Reputation: 415
I was examining output of ls -l
in by bash completion folder on Mac OS X
$ ls -alrth /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/docker-machine*
-rw-r--r--@ 1 abhimskywalker staff 1.4K Jun 13 19:04 /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/docker-machine-prompt.bash
-rw-r--r--@ 1 abhimskywalker staff 1.5K Jun 13 19:36 /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/docker-machine-wrapper.bash
-rw-r--r--@ 1 abhimskywalker staff 6.8K Jun 13 19:37 /usr/local/etc/bash_completion.d/docker-machine.bash
I could not understand what does this @
mean in -rw-r--r--@
?
Upvotes: 18
Views: 11443
Reputation: 1220
It indicates that the file has extended attributes. You can use the xattr command-line utility to view and modify them:
xattr -l file # lists the names of all xattrs.
xattr -w attr_name attr_value file # sets xattr attr_name to attr_value.
xattr -d attr_name file # deletes xattr attr_name.
xattr -c file # deletes all xattrs.
xattr -h # prints help
You can also use ls -l@
to see more information about those extended attributes.
From the osx ls
man page:
The Long Format
If the file or directory has extended attributes, the permissions field printed by the -l option is followed by an @ character. Otherwise, if the file or directory has extended security information, the permissions field printed by the -l option is followed by a + character.
And
-@ Display extended attribute keys and sizes in long (-l) output.
Upvotes: 20