lsacl(1)
NAME
lsacl − list access control lists (ACLs) of files
SYNOPSIS
lsacl [−l] file ...
DESCRIPTION
lsacl lists access control lists (ACLs) of one or more files in symbolic, “short” form, one file’s ACL per line of output, followed by the file name; see acl(5) for ACL syntax.
Options
lsacl recognizes the following option:
−l Print ACLs in long form. Each file’s ACL can be more than one line long, and is always preceded by file name, colon, and newline. Consecutive file names are separated by blank lines.
If a hyphen (−) is given as a file name argument, lsacl prints the ACL for the standard input. By default, it prints the file name as −. For the −l option it prints a file name of <stdin>.
Unlike ls(1), lsacl cannot list ACLs of files in subdirectories automatically or list the ACL entries of the files in the current directory by default. A good way to do the latter is:
lsacl ∗
or
lsacl .∗ ∗
EXTERNAL INFLUENCES
Environment Variables
LANG determines the language in which messages are displayed.
If LANG is not specified or is set to the empty string, a default of "C" (see lang(5)) is used instead of LANG. If any internationalization variable contains an invalid setting, lsacl behaves as if all internationalization variables are set to "C". See environ(5).
RETURN VALUE
If lsacl succeeds, it returns zero. If invoked incorrectly, it returns a value of 1. If lsacl is unable to read the ACL for a specified file, it prints an error message to standard error, continues, and later returns a value of 2.
EXAMPLES
The following command lists the ACL of the file “dir/file1.”
lsacl dir/file1
Here’s how to list ACLs for all files in the current directory, in long form.
lsacl −l .∗ ∗
Here’s how to list ACLs for all files under “mydir”.
find mydir -print | sort | xargs lsacl
DEPENDENCIES
NFS:
lsacl is not supported on remote files.
AUTHOR
lsacl was developed by HP.
SEE ALSO
chacl(1), getaccess(1), ls(1), getacl(2), acl(5).
Hewlett-Packard Company — HP-UX Release 8.05: June 1991