Provided by: attr_2.5.2-1build1.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       attr - legacy tool to handle extended attributes on filesystem objects

SYNOPSIS

       attr [ -LRSq ] -s attrname [ -V attrvalue ] pathname

       attr [ -LRSq ] -g attrname pathname

       attr [ -LRSq ] -r attrname pathname

       attr [ -LRSq ] -l pathname

OVERVIEW

       Extended  attributes  implement  the  ability for a user to attach name:value pairs to objects within the
       filesystem.

       This document describes the attr command, which is mostly compatible with the IRIX command  of  the  same
       name.   It  was  originally aimed specifically at users of the XFS filesystem, even though it can be used
       now on any filesystem that supports extended attributes, but for the generic and more portable  interface
       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 supported filesystems, 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 inodes: regular files,  directories,  symbolic  links,  device
       nodes, etc.

       Extended  attributes  use  several disjoint attribute namespaces associated with every filesystem object:
       the trusted (or xfsroot for compatibility with IRIX)  namespace,  only  accessible  and  visible  to  the
       superuser  and  when requested explicitly with an option, the security namespace with the same properties
       except used for security metadata, and the  user  namespace,  which  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.

DESCRIPTION

       The legacy attr utility allows the manipulation of extended attributes associated with filesystem objects
       from within shell scripts.

       There are four main operations that attr can perform:

       GET    The  -g  attrname  option  tells  attr  to search the named object and print (to 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.

       LIST   The  -l  option  tells  attr  to list the names of all the attributes that are associated with the
              object, and the number of bytes in the value of each of  those  attributes.   With  the  -q  flag,
              stdout  will be a simple list of only the attribute names, one per line, suitable for input into a
              script.

       REMOVE The -r attrname option tells attr to remove an attribute with the given name from  the  object  if
              the attribute exists.  There is no output on successful completion.

       SET/CREATE
              The  -s attrname option tells attr to set the named attribute of the object to the value read from
              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  trusted  (or
       xfsroot) 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).

NOTES

       The standard file interchange/archive programs tar(1), and cpio(1) will not archive or  restore  extended
       attributes.  Although GNU tar supports handling extended attributes with its --xattrs option.

CAVEATS

       The  list  option  present  in  the  IRIX  version of this command is not supported.  getfattr provides a
       mechanism to retrieve all of the attribute names.

AUTHOR

       Andreas  Gruenbacher,  <andreas.gruenbacher@gmail.com>  and  the  SGI  XFS  development   team,   <linux-
       xfs@oss.sgi.com>.

       Please  send  your  bug  reports  or  comments to <https://savannah.nongnu.org/bugs/?group=attr> or <acl-
       devel@nongnu.org>.

SEE ALSO

       getfattr(1), setfattr(1), attr_get(3), attr_set(3), attr_multi(3), attr_remove(3), xattr(7), xfsdump(8)