chattr
chattr is the command in the Linux operating system that allows a user to set certain attributes of a file residing on a Linux file system. lsattr is the command that displays the attributes of a file.
Modern BSD-like systems, including OS X, have analogous chflags to set, but no command specifically meant to display them; specific options to the ls command are used instead.
The Solaris system has no commands specifically meant to manipulate them. chmod[1] and ls[2] are used instead.
Other Unices, in general, have no analogous commands. The similar-sounding commands chatr (from HP-UX) and lsattr (from AIX) exist but have unrelated functions.
Among other things, the chattr command is useful to make files immutable so that password files and certain system files cannot be erased during software upgrades.[3]
In Linux systems (chattr and lsattr)
File system support
The attributes chattr and lsattr manipulate were originally specific to the Second Extended Filesystem family (ext2, ext3, ext4), and are available as part of the e2fsprogs package.
However, the functionality has since been extended, fully or partially, to many other systems, including XFS, ReiserFS, JFS and OCFS2.
Even the originally targeted file systems miss some features, as pointed further in this article.
chattr description
The form of the chattr command is:
chattr [-RVf] [-+=AacDdijsTtSu] [-v version] files...
-
-R
recursively changes attributes of directories and their contents -
-V
is to be verbose and print the program version -
-f
suppresses most error messages
lsattr description
The form of the lsattr command (gnu 1.41.3):
lsattr [ -RVadv ] [ files... ]
-
-R
recursively lists attributes of directories and their contents -
-V
displays the program version -
-a
lists all files in directories, including dotfiles -
-d
lists directories like other files, rather than listing their contents
Attributes
Some attributes include:
Attribute | lsattr flag | chattr option | Semantics and rationale |
---|---|---|---|
No atime updates |
A |
+A to set-A to clear |
|
Append only | a |
+a to set-a to clear[note 1] |
|
Compressed | c |
+c to set-c to clear[note 2] |
|
Synchronous directory updates | D |
+D to set-D to clear |
|
No dump | d |
+d to set-d to clear |
|
Compression error | E |
(unavailable) |
|
Extent format | e |
(unavailable) |
|
Huge file | h |
(unavailable) |
|
Indexed directory | I |
(unavailable) |
|
Immutable | i |
+i to set-i to clear[note 1] |
|
Data journaling | j |
+j to set-j to clear[note 3] |
|
Secure deletion | s |
+s to set-s to clear[note 2][note 4] |
|
Synchronous updates | S |
+S to set-S to clear |
|
Top of directory hierarchy | T |
+T to set-T to clear |
|
No tail-merging | t |
+t to set-t to clear |
|
Undeletable | u |
+u to set-u to clear[note 2] |
|
Compression raw access | X |
(unavailable) |
|
Compressed dirty file | Z |
(unavailable) |
|
Version / generation number | -v |
-v version |
|
Notes
- 1 2 Only the superuser or a process possessing the
CAP_LINUX_IMMUTABLE
capability can set or clear these attributes. - 1 2 3 These attributes are not honored by the ext2 and ext3 filesystems as implemented in the current mainline Linux kernels.
- ↑ Only the superuser or a process possessing the
CAP_SYS_RESOURCE
capability can set or clear this attribute. - ↑ This attribute is not honored by the ext4 filesystem as implemented in the current mainline Linux kernels as reported in Bug #17872.
Other attributes
Other attributes include:
|
In BSD-like systems (chflags)
File system support
The chflags command is not specific to particular file systems. UFS on BSD systems, and HFS+, SMB, AFP, and FAT on OS X support least some flags.
chflags description
The form of the chflags command is:
chflags [-R [-H | -L | -P]] flags file ...
-
-H
If the -R option is specified, symbolic links on the command line are followed. (Symbolic links encountered in the tree traversal are not followed.) -
-L
If the -R option is specified, all symbolic links are followed. -
-P
If the -R option is specified, no symbolic links are followed. This is the default. -
-R
Change the file flags for the file hierarchies rooted in the files instead of just the files themselves.
Displaying
BSD-like systems, in general, have no default user-level command specifically meant to display the flags of a file. The ls command will do with either the -lo
, or the -lO
, depending on the system, flags passed.
Attributes
All attributes can be set or cleared by the super-user; some can also be set or cleared by the owner of the file. Some attributes include:
Attribute | ls flag | chflags flag | Owner-settable | OS support | Semantics and rationale |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Archived | arch | arch, archived | No | All | |
Opaque | opaque | opaque | Yes | All | Directory is opaque when viewed through a union mount |
No dump | nodump | nodump | Yes | All | |
System append-only | sappnd | sappnd, sappend | No | All | Existing data in the file can't be overwritten and the file cannot be truncated |
System immutable | schg | schg, schange, simmutable | No | All | File cannot be changed, renamed, moved, or removed |
User append-only | uappnd | uappnd, uappend | Yes | All | Existing data in the file can't be overwritten and the file cannot be truncated |
User immutable | uchg | uchg, uchange, uimmutable | Yes | All | Existing data in the file can't be overwritten |
Hidden | hidden | hidden | Yes | OS X | File is hidden by default in the GUI (but not in ls) |
See also
-
ATTRIB
– analogous command in MS-DOS, OS/2 and Microsoft Windows -
chown
– change file/directory ownership in a Unix system -
chmod
– change file access control attributes in a Unix system -
cacls
– change file access control lists in Microsoft Windows NT
Notes
- ↑ – illumos and OpenSolaris User Commands Reference Manual from latest Sun based OpenSolaris
- ↑ – illumos and OpenSolaris User Commands Reference Manual from latest Sun based OpenSolaris
- ↑ – OpenBSD General Commands Manual
- ↑ E2fsprogs: add compress and cow support in chattr, lsattr, retrieved April 9, 2012
References
- – Linux User Commands Manual
- – Linux User Commands Manual
- – OpenBSD General Commands Manual
- – FreeBSD General Commands Manual
- – NetBSD General Commands Manual
- – Darwin and OS X General Commands Manual
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