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(This used to be commit 9087fab0adcf1791caeb795509ca9f14f5f47e82)
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(This used to be commit f3844cc0a5ad6b03f166435d44db02763df345d7)
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circular references (circular references are allowed, they just need
to be handled carefully inside talloc)
- mark talloc_reference() pointers nicely in the --leak-report-full
code, so you see what has a reference to what in a useful manner
(This used to be commit a87d3d11344069284604a7294a54cadcc6e1a096)
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RPC-SAMR torture test. This closes the samr connection before working
on a open domain handle. The server is supposed to know that the open
domain handle still holds a reference to the connection, so the
connection remains valid even though it has been closed.
(This used to be commit f31e5d56e364ce8ab76fdb20b30e179b458b2ffa)
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void *talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr);
this function makes a secondary reference to ptr, and hangs it off the
given context. This greatly simplifies some of the current reference
counting code in the samr server and I suspect it will be widely used
in other places too.
the way you use it is like this:
domain_state->connect_state = talloc_reference(domain_state, connect_state);
that makes the element connect_state of domain_state a secondary
reference to connect_state. The connect_state structure will then only
be freed when both domain_state and the original connect_state go
away, allowing you to free them independently and in any order.
you could do this alrady using a talloc destructor, and that is what
the samr server did previously, but that meant this construct was
being reinvented in several places. So this convenience function sets
up the destructor for you, giving a much more convenient and less
error prone API.
(This used to be commit dc5315086156644fad093cbe6b02d999adba8540)
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a const pointer really means that "the data pointed to by this pointer
won't change", and that is certainly true of talloc(). The fact that
some behind-the-scenes meta-data can change doesn't matter from the
point of view of const.
this fixes a number of const warnings caused by const data structures
being passed as talloc contexts. That will no longer generate a
warning.
also changed the talloc leak reporting option from --leak-check to
--leak-report, as all it does is generate a report on exit. A new
--leak-report-full option has been added that shows the complete tree
of memory allocations, which is is quite useful in tracking things down.
NOTE: I find it quite useful to insert talloc_report_full(ptr, stderr)
calls at strategic points in the code while debugging memory
allocation problems, particularly before freeing a major context (such
as the connection context). This allows you to see if that context has
been accumulating too much data, such as per-request data, which
should have been freed when the request finished.
(This used to be commit c60ff99c3129c26a9204bac1c6e5fb386114a923)
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existing call rather than creating a new one. This prevents call
structures hanging around on the rpc connection context until it is
closed
(This used to be commit c51ca7c0e73b97435c245cd440a4fb979cf6a4f3)
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call name
(This used to be commit 015db2ed8cdde6d6eb79857cb9b6d72185382acc)
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taking a context (so when you pass a NULL pointer you end up with
memory in a top level context). Fixed it by changing the API to take a
context. The context is only used if the pointer you are reallocing is
NULL.
(This used to be commit 8dc23821c9f54b2f13049b5e608a0cafb81aa540)
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disconnects. Previously the ldb was always kept open.
(This used to be commit d78eea9eb8540f137d30aef5fbb397295312eb1b)
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(This used to be commit 278cef77f083c002d17ecbbe18c20825a380eda3)
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the cli context too
(This used to be commit 417d0c0ba182aab3a3a23db76ff7ac7cbc663cb6)
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and 4.0 don't accept declarations of static functions inside other
functions, see http://gcc.gnu.org/ml/gcc-patches/2004-08/msg02514.html
(This used to be commit 8768168aadf51b9559831954e349d9aa94101c41)
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report from --leak-check
(This used to be commit 1ff41bbcae8dc7514a85d69679e44dc7c5b0342f)
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(This used to be commit 2662be3a2be04aa7f4dcfde3453389595bf43496)
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(This used to be commit 00518201754dc2de583267071ebd2adecbadcb59)
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This sort of bug happens quite easily with the new talloc_realloc()
interface. talloc_realloc() now looks like this:
void *talloc_realloc(void *ptr, size_t size);
and if ptr is not NULL then everything is fine. If ptr is NULL then
talloc_realloc() presumes you want to allocate in the NULL context,
which is probably not what is wanted.
For now the solution is to initialise ptr like this:
ptr = talloc(mem_ctx, 0);
so when the realloc happens it has a context to get hold of.
I might change the interface of talloc_realloc() later to prevent this
problem in a more robust manner
(This used to be commit bd813dfb1b08b586dc71f9cec4eb65b35ea808fe)
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rather than manual reference counts
- properly support SMBexit in the cifs and posix backends
- added a logoff method to all backends
With these changes the RAW-CONTEXT test now passes against the posix backend
(This used to be commit c315d6ac1cc40546fde1474702a6d66d07ee13c8)
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(This used to be commit 770aa7e01e68df1fd8538c5b19b63a8545bb0355)
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(This used to be commit 18632ec56524f294655d881406c10beb659ddee1)
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is ignored
(This used to be commit 50d5c638a3710855be67cd41dccc9658d64b70fd)
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don't actually work yet, that will come later)
(This used to be commit 46b790c19da25ba88d29f555f828688bb05e531d)
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smbcli raw context handling
(This used to be commit d5fd6388751944f11c34e5124d403d57c8670e3b)
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of 16 bytes, caused by the 16 byte data_blob in the smb_signing
code.
(This used to be commit 2f1b788e09686e065d22f621f5c0c585192c6740)
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- talloc_strdup() and related functions get automatic names
(This used to be commit 0cf427d14fe0a19cb3e85b6191be220f3d81080a)
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(This used to be commit 4aba6e7101041100f7d400abd5e7144b95528fc3)
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to get auto-naming of pointers very cheaply.
- fixed a couple of memory leaks found with the new tricks
A typical exit report for smbd is now:
talloc report on 'null_context' (total 811 bytes in 54 blocks)
auth/auth_sam.c:334 contains 20 bytes in 1 blocks
struct auth_serversupplied_info contains 498 bytes in 33 blocks
UNNAMED contains 8 bytes in 1 blocks
lib/data_blob.c:40 contains 16 bytes in 1 blocks
iconv(CP850,UTF8) contains 61 bytes in 4 blocks
iconv(UTF8,CP850) contains 61 bytes in 4 blocks
iconv(UTF8,UTF-16LE) contains 67 bytes in 4 blocks
iconv(UTF-16LE,UTF8) contains 67 bytes in 4 blocks
UNNAMED contains 13 bytes in 1 blocks
which is much better than before
(This used to be commit 6e721393d03afd3c2f8ced8422533547a9e33342)
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connection termination cleanup, and to ensure that the event
contexts are properly removed for every process model
- gave auth_context the new talloc treatment, which removes another
source of memory leaks.
(This used to be commit 230e1cd777b0fba82dffcbd656cfa23c155d0560)
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library are closed on abnormal termination
- convert the service.h structures to the new talloc methods
(This used to be commit 2dc334a3284858eb1c7190f9687c9b6c879ecc9d)
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(This used to be commit b378aae95d4001c4cf4e6e59ed80ee1bd55382ee)
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(This used to be commit bc779cb2ce6bc13157f9d046400ce99d107ccd52)
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also fixes a memory leak found with --leak-check.
(This used to be commit f19201ea274f0a542314c61c4af676197bf154ad)
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(This used to be commit 28dcd2202948b003f8d13951395baa4a722593f4)
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auto-derived from the type you are allocating. This is done with
basically zero overhead by relying on the stringify operator in cpp
producing string constants.
the result is that --leak-check nicely names all pointers that come
from talloc_p()
(This used to be commit bd86ebe2972af4d424df20db1e422919aa6203d0)
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and can't properly handle leaks of doubly linked lists which we use a
lot (as the memory is always reachable). Even with --show-reachable
its hard to track leaks down sometimes.
I realised that talloc does have the necessary information to track
these, and by using the cascading property of the new talloc it can
report on leaks in a much more succinct fashion than valgrind can.
I have added a new samba option --leak-check that applies to all Samba
tools. When enabled it prints a leak report summarising all top level
contexts that are present when the program exits. A typical report
looks like this:
talloc report on 'null_context' (total 1071 bytes in 52 blocks)
iconv(CP850,UTF8) contains 43 bytes in 3 blocks
UNNAMED contains 24 bytes in 1 blocks
UNNAMED contains 24 bytes in 1 blocks
dcesrv_init contains 604 bytes in 26 blocks
server_service contains 120 bytes in 6 blocks
UNNAMED contains 24 bytes in 1 blocks
UNNAMED contains 24 bytes in 1 blocks
server_service contains 104 bytes in 4 blocks
server_context contains 12 bytes in 2 blocks
iconv(UTF8,UTF-16LE) contains 46 bytes in 3 blocks
iconv(UTF-16LE,UTF8) contains 46 bytes in 3 blocks
the numbers are recursive summaries for all the memory hanging off each context.
this option is not thread safe when used, but the code is thread safe
if the option is not given, so I don't think thats a problem.
(This used to be commit 96d33d36a5639e7fc46b14a470ccac674d87c62a)
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(This used to be commit 480636ebbca102172621609496bdab682d4bda8a)
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handle unless we use it. This saves quite a bit of memory (libc chews
a lot loading a handle). Typically smbd now loads 3 handles, instead
of 36.
(This used to be commit 60e8d154fda548862cd6f8e8c1dadd64b3c4bd9c)
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(This used to be commit 1ee5ed4197f49f12372835f66160801f19ee35a6)
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(This used to be commit 56ecda2178e33508c55c6195ccec41c06e099d6f)
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(This used to be commit e9803058ecc0b0f849aee48a077bff4e2c8feaa5)
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const warnings for a long time, and no real way to approach a
solution. Some of them are unavoidable due to the way the C standard
works (for example, any function that provides strchr() like
functionality _must_ produce a const warning)
I will be converting a bunch of places that currently produce const
warnings to use the discard_const_p(). Some of these will be
unavoidable const problems, some of them will be ones we will fix up
over time. At least this change means we will no longer be swamped
with const warnings, and we will easily be able to see when new
problems emerge.
(This used to be commit fec3288ad6ce58e8273e3f16e88037db49ecf046)
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(This used to be commit 2a7e5f07086ef4aebbb2be35acbf9c7c39b13c75)
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(This used to be commit 7124949140141513193f41bb8491aa6a283efed7)
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by making our gensec structures a talloc child of the open connection
we can be sure that it will be destroyed when the connection is
dropped.
(This used to be commit f12ee2f241aab1549bc1d9ca4c35a35a1ca0d09d)
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hierarchical memory allocation
(This used to be commit 26da45a8019a2d6c9ff2ac2a6739c7d0b42b00de)
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server code. This fixes a number of memory leaks I found when testing
with valgrind and smbtorture, as the cascading effect of a
talloc_free() ensures that anything derived from the top level object
is destroyed on disconnect.
(This used to be commit 76d0b8206ce64d6ff4a192979c43dddbec726d6e)
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name in our code
(This used to be commit 458f85328850905db8e9808d02898c69b5f9b872)
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in particular), as it gives us type checking.
(This used to be commit dabc7ddd9f940db414d1c3c7bf3cebcd108fbf6f)
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select has indicated are possible
- when a socket is dead, don't try to do anything more on it
(This used to be commit e95e5c591fcf9c3b7fde7fbdcc1837e22195e0a8)
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compilers
(This used to be commit c2be7b696ccb338df06a5212ed1f7b78e4c116c2)
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