ACL: Difference between revisions

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   setfacl -Rm g:users:rwX /path/to/some/folder/
   setfacl -Rm g:users:rwX /path/to/some/folder/
   setfacl -d -Rm g:users:rwX /path/to/some/folder/
   setfacl -d -Rm g:users:rwX /path/to/some/folder/
=== Links ===
* [http://bencane.com/2012/05/27/acl-using-access-control-lists-on-linux/ ACL: Using Access Control Lists on Linux]

Revision as of 12:22, 16 March 2017

Using ACL to make an actually useable shared folder

Sadly the built in UNIX way of doing permissions, with it's notions of users, groups, and "others" is in practice quite difficult to use to make "shared folders". ACL (for access control lists) is an extension to these mechanisms that gives more flexibility. The setfacl command is the thing that sets the options.

So, the command to Allow anyone in the users group to write files to path/to/some/folder

 setfacl -Rm g:users:rwX /path/to/some/folder/
 setfacl -d -Rm g:users:rwX /path/to/some/folder/

Links