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Manual Reference Pages - MAC_GET (3)
NAME
mac_get_file,
mac_get_link,
mac_get_fd,
mac_get_peer,
mac_get_pid,
mac_get_proc
- get the label of a file, socket, socket peer or process
CONTENTS
Library
Synopsis
Description
Errors
See Also
Standards
History
LIBRARY
.Lb libc
SYNOPSIS
.In sys/mac.h
int
mac_get_file const char *path mac_t label
int
mac_get_link const char *path mac_t label
int
mac_get_fd int fd mac_t label
int
mac_get_peer int fd mac_t label
int
mac_get_pid pid_t pid mac_t label
int
mac_get_proc mac_t label
DESCRIPTION
The
mac_get_file
system call returns the label associated with a file specified by
pathname.
The
mac_get_link
function is the same as
mac_get_file,
except that it does not follow symlinks.
The
mac_get_fd
system call returns the label associated with an object referenced by
the specified file descriptor.
Note that in the case of a file system socket, the label returned will
be the socket label, which may be different from the label of the
on-disk node acting as a rendezvous for the socket.
The
mac_get_peer
system call returns the label associated with the remote endpoint of
a socket; the exact semantics of this call will depend on the protocol
domain, communications type, and endpoint; typically this label will
be cached when a connection-oriented protocol instance is first set up,
and is undefined for datagram protocols.
The
mac_get_pid
and
mac_get_proc
system calls return the process label associated with an arbitrary
process ID, or the current process.
Label storage for use with these calls must first be allocated and
prepared using the
mac_prepare(3)
functions.
When an application is done using a label, the memory may be returned
using
mac_free(3).
ERRORS
| [EACCES]
| | |
A component of
path
is not searchable,
or MAC read access to the file
is denied.
|
| [EINVAL]
| | |
The requested label operation is not valid for the object referenced by
fd.
|
| [ENAMETOOLONG]
| | |
The pathname pointed to by
path
exceeds
PATH_MAX,
or a component of the pathname exceeds
NAME_MAX.
|
| [ENOENT]
| | |
A component of
path
does not exist.
|
| [ENOMEM]
| | |
Insufficient memory is available
to allocate a new MAC label structure.
|
| [ENOTDIR]
| | |
A component of
path
is not a directory.
|
|
SEE ALSO
mac(3),
mac_free(3),
mac_prepare(3),
mac_set(3),
mac_text(3),
mac(4),
mac(9)
STANDARDS
POSIX.1e is described in IEEE POSIX.1e draft 17.
Discussion of the draft
continues on the cross-platform POSIX.1e implementation mailing list.
To join this list, see the
.Fx
POSIX.1e implementation page
for more information.
HISTORY
Support for Mandatory Access Control was introduced in
.Fx 5.0
as part of the
TrustedBSD
Project.
| December 21, 2001 | MAC_GET (3) | |
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