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acl_cmp — compare two ACLs

Author

Written by Andreas Gruenbacher <andreas.gruenbacher@gmail.com>. Linux ACL March 23, 2002 ACL_CMP(3)

Description

The acl_cmp() function compares the ACLs pointed to by the arguments acl1 and acl2 for equality. The two ACLs are considered equal if for each entry in acl1 there is an entry in acl2 with matching tag type, qualifier, and permissions, and vice versa.

Errors

If any of the following conditions occur, the acl_cmp() function returns -1 and sets errno to the corresponding value: [EINVAL] The argument acl1 is not a valid pointer to an ACL. The argument acl2 is not a valid pointer to an ACL.

Library

Linux Access Control Lists library (libacl, -lacl).

Name

acl_cmp — compare two ACLs

Return Value

If successful, the acl_cmp() function returns 0 if the two ACLs acl1 and acl2 are equal, and 1 if they differ. Otherwise, the value -1 is returned and the global variable errno is set to indicate the error.

See Also

acl(5)

Standards

This is a non-portable, Linux specific extension to the ACL manipulation functions defined in IEEE Std 1003.1e draft 17 (“POSIX.1e”, abandoned).

Synopsis

#include<sys/types.h>#include<acl/libacl.h>intacl_cmp(acl_tacl1, acl_tacl2);

See Also