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Full Discussion: Using the Find command
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Using the Find command Post 302999371 by Don Cragun on Sunday 18th of June 2017 08:40:37 PM
Old 06-18-2017
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mook
Thank you, I know have a copy! I meant without any other alternatives and, I think I have some sort of misunderstanding... So -gid will show me the files that a user group has access too?
We can't answer that without knowing what operating system you're using.

And lots of other factors affect file access in addition to the file's numeric group ID and/or alphanumeric group name. If you're using GNU utilities find AND the effective user ID of the process trying to access the file does not have permission to do so AND there is no ACL associated with this file AND the number given as the argument to the -gid primary is a valid group ID AND (the effective group ID or one of the supplementary group IDs of the running process matches the file's group ID OR the permissions on the file allow anyone to perform the type of access the process is requesting) then the process has access to open the file, remove the file, truncate the file, or rename the file. And, of course, depending on what you are trying to do, other restrictions might apply such as the time of day, the number of links to the file, etc. which might further restrict access to a file.

If you're using a BSD-based find utility, the results are based on a group name or group ID instead of just a group ID.

Last edited by Don Cragun; 06-19-2017 at 04:40 AM.. Reason: Fix typo: s/your IP/group ID/
 

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nfsidmap(5)							File Formats Manual						       nfsidmap(5)

NAME
nfsidmap - The NFS idmapper upcall program SYNOPSIS
nfsidmap [-v] [-t timeout] key desc nfsidmap [-v] [-c] nfsidmap [-v] [-u|-g|-r user] DESCRIPTION
The file /usr/sbin/nfsidmap is used by the NFS idmapper to translate user and group ids into names, and to translate user and group names into ids. Idmapper uses request-key to perform the upcall and cache the result. /usr/sbin/nfsidmap is called by /sbin/request-key, and will perform the translation and initialize a key with the resulting information. nfsidmap can also used to clear the keyring of all the keys or revoke one particular key. This is useful when the id mappings have failed to due to a lookup error resulting in all the cached uids/gids to be set to the user id nobody. OPTIONS
-c Clear the keyring of all the keys. -g user Revoke the gid key of the given user. -r user Revoke both the uid and gid key of the given user. -t timeout Set the expiration timer, in seconds, on the key. The default is 600 seconds (10 mins). -u user Revoke the uid key of the given user. -v Increases the verbosity of the output to syslog (can be specified multiple times). CONFIGURING
The file /etc/request-key.conf will need to be modified so /sbin/request-key can properly direct the upcall. The following line should be added before a call to keyctl negate: create id_resolver * * /usr/sbin/nfsidmap -t 600 %k %d This will direct all id_resolver requests to the program /usr/sbin/nfsidmap. The -t 600 defines how many seconds into the future the key will expire. This is an optional parameter for /usr/sbin/nfsidmap and will default to 600 seconds when not specified. The idmapper system uses four key descriptions: uid: Find the UID for the given user gid: Find the GID for the given group user: Find the user name for the given UID group: Find the group name for the given GID You can choose to handle any of these individually, rather than using the generic upcall program. If you would like to use your own pro- gram for a uid lookup then you would edit your request-key.conf so it looks similar to this: create id_resolver uid:* * /some/other/program %k %d create id_resolver * * /usr/sbin/nfsidmap %k %d Notice that the new line was added above the line for the generic program. request-key will find the first matching line and run the cor- responding program. In this case, /some/other/program will handle all uid lookups, and /usr/sbin/nfsidmap will handle gid, user, and group lookups. AUTHOR
Bryan Schumaker, <bjschuma@netapp.com> 1 October 2010 nfsidmap(5)
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