SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES
The SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES
structure contains the security descriptor for an object and specifies whether
the handle retrieved by specifying this structure is inheritable.
typedef struct _SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES { // sa
DWORD nLength;
LPVOID
lpSecurityDescriptor;
BOOL bInheritHandle;
} SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES;
Members
nLength
Specifies the
size, in bytes, of this structure. Set this value to the size of the SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES
structure.
Windows NT: Some
functions that use the SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES structure do not verify the
value of the nLength member. However, an application should still set it
properly. That ensures current, future, and cross-platform compatibility.
lpSecurityDescriptor
Points to a
security descriptor for the object that controls the sharing of it. If NULL is
specified for this member, the object may be assigned the default security
descriptor of the calling process.
bInheritHandle
Specifies
whether the returned handle is inherited when a new process is created. If this
member is TRUE, the new process inherits the handle.
Remarks
A pointer to
a SECURITY_ATTRIBUTES structure is used as a parameter in most kernel
and window-management functions in the Win32 API that return a handle of an
object.
See Also