############################################################################
#  -----------------------------------------------------------------------
#  dtfile.config
#  -------------
#
#  (c) Copyright 1993, 1994 Hewlett-Packard Company
#  (c) Copyright 1993, 1994 International Business Machines Corp.
#  (c) Copyright 1993, 1994 Sun Microsystems, Inc.
#  (c) Copyright 1993, 1994 Unix System Labs, Inc., a subsidiary of
#      Novell, Inc.
#
#  Configuration file for the dt File Manager.
#
#  This file enables dialogs which can be used to edit
#  file-system specific parameters, for example Access
#  Control Lists for Andrew File System directories.
#  Additional information is in the man page dtfile_config.
#
#  The file consists of two sections.  The first section
#  maps platform-specific information to a platform-independent
#  identifier. There are two fields in the platform-specific
#  portion separated by a colon.  The first field identifies
#  the platform: aix, hpux, sunos.  The second field depends
#  on platform; for aix it is an integer corresponding to the
#  st_vfstype field returned by stat, for hpux it is an integer
#  corresponding to the f_fsid[1] field returned by statfs, for
#  sunos it is a string corresponding to the f_basetype field
#  returned by statvfs.  The platform-independent identifier
#  is given following an equals sign.  The keyword "end" delimits
#  the list of mappings.  For example, to define the "native"
#  file systems on several platforms:
#
#  aix:3     = native
#  hpux:0    = native
#  sunos:ufs = native
#  end
#
#  The second section of the configuration file provides
#  information needed by File Manager to execute the
#  filesystem-specific dialog. It consists of a list of
#  platform-independent identifiers followed by a colon and
#  two or three fields. Each field consists of a name followed
#  by an equals sign and a string. The three field names are:
#  buttonLabel, which defines a label for a button in the permissions
#  dialog; fsDialog, which defines the path to the program
#  which displays the dialog for editing file-specific properties;
#  and warning, which is optional and defines a warning message to
#  be displayed in permissions dialog. "\n" can be included in the
#  warning text to generate a new line. Continuing the native file
#  system example used above, the following would enable a file-system
#  specific dialog generated by the program /local/bin/modExtAttr:
#
#  native:     buttonLabel  =  Modify extended attributes ...
#              warning      =  Warning:\nExtended attributes may limit your access
#              fsDialog     =  /local/bin/modExtAttr
#
#   Since the button label and warning are visible to users, they must be
#   localized. This is done using the tagged message file
#   format.
#
#  -----------------------------------------------------------------------
#

  aix:3     = jfs
  aix:0     = jfs2
#hpux:0    = test
#sunos:ufs = test
#aix:7     = dfs
end

afs:    buttonLabel = Change AFS ACL ...
        warning     = Warning: This is an Andrew File System (AFS) object.\nAccess permissions may be further restricted by the AFS Access Control List (ACL).
        fsDialog    = /usr/dt/bin/dtaclafs

test:   buttonLabel = Display test dialog ...
        fsDialog    = /usr/dt/bin/dtfile_error

dfs:    buttonLabel = Change DFS ACL ...
        warning     = Warning: This is a DCE File System (DFS) object.\nAccess permissions may be further restricted by the DFS Access Control List (ACL).
        fsDialog    = /usr/dt/bin/dtacldfs
	
jfs:    buttonLabel = Change JFS ACL ...
        warning     = Warning: This is a Journaled File System (JFS) object.\nAccess permissions may be further restricted by the JFS Access Control List (ACL).
        fsDialog    = /usr/dt/bin/dtacljfs

jfs2:   buttonLabel = Change JFS2 ACL ...
        warning     = Warning: This is a Enhanced Journaled File System (JFS2) object.\nAccess permissions may be further restricted by the JFS2 Access Control List (ACL). 
        fsDialog    = /usr/dt/bin/dtacljfs