AclFileAttributeView
  public
  
  
  
  interface
  AclFileAttributeView
  
  
      implements
      
        FileOwnerAttributeView
      
  
  
| java.nio.file.attribute.AclFileAttributeView | 
A file attribute view that supports reading or updating a file's Access Control Lists (ACL) or file owner attributes.
 ACLs are used to specify access rights to file system objects. An ACL is
 an ordered list of access-control-entries, each specifying a
 UserPrincipal and the level of access for that user principal. This
 file attribute view defines the getAcl, and setAcl methods to read and write ACLs based on the ACL
 model specified in RFC 3530:
 Network File System (NFS) version 4 Protocol. This file attribute view
 is intended for file system implementations that support the NFSv4 ACL model
 or have a well-defined mapping between the NFSv4 ACL model and the ACL
 model used by the file system. The details of such mapping are implementation
 dependent and are therefore unspecified.
 
 This class also extends FileOwnerAttributeView so as to define
 methods to get and set the file owner.
 
 When a file system provides access to a set of file-systems that are not homogeneous then only some of the file systems may
 support ACLs. The supportsFileAttributeView method can be used to test if a file system
 supports ACLs.
 
Interoperability
RFC 3530 allows for special user identities to be used on platforms that support the POSIX defined access permissions. The special user identities are "OWNER@", "GROUP@", and "EVERYONE@". When both
 the AclFileAttributeView and the PosixFileAttributeView
 are supported then these special user identities may be included in ACL entries that are read or written. The file system's UserPrincipalLookupService may be used to obtain a UserPrincipal
 to represent these special identities by invoking the lookupPrincipalByName
 method.
 Usage Example: Suppose we wish to add an entry to an existing ACL to grant "joe" access:
     // lookup "joe"
     UserPrincipal joe = file.getFileSystem().getUserPrincipalLookupService()
         .lookupPrincipalByName("joe");
     // get view
     AclFileAttributeView view = Files.getFileAttributeView(file, AclFileAttributeView.class);
     // create ACE to give "joe" read access
     AclEntry entry = AclEntry.newBuilder()
         .setType(AclEntryType.ALLOW)
         .setPrincipal(joe)
         .setPermissions(AclEntryPermission.READ_DATA, AclEntryPermission.READ_ATTRIBUTES)
         .build();
     // read ACL, insert ACE, re-write ACL
     List<AclEntry> acl = view.getAcl();
     acl.add(0, entry);   // insert before any DENY entries
     view.setAcl(acl);
 Dynamic Access
Where dynamic access to file attributes is required, the attributes supported by this attribute view are as follows:
Name Type "acl" List<AclEntry>"owner" UserPrincipal
 The getAttribute method may be used to read
 the ACL or owner attributes as if by invoking the getAcl or
 getOwner methods.
 
 The setAttribute method may be used to
 update the ACL or owner attributes as if by invoking the setAcl
 or setOwner methods.
 
Setting the ACL when creating a file
 Implementations supporting this attribute view may also support setting
 the initial ACL when creating a file or directory. The initial ACL
 may be provided to methods such as createFile or createDirectory as an FileAttribute with name "acl:acl" and a value that is the list of AclEntry objects.
 
 Where an implementation supports an ACL model that differs from the NFSv4
 defined ACL model then setting the initial ACL when creating the file must
 translate the ACL to the model supported by the file system. Methods that
 create a file should reject (by throwing IOException)
 any attempt to create a file that would be less secure as a result of the
 translation.
Summary
| Public methods | |
|---|---|
| 
        abstract
        
        
        
        
        List<AclEntry> | 
      getAcl()
      Reads the access control list. | 
| 
        abstract
        
        
        
        
        String | 
      name()
      Returns the name of the attribute view. | 
| 
        abstract
        
        
        
        
        void | 
      setAcl(List<AclEntry> acl)
      Updates (replace) the access control list. | 
| Inherited methods | |
|---|---|
Public methods
getAcl
public abstract List<AclEntry> getAcl ()
Reads the access control list.
When the file system uses an ACL model that differs from the NFSv4 defined ACL model, then this method returns an ACL that is the translation of the ACL to the NFSv4 ACL model.
 The returned list is modifiable so as to facilitate changes to the
 existing ACL. The setAcl method is used to update
 the file's ACL attribute.
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| List<AclEntry> | an ordered list of entriesrepresenting the
          ACL | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IOException | if an I/O error occurs | 
| SecurityException | In the case of the default provider, a security manager is
          installed, and it denies RuntimePermission("accessUserInformation")or itscheckReadmethod
          denies read access to the file. | 
name
public abstract String name ()
Returns the name of the attribute view. Attribute views of this type
 have the name "acl".
| Returns | |
|---|---|
| String | the name of the attribute view | 
setAcl
public abstract void setAcl (List<AclEntry> acl)
Updates (replace) the access control list.
 Where the file system supports Access Control Lists, and it uses an
 ACL model that differs from the NFSv4 defined ACL model, then this method
 must translate the ACL to the model supported by the file system. This
 method should reject (by throwing IOException) any
 attempt to write an ACL that would appear to make the file more secure
 than would be the case if the ACL were updated. Where an implementation
 does not support a mapping of AclEntryType.AUDIT or AclEntryType.ALARM entries, then this method ignores these entries when
 writing the ACL.
 
 If an ACL entry contains a user-principal
 that is not associated with the same provider as this attribute view then
 ProviderMismatchException is thrown. Additional validation, if
 any, is implementation dependent.
 
 If the file system supports other security related file attributes
 (such as a file access-permissions for example), the updating the access control list
 may also cause these security related attributes to be updated.
| Parameters | |
|---|---|
| acl | List: the new access control list | 
| Throws | |
|---|---|
| IOException | if an I/O error occurs or the ACL is invalid | 
| SecurityException | In the case of the default provider, a security manager is
          installed, it denies RuntimePermission("accessUserInformation")or itscheckWritemethod denies write access to the file. | 
