attr - Extended attributes
Extended attributes are extensions to the normal attributes which are associated with all inodes in the system (i.e. the stat(2) data). They are often used to provide additional functionality to a filesystem - for example, additional security features such as Access Control Lists (ACLs) may be implemented using extended attributes.
Users with search access to a file or directory may retrieve a list of attribute names defined for that file or directory.
Extended attributes are accessed as atomic objects. Reading retrieves the whole value of an attribute and stores it in a buffer. Writing replaces any previous value with the new value.
Space consumed for extended attributes is counted towards the disk quotas of the file owner and file group.
Currently, support for extended attributes is implemented on Linux by the ext2, ext3 and XFS filesystem patches, which can be downloaded from http://acl.bestbits.at/ and http://oss.sgi.com/projects/xfs/ respectively.
The namespace mechanism is used to define different classes of extended attributes. These different classes exist for several reasons, e.g. the permissions and capabilities required for manipulating extended attributes of one namespace may differ to another.
Currently the security, system, trusted, and user extended attribute classes are defined as described below. Additional classes may be added in the future.
The file permission bits of regular files and directories are interpreted differently from the file permission bits of special files and symbolic links. For regular files and directories the file permission bits define access to the file's contents, while for device special files they define access to the device described by the special file. The file permissions of symbolic links are not used in access checks. These differences would allow users to consume filesystem resources in a way not controllable by disk quotas for group or world writable special files and directories.
For this reason, extended user attributes are only allowed for regular files and directories, and access to extended user attributes is restricted to the owner and to users with appropriate capabilities for directories with the sticky bit set (see the chmod(1) manual page for an explanation of Sticky Directories).
In the current ext2 and ext3 filesystem implementations, all extended attributes must fit on a single filesystem block (1024, 2048 or 4096 bytes, depending on the block size specified when the filesystem was created). This limit may be removed in a future version.
In the XFS filesystem implementation, there is no practical limit on the number of extended attributes associated with a file, and the algorithms used to store extended attribute information on disk are scalable (stored either inline in the inode, as an extent, or in a B+ tree).
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