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Date:      Sat, 13 Feb 2010 01:24:37 -0800
From:      perryh@pluto.rain.com
To:        dougs@dawnsign.com
Cc:        freebsd-questions@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: setting default directory ACLs using xargs
Message-ID:  <4b766fd5.VK3xWZMZCcYJJTF5%perryh@pluto.rain.com>
In-Reply-To: <D05FCB8B5D9E904981802903D84EEFEF3DF3@hydra.dawnsign.com>
References:  <D05FCB8B5D9E904981802903D84EEFEF3DF3@hydra.dawnsign.com>

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Doug Sampson <dougs@dawnsign.com> wrote:

> I need to do this at the command prompt for all directories:
...
> root@aries:/data/Products# getfacl . | setfacl -d -b -n -M - .

> Now, I have thousands of subdirectories that I want to apply this
> to. When I attempt to use the xarg command with the above command
> modified to work with xargs, I end up with an error message ...

Two possibilities come to mind:

* Try using the "-L 1" switch to cause xargs to run a separate
  command instance for each input value.

* You may have run into one of the rare situations where
  "find ... | xargs" is not the best tool for the job.  It may
  work better to set up a 3-line shell script along the lines of

    #!/bin/sh
    cd $1
    getfacl . | setfacl -d -b -n -M - .

  and then use "find -type d -exec" to run it for each directory.



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