>> acl_set_file (3) ( Linux man: Библиотечные вызовы )
BSD mandoc
Linux ACL
NAME
acl_set_file
- set an ACL by filename
LIBRARY
Linux Access Control Lists library (libacl, -lacl).
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/acl.h> int
acl_set_file (const char *path_p acl_type_t type acl_t acl);
DESCRIPTION
The
acl_set_file ();
function associates an access ACL with a file or directory, or
associates a default ACL with a directory. The pathname for the file or
directory is pointed to by the argument
path_p
The effective user ID of the process must match the owner of the file or
directory or the process must have the CAP_FOWNER capability for the
request to succeed.
The value of the argument
type
is used to indicate whether the access ACL or the default ACL associated
with
path_p
is being set. If the
type
parameter is ACL_TYPE_ACCESS, the access ACL of
path_p
shall be set. If the
type
parameter is ACL_TYPE_DEFAULT, the default ACL of
path_p
shall be set. If the argument
type
specifies a type of ACL that cannot be associated with
path_p
then the function fails.
The
acl
parameter must reference a valid ACL according to the rules described on the
acl_valid3
manual page if the
type
parameter is ACL_TYPE_ACCESS, and must either reference a valid ACL or an ACL with zero ACL entries if the
type
parameter is ACL_TYPE_DEFAULT. If the
acl
parameter references an empty ACL, then the
acl_set_file ();
function removes any default ACL associated with the directory referred to
by the
path_p
parameter.
RETURN VALUE
Rv -std acl_set_file
ERRORS
If any of the following conditions occur, the
acl_set_file ();
function returns
-1
and sets
errno
to the corresponding value:
Bq Er EACCES
Search permission is denied for a component of the path prefix or the
object exists and the process does not have appropriate access rights.
Argument
type
specifies a type of ACL that cannot be associated with
path_p
Bq Er EINVAL
The argument
acl
does not point to a valid ACL.
The ACL has more entries than the file referred to by
path_p
can obtain.
The
type
parameter is not ACL_TYPE_ACCESS or ACL_TYPE_DEFAULT.
The
type
parameter is ACL_TYPE_DEFAULT, but the file referred to by
path_p
is not a directory.
Bq Er ENAMETOOLONG
The length of the argument
path_p
is too long.
Bq Er ENOENT
The named object does not exist or the argument
path_p
points to an empty string.
Bq Er ENOSPC
The directory or file system that would contain the new ACL cannot be extended or the file system is out of file allocation resources.
Bq Er ENOTDIR
A component of the path prefix is not a directory.
Bq Er ENOTSUP
The file identified by
path_p
cannot be associated with the ACL because the file system on which the file
is located does not support this.
Bq Er EPERM
The process does not have appropriate privilege to perform the operation to set the ACL.
Bq Er EROFS
This function requires modification of a file system which is currently read-only.
The behavior of
acl_set_file ();
when the
acl
parameter refers to an empty ACL and the
type
parameter is ACL_TYPE_DEFAULT is an extension in the Linux implementation, in order that all values returned by
acl_get_file ();
can be passed to
acl_set_file (.);
The POSIX.1e function for removing a default ACL is
acl_delete_def_file (.);
Derived from the FreeBSD manual pages written by
An Robert N M Watson Aq [email protected] ,
and adapted for Linux by
An Andreas Gruenbacher Aq [email protected] .