acl_set_fd, acl_set_fd_np, acl_set_file, acl_set_link_np -- set an ACL
for a file
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <sys/acl.h>
int
acl_set_fd(int fd, acl_t acl);
int
acl_set_fd_np(int fd, acl_t acl, acl_type_t type);
int
acl_set_file(const char *path_p, acl_type_t type, acl_t acl);
int
acl_set_link_np(const char *path_p, acl_type_t type, acl_t acl);
The acl_set_fd(), acl_set_fd_np(), acl_set_file(), and acl_set_link_np()
each associate an ACL with an object referred to by fd or path_p. The
acl_set_fd_np() and acl_set_link_np() functions are not POSIX.1e calls.
The acl_set_fd() function allows only the setting of ACLs of type
ACL_TYPE_ACCESS where as acl_set_fd_np() allows the setting of ACLs of
any type. The acl_set_link_np() function acts on a symlink rather than
its target, if the target of the path is a symlink.
FreeBSD's support for POSIX.1e interfaces and features is still under
development at this time.
Upon successful completion, the value 0 is returned; otherwise the
value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the
error.
If any of the following conditions occur, these functions shall return -1
and set errno to the corresponding value:
[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.
[EBADF] The fd argument is not a valid file descriptor.
[EINVAL] Argument acl does not point to a valid ACL for this
object, or the ACL type specified in type is invalid
for this object, or both.
[ENAMETOOLONG] A component of a pathname exceeded 255 characters, or
an entire path name exceeded 1023 characters.
[ENOENT] The named object does not exist, or the path_p argument
points to an empty string.
[ENOMEM] Insufficient memory available to fulfill request.
[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.
[EOPNOTSUPP] The file system does not support ACL retrieval.
[EROFS] This function requires modification of a file system
which is currently read-only.
acl(3), acl_delete(3), acl_get(3), acl_valid(3), posix1e(3)
POSIX.1e is described in IEEE POSIX.1e draft 17. Discussion of the draft
continues on the cross-platform POSIX.1e implementation mailing list. To
join this list, see the FreeBSD POSIX.1e implementation page for more
information.
POSIX.1e support was introduced in FreeBSD 4.0, and development continues.
Robert N M Watson
FreeBSD 5.2.1 December 29, 2002 FreeBSD 5.2.1 [ Back ] |