Novell NETWARE 6-DOCUMENTATION Manual page 2206

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When Access Control Is On
Responding When Access Is Denied
Controlling Access to Your Server Using Local Database or LDAP Modes 277
allow (read)
{
(group=regular and dayofweek="mon,tue,wed,thu,fri");
(group=regular and (timeofday>=0800 and timeofday<=1700));
(group=critical)
}
For more information on valid syntax and ACL files, see the Help.
You can turn off access control for any part of the server that a user accesses.
For example, you could create an ACL that restricts access to the resource
.HTML. You could then have an ACL for the entire server that is turned off.
In this case, the only time access-control is used is when a user requests any
file or directory in the *.HTML extension.
When you uncheck the option, you'll get a prompt asking if you want to erase
records in the ACL. When you click OK, the server deletes the ACL entry for
that resource from the ACL file.
If you want to deactivate an ACL, you can comment out the ACL lines in the
file GENERATED-HTTPS-SERVER-ID.ACL by putting pound signs (#) at
the beginning of each line.
You can choose the response a user sees when denied access. You can vary the
message for each access control object. By default, the user is sent a message
that says the file wasn't found. The HTTP error code "404 Not Found" is also
sent.
To change what message is sent for a particular ACL:
1
In the ACL form, click Response When Denied.
2
In the lower frame, select Respond with the Following URL.
3
In the text field, type a URL or URI to a text or HTML file in your server's
document root that you want to send to users when they are denied access.
Make sure the file doesn't contain references to other files, such as style
sheets or images, because they won't be sent.
4
Click Update.

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