POSIX Access Control Lists

POSIX Access Control Lists (ACLs) allows you to assign different permissions for different users or groups even though they do not correspond to the original owner or the owning group.

For example: User john creates a file but does not want to allow anyone to do anything with this file, except another user, antony (even though there are other users that belong to the group john).

This means, in addition to the file owner, the file group, and others, additional users and groups can be granted or denied access by using POSIX ACLs.

Activating POSIX ACLs Support

To use POSIX ACLs for a file or directory, the partition of the file or directory must be mounted with POSIX ACLs support.

Activating POSIX ACLs Support on Sever

To mount the backend export directories for POSIX ACLs support, use the following command:

# mount -o acl

For example:

# mount -o acl /dev/sda1 /export1

Alternatively, if the partition is listed in the /etc/fstab file, add the following entry for the partition to include the POSIX ACLs option:

LABEL=/work /export1 ext3 rw, acl 14

Activating POSIX ACLs Support on Client

To mount the glusterfs volumes for POSIX ACLs support, use the following command:

# mount –t glusterfs -o acl

For example:

# mount -t glusterfs -o acl 198.192.198.234:glustervolume /mnt/gluster

Setting POSIX ACLs

You can set two types of POSIX ACLs, that is, access ACLs and default ACLs. You can use access ACLs to grant permission for a specific file or directory. You can use default ACLs only on a directory but if a file inside that directory does not have an ACLs, it inherits the permissions of the default ACLs of the directory.

You can set ACLs for per user, per group, for users not in the user group for the file, and via the effective right mask.

Setting Access ACLs

You can apply access ACLs to grant permission for both files and directories.

To set or modify Access ACLs

You can set or modify access ACLs use the following command:

# setfacl –m file

The ACL entry types are the POSIX ACLs representations of owner, group, and other.

Permissions must be a combination of the characters r (read), w (write), and x (execute). You must specify the ACL entry in the following format and can specify multiple entry types separated by commas.

ACL Entry Description
u:uid:\<permission> Sets the access ACLs for a user. You can specify user name or UID
g:gid:\<permission> Sets the access ACLs for a group. You can specify group name or GID.
m:\<permission> Sets the effective rights mask. The mask is the combination of all access permissions of the owning group and all of the user and group entries.
o:\<permission> Sets the access ACLs for users other than the ones in the group for the file.

If a file or directory already has an POSIX ACLs, and the setfacl command is used, the additional permissions are added to the existing POSIX ACLs or the existing rule is modified.

For example, to give read and write permissions to user antony:

# setfacl -m u:antony:rw /mnt/gluster/data/testfile

Setting Default ACLs

You can apply default ACLs only to directories. They determine the permissions of a file system objects that inherits from its parent directory when it is created.

To set default ACLs

You can set default ACLs for files and directories using the following command:

# setfacl –m –-set

Permissions must be a combination of the characters r (read), w (write), and x (execute). Specify the ACL entry_type as described below, separating multiple entry types with commas.

u:user_name:permissons Sets the access ACLs for a user. Specify the user name, or the UID.

g:group_name:permissions Sets the access ACLs for a group. Specify the group name, or the GID.

m:permission Sets the effective rights mask. The mask is the combination of all access permissions of the owning group, and all user and group entries.

o:permissions Sets the access ACLs for users other than the ones in the group for the file.

For example, to set the default ACLs for the /data directory to read for users not in the user group:

# setfacl –m --set o::r /mnt/gluster/data

Note

An access ACLs set for an individual file can override the default ACLs permissions.

Effects of a Default ACLs

The following are the ways in which the permissions of a directory's default ACLs are passed to the files and subdirectories in it:

  • A subdirectory inherits the default ACLs of the parent directory both as its default ACLs and as an access ACLs.
  • A file inherits the default ACLs as its access ACLs.

Retrieving POSIX ACLs

You can view the existing POSIX ACLs for a file or directory.

To view existing POSIX ACLs

  • View the existing access ACLs of a file using the following command:

    # getfacl

    For example, to view the existing POSIX ACLs for sample.jpg

    # getfacl /mnt/gluster/data/test/sample.jpg
    # owner: antony
    # group: antony
    user::rw-
    group::rw-
    other::r--
    
  • View the default ACLs of a directory using the following command:

    # getfacl

    For example, to view the existing ACLs for /data/doc

    # getfacl /mnt/gluster/data/doc
    # owner: antony
    # group: antony
    user::rw-
    user:john:r--
    group::r--
    mask::r--
    other::r--
    default:user::rwx
    default:user:antony:rwx
    default:group::r-x
    default:mask::rwx
    default:other::r-x
    

Removing POSIX ACLs

To remove all the permissions for a user, groups, or others, use the following command:

# setfacl -x

setfaclentry_type Options

The ACL entry_type translates to the POSIX ACL representations of owner, group, and other.

Permissions must be a combination of the characters r (read), w (write), and x (execute). Specify the ACL entry_type as described below, separating multiple entry types with commas.

u:user_name Sets the access ACLs for a user. Specify the user name, or the UID.

g:group_name Sets the access ACLs for a group. Specify the group name, or the GID.

m:permission Sets the effective rights mask. The mask is the combination of all access permissions of the owning group, and all user and group entries.

o:permissions Sets the access ACLs for users other than the ones in the group for the file.

For example, to remove all permissions from the user antony:

# setfacl -x u:antony /mnt/gluster/data/test-file

Samba and ACLs

If you are using Samba to access GlusterFS FUSE mount, then POSIX ACLs are enabled by default. Samba has been compiled with the --with-acl-support option, so no special flags are required when accessing or mounting a Samba share.

NFS and ACLs

Currently GlusterFS supports POSIX ACL configuration through NFS mount, i.e. setfacl and getfacl commands work through NFS mount.