acl_to_text
,
acl_to_text_np
— convert an
ACL to text
Standard C Library (libc, -lc)
#include
<sys/types.h>
#include <sys/acl.h>
char *
acl_to_text
(acl_t
acl, ssize_t
*len_p);
char *
acl_to_text_np
(acl_t
acl, ssize_t
*len_p, int
flags);
The
acl_to_text
()
and
acl_to_text_np
()
functions translate the ACL pointed to by argument acl
into a NULL terminated character string. If the pointer
len_p is not NULL, then the function shall return the
length of the string (not including the NULL terminator) in the location
pointed to by len_p. If the ACL is POSIX.1e, the
format of the text string returned by acl_to_text
()
shall be the POSIX.1e long ACL form. If the ACL is NFSv4, the format of the
text string shall be the compact form, unless the
ACL_TEXT_VERBOSE flag is given.
The flags specified are formed by
or'ing the following
values
ACL_TEXT_VERBOSE |
Format ACL using verbose form |
ACL_TEXT_NUMERIC_IDS |
Do not resolve IDs into user or group names |
ACL_TEXT_APPEND_ID |
In addition to user and group names, append numeric IDs |
This function allocates any memory necessary to contain the string
and returns a pointer to the string. The caller should free any releasable
memory, when the new string is no longer required, by calling
acl_free(3)
with the (void*)char as an argument.
FreeBSD's support for POSIX.1e interfaces
and features is still under development at this time.
Upon successful completion, the function shall return a pointer to
the long text form of an ACL. Otherwise, a value of
(char*)NULL shall be returned and
errno shall be set to indicate the error.
If any of the following conditions occur, the
acl_to_text
() function shall return a value of
(acl_t)NULL and set errno to the
corresponding value:
- [
EINVAL
]
- Argument acl does not point to a valid ACL.
The ACL denoted by acl contains one or
more improperly formed ACL entries, or for some other reason cannot be
translated into a text form of an ACL.
- [
ENOMEM
]
- The character string to be returned requires more memory than is allowed
by the hardware or software-imposed memory management constraints.
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.
The acl_from_text
() and
acl_to_text
() functions rely on the
getpwent(3)
library calls to manage username and uid mapping, as well as the
getgrent(3)
library calls to manage groupname and gid mapping. These calls are not
thread safe, and so transitively, neither are
acl_from_text
() and
acl_to_text
(). These functions may also interfere
with stateful calls associated with the getpwent
()
and getgrent
() calls.