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z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

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Example<br />

Localization<br />

Exit Values<br />

Portability<br />

This example uses getconf to find the minimum conforming value for PATH_MAX,<br />

which is contained in the variable _P<strong>OS</strong>IX_PATH_MAX. If you issue<br />

getconf _P<strong>OS</strong>IX_PATH_MAX<br />

getconf displays<br />

255<br />

Related Information<br />

bc, expr, sh<br />

getconf uses the following localization environment variables:<br />

v LANG<br />

v LC_ALL<br />

v LC_CTYPE<br />

v LC_MESSAGES<br />

See Appendix F for more information.<br />

0 The specified parameter_name was valid and getconf displayed its value<br />

successfully.<br />

>0 An error occurred.<br />

P<strong>OS</strong>IX.2, X/Open Portability Guide.<br />

_CS_SHELL is an extension of the P<strong>OS</strong>IX standard. Some symbols are supported<br />

only on systems that support P<strong>OS</strong>IX.2.<br />

See Appendix C for more information about regexp.<br />

getfacl — Display owner, group, and access control list (ACL) entries<br />

Format<br />

Description<br />

getfacl [–acdfhmoqs] [-e user ] file ...<br />

getfacl displays the comment header, base ACL (access control list) entries, and<br />

extended ACL entries, if there are any, for each file that is specified. It also resolves<br />

symbolic links. You can specify whether to display access, file default, or directory<br />

default. You can also change the default display format. The output can be used as<br />

input to setfacl.<br />

A comprehensive description of access control list entries can be found in z/<strong>OS</strong><br />

<strong>UNIX</strong> <strong>System</strong> <strong>Services</strong> Planning.<br />

getconf<br />

Chapter 2. Shell command descriptions 299

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