Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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Lookup the EA and Stream status on CreateX.
Jeremy.
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Guenther
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Office 2003.
Confirmation from reporter that this fixes the issue in master on ext3/ext4.
Back-ports to follow.
Jeremy.
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On filesystems that can't store less than one second timestamps,
round the incoming timestamp set requests so the client can't discover
that a time set request has been truncated by the filesystem.
Needs backporting to 3.4, 3.3, 3.2 and (even) 3.0.
Jeremy
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metze
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that stores the create time in the user.DosTimestamps EA.
Jeremy.
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Michael
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They're both only used in the context of a function,
so we can make them stack variables.
metze
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This can be NULL for faked connection structs used in the rpc server
or printing code.
metze
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It took me a bit to understand what this flag does. I hope this is
a bit clearer, at least it is to me.
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do the time twiddling logic at the smb_set_file_time level.
Jeremy.
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construct_reply() references the request after chain_reply has freed it.
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This patch also changes the unix convert flags to make sure the
correct semantics are preservered for allowing/disallowing wildcards
in the last component of the path.
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s3: Make smbd aware of permission change of usershare. Since usershare are relatively volatile and
non-previledge users must disconnect from smbd and reconnect to it to make share permission in effect.
For now. This is a feature request and I think we need
to design it a little differently so as not to touch
core change_to_user() code.
Jeremy.
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relatively volatile and non-previledge users must disconnect from smbd and reconnect to it to make share permission in effect.
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Guenther
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Before 3.3, an smbcontrol debug message sent to the target "smbd" would
actually be sent to all running processes including nmbd and winbindd.
This behavior was changed in 3.3 so that the "smbd" target would only
send a message to the process found in smbd.pid, while the "all" target
would send a message to all processes.
The ability to set the debug level of all processes within a single
daemon, without specifying each pid is quite useful. This was implemented
in winbindd in 065760ed. This patch does the same thing for smbd.
Upon receiving a MSG_DEBUG the parent smbd will rebroadcast it to all of
its children.
The printing process has been added to the list of smbd child processes,
and we now always track the number of smbd children regardless of the
"max smbd processes" setting.
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All paths are now unix paths, making this flag useless.
This flags argument is now unused and can be safely removed.
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metze
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This is the first of a series of patches that change path based
operations to operate on a struct smb_filename instead of a char *.
This same concept already exists in source4.
My goals for this series of patches are to eventually:
1) Solve the stream vs. posix filename that contains a colon ambiguity
that currently exists.
2) Make unix_convert the only function that parses the stream name.
3) Clean up the unix_convert API.
4) Change all path based vfs operation to take a struct smb_filename.
5) Make is_ntfs_stream_name() a constant operation that can simply
check the state of struct smb_filename rather than re-parse the
filename.
6) Eliminate the need for split_ntfs_stream_name() to exist.
My strategy is to start from the inside at unix_convert() and work my
way out through the vfs layer, call by call. This first patch does
just that, by changing unix_convert and all of its callers to operate
on struct smb_filename. Since this is such a large change, I plan on
pushing the patches in phases, where each phase keeps full
compatibility and passes make test.
The API of unix_convert has been simplified from:
NTSTATUS unix_convert(TALLOC_CTX *ctx,
connection_struct *conn,
const char *orig_path,
bool allow_wcard_last_component,
char **pp_conv_path,
char **pp_saved_last_component,
SMB_STRUCT_STAT *pst)
to:
NTSTATUS unix_convert(TALLOC_CTX *ctx,
connection_struct *conn,
const char *orig_path,
struct smb_filename *smb_fname,
uint32_t ucf_flags)
Currently the smb_filename struct looks like:
struct smb_filename {
char *base_name;
char *stream_name;
char *original_lcomp;
SMB_STRUCT_STAT st;
};
One key point here is the decision to break up the base_name and
stream_name. I have introduced a helper function called
get_full_smb_filename() that takes an smb_filename struct and
allocates the full_name. I changed the callers of unix_convert() to
subsequently call get_full_smb_filename() for the time being, but I
plan to eventually eliminate get_full_smb_filename().
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metze
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This fixes bug #4271: testparm should not print includes.
Michael
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Guenther
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We store the seqnum/mid mapping in the cli_request structure
for async requests and in the cli_state structure for sync calls.
We skip the signing check for oplock requests while waiting
for async requests coming in.
metze
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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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password talloc'ed strings within the cli_struct.
Jeremy.
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We need to store the "force group" uid separately from the
conn->server_info token as we need to apply it separately also.
Volker PLEASE CHECK !
Jeremy.
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samba3 smb.h.
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This extends the file_id struct to add an additional generic uint64_t
field: extid. For backwards compatibility with dev/inodes stored in
xattr_tdbs and acl_tdbs, the ext id is ignored for these databases.
This patch should cause no functional change on systems that don't use
SMB_VFS_FILE_ID_CREATE to set the extid.
Existing code that uses the smb_share_mode library will need to be
updated to be compatibile with the new extid.
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Here is a short description for each of the new capability flags:
KOPLOCKS_LEVEL2_SUPPORTED: Level 2 oplocks are supported natively in
the kernel.
KOPLOCKS_DEFERRED_OPEN_NOTIFICATION: The kernel notifies deferred
openers when they can retry the open.
KOPLOCKS_TIMEOUT_NOTIFICATION: The kernel notifies smbds when an
oplock break times out.
KOPLOCKS_OPLOCK_BROKEN_NOTIFICATION: The kernel notifies smbds when an
oplock is broken.
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This replaces release_level2_oplocks_on_change with
contend_level2_oplock_begin/end in order to contend level2 oplocks
throughout an operation rather than just at the begining. This is
necessary for some kernel oplock implementations, and also lays the
groundwork for better correctness in Samba's standard level2 oplock
handling. The next step for non-kernel oplocks is to add additional
state to the share mode lock struct that prevents any new opens from
granting oplocks while a contending operation is in progress.
All operations that contend level 2 oplocks are now correctly spanned
except for aio and synchronous writes. The two write paths both have
non-trivial error paths that need extra care to get right.
RAW-OPLOCK and the rest of 'make test' are still passing with this
change.
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Level 2 for kernel oplocks
Pass in an extra argument when releasing an oplock so kernel oplock
implementations can support downgrading from Level 1 to Level 2.
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I'm not certain if the dummy pointer is needed in struct vfs_fsp_data,
but I added it to be consistent with the comment below.
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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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Guenther
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delete file
This fixes the generic rename/delete problem for 3.3.0 and above.
Fixed slightly differently to discussions, user viewable modified
ACLs are not a good idea :-).
Jeremy.
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The idea of this is that all client utils like smbpasswd and also for example
"net join" do not access our internal databases like passdb and secrets.tdb
directly anymore but pass everything throught the well-established RPC
interfaces.
The way you use this is the following: With rpc_cli_smbd_conn_init() or its
async variant you initialize a "struct rpc_cli_smbd_conn". This structure is
the link to a freshly forked smbd, ready to be used for RPC services. You
should only ever have one such structure in your program. More don't hurt, but
are plainly unnecessary.
If you want to use the SAMR pipe to change a passwort, you connect to that pipe
with rpc_pipe_open_local. Do you normal rpccli_samr calls on that and your
locally forked smbd will connect to passdb for you.
GD, this might make the distinction between the _l and _r calls in libnetapi
mostly unnecessary. At least it is intended to do so... :-)
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