On Wed, 2009-07-15 at 02:22 +0000, Amadeus W.M. wrote:
> Looking at file permissions, I see there is a . at the end of the
> permissions. As in
>
>
> [r...@phoenix ~]# ls -l somefile
> -rw-r--r--. 1 root root 0 2009-07-14 22:20 somefile
>
> ^
> here
>
> That's new to me. What does it mean? Where is it documented?
>From "info coreutils 'ls invocation'":
Following the file mode bits is a single character that specifies
whether an alternate access method such as an access control list
applies to the file. When the character following the file mode
bits is a space, there is no alternate access method. When it is
a printing character, then there is such a method.
GNU `ls' uses a `.' character to indicate a file with an SELinux
security context, but no other alternate access method.
A file with any other combination of alternate access methods is
marked with a `+' character.
poc
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