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- wheezy 2.2.6-9
NWGRANT(8) | nwgrant | NWGRANT(8) |
NAME¶
nwgrant - Add Trustee Rights to a directorySYNOPSIS¶
nwgrant [ -h ] [ -S server ] [ -U user name ] [ -P password | -n ] [ -C ] [ -o object name ] [ -t type ] [ -r rights ] file/directoryDESCRIPTION¶
nwgrant adds the specified bindery object with the corresponding trustee rights to the directory.OPTIONS¶
-h-h is used to print out a short help
text.
server is the name of the server you
want to use.
user is the user name to use for
login.
password is the password to use for
login. If neither -n nor -P are given, and the user has no open
connection to the server, nwgrant prompts for a password.
-n should be given if no password is
required for the login.
By default, passwords are converted to
uppercase before they are sent to the server, because most servers require
this. You can turn off this conversion by -C.
The name of the object to be added as
trustee.
The type of the object. Object type
must be specified as a decimal value. Common values are 1 for user objects, 2
for group objects and 3 for print queues. Other values are allowed, but are
usually used for specialized applications. If you do not specify object
type, object name is taken as NDS name.
You must tell nwgrant which rights it
should grant to the bindery object. The new rights for the object is specified
by rights, which can be either a hexadecimal number representing the
sum of all the individual rights to be granted or a string containing
characters representing each right. If rights are represented in string format
then the string must be bounded with square brackets. Characters within the
brackets may be in any order and in either case. Spaces are allowed between
the brackets - in which case the entire string should be quoted. Hexadecimal
and character values for the rights are shown in this table:
00 = no access
01 = read access = R
02 = write access = W
08 = create access = C
10 = delete access = E
20 = ownership access = A
40 = search access = F
80 = modify access = M
100 = supervisory access = S
for a possible total of "1fb" or "[SRWCEMFA]" for all
rights.
00 = no access
01 = read access = R
02 = write access = W
08 = create access = C
10 = delete access = E
20 = ownership access = A
40 = search access = F
80 = modify access = M
100 = supervisory access = S
You must specify the directory to which to add
the object as trustee. This has to be done in fully qualified NetWare
notation.
Example:
nwgrant -S NWSERVER -o linus -t 1 -r fb 'data:home\linus'
With this example, user linus is given all rights except supervisory to his home
directory on the data volume. This example assumes the existence of the file
$HOME/.nwclient.
nwgrant -o linus -t 1 -r fb /home/linus/ncpfs/data/home/linus
With this example, user linus is given all rights except supervisory to his home
directory on the data volume. This example assumes that NWSERVER is already
mounted on /home/linus/ncpfs mountpoint.
AUTHORS¶
nwgrant was written by Volker Lendecke with the corresponding NetWare utility in mind. See the Changes file of ncpfs for other contributors.5/19/2000 | nwgrant |