| To: | linux-xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx |
|---|---|
| Subject: | Re: disable ACLs on xfs |
| From: | Florian Weimer <fw@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| Date: | Tue, 01 Mar 2005 11:53:48 +0100 |
| In-reply-to: | <20050301080048.GA737@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> (martin f. krafft's message of "Tue, 1 Mar 2005 09:00:48 +0100") |
| References: | <1109609019.4146.24.camel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> <20050301080048.GA737@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> |
| Sender: | linux-xfs-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxx |
* martin f. krafft:
> also sprach Fabio Capannini <f.capannini@xxxxxxxxx> [2005.02.28.1743 +0100]:
>> It turns out that some applications don't support xfs ACLs in
>> a correct manner, so I was wondering if I could turn them off.
>
> what does an application care about the filesystem or ACLs? or are
> we talking about tools like rsync/scp (no ACL support), or low-level
> XFS tools?
Most likely the application supports some form of ACLs, but doesn't
work with the current Linux semantics. For example, cp from Debian's
coreutils claims to support ACLs, but cannot deal properly with older
XFS ACLs ("cp -p" fails, breaking build scripts).
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