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Full Discussion: ZFS ACLS and vim
Operating Systems Solaris ZFS ACLS and vim Post 302939031 by akame on Saturday 21st of March 2015 09:11:53 AM
Old 03-21-2015
Yes, I run a test with LD_PRELOAD set, so chmod command would not work (and it wasn't working! I tried), that preserved the ACLS when runing vim with backup mode on.

I have attached the dtrace for the run with vim + set nobackup

Code:
# ls -V 1
-rw-r--r--+  1 root     root           9 Mar 21 13:03 1
                user:lp:rwx-----------:fd-----:allow
                 owner@:rw-p--aARWcCos:-------:allow
                 group@:r-----a-R-c--s:-------:allow
              everyone@:r-----a-R-c--s:-------:allow
# cat ~/.vimrc
set nobackup
# truss -f -a -vall -l -d -o truss.out vim 1
# ls -V 1
-rw-r--r--+  1 root     root           9 Mar 21 13:03 1
                user:lp:rwx-----------:fd-----:allow
                 owner@:rw-p--aARWcCos:-------:allow
                 group@:r-----a-R-c--s:-------:allow
              everyone@:r-----a-R-c--s:-------:allow

 

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EVIM(1) 						      General Commands Manual							   EVIM(1)

NAME
evim - easy Vim, edit a file with Vim and setup for modeless editing SYNOPSIS
evim [options] [file ..] eview DESCRIPTION
eVim starts Vim and sets options to make it behave like a modeless editor. This is still Vim but used as a point-and-click editor. This feels a lot like using Notepad on MS-Windows. eVim will always run in the GUI, to enable the use of menus and toolbar. Only to be used for people who really can't work with Vim in the normal way. Editing will be much less efficient. eview is the same, but starts in read-only mode. It works just like evim -R. See vim(1) for details about Vim, options, etc. The 'insertmode' option is set to be able to type text directly. Mappings are setup to make Copy and Paste work with the MS-Windows keys. CTRL-X cuts text, CTRL-C copies text and CTRL-V pastes text. Use CTRL-Q to obtain the original meaning of CTRL-V. OPTIONS
See vim(1). FILES
/usr/share/vim/vim61/evim.vim The script loaded to initialize eVim. AKA
Also Known As "Vim for gumbies". When using evim you are expected to take a handkerchief, make a knot in each corner and wear it on your head. SEE ALSO
vim(1) AUTHOR
Most of Vim was made by Bram Moolenaar, with a lot of help from others. See the Help/Credits menu. 2002 February 16 EVIM(1)
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