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YAFIC.CONF(5) DragonFly File Formats Manual YAFIC.CONF(5)
NAME
yafic.conf -- yafic(1) configuration file
DESCRIPTION
yafic.conf is the configuration file used by yafic(1). It specifies how
yafic(1) should examine the filesystem.
Blank lines are ignored.
You may use double quotes ``"'' to enclose strings with spaces. Escape
double quotes by prefixing them with a ``\''.
Comments begin with ``#''. Everything until the end of line is ignored.
You may escape ``#'' characters by either quoting them or prefixing
them with a ``\''.
A line ending with ``\'' specifies that the line following it is to be
interpreted as its continuation.
Each line is of the form:
entry-name flags
Where entry-name is the name of a file or directory (relative to the
root. See the -r option to yafic(1)) and flags are which file
attributes to check.
DIRECTORY RECURSION
Normally, if entry-name is a directory, its contents will also be
checked using flags. This behavior can be changed by using prefixes.
An entry defined with the form
!entry-name
will be ignored. entry-name and its contents will not be examined. An
entry defined like this:
=entry-name flags
will mean that the contents of entry-name will not be looked at. flags
will apply to entry-name and entry-name only. Finally, an entry
defined like this:
$entry-name flags
will still have its contents checked. However, flags will only apply to
entry-name. Its contents will keep their previous flags. If no flags
were previously defined, then the contents will inherit the flags from
entry-name's parent. If there is no entry for entry-name's parent or
the entry is an ignore entry, then the flags will be inherited from
entry-name's grandparent, etc. This will continue up to the root until
a non-ignored entry is found. If none is found, the contents will
inherit the default flags.
Directories that serve as mount points for other filesystems are always
ignored and are never recursed into. To recurse into a mount point, an
entry for it must be explicitly defined.
FILE ATTRIBUTE FLAGS
Each entry can be checked for changes in certain file attributes.
These attributes are:
p Permissions/mode.
i inode number.
n Number of links.
u User ID.
g Group ID.
s Size.
a Access timestamp.
m Modification timestamp.
c Creation timestamp/inode modification timestamp.
h SHA-1 hash of contents.
If flags is unspecified, it defaults to `pinugmch'. Flags can be added
or removed relative to the default by prefixing them with ``+'' or
``-''. For example:
/some/file +s-mh
The resultant flags for /some/file would be `pinugsc'.
For convenience, there are a few flag templates defined:
R Same as `pinugmch'. (`Read-only')
L Same as `pinug'. (`Log file')
N Same as `pinugsamch'. (`Ignore nothing')
E Same as `'. (`Ignore everything')
If a template is used, it must be the first listed. Flags may be added
or removed from a template by prefixing them with ``+'' or ``-''
respectively. For example:
/another/file L+h
/another/file would have the flags `pinugh'.
If you wish to know when files are added or removed from a directory,
but you don't care about changes to the directory or its contents, you
must use the ``E'' template rather than prefixing the directory with
``!''.
NOTE ABOUT ORDER
Each entry is parsed in order. Entries defined later will override
earlier ones. So, for example:
!/var
/var/log L
means that /var and its contents will be ignored. However, /var/log and
its contents will be checked using the ``L'' template. Changing the
order changes the meaning:
/var/log L
!/var
In this case, /var and its contents are totally ignored. The /var/log
entry is overridden by the subsequent !/var.
PER-TYPE FLAG MASKS
Optionally, one or more of the following special entries can appear:
%dirmask mask
%filemask mask
%linkmask mask
%specialmask mask
mask is parsed exactly like flags, described previously.
When changes are detected in an entry, depending on the entry's type
(directory, file, symbolic links, special), one of the four masks is
checked. The change is reported only if the corresponding flag is set
in the mask.
By default, all masks have all flags ('pinugsamch') set.
Note that when a mask for a particular type is set, only entries
defined afterwards inherit that mask.
FILES
yafic.conf
Default yafic(1) configuration file.
SEE ALSO
yafic(1)
December 12, 2003 YAFIC.CONF(5)