On Tue, 26 Nov 2002 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> On Tue, 26 Nov 2002, Hiten Pandya wrote:
> 
> > On Tue, Nov 26, 2002 at 11:21:28AM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote the words in 
>effect of:
> > > On Tue, 26 Nov 2002, Bruno Miguel wrote:
> > >
> > > > On 25 Nov 2002 at 23:34, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote...
> > > >
> > > > > How do I enable ACLs on the boot partition? tunefs -a enable /dev/ad0s1a
> > > > > indicates it got set (in single user mode with / mounted readonly). But I
> > > > > still can't set anything with setfacl(1). I tried booting to the fixit
> > > > > floppy, hoping to set acls flag from there to my partition, but it doesn't
> > > > > have tunefs. Is my only choice now to take the drive out and put it in
> > > > > another FreeBSD machine and set it from there?
> > > >
> > > > If you are using UFS1, did you follow the procedures in 
>/sys/ufs/ufs/README.acls ?
> > >
> > > No, not using USF1. / was formatted UFS2.
> >
> > tunefs -a /your/filesystem
> >
> > I think thats the one.
> > Cheers.
> 
> Tried that already on / in single user mode with it mounted readonly. 
> tunefs said it changed the flag, but didn't really. I also tried adding
> acls to fstab for /, but no effect. Were you successful in doing this
> for / ? 

tunefs changes the flag for the next mount, so doesn't take immediate
effect.  Once you've tunefs'd a read-only file system, you need to unmount
and remount it -- for the file system root, this generally means
rebooting.  Just to confirm: you're running with GENERIC, or with a kernel
that includes UFS_ACL, right?  (Normally the kernel will complain if you
try to mount a file system with ACL support when ACLs aren't enabled).

Robert N M Watson             FreeBSD Core Team, TrustedBSD Projects
[EMAIL PROTECTED]      Network Associates Laboratories



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