Am 24. Jul, 2002 schwätzte foodog so: > Is there a Linux version of VMS-style access control lists (ACLs)? If > so, it's no problem. (and if those exist, I'd really appreciate a > pointer to 'em :-) $ apt-cache search access | grep control libapache-authznetldap-perl - LDAP access control for Apache+mod_perl squidguard - filter, redirector and access controller plug for Squid acl - Access control list utilities acl-dev - Access control list static libraries and headers enigma - A game where you control a marble with the mouse gsm-utils - Application to access and control a GSM mobile phone. idsaguardgtk - Interactive access control with GTK GUI for IDS/A libacl1 - Access control list shared library webmin-wuftpd - wu-ftpd control module for webmin $ apt-cache show libacl1 Package: libacl1 Priority: optional Section: utils Installed-Size: 48 Maintainer: Nathan Scott Architecture: i386 Source: acl Version: 2.0.15-1 Depends: libattr1, libc6 (>= 2.2.4-4) Conflicts: acl (<< 2.0.0) Filename: pool/main/a/acl/libacl1_2.0.15-1_i386.deb Size: 11012 MD5sum: fdb8b5ac04d5f8a8e288cd354d976784 Description: Access control list shared library This package contains the libacl.so dynamic library containing the POSIX 1003.1e draft standard 17 functions for manipulating access control lists. ACLs are addons to *NIX. At least a couple of commercial *NIXen support them ( AIX, Solaris, HP/UX? ). Last I played with any they weren't compatable. Using AFS on top of everything makes it all compatable, though. Presumably the same for veritas filesystem stuff. Seeing a reference for a POSIX standard gives me hope that we might someday have a ubiquitous, standard ACL implementation. I wish we had it years ago. > > I'm told that long ago Netware branched off from a *nix distribution. > It's deeply in the "no-brainer" category with NW3 and up. Netware is based on System V to some extent, or so I'm told. In fact, rumor has it that that's the reason Novell hasn't gone Open Source. Supposedly the copyrights have finally run out ( or will soon ) and Novell wants to go Open Source. They might even want to go Free Software. I haven't heard anything beyond the initial rumor that was published in one of their Novell news typeos of publications a couple of months ago. ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com/ # It's up to the reader to make the book interesting. # An author has only the opportunity to make it uninteresting. - der.hans