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ZwQuerySecurityObject routine

The ZwQuerySecurityObject routine retrieves a copy of an object's security descriptor.

Syntax

NTSTATUS ZwQuerySecurityObject(
  _In_  HANDLE               Handle,
  _In_  SECURITY_INFORMATION SecurityInformation,
  _Out_ PSECURITY_DESCRIPTOR SecurityDescriptor,
  _In_  ULONG                Length,
  _Out_ PULONG               LengthNeeded
);

Parameters

  • Handle [in]
    Handle for the object whose security descriptor is to be queried. This handle must have the access specified in the Meaning column of the table shown in the description of the SecurityInformation parameter.

  • SecurityInformation [in]
    Pointer to a SECURITY_INFORMATION value specifying the information to be queried.

    Value Meaning

    DACL_SECURITY_INFORMATION

    Indicates the discretionary access control list (DACL) of the object is being queried. Requires READ_CONTROL access.

    GROUP_SECURITY_INFORMATION

    Indicates the primary group identifier of the object is being queried. Requires READ_CONTROL access.

    OWNER_SECURITY_INFORMATION

    Indicates the owner identifier of the object is being queried. Requires READ_CONTROL access.

    SACL_SECURITY_INFORMATION

    Indicates the system ACL (SACL) of the object is being queried. Requires ACCESS_SYSTEM_SECURITY access.

     

  • SecurityDescriptor [out]
    Caller-allocated buffer that ZwQuerySecurityObject fills with a copy of the specified security descriptor. The SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR structure is returned in self-relative format.

  • Length [in]
    Size, in bytes, of the buffer pointed to by SecurityDescriptor.

  • LengthNeeded [out]
    Pointer to a caller-allocated variable that receives the number of bytes required to store the copied security descriptor.

Return value

ZwQuerySecurityObject returns STATUS_SUCCESS or an appropriate error status. Possible error status codes include the following:

Return code Description
STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED

Handle did not have the required access.

STATUS_BUFFER_TOO_SMALL

The buffer is too small for the security descriptor. None of the security information was copied to the buffer.

STATUS_INVALID_HANDLE

Handle was not a valid handle.

STATUS_OBJECT_TYPE_MISMATCH

Handle was not a handle of the expected type.

 

Remarks

A security descriptor can be in absolute or self-relative form. In self-relative form, all members of the structure are located contiguously in memory. In absolute form, the structure only contains pointers to the members.

The NTFS file system imposes a 64K limit on the size of the security descriptor that is written to disk for a file. (The FAT file system does not support security descriptors for files.) Thus a 64K SecurityDescriptor buffer is guaranteed to be large enough to hold the returned SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR structure.

For more information about security and access control, see the documentation on these topics in the Windows SDK.

Minifilters should call FltQuerySecurityObject instead of ZwQuerySecurityObject.

Note  If the call to the ZwQuerySecurityObject function occurs in user mode, you should use the name "NtQuerySecurityObject" instead of "ZwQuerySecurityObject".

 

For calls from kernel-mode drivers, the NtXxx and ZwXxx versions of a Windows Native System Services routine can behave differently in the way that they handle and interpret input parameters. For more information about the relationship between the NtXxx and ZwXxx versions of a routine, see Using Nt and Zw Versions of the Native System Services Routines.

Requirements

Target platform

Universal

Version

Available in Windows XP and later versions of Windows.

Header

Ntifs.h (include Ntifs.h)

Library

NtosKrnl.lib

DLL

NtosKrnl.exe

IRQL

PASSIVE_LEVEL

DDI compliance rules

PowerIrpDDis, HwStorPortProhibitedDDIs

See also

FltQuerySecurityObject

SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR

SECURITY_INFORMATION

Using Nt and Zw Versions of the Native System Services Routines

ZwSetSecurityObject

 

 

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