attr [ -LRSq ] -s attrname [ -V attrvalue ] pathname attr [ -LRSq ] -g attrname pathname attr [ -LRSq ] -r attrname pathname attr [ -LRSq ] -l pathname
This document describes the attr command, which is mostly compatible with the IRIX command of the same name. It is thus aimed specifically at users of the XFS filesystem - for filesystem independent extended attribute manipulation, consult the getfattr(1) and setfattr(1) documentation.
Extended attributes can be used to store meta-information about the file. For example "character-set=kanji" could tell a document browser to use the Kanji character set when displaying that document and "thumbnail=..." could provide a reduced resolution overview of a high resolution graphic image.
In the XFS filesystem, the names can be up to 256 bytes in length, terminated by the first 0 byte. The intent is that they be printable ASCII (or other character set) names for the attribute. The values can be up to 64KB of arbitrary binary data.
Attributes can be attached to all types of XFS inodes: regular files, directories, symbolic links, device nodes, etc.
XFS uses 2 disjoint attribute name spaces associated with every filesystem object. They are the root and user address spaces. The root address space is accessable only to the superuser, and then only by specifying a flag argument to the function call. Other users will not see or be able to modify attributes in the root address space. The user address space is protected by the normal file permissions mechanism, so the owner of the file can decide who is able to see and/or modify the value of attributes on any particular file.
There are four main operations that attr can perform:
stdout
) the value associated with that attribute name. With
the -q flag, stdout
will be exactly and only the value of the attribute,
suitable for storage directly into a file or processing via a piped command.
stdout
will be a simple list
of only the attribute names, one per line, suitable for input into a script.
stdin
. If an attribute
with that name already exists, its value will be replaced with this one.
If an attribute with that name does not already exist, one will be created
with this value. With the -V attrvalue flag, the attribute will be set to
have a value of attrvalue and stdin
will not be read. With the -q flag, stdout
will not be used. Without the -q flag, a message showing the attribute name
and the entire value will be printed. When the -L option is given and the named object is a symbolic link, operate on the attributes of the object referenced by the symbolic link. Without this option, operate on the attributes of the symbolic link itself.
When the -R option is given and the process has appropriate privileges, operate in the root attribute namespace rather that the USER attribute namespace.
The -S option is similar, except it specifies use of the security attribute namespace.
When the -q option is given attr
will try to keep quiet. It will output error messages (to stderr
) but will
not print status messages (to stdout
).