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If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 7 .TH ACL 5 "Nov 24, 2014" 8 .SH NAME 9 acl \- Access Control Lists 10 .SH DESCRIPTION 11 .LP 12 Access control lists (ACLs) are discretionary access control mechanisms that 13 grant and deny access to files and directories. Two different ACL models are 14 supported in the Solaris release: POSIX-draft ACLs and NFSv4 ACLs. 15 .sp 16 .LP 17 The older, POSIX-draft model is supported by the UFS file system. This model is 18 based on a withdrawn ACL POSIX specification that was never standardized. It 19 was subsequently withdrawn by the POSIX committee. 20 .sp 21 .LP 22 The other model is based on the standards of the NFSv4 working group and is an 23 approved standard from the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). The ZFS file 24 system uses the NFSv4 model, and provides richer semantics and finer grained 25 permission capabilities than the POSIX-draft model. 26 .SS "\fBPOSIX\fR-draft \fBACL\fRs" 27 .LP 28 POSIX-draft ACLs provide an alternative security mechanism to basic UNIX file 29 permissions in the Solaris release. Their purpose is to further restrict access 30 to files and directories or to extend permissions to a particular user. ACLs 31 can be used to change the permissions for the standard owner, group and other 32 class bits of a file's mode. ACLs can give additional users and groups access 33 to the file. A directory can also have a special kind of ACL called a 34 \fBdefault\fR ACL, which defines ACL entries to be inherited by descendents of 35 the directory. POSIX-draft ACLs have an ACL entry called \fBmask\fR. The mask 36 defines the maximum permissions that can be granted to additional user and 37 group entries. Whenever a file is created or its mode is changed by 38 \fBchmod\fR(1) or \fBchmod\fR(2), the mask is recomputed. It is recomputed to 39 be the group permission defined in the mode passed to \fBchmod\fR(2). 40 .sp 41 .LP 42 The POSIX-draft ACL model uses the standard \fBrwx\fR model of traditional UNIX 43 permissions. 44 .sp 45 .LP 46 An ACL is represented as follows: 47 .sp 48 .in +2 49 .nf 50 \fIacl_entry\fR[,\fIacl_entry\fR]... 51 .fi 52 .in -2 53 .sp 54 55 .sp 56 .LP 57 Each \fIacl_entry\fR contains one ACL entry. An ACL entry is represented by two 58 or three colon-separated(\fB:\fR) fields. 59 .sp 60 .ne 2 61 .na 62 \fB\fIuser\fR:[\fIuid\fR]:\fIperms\fR\fR 63 .ad 64 .RS 21n 65 If \fIuid\fR blank, it represents the file owner. 66 .RE 67 68 .sp 69 .ne 2 70 .na 71 \fB\fIgroup\fR:[\fIgid\fR]:\fIperms\fR\fR 72 .ad 73 .RS 21n 74 If \fIgid\fR is blank, it represents the owning group. 75 .RE 76 77 .sp 78 .ne 2 79 .na 80 \fB\fIother\fR:\fIperms\fR\fR 81 .ad 82 .RS 21n 83 Represents the file other class. 84 .RE 85 86 .sp 87 .ne 2 88 .na 89 \fB\fImask\fR:\fIperms\fR\fR 90 .ad 91 .RS 21n 92 Defines the \fBMAX\fR permission to hand out. 93 .RE 94 95 .sp 96 .LP 97 For example to give user \fBjoe\fR read and write permissions, the ACL entry is 98 specified as: 99 .sp 100 .in +2 101 .nf 102 user:joe:rw- 103 .fi 104 .in -2 105 .sp 106 107 .SS "\fBNFS\fRv4 \fBACL\fRs" 108 .LP 109 NFSv4 ACL model is based loosely on the Windows NT ACL model. NFSv4 ACLs 110 provide a much richer ACL model than POSIX-draft ACLs. 111 .sp 112 .LP 113 The major differences between NFSv4 and POSIX-draft ACLs are as follows: 114 .RS +4 115 .TP 116 .ie t \(bu 117 .el o 118 NFSv4 ACLs provide finer grained permissions than the \fBrwx\fR model. 119 .RE 120 .RS +4 121 .TP 122 .ie t \(bu 123 .el o 124 NFSv4 ACLs allow for both \fBALLOW\fR and \fBDENY\fR entries. 125 .RE 126 .RS +4 127 .TP 128 .ie t \(bu 129 .el o 130 NFSv4 ACLs provide a rich set of inheritance semantics. POSIX ACLs also have 131 inheritance, but with the NFSv4 model you can control the following inheritance 132 features: 133 .RS +4 134 .TP 135 .ie t \(bu 136 .el o 137 Whether inheritance cascades to both files and directories or only to files or 138 directories. 139 .RE 140 .RS +4 141 .TP 142 .ie t \(bu 143 .el o 144 In the case of directories, you can indicate whether inheritance is applied to 145 the directory itself, to just one level of subdirectories, or cascades to all 146 subdirectories of the directory. 147 .RE 148 .RE 149 .RS +4 150 .TP 151 .ie t \(bu 152 .el o 153 NFSv4 ACLs provide a mechanism for hooking into a system's audit trail. 154 Currently, Solaris does not support this mechanism. 155 .RE 156 .RS +4 157 .TP 158 .ie t \(bu 159 .el o 160 NFSv4 ACLs enable administrators to specify the order in which ACL entries are 161 checked. With POSIX-draft ACLs the file system reorders ACL entries into a well 162 defined, strict access, checking order. 163 .RE 164 .sp 165 .LP 166 POSIX-draft ACL semantics can be achieved with NFSv4 ACLs. However, only some 167 NFSv4 ACLs can be translated to equivalent POSIX-draft ACLs. 168 .sp 169 .LP 170 Permissions can be specified in three different \fBchmod\fR ACL formats: 171 verbose, compact, or positional. The verbose format uses words to indicate that 172 the permissions are separated with a forward slash (\fB/\fR) character. Compact 173 format uses the permission letters and positional format uses the permission 174 letters or the hyphen (\fB-\fR) to identify no permissions. 175 .sp 176 .LP 177 The permissions for verbose mode and their abbreviated form in parentheses for 178 compact and positional mode are described as follows: 179 .sp 180 .ne 2 181 .na 182 \fBread_data (\fBr\fR)\fR 183 .ad 184 .RS 24n 185 Permission to read the data of the file 186 .RE 187 188 .sp 189 .ne 2 190 .na 191 \fBlist_directory (\fBr\fR)\fR 192 .ad 193 .RS 24n 194 Permission to list the contents of a directory. 195 .RE 196 197 .sp 198 .ne 2 199 .na 200 \fBwrite_data (\fBw\fR)\fR 201 .ad 202 .RS 24n 203 Permission to modify a file's data anywhere in the file's offset range. This 204 includes the ability to grow the file or write to any arbitrary offset. 205 .RE 206 207 .sp 208 .ne 2 209 .na 210 \fBadd_file (\fBw\fR)\fR 211 .ad 212 .RS 24n 213 Permission to add a new file to a directory. 214 .RE 215 216 .sp 217 .ne 2 218 .na 219 \fBappend_data (\fBp\fR)\fR 220 .ad 221 .RS 24n 222 The ability to modify the file's data, but only starting at EOF. Currently, 223 this permission is not supported. 224 .RE 225 226 .sp 227 .ne 2 228 .na 229 \fBadd_subdirectory (\fBp\fR)\fR 230 .ad 231 .RS 24n 232 Permission to create a subdirectory to a directory. 233 .RE 234 235 .sp 236 .ne 2 237 .na 238 \fBread_xattr (\fBR\fR)\fR 239 .ad 240 .RS 24n 241 The ability to read the extended attributes of a file or do a lookup in the 242 extended attributes directory. 243 .RE 244 245 .sp 246 .ne 2 247 .na 248 \fBwrite_xattr (\fBW\fR)\fR 249 .ad 250 .RS 24n 251 The ability to create extended attributes or write to the extended attributes 252 directory. 253 .RE 254 255 .sp 256 .ne 2 257 .na 258 \fBexecute (\fBx\fR)\fR 259 .ad 260 .RS 24n 261 Permission to execute a file. 262 .RE 263 264 .sp 265 .ne 2 266 .na 267 \fBread_attributes (\fBa\fR)\fR 268 .ad 269 .RS 24n 270 The ability to read basic attributes (non-ACLs) of a file. Basic attributes are 271 considered to be the stat level attributes. Allowing this access mask bit means 272 that the entity can execute \fBls\fR(1) and \fBstat\fR(2). 273 .RE 274 275 .sp 276 .ne 2 277 .na 278 \fBwrite_attributes (\fBA\fR)\fR 279 .ad 280 .RS 24n 281 Permission to change the times associated with a file or directory to an 282 arbitrary value. 283 .RE 284 285 .sp 286 .ne 2 287 .na 288 \fBdelete (\fBd\fR)\fR 289 .ad 290 .RS 24n 291 Permission to delete the file. 292 .RE 293 294 .sp 295 .ne 2 296 .na 297 \fBdelete_child (\fBD\fR)\fR 298 .ad 299 .RS 24n 300 Permission to delete a file within a directory. 301 .RE 302 303 .sp 304 .ne 2 305 .na 306 \fBread_acl (\fBc\fR)\fR 307 .ad 308 .RS 24n 309 Permission to read the ACL. 310 .RE 311 312 .sp 313 .ne 2 314 .na 315 \fBwrite_acl (\fBC\fR)\fR 316 .ad 317 .RS 24n 318 Permission to write the ACL or the ability to execute \fBchmod\fR(1) or 319 \fBsetfacl\fR(1). 320 .RE 321 322 .sp 323 .ne 2 324 .na 325 \fBwrite_owner (\fBo\fR)\fR 326 .ad 327 .RS 24n 328 Permission to change the owner or the ability to execute \fBchown\fR(1) or 329 \fBchgrp\fR(1). 330 .RE 331 332 .sp 333 .ne 2 334 .na 335 \fBsynchronize (\fBs\fR)\fR 336 .ad 337 .RS 24n 338 Permission to access a file locally at the server with synchronous reads and 339 writes. Currently, this permission is not supported. 340 .RE 341 342 .sp 343 .LP 344 The following inheritance flags are supported by NFSv4 ACLs: 345 .sp 346 .ne 2 347 .na 348 \fBfile_inherit (\fBf\fR)\fR 349 .ad 350 .RS 26n 351 Inherit to all newly created files in a directory. 352 .RE 353 354 .sp 355 .ne 2 356 .na 357 \fBdir_inherit (\fBd\fR)\fR 358 .ad 359 .RS 26n 360 Inherit to all newly created directories in a directory. 361 .RE 362 363 .sp 364 .ne 2 365 .na 366 \fBinherit_only (\fBi\fR)\fR 367 .ad 368 .RS 26n 369 Placed on a directory, but does not apply to the directory itself, only to 370 newly created files and directories. This flag requires file_inherit 371 and/or dir_inherit to indicate what to inherit. 372 .RE 373 374 .sp 375 .ne 2 376 .na 377 \fBno_propagate (\fBn\fR)\fR 378 .ad 379 .RS 26n 380 Placed on directories and indicates that ACL entries should only be inherited 381 one level of the tree. This flag requires file_inherit and/or dir_inherit to 382 indicate what to inherit. 383 .RE 384 385 .sp 386 .ne 2 387 .na 388 \fBsuccessful_access (\fBS\fR)\fR 389 .ad 390 .RS 26n 391 Indicates whether an alarm or audit record should be initiated upon successful 392 accesses. Used with audit/alarm ACE types. 393 .RE 394 395 .sp 396 .ne 2 397 .na 398 \fBfailed_access (\fBF\fR)\fR 399 .ad 400 .RS 26n 401 Indicates whether an alarm or audit record should be initiated when access 402 fails. Used with audit/alarm ACE types. 403 .RE 404 405 .sp 406 .ne 2 407 .na 408 \fBinherited (\fBI\fR)\fR 409 .ad 410 .RS 26n 411 ACE was inherited. 412 .RE 413 414 .sp 415 .ne 2 416 .na 417 \fB\fB-\fR\fR 418 .ad 419 .RS 26n 420 No permission granted. 421 .RE 422 423 .sp 424 .LP 425 An NFSv4 ACL is expressed using the following syntax: 426 .sp 427 .in +2 428 .nf 429 \fIacl_entry\fR[,\fIacl_entry\fR]... 430 431 owner@:<perms>[:inheritance flags]:<allow|deny> 432 group@:<perms>[:inheritance flags]:<allow|deny> 433 everyone@:<perms>[:inheritance flags]:<allow|deny> 434 user:<username>:<perms>[:inheritance flags]:<allow|deny> 435 usersid:<sid string>:<perms>[:inheritance flags]:<allow|deny> 436 group:<groupname>:<perms>[:inheritance flags]:<allow|deny> 437 groupsid:<sid string>:<perms>[:inheritance flags]:<allow|deny> 438 sid:<sid string>:<perms>[:inheritance flags]:<allow|deny> 439 .fi 440 .in -2 441 442 .sp 443 .ne 2 444 .na 445 \fBowner@\fR 446 .ad 447 .RS 10n 448 File owner 449 .RE 450 451 .sp 452 .ne 2 453 .na 454 \fBgroup@\fR 455 .ad 456 .RS 10n 457 Group owner 458 .RE 459 460 .sp 461 .ne 2 462 .na 463 \fBuser\fR 464 .ad 465 .RS 10n 466 Permissions for a specific user 467 .RE 468 469 .sp 470 .ne 2 471 .na 472 \fBgroup\fR 473 .ad 474 .RS 10n 475 Permissions for a specific group 476 .RE 477 478 .sp 479 .LP 480 Permission and inheritance flags are separated by a \fB/\fR character. 481 .sp 482 .LP 483 ACL specification examples: 484 .sp 485 .in +2 486 .nf 487 user:fred:read_data/write_data/read_attributes:file_inherit:allow 488 owner@:read_data:allow,group@:read_data:allow,user:tom:read_data:deny 489 .fi 490 .in -2 491 .sp 492 493 .sp 494 .LP 495 Using the compact ACL format, permissions are specified by using 14 unique 496 letters to indicate permissions. 497 .sp 498 .LP 499 Using the positional ACL format, permissions are specified as positional 500 arguments similar to the \fBls -V\fR format. The hyphen (\fB-\fR), which 501 indicates that no permission is granted at that position, can be omitted and 502 only the required letters have to be specified. 503 .sp 504 .LP 505 The letters above are listed in the order they would be specified in positional 506 notation. 507 .sp 508 .LP 509 With these letters you can specify permissions in the following equivalent 510 ways. 511 .sp 512 .in +2 513 .nf 514 user:fred:rw------R------:file_inherit:allow 515 .fi 516 .in -2 517 .sp 518 519 .sp 520 .LP 521 Or you can remove the \fB-\fR and scrunch it together. 522 .sp 523 .in +2 524 .nf 525 user:fred:rwR:file_inherit:allow 526 .fi 527 .in -2 528 .sp 529 530 .sp 531 .LP 532 The inheritance flags can also be specified in a more compact manner, as 533 follows: 534 .sp 535 .in +2 536 .nf 537 user:fred:rwR:f:allow 538 user:fred:rwR:f------:allow 539 .fi 540 .in -2 541 .sp 542 543 .SS "Shell-level Solaris \fBAPI\fR" 544 .LP 545 The Solaris command interface supports the manipulation of ACLs. The following 546 Solaris utilities accommodate both ACL models: 547 .sp 548 .ne 2 549 .na 550 \fB\fBchmod\fR\fR 551 .ad 552 .RS 12n 553 The \fBchmod\fR utility has been enhanced to allow for the setting and deleting 554 of ACLs. This is achieved by extending the symbolic-mode argument to support 555 ACL manipulation. See \fBchmod\fR(1) for details. 556 .RE 557 558 .sp 559 .ne 2 560 .na 561 \fB\fBcompress\fR\fR 562 .ad 563 .RS 12n 564 When a file is compressed any ACL associated with the original file is 565 preserved with the compressed file. 566 .RE 567 568 .sp 569 .ne 2 570 .na 571 \fB\fBcp\fR\fR 572 .ad 573 .RS 12n 574 By default, \fBcp\fR ignores ACLs, unless the \fB-p\fR option is specified. 575 When \fB-p\fR is specified the owner and group id, permission modes, 576 modification and access times, ACLs, and extended attributes if applicable are 577 preserved. 578 .RE 579 580 .sp 581 .ne 2 582 .na 583 \fB\fBcpio\fR\fR 584 .ad 585 .RS 12n 586 ACLs are preserved when the \fB-P\fR option is specified. 587 .RE 588 589 .sp 590 .ne 2 591 .na 592 \fB\fBfind\fR\fR 593 .ad 594 .RS 12n 595 Find locates files with ACLs when the \fB-acl\fR flag is specified. 596 .RE 597 598 .sp 599 .ne 2 600 .na 601 \fB\fBls\fR\fR 602 .ad 603 .RS 12n 604 By default \fBls\fR does not display ACL information. When the \fB-v\fR option 605 is specified, a file's ACL is displayed. 606 .RE 607 608 .sp 609 .ne 2 610 .na 611 \fB\fBmv\fR\fR 612 .ad 613 .RS 12n 614 When a file is moved, all attributes are carried along with the renamed file. 615 When a file is moved across a file system boundary, the ACLs are replicated. If 616 the ACL information cannot be replicated, the move fails and the source file is 617 not removed. 618 .RE 619 620 .sp 621 .ne 2 622 .na 623 \fB\fBpack\fR\fR 624 .ad 625 .RS 12n 626 When a file is packed, any ACL associated with the original file is preserved 627 with the packed file. 628 .RE 629 630 .sp 631 .ne 2 632 .na 633 \fB\fBrcp\fR\fR 634 .ad 635 .RS 12n 636 \fBrcp\fR has been enhanced to support copying. A file's ACL is only preserved 637 when the remote host supports ACLs. 638 .RE 639 640 .sp 641 .ne 2 642 .na 643 \fB\fBtar\fR\fR 644 .ad 645 .RS 12n 646 ACLs are preserved when the \fB-p\fR option is specified. 647 .RE 648 649 .sp 650 .ne 2 651 .na 652 \fB\fBunpack\fR\fR 653 .ad 654 .RS 12n 655 When a file with an ACL is unpacked, the unpacked file retains the ACL 656 information. 657 .RE 658 659 .SS "Application-level \fBAPI\fR" 660 .LP 661 The primary interfaces required to access file system ACLs at the programmatic 662 level are the \fBacl_get()\fR and \fBacl_set()\fR functions. These functions 663 support both POSIX draft ACLs and NFSv4 ACLs. 664 .SS "Retrieving a file's \fBACL\fR" 665 .in +2 666 .nf 667 int acl_get(const char *path, int flag, acl_t **aclp); 668 int facl_get(int fd, int flag, acl_t **aclp); 669 .fi 670 .in -2 671 672 .sp 673 .LP 674 The \fBacl_get\fR(3SEC) and \fBfacl_get\fR(3SEC) functions retrieves an ACL on 675 a file whose name is given by path or referenced by the open file descriptor 676 fd. The flag argument specifies whether a trivial ACL should be retrieved. When 677 the flag argument equals \fBACL_NO_TRIVIAL\fR then only ACLs that are not 678 trivial are retrieved. The ACL is returned in the \fBaclp\fR argument. 679 .SS "Freeing \fBACL\fR structure" 680 .in +2 681 .nf 682 void acl_free(acl_t *aclp)s; 683 .fi 684 .in -2 685 686 .sp 687 .LP 688 The \fBacl_free()\fR function frees up memory allocated for the argument 689 \fBaclp;\fR. 690 .SS "Setting an \fBACL\fR on a file" 691 .in +2 692 .nf 693 int acl_set(const char *path, acl_t *aclp); 694 int facl_set(int fd, acl_t *aclp); 695 .fi 696 .in -2 697 698 .sp 699 .LP 700 The \fBacl_set\fR(3SEC) and \fBfacl_get\fR(3SEC) functions are used for setting 701 an ACL on a file whose name is given by path or referenced by the open file 702 descriptor \fBfd\fR. The \fBaclp\fR argument specifies the ACL to set. The 703 \fBacl_set\fR(3SEC) translates an POSIX-draft ACL into a NFSv4 ACL when the 704 target file systems supports NFSv4 ACLs. No translation is performed when 705 trying to set an NFSv4 ACL on a POSIX-draft ACL supported file system. 706 .SS "Determining an \fBACL\fR's trivialness" 707 .in +2 708 .nf 709 int acl_trivial(const char *path); 710 .fi 711 .in -2 712 713 .sp 714 .LP 715 The \fBacl_trivial()\fR function is used to determine whether a file has a 716 trivial ACL. 717 .SS "Removing all \fBACL\fRs from a file" 718 .in +2 719 .nf 720 int acl_strip(const char *path, uid_t uid, gid_t gid, mode_t mode); 721 .fi 722 .in -2 723 724 .sp 725 .LP 726 The \fBacl_strip()\fR function removes all ACLs from a file and replaces them 727 with a trivial ACL based off of the passed in argument mode. After replacing 728 the ACL the owner and group of the file are set to the values specified in the 729 uid and gid parameters. 730 .SS "Converting \fBACL\fRs to/from external representation" 731 .in +2 732 .nf 733 int acl_fromtext(const char *path, acl_t **aclp); 734 char *acl_totext(acl_t *aclp, int flags); 735 .fi 736 .in -2 737 738 .sp 739 .LP 740 The \fBacl_totext()\fR function converts an internal ACL representation pointed 741 to by aclp into an external representation. See \fBDESCRIPTION\fR for details 742 about external representation. 743 .sp 744 .LP 745 The \fBacl_fromtext()\fR functions converts and external representation into an 746 internal representation. See \fBDESCRIPTION\fR for details about external 747 representation. 748 .SH EXAMPLES 749 .LP 750 The following examples demonstrate how the API can be used to perform basic 751 operations on ACLs. 752 .LP 753 \fBExample 1 \fRRetrieving and Setting an ACL 754 .sp 755 .LP 756 Use the following to retrieve an ACL and set it on another file: 757 758 .sp 759 .in +2 760 .nf 761 error = acl_get("file", ACL_NO_TRIVIAL, &aclp); 762 763 if (error == 0 && aclp != NULL) { 764 .in +8 765 error = acl_set("file2", aclp); 766 acl_free(aclp); 767 .in -8 768 } 769 \&... 770 .fi 771 .in -2 772 773 .LP 774 \fBExample 2 \fRRetrieving and Setting Any ACLs 775 .sp 776 .LP 777 Use the following to retrieve any ACL, including trivial ACLs, and set it on 778 another file: 779 780 .sp 781 .in +2 782 .nf 783 error = acl_get("file3", 0, &aclp); 784 if (error == 0) { 785 .in +8 786 error = acl_set("file4", aclp); 787 acl_free(aclp); 788 .in -8 789 } 790 \&... 791 .fi 792 .in -2 793 794 .LP 795 \fBExample 3 \fRDetermining if a File has a Trivial ACL 796 .sp 797 .LP 798 Use the following to determine if a file has a trivial ACL: 799 800 .sp 801 .in +2 802 .nf 803 char *file = "file5"; 804 istrivial = acl_trivial(file); 805 806 if (istrivial == 0) 807 .in +8 808 printf("file %s has a trivial ACL\en", file); 809 .in -8 810 else 811 .in +8 812 printf("file %s has a NON-trivial ACL\en", file); 813 .in -8 814 \&... 815 .fi 816 .in -2 817 818 .LP 819 \fBExample 4 \fRRemoving all ACLs from a File 820 .sp 821 .LP 822 Use the following to remove all ACLs from a file, and set a new mode, owner, 823 and group: 824 825 .sp 826 .in +2 827 .nf 828 error = acl_strip("file", 10, 100, 0644); 829 \&... 830 .fi 831 .in -2 832 833 .SH SEE ALSO 834 .LP 835 \fBchgrp\fR(1), \fBchmod\fR(1), \fBchown\fR(1), \fBcp\fR(1), \fBcpio\fR(1), 836 \fBfind\fR(1), \fBls\fR(1), \fBmv\fR(1), \fBtar\fR(1), \fBsetfacl\fR(1), 837 \fBchmod\fR(2), \fBacl\fR(2), \fBstat\fR(2), \fBacl_get\fR(3SEC), 838 \fBaclsort\fR(3SEC), \fBacl_fromtext\fR(3SEC), \fBacl_free\fR(3SEC), 839 \fBacl_strip\fR(3SEC), \fBacl_trivial\fR(3SEC)