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| File: [Development] / xfs-cmds / xfstests / 105 (download)
Revision 1.3, Fri May 12 06:06:04 2006 UTC (11 years, 5 months ago) by ajones.longdrop.melbourne.sgi.com
Test 105 was broken on IRIX because there is no setfacl cmd in IRIX. Merge of master-melb:xfs-cmds:25919a by kenmcd. Test now checks HOSTOS and runs setfacl for linux and chacl for IRIX. Also removed the group ($4) column in the ls -l cmd because IRIX reports the group 'sys' but Linux reports the group as 'root'. This detail was not needed for the test. |
#! /bin/sh
# FS QA Test No. 105
#
# Test fix of bug:
# 930290 - xfs directory with no exec perm in ACL denies access
# and breaks CAPP evaluation
# which pulls out an earlier mod
#
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
# Copyright (c) 2000-2006 Silicon Graphics, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
#-----------------------------------------------------------------------
#
# creator
owner=fsgqa@snap.melbourne.sgi.com
seq=`basename $0`
echo "QA output created by $seq"
here=`pwd`
tmp=/tmp/$$
status=1 # failure is the default!
trap "_cleanup; exit \$status" 0 1 2 3 15
_cleanup()
{
cd /
}
# get standard environment, filters and checks
. ./common.rc
. ./common.filter
. ./common.attr
# Modify as appropriate.
_supported_fs xfs udf
_supported_os IRIX Linux
# real QA test starts here
rm -f $seq.full
_require_scratch
_acl_setup_ids
_acl_requirements
umount $SCRATCH_DEV >/dev/null 2>&1
echo "*** MKFS ***" >>$seq.full
echo "" >>$seq.full
_scratch_mkfs >>$seq.full 2>&1 \
|| _fail "mkfs failed"
_scratch_mount >>$seq.full 2>&1 \
|| _fail "mount failed"
cd $SCRATCH_MNT
# create a dir with out execute perms
mkdir -m 600 subdir
# make it owned by $acl1
chown $acl1 subdir
# put a file in the directory
echo data > subdir/file
ls -l subdir/file | awk '{ print $1, $3 }'
# add an ACL with a user ACE which has no exec permission
if [ "$HOSTOS" == "Linux" ]; then
setfacl -m u:$acl1:r subdir
elif [ "$HOSTOS" == "IRIX" ]; then
chacl u:$acl:r--,g::---,o::--- subdir
else
echo "Unknown OS!"
exit 1
fi
# With the bug this gives: `ls: subdir/file: Permission denied'
# because one needs at least an exec perm somewhere in acl
# However, this should not hold true for directories.
ls -l subdir/file | awk '{ print $1, $3 }'
# With the bug this gives: `subdir/file2: Permission denied'.
echo data2 > subdir/file2
# success, all done
status=0
exit