ACL
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Contents
Use Case
Peter, Paul and Mary are working with one directory tree. They share, use and edit the same files. They all belong to the system group users. But the directory the should be able to write on belongs to the group exchange.
/home | /exchange | /peters_subdir | /peters_file.txt /pauls_subdir | /pauls_file.odf maries_file.doc
Links
- Indiana University Dep. of Comupter Science
- German - Was ist die umask? Wie kann ich sie festlegen?
- German - Wie nutzt man ACLs (Access Control Lists) richtig?
Use it
Enable ACL
Enable the ACL's in fstab
/etc/fstab /home /dev/hdx ext3 defaults,exec,acl 1 2
Create a new group exchange
Create the new group exchange. In some cases it could be wise to create a user with the same name too, with its own home directory and the default group exchange. Don't forget to set the default group for the user.
chgrp exchange /home/exchange/ chmod g+s /home/exchange
Add ACL support
Changing the default umask for the certain directory and all subdirectories
setfacl -d -m mask:007 /home/exchange/
Now every file from any user accessing this directory will be readably/writable for the group exchange.
NFS
Change your fstab mount options to
nfs_server:/home/exchange /home/your_account/exchange nfs \ rw,rsize=8192,wsize=8192,user,timeo=10,intr,acl 0 0
Important here is the acl in the options part.
Manually mount like this:
mount -t nfs -o rw,acl \ nfs_server:/home/exchange /home/your_account/exchange
Backup
If you like to backup directories or files with acl's, you have to use the star (a tar clone) backup utility.