NAME
chflags —
change file flags
SYNOPSIS
chflags |
[-h] [-R
[-H | -L |
-P]] flags
file ... |
DESCRIPTION
The chflags utility modifies the file
flags of the listed files as specified by the flags
operand. The flags of a file dictate special
restrictions beyond those enforced by its mode/permissions. Only the
superuser can change the user flags on block and character devices.
You can use
ls
-lo to see the flags of existing files.
The options are as follows:
-H- If the
-Roption is also specified, symbolic links on the command line are followed. Symbolic links encountered in the tree traversal are not followed. -h- Treat symbolic links like other files: modify links instead of following
them. The
-hand-Roptions are mutually exclusive. -L- If the
-Roption is also specified, all symbolic links are followed. -P- If the
-Roption is also specified, no symbolic links are followed. -R- Recurse. Where file is a directory, change the flags of the directory and all the files and directories in the file hierarchy below it.
Flags are a comma separated list of keywords. The following keywords are currently defined:
arch- set the archived flag (superuser only)
nodump- set the nodump flag (owner or superuser only)
sappnd- set the system append-only flag (superuser only)
schg- set the system immutable flag (superuser only)
uappnd- set the user append-only flag (owner or superuser only)
uchg- set the user immutable flag (owner or superuser only)
The arch flag is for compatibility only,
and currently has no effect.
A file with the nodump flag set will by
default only be backed up by dump(8) during full backups. The -h option of
dump(8) can be used to alter
this.
An immutable file may not be changed, moved, or deleted. An append-only file is immutable except that data may be appended to it.
The superuser-settable sappnd and
schg flags can be set at any time, but may only be
cleared when the system is running at security level 0 or -1 (insecure or
permanently insecure mode, respectively). For more information on setting
the system security level, see securelevel(7).
Putting the letters no before a flag name
causes the flag to be turned off. For example:
nouchg- the immutable bit should be cleared
The -H, -L, and
-P options are ignored unless the
-R option is specified. In addition, these options
override each other and the command's actions are determined by the last one
specified.
EXIT STATUS
The chflags utility exits 0 on
success, and >0 if an error occurs.
SEE ALSO
ls(1), chflags(2), stat(2), fts_open(3), securelevel(7), symlink(7), dump(8)
HISTORY
The chflags command first appeared in
4.4BSD.