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Full Discussion: ZFS ACLS and vim
Operating Systems Solaris ZFS ACLS and vim Post 302938963 by akame on Friday 20th of March 2015 11:09:47 AM
Old 03-20-2015
Hi Achenle,

Thanks for your email.

I have tried this and it is not changing the permissions now.. but that would be expected if chmod is "interfered" like that?
What vim does is take a copy, work on tha tcopy, then copy that file back and invoke chmod to preserve permissions, which in turns overwrites the ACLs.

I have attaced the dtrace output too.

What's odd is, if I run it with "nobackup", it creates the swap file as well, but this time it preserves the acls...

Code:
1715/1:          0.0733 chmod(".1.swp", 0644)                           = 0
1715/1:          2.7204 rename("1", "1~")                               = 0
1715/1:          2.7227 chmod("1", 0100644)                             = 0
1715/1:          2.7284 rename("/root/.viminfo.tmp", "/root/.viminfo")  = 0

Cheers.
 

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sticky(5)                                               Standards, Environments, and Macros                                              sticky(5)

NAME
sticky - mark files for special treatment DESCRIPTION
The sticky bit (file mode bit 01000, see chmod(2)) is used to indicate special treatment of certain files and directories. A directory for which the sticky bit is set restricts deletion of files it contains. A file in a sticky directory can only be removed or renamed by a user who has write permission on the directory, and either owns the file, owns the directory, has write permission on the file, or is a privi- leged user. Setting the sticky bit is useful for directories such as /tmp, which must be publicly writable but should deny users permission to arbitrarily delete or rename the files of others. If the sticky bit is set on a regular file and no execute bits are set, the system's page cache will not be used to hold the file's data. This bit is normally set on swap files of diskless clients so that accesses to these files do not flush more valuable data from the sys- tem's cache. Moreover, by default such files are treated as swap files, whose inode modification times may not necessarily be correctly recorded on permanent storage. Any user may create a sticky directory. See chmod for details about modifying file modes. SEE ALSO
chmod(1), chmod(2), chown(2), mkdir(2), rename(2), unlink(2) BUGS
The mkdir(2) function will not create a directory with the sticky bit set. SunOS 5.10 1 Aug 2002 sticky(5)
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