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MAILDIRACL
Section: Double Precision, Inc. (1) Updated: 02/19/2010 Index
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NAME
maildiracl - manage access control lists
SYNOPSIS
-
maildiracl {-reset} {maildir}
-
maildiracl {-list} {maildir} {INBOX[.folder]}
-
maildiracl {-set} {maildir} {INBOX[.folder]} {[-]identifier} {[+/-]rights}
-
maildiracl {-delete} {maildir} {INBOX[.folder]} {[-]identifier}
-
maildiracl {-compute} {maildir} {INBOX[.folder]} {identifier...}
DESCRIPTION
maildiracl
manages
lqaccess control listsrq
(or ACLs) of the
Courier
IMAP server maildir folders. Access control lists are used primarily to provide fine-grained control for accessing virtual shared folders via IMAP.
-
Note
The
Courier
IMAP server server implements two types of shared folders: filesystem permission-based shared folders, as well as virtual shared folders based on IMAP access control lists. Use the
maildiracl
command to set up access control lists for virtual shared folders. Use the
m[blue]maildirmake(1)m[][1], command to implement shared folders based on filesystem permissions.
See the
Courier
IMAP server documentation for additional information on setting up virtual shared folders.
ACL overview
ACLs provide a fine-grained mechanism for controlling access to shared folders. ACLs may be used to specify, for example, that
user1
may only open and read the messages in the folder; and
user2
can not only do that, but also delete messages, and create subfolders.
Each folder maintains its own individual access control list, that specifies who can do what to the folder. An ACL is a list of
lqidentifierrq
and
lqrightsrq
pairs. Each
lqidentifierrq
and
lqrightsrq
pair means that an entity called
lqidentifierrq
(using the
UTF-8
character set) is allowed to do
lqrightsrq
on this folder.
lqrightsrq
consists of one or more letters, each letter signifies a particular action:
a
-
identifier
may modify this folder's ACLs.
c
-
identifier
may create subfolders of this folder (this includes renaming another folder as this folder's subfolders).
e
-
identifier
may remove deleted messages from this folder.
i
-
identifier
may add messages to this folder (either uploading them one by one, or copying messages from another folder).
l
-
identifier
may actually see that this folder exists. If
identifier
does not have the
lqlrq
right on this folder, the folder is effectively invisible to
identifier.
r
-
identifier
may open this folder. Note that if
identifier
knows the name of this folder, it can open it even if
identifier
does not the
lqlrq
right on this folder.
s
-
identifier
may mark messages in this folder as seen, or unseen.
t
-
identifier
may mark messages in this folder as deleted, or undeleted.
w
-
identifier
may change other status flags of messages in this folder. May also add or remove custom keywords on individual messages.
x
-
identifier
may delete this folder (which includes renaming this folder as another mailbox's subfoler.
Negative rights
-
An ACL entry of
lq-identifierrq
and
lqrightsrq
is called a
lqnegative rightrq, which explicitly removes
lqrightsrq
from
lqidentifierrq. More than one
lqidentifierrq
is usually used to determine the actual rights someone has for the given folder. The actual access rights are determined by taking all rights from all applicable
identifier, than subtracting any negative rights, as specified in the following section.
Identifiers
-
Access rights on a given folder are computed by obtained the rights on the following identifiers, then subtracting the negative rights on the same identifiers:
owner
-
The owner of the maildir containing this folder. The maildir's INBOX's ACL defaults to all rights for its owner. A new folder's ACL is the same as its parent's ACL. In all cases, trying to remove the
lqarq
right from the owner (either directly or using a negative right) results in an error.
anyone
-
This identifier refers literally to every userid. The associated rights (or negative rights) are always used.
anonymous
-
This is a synonym from
lqanyonerq.
user=loginid
-
Rights (or negative rights) for IMAP account
lqloginidrq.
-
Note
lqloginidrq
is what's logged to syslog after a succesful login. In some situations
lqloginidrq
is not exactly the actual login ID used by the IMAP client.
group=name
-
Rights (or negative rights) for account group
lqnamerq. Access rights are granted to an account group as a whole. The account options feature of the Courier Authentication Library specifies which account belongs to which account group. See courier-authlib's documentation for more information.
administrators
-
This is an alias for
lqgroup=administratorsrq. Accounts that are members of an account group called
lqadministratorsrq
are considered administrative accounts, and automatically receive all access rights on all accessible folders.
Consider the following access control list:
-
owner aceilrstwx
anyone lr
user=john w
-user=mary r
administrators aceilrstwx
This access control list specifies that the folder's owner has complete control over the mailbox (as well as the administrators, which have complete access to every folder); everyone else can see it and open it, except for
lqmaryrq
who can see that the mailbox exists, but can't open it; additionally,
lqjohnrq
can change the status and keywords of individual messages (but not mark them as deleted/undeleted or seen/unseen, which requires additional rights).
OPTIONS
-
maildiracl -reset maildir
This command resets access control lists in
maildir
which as a path to a maildir. Under certain conditions, the files where a folder's ACLs are saved may continue to exist after the folder is removed. The
-reset
options goes through
maildir
and removes all stale ACL files for removed folders.
-
Note
The
Courier
IMAP server normally performs this maintenance function automatically. It is not necessary to run this command under normal conditions.
-
maildiracl -list
maildir
folder
This command lists the access control lists set for
folder.
folder
must be either
lqINBOXrq
or
lqINBOX.folder.subfolderrq, which is the same naming convention for the
Courier
IMAP server.
-
maildiracl -set
maildir
folder
identifier
rights
Puts
identifier
(which may begin with a minus sign to specify a negative right) and
rights
in
folder's access control list. Existing rights for
identifier
(or
identifier) are replaced by
rights
unless
lqrightsrq
begins with
lq+rq
or
lq-rq, which modifies the existing rights by adding or removing from them accordingly. Some examples:
-
maildiracl -set /home/user1/Maildir INBOX.Sent user=john lr
maildiracl -set /home/user2/Maildir INBOX.Notes anyone -r
maildiracl -set /home/user3/Maildir INBOX.Private -user=tom +r
-
Note
Observe that the last command
revokes
the
lqrrq
right from
lqtomrq, by adding it as a negative right.
-
maildiracl -delete
maildir
folder
identifier
This command removes
identifier
from
folder's access control list, if it exists. Use
lq-identifierrq
to remove negative rights.
-
maildiracl -compute
maildir
folder
[identifier]+
This command takes a list of one or more
identifiers. All access rights for the
identifiers are combined together, then any appropriate negative rights are removed, and the result is printed on standard output. Use the following procedure to compute access rights the same way as they are computed by the
Courier
IMAP server:
-
maildiracl -compute /home/tom46/Maildir INBOX.Sent owner user=tom46
This command computes access rights
lqtom46rq
has on his own folder.
-
maildiracl -compute /home/john34/Maildir INBOX.Public user=tom46
This command computes access rights
lqtom46rq
has on
lqjohn34rq's folder.
IRREVOCABLE ACCESS RIGHTS
The owner of the mailbox must always have the
lqarq
amd
lqlrq
access rights. The
administrators
group must always have all access rights to all folders. Attempts to set access control lists, that do not include these minimum access rights, will be rejected.
BUGS
All identifiers are specified using the
UTF-8
character set.
All non-Latin letters in folder names are specified using the
modified-UTF7
coding as used in IMAP.
This implementation of access control lists is based on version 2 (or
lqACL2rq) of IMAP access control lists, which is a work-in-progress. The existing IMAP ACL,
m[blue]RFC 2086m[][2]
is transparently implemented inside the ACL2 model.
If history's of any guidance, ACL2 is subject to change at any time. Be sure to check the release notes when upgrading to a newer version of this software. The
lqACL overviewrq
portion of this manual page is a
very
brief summary of ACL2, which leaves out optional parts of ACL2 that are not implemented.
SEE ALSO
m[blue]maildirmake(1)m[][1],
m[blue]maildirkw(1)m[][3],
NOTES
- 1.
-
maildirmake(1)
-
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildirmake.html
- 2.
-
RFC 2086
-
http://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc2086.txt
- 3.
-
maildirkw(1)
-
[set $man.base.url.for.relative.links]/maildirkw.html
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- ACL overview
-
- OPTIONS
-
- IRREVOCABLE ACCESS RIGHTS
-
- BUGS
-
- SEE ALSO
-
- NOTES
-
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