Georg Pfuetzenreuter
81c79895ed
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pyacl
Overview
This is a high level abstraction over the great pylibacl library. It removes the
need for low level understanding of POSIX.1e by providing an interface
similar to what one is used to by common ACL handling tools such as
getfacl(1)
and setfacl(1)
. Handling of ACLs in
pyacl
happens through a map resembling what one would find
as a result of calling getfacl(1)
.
Example
Reading the ACL of a path
The following shows a file at /tmp/testacl1
on which an
ACL granting the user georg2
read permissions was
applied.
Result from getfacl(1)
:
$ getfacl -c /tmp/testacl1
getfacl: Removing leading '/' from absolute path names
user::---
user:georg2:r--
group::r--
mask::r--
other::---
Result from pyacl
:
>>> from pyacl import acl
>>> acl.parse_acl_from_path('/tmp/testacl1')
{'user': {'georg2': {'read': True, 'write': False, 'execute': False}},
'group': {None: {'read': True, 'write': False, 'execute': False}},
'mask': {None: {'read': True, 'write': False, 'execute': False}},
'other': {None: {'read': False, 'write': False, 'execute': False}}}
Writing an ACL to a path
The following will apply ACL granting the user georg2
read permissions to a file at /tmp/testacl2
.
echo hi > /tmp/testacl2
With setfacl(1)
:
setfacl -m u:georg2:r /tmp/testacl2
With pyacl
:
>>> from pyacl import acl
>>> myacl = acl.build_acl(target_name='georg2', target_type='user', read=True, write=False, execute=False)
>>> acl.apply_acl_to_path(myacl, '/tmp/testacl2')
Of course, the build_acl()
call could be shortened by
omitting default arguments.
Documentation
The functions provided by pyacl
are documented through
docstrings. Find them in the source code, or by calling
help()
- example:
>>> from pyacl import acl
>>> help(acl.build_acl)
Help on function build_acl in module pyacl.acl:
build_acl(target_name, target_type, read=False, write=False, execute=False)
Example usage: build_acl(target_name='georg2', target_type='user', read=True, write=False, execute=True)
Return: posix1e.ACL
Hacking/Tests
Functionality is tested through pytest
. As it requires a
certain test user to be present, easiest is to use the purpose-built
container image. A wrapper is provided at
scripts/test.sh
.