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This completes the work Jeremy began last week, disambiguating the meaning of
c_time. (In POSIX terminology, c_time means "status Change time", not "create
time".) All uses of c_time, a_time and m_time have now been replaced with
change_time, access_time, and write_time, and when creation time is intended,
create_time is used.
Additionally, the capability of setting and retrieving the create time have
been added to the smbc_setxattr() and smbc_getxattr() functions. An example
of setting all four times can be seen with the program
examples/libsmbclient/testacl
with the following command line similar to:
testacl -f -S "system.*:CREATE_TIME:1000000000,ACCESS_TIME:1000000060,WRITE_TIME:1000000120,CHANGE_TIME:1000000180" 'smb://server/share/testfile.txt'
The -f option turns on the new mode which uses full time names in the
attribute specification (e.g. ACCESS_TIME vs A_TIME).
(This used to be commit 8e119b64f1d92026dda855d904be09912a40601c)
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1. using smbc_getxattr() et al, one may now request all access control
entities in the ACL without getting all other NT attributes.
2. added the ability to exclude specified attributes from the result set
provided by smbc_getxattr() et al, when requesting all attributes,
all NT attributes, or all DOS attributes.
3. eliminated all compiler warnings, including when --enable-developer
compiler flags are in use. removed -Wcast-qual flag from list, as that
is specifically to force warnings in the case of casting away qualifiers.
Note: In the process of eliminating compiler warnings, a few nasties were
discovered. In the file libads/sasl.c, PRIVATE kerberos interfaces
are being used; and in libsmb/clikrb5.c, both PRIAVE and DEPRECATED
kerberos interfaces are being used. Someone who knows kerberos
should look at these and determine if there is an alternate method
of accomplishing the task.
(This used to be commit 994694f7f26da5099f071e1381271a70407f33bb)
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