acl_get, facl_get, acl_set, facl_set - get or set a file's Access Control List (ACL)
cc [ flag... ] file... -lsec [ library... ] #include <sys/acl.h> int *acl_get(const char *path, int flag, acl_t **aclp);
int *facl_get(int fd, int flag, acl_t **aclp);
int acl_set(const char *path, acl_t *aclp);
int facl_set(int fd, acl_t *aclp);
The acl_get() and facl_get() functions retrieve an Access Control List (ACL) of a file whose name is given by path or referenced by the open file descriptor fd. The flag argument specifies whether a trivial ACL should be retrieved. When the flag argument is ACL_NO_TRIVIAL, only ACLs that are not trivial will be retrieved. The ACL is returned in the aclp argument.
The acl_set() and facl_set() functions are used for setting an ACL of a file whose name is given by path or referenced by the open file descriptor fd. The aclp argument specifies the ACL to set.
The acl_get() and acl_set() functions support multiple types of ACLs. When possible, the acl_set() function translates an ACL to the target file's style of ACL. Currently this is only possible when translating from a POSIX-draft ACL such as on UFS to a file system that supports NFSv4 ACL semantics such as ZFS or NFSv4.
Upon successful completion, acl_get() and facl_get() return 0 and aclp is non-NULL. The aclp argument can be NULL after successful completion if the file had a trivial ACL and the flag argument was ACL_NO_TRIVIAL. Otherwise, -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
Upon successful completion, acl_set() and facl_set() return 0. Otherwise, -1 is returned and errno is set to indicate the error.
These functions will fail if:
EACCES
EIO
ENOENT
ENOSYS
ENOTSUP
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
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chmod(1), acl(2), acl(5), attributes(5)
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