Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Guenther
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Michael
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we can provide the path to ctdb via the --with-ctdb=... configure flag like we
do it with other packageѕ, too. There is no need for another redundnant
Makefile hack to point the ctdb header location
Signed-off-by: Michael Adam <obnox@samba.org>
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We keep the seqnum/mid mapping in the smb_request structure.
This also moves one global variable into the
smbd_server_connection struct.
metze
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It's the job of the caller to maintain the seqnum/mid mapping.
Hopefully we can use this code in s4 later too.
metze
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This prepares a large simplification of the smb_signing code
metze
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This is to allow for testing samba_version_string() without
the need to compile any of the larger binaries like smbd or net...
Michael
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metze
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correctly.
This is a really nasty one to fix as in order to successfully update the
passdb.tdb we must do the equivalent of a tdbbackup to move to the new hash
values before we do the upgrade.
Jeremy.
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Guenther
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Good-Bye, last hand-marshalled rpc functions, rest in peace.
Guenther
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Guenther
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password talloc'ed strings within the cli_struct.
Jeremy.
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merged.
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auth_onefs_wb.c -> auth_wbc.c
pdb_onefs_sam.c -> pdb_wbc_sam.c
No changes to functionality
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metze
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This fixes a bug in 116ce19b, where we didn't clear the pid cache in
become_daemon() and thus the /var/run/smbd.pid didn't match the actual
pid of the parent process.
Currently S4 will clear the pid cache on fork but doesn't yet take
advantage of the pid cache by using sys_pid() instead of the direct
get_pid().
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All of the spoolss change notify code uses pidl generated functions now.
Guenther
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Implements a custom backend for onefs that exclusively uses the wbclient
interface for all passdb calls.
It lacks some features of a standard passdb.
In particular it's a read only interface and doesn't implement privileges.
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This new backend is custom tailored to onefs' unique requirements:
1) No fallback logic
2) Does not validate the domain of the user
3) Handles unencrypted passwords
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The OneFS Samba implementation of change notify is modeled after the
usage of Linux's inotify kernel subsystem. A single call is made
into the onefs.so VFS module to initialize kernel tracking of certain
file change events. When these events occur a kernel notification is
sent to smbd and the notification event is translated and given to the
general Samba Change Notify layer through a callback function.
The most difficult aspect is converting an SMB CompletionFilter to
a matching ifs_event mask, and then back to an appropriate change
notify action. Currently, not all possible cases are handled by the
this module, but the most prevalent ones, which are tested by
smbtorture, are implemented.
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Add 'perfcount module = pc_test' to exercise this module. Results are
logged into smb.log every 50 operations (configurable via smb.conf).
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* Much of the beginning should look familiar, as I re-used the OneFS oplock
callback record concept. This was necessary to keep our own state around - it
really only consists of a lock state, per asynchronous lock that is currently
unsatisfied. The onefs_cbrl_callback_records map to BLRs by the id.
* There are 4 states an async lock can be in. NONE means there is no async
currently out for the lock, as opposed to ASYNC. DONE means we've locked
*every* lock (keep in mind a request can ask for multiple locks at a time.)
ERROR is an error.
* onefs_cbrl_async_success: The lock_num is incremented, and the state changed,
so that when process_blocking_lock_queue is run, we will try the *next* lock,
rather than the same one again.
* onefs_brl_lock_windows() has some complicated logic:
* We do a no-op if we're passed a BLR and the matching state is ASYNC --
this means Samba is trying to get the same lock twice, and we just need
to wait longer, so we return an error.
* PENDING lock calls happen when the lock is being queued on the BLQ -- we
do async in this case.
* We also do async in the case that we're passed a BLR, but the lock is not
pending. This is an async lock being probed by process_blocking_lock_queue.
* We do a sync lock for any normal first request of a lock.
* Failure is returned, but it doesn't go to the client unless the lock has
actually timed out.
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Guenther
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* also removed duplicate paths to lib directories in make clean
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Michael
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OneFS provides the bulk directory enumeration syscall readdirplus(). This
syscall has the same semantics as the NFSv3 READDIRPLUS command, returning
a batch of directory entries with prefetched stat information via one
syscall.
This commit wraps the readdirplus() call in the existing POSIX
readdir/seekdir VFS interface. By default a batch of 128 directory entries
are optimistically read from the kernel into a global cache, and fed to
iterative calls of VFS_OP_READDIR.
The global buffers could be avoided in the future by hanging connection
specific buffers off the conn struct.
Added new parameter "onefs:use readdirplus" which toggles usage of this
code on or off.
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A few functions in oplocks_onefs.c need to be accessed from the onefs
vfs module. It would be ideal if oplocks were implemented at the vfs
layer, but since they aren't yet, a new header is added to
source3/include to make these functions available to the onefs vfs
module. oplocks_onefs.o doesn't need to be linked into the onefs vfs
module explicitly, since it is already linked into smbd by default.
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This changelist allows for the addition of custom performance
monitoring modules through smb.conf. Entrypoints in the main message
processing code have been added to capture the command, subop, ioctl,
identity and message size statistics.
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This also switches wb_reqtrans to use wbcErr instead of NTSTATUS as it would
be pointless to convert to errno first and to wbcErr later.
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