HP OpenVMS DCL Dictionary


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SET SECURITY

Modifies the security profile of an object.

Format

SET SECURITY object-name


Parameter

object-name

Specifies the name of an object, such as a file or device, whose security profile is to be modified. An object is identified by an object name and a class name. The default class name is FILE.

An object name of the FILE class (explicitly or implicitly specified) can include an asterisk (*) or a percent sign (%) wildcard character, but wildcard characters are not allowed in any class other than FILE. SET SECURITY does not operate on remote files and devices, alias directory entries, or directory names in UIC format (for example, [14,5]).


Description

The SET SECURITY command modifies the security profile of an object. Such a profile contains the following elements:

There are three different ways to use the command:

To modify a security profile, you need control access to the object. An ACL grants control access explicitly whereas a protection code grants it implicitly to anyone belonging to the owner or system categories. If an object profile is modified while the object is being accessed, the existing access is unaffected.

The following table identifies object classes and the access types they support:
  Object Class Access Types
  COMMON_EVENT_FLAG_CLUSTER Associate, Delete
  DEVICE Read, Write, Physical, Logical
  FILE (including directory file) Read, Write, Execute, Delete
  GROUP_GLOBAL_SECTION Read, Write, Execute
  ICC_ASSOCIATION 1 Open, Access
  LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE Read, Write, Create, Delete
  QUEUE Read, Submit, Manage, Delete
  RESOURCE_DOMAIN Read, Write, Lock
  SECURITY_CLASS Read, Write, Logical I/O, Physical I/O
  SYSTEM_GLOBAL_SECTION Read, Write, Execute
  VOLUME Read, Write, Create, Delete


1The class ICC_ASSOCIATION has special semantics: there are both permanent and temporary objects for this class. Permanent objects are created using the command procedure SYS$MANAGER:ICC$CREATE_SECURITY_OBJECT.COM. The SET SECURITY command applies to both permanent and temporary ICC_ASSOCIATION security objects.

The HP OpenVMS Guide to System Security provides a full explanation of protected objects and how to modify them.

Table DCLII-20 shows the qualifier categories for the SET SECURITY command. The explanations for the qualifiers following Table DCLII-20 occur in alphabetical order.

Table DCLII-20 SET SECURITY Qualifier Categories
General
Qualifiers
ACL-Modifying Qualifiers Security Class Qualifier File-Specific Qualifiers Transfer
Qualifiers
/ACL
/CLASS
/LOG
/OWNER
/PROTECTION
/AFTER
/DELETE
/EDIT
/REPLACE
/PROFILE /BACKUP
/BEFORE
/BY_OWNER
/CONFIRM
/CREATED
/DEFAULT
/EXCLUDE
/EXPIRED
/MODIFIED
/SINCE
/STYLE
/COPY_ATTRIBUTE
/LIKE


Qualifiers

/ACL[=(ace[,...])]

Identifies one or more access control list entries (ACEs) to add, replace, or delete. Enclose each ACE in parentheses and separate multiple ACEs by commas (,). The most common type of entry, the Identifier ACE, has the format (IDENTIFIER=identifier, ACCESS=access-type(+...)). By default, SET SECURITY adds an ACE to the top of the ACL. This behavior changes when you include one of the positional qualifiers: /AFTER, /DELETE, or /REPLACE. See the discussion of ACL ordering in the HP OpenVMS Guide to System Security.

/AFTER=ace

Positions all ACEs specified with the /ACL qualifier after the ACE named with the /AFTER qualifier.

/BACKUP

Modifies the time value provided with the /BEFORE or the /SINCE qualifier. The /BACKUP qualifier selects files according to the date of their most recent backup (rather than by the creation, expiration, or modification date). By default, SET SECURITY selects files according to their creation date.

/BEFORE[=time]

Selects only those files dated prior to the specified time. You can specify time as absolute time, as a combination of absolute and delta times, or as one of the following keywords: BOOT, LOGIN, TODAY (default), TOMORROW, or YESTERDAY. Specify the /CREATED or the /MODIFIED qualifier to indicate the time attribute to be used as the basis for selection. The /CREATED qualifier is the default.

For complete information on specifying time values, see the OpenVMS User's Manual or the online help topic Date.

/BY_OWNER[=uic]

Selects files whose owner's UIC matches the UIC specified. The default UIC is that of the current process.

/CLASS=class-name

Specifies the class of the object whose profile is to be modified. By default, the command assumes the object class is FILE.

/CONFIRM

Controls whether SET SECURITY prompts for verification before performing the operation. Valid responses are YES, NO, TRUE, and FALSE. Answers are not case sensitive and can be abbreviated to one letter. To stop processing the command at any point, type QUIT or press Ctrl/Z. To cancel the verification procedure but to proceed with the command, type ALL.

/COPY_ATTRIBUTE=(keyword[,...])

Specifies a subset of security elements to transfer from a source object to a target object. Valid keywords include the following:
Keyword Description
ALL (default) Copy all security elements
ACL Copy the access control list
OWNER Copy the owner
PROTECTION Copy the protection code

Use the /COPY_ATTRIBUTE qualifier with the /LIKE qualifier. For example, you can create an ACL for an object and then copy its ACL to new objects.

/CREATED

Modifies the time value specified with the /BEFORE or the /SINCE qualifier. The /CREATED qualifier selects files according to the date they were created (rather than by the backup, expiration, or modification date). By default, SET SECURITY selects files according to their creation date.

/DELETE[=ALL]

Deletes ACEs according to the following rules:

/DEFAULT

Regenerates the security profile of a file. The default qualifier changes the protection code, the ACL, and the owner elements of a file to what it would be if the file had just been created. The profile is recreated according to the following rules:

With subdirectory files, SET SECURITY assigns the owner, protection, and ACL elements of the parent directory.

SET SECURITY does not copy any ACE on the source object if the ACE holds the nopropagate attribute nor does it change any ACE on the target object if the ACE holds the protected attribute. To apply new elements to all versions of the file, specify ;* in the object name. See the HP OpenVMS Guide to System Security for more information on propagation rules.

/EDIT

Invokes the access control list editor (ACL editor) and allows you to modify an ACL interactively. The ACL editor does not allow the asterisk (*) and the percent sign (%) wildcard characters in an object name. You must specify the object whose ACL you are editing.

The /EDIT qualifier must be the first qualifier on the command line; other qualifiers can include /CLASS and, if the class is SECURITY_CLASS, you can include the /PROFILE qualifier. Whenever an object does not belong to the FILE class, you also need to specify /CLASS.

See the ACL editor in the HP OpenVMS System Management Utilities Reference Manual for more information.

/EXCLUDE=(filespec[,...])

Excludes the specified files from the SET SECURITY operation. You can include a directory, but not a device, in the file specification. You cannot use relative version numbers to exclude a specific version.

/EXPIRED

Modifies the time specified with the /BEFORE or the /SINCE qualifier. The /EXPIRED qualifier selects files according to their expiration dates rather than by the backup, creation, or modification date. (The expiration date is set with the SET FILE/EXPIRATION_DATE command.) By default, files are selected according to their creation date.

/LIKE=(NAME=source-object-name
[,CLASS=source-object-class] [,PROFILE=TEMPLATE=template-name])

Identifies the object from which SET SECURITY should copy security elements. The /LIKE qualifier replaces an object's existing elements with those of the source object. Nopropagate ACEs are not transferred and protected ACEs on the target object are not deleted. Use the /COPY_ATTRIBUTE qualifier with the /LIKE qualifier to copy an object's elements. See the HP OpenVMS Guide to System Security for information about the special handling of protected and nopropagate ACEs.

The object class of the source object defaults to the class of the target object. When the /CLASS qualifier is omitted, the CLASS keyword defaults to FILE.

The PROFILE keyword applies to security class objects. It identifies which template of the security class you want to copy and modify. See /PROFILE for more information.

/LOG

Controls whether the SET SECURITY command displays the name of the object that has been modified by the command. The qualifier is invalid with the /EDIT qualifier.

/MODIFIED

Modifies the time value specified with the /BEFORE or the /SINCE qualifier. The /MODIFIED qualifier selects files according to the dates on which they were last modified, rather than by the backup, creation, or expiration date. By default, files are selected according to their creation date.

/OWNER=identifier

Requires GRPPRV (group privilege) to set the owner to another member of the same group. Requires SYSPRV (system privilege) to set the owner to any user identification code (UIC) outside your group.

Modifies the owner element of an object. Specify the user identification code (UIC) or general identifier in the standard format. Modifying the owner element of a file usually requires privileges. See the HP OpenVMS Guide to System Security for more information.

/PROFILE=TEMPLATE[=template-name]

Identifies which template profile of a security class object you want to modify. All object classes except FILE have at least one template profile. These template profiles define the basis of the profile of new objects. Use the DCL command SHOW SECURITY/CLASS=SECURITY_CLASS to display template names. When no value is given for template-name, SET SECURITY uses the template named DEFAULT.

Include the /CLASS=SECURITY_CLASS qualifier to identify which profile you want to modify.

/PROTECTION=(ownership[:access][,...])

Cannot be used to change the protection on a file by using DECnet software.

Modifies the protection code of an object. The protection code defines the type of access allowed to users, based on their relationship to the object's owner.

Specify the ownership parameter as system (S), owner (O), group (G), or world (W).

Access types are class specific and are shown in the Description section. For access, use the first letter of the access name. The Examples section provides you with models of protection codes.

/REPLACE=(ace[,...])

Eliminates entries listed with the /ACL qualifier and adds entries listed with the /REPLACE qualifier. SET SECURITY inserts the entries listed with /REPLACE in the position of the last deleted ACE.

/SECRECY

Reserved for use by HP.

/SINCE[=time]

Selects only those files dated on or after the specified time. You can specify time as absolute time, as a combination of absolute and delta times, or as one of the following keywords: BOOT, JOB_LOGIN, LOGIN, TODAY (default), TOMORROW, or YESTERDAY. Specify the /CREATED or the /MODIFIED qualifier to indicate the time attribute to be used as the basis for selection. The /CREATED qualifier is the default.

For complete information on specifying time values, see the OpenVMS User's Manual or the online help topic Date.

/STYLE=keyword

Specifies the file name format for display purposes.

The valid keywords for this qualifier are CONDENSED and EXPANDED. Descriptions are as follows:
Keyword Explanation
CONDENSED (default) Displays the file name representation of what is generated to fit into a 255-length character string. This file name may contain a DID or FID abbreviation in the file specification.
EXPANDED Displays the file name representation of what is stored on disk. This file name does not contain any DID or FID abbreviations.

The keywords CONDENSED and EXPANDED are mutually exclusive. This qualifier specifies which file name format is displayed in the output message, along with the confirmation if requested.

File errors are displayed with the CONDENSED file specification unless the EXPANDED keyword is specified.

See the HP OpenVMS System Manager's Manual, Volume 1: Essentials for more information.

/SYMLINK=keyword

The valid keywords for this qualifier are [NO]WILDCARD and [NO]ELLIPSIS. Descriptions are as follows:
Keyword Explanation
WILDCARD Indicates that symlinks are enabled during wildcard searches.
NOWILDCARD Indicates that symlinks are disabled during directory wildcard searches.
ELLIPSIS Equivalent to WILDCARD (included for command symmetry).
NOELLIPSIS Indicates that symlinks are matched for all wildcard fields except for ellipsis.

If the file named in the SET SECURITY command is a symlink, the command operates on the symlink itself.


Examples

#1

$  SHOW SECURITY LNM$GROUP /CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
LNM$GROUP object of class LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
     Owner: [SYSTEM]
     Protection: (System: RWCD, Owner: R, Group: R, World: R)
     Access Control List:
          (IDENTIFIER=[USER,VARANESE],ACCESS=CONTROL)
$  SET SECURITY LNM$GROUP /CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE -
_$      /ACL=((IDENTIFIER=CHEKOV,ACCESS=CONTROL), -
_$            (IDENTIFIER=WU,ACCESS=READ+WRITE)) -
_$       /DELETE=ALL -
_$       /PROTECTION=(S:RWCD, O:RWCD, G:R, W:R)
$  SHOW SECURITY LNM$GROUP /CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
LNM$GROUP object of class LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
     Owner: [SYSTEM]
     Protection: (System: RWCD, Owner: RWCD, Group: R, World: R)
     Access Control List:
          (IDENTIFIER=[USER,CHEKOV],ACCESS=CONTROL)
          (IDENTIFIER=[USER,WU],ACCESS=READ+WRITE)
 
      

This example shows how to make a straightforward change to the security elements of an object. The first SHOW SECURITY command displays the current settings of the LNM$GROUP logical name table. The SET SECURITY command resets the ACL to allow control access for user Chekov, and to allow read and write access for user Wu. Note that without the /DELETE=ALL qualifier, these ACEs would have been added to the existing ACL rather than superseding it. The protection is also changed to allow read, write, create, and delete access for the owner. The last command displays the results of the changes.

#2

$  SHOW SECURITY LNM$GROUP /CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
LNM$GROUP object of class LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
     Owner: [SYSTEM]
     Protection: (System: RWCD, Owner: R, Group: R, World: R)
     Access Control List:
          (IDENTIFIER=[USER,FERNANDEZ],ACCESS=CONTROL)
$  SHOW SECURITY LNM$JOB /CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
LNM$JOB object of class LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
     Owner: [USER,WEISS]
     Protection: (System: RWCD, Owner: RWCD, Group, World)
     Access Control List:  <empty>
$  SET SECURITY LNM$JOB /CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE -
_$      /LIKE=(NAME=LNM$GROUP, CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE) -
_$      /COPY_ATTRIBUTES=PROTECTION
$  SET SECURITY LNM$JOB /CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE -
_$      /ACL=(IDENTIFIER=FERNANDEZ, ACCESS=READ)
$  SHOW SECURITY LNM$JOB /CLASS=LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
LNM$JOB object of class LOGICAL_NAME_TABLE
     Owner: [USER,WEISS]
     Protection: (System: RWCD, Owner: R, Group: R, World: R)
     Access Control List:
          (IDENTIFIER=[USER,FERNANDEZ],ACCESS=READ)
 
      

This example shows how to copy security access information from one object to another and, at the same time, set some elements explicitly. The first SHOW SECURITY commands display the current settings for the LNM$GROUP and LNM$JOB logical name tables. The SET SECURITY command copies the protection code from the LNM$GROUP logical name table to the LNM$JOB logical name table and adds an ACE to allow read access to another user. The final SHOW SECURITY command shows the effect of the changes.

#3

$  SHOW SECURITY SECURITY_CLASS /CLASS=SECURITY_CLASS
SECURITY_CLASS object of class SECURITY_CLASS
     Owner: [SYSTEM]
     Protection: (System: RWED, Owner: RWED, Group: R, World: R)
     Access Control List:  <empty>
  Template: DEFAULT
     Owner: [SYSTEM]
     Protection: (System: RWED, Owner: RWED, Group, World: RE)
     Access Control List:   <empty>
$  SET SECURITY SECURITY_CLASS /CLASS=SECURITY_CLASS -
_$      /PROFILE=TEMPLATE=DEFAULT -
_$      /PROTECTION=(S:RWE, O:RWE, G:RE)
$  SHOW SECURITY SECURITY_CLASS /CLASS=SECURITY_CLASS
SECURITY_CLASS object of class SECURITY_CLASS
     Owner: [SYSTEM]
     Protection: (System: RWED, Owner: RWED, Group: R, World: R)
     Access Control List:  <empty>
  Template: DEFAULT
     Owner: [SYSTEM]
     Protection: (System: RWE, Owner: RWE, Group: RE, World: RE)
     Access Control List:  <empty>
 
      

This example demonstrates how to change the security elements for the template of a security class object. The first command shows the current settings for the SECURITY_CLASS object. The second command changes the DEFAULT template of the SECURITY_CLASS object such that the protection is (S:RWE, O:RWE, G:RE). The change is shown in the display of the last command. The world protection of RE remains unchanged.

#4

$  DIRECTORY/SECURITY
Directory DKA200:[DATA]
FILE001.DAT;1        [SYSTEM]                         (RWED,RWED,RE,)
Total of 1 file.
$  SET SECURITY/CLASS=FILE/PROTECTION=(WORLD:RE)/LOG FILE001.DAT
%SET-I-MODIFIED, DKA200:[DATA]FILE001.DAT;1 modified
$  DIRECTORY/SECURITY
Directory DKA200:[DATA]
FILE001.DAT;1        [SYSTEM]                       (RWED,RWED,RE,RE)
Total of 1 file.
$
 
      

This example shows how to set UIC-based protection codes on an object. The first DIRECTORY command displays the current security settings on the file FILE001.DAT. The SET SECURITY command changes the protection codes on the file to allow read and execute access for all users. The last command displays the results of the change.


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