `bar' and `frobaz' to ACL of `foo':
$ nfs4_getfacl foo | nfs4_setfacl -S - bar frobaz
AUTHORS¶
nfs4_setfacl was written by people at CITI, the Center for Information
Technology Integration (
http://www.citi.umich.edu). This manpage was
written by David Richter.
Please send bug reports, feature requests, and comments to
<
nfsv4@linux-nfs.org>.
SEE ALSO¶
nfs4_getfacl(1),
nfs4_acl(5),
RFC3530 (NFSv4.0), NFSv4.1
Minor Version Draft.