Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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metze
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at a higher level
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I used the smb_filename struct everywhere that was feasible for the
first pass. There are still some places in this path that need to be
changed to use smb_filename, but this is a good start.
I also:
- Removed fname/path arguments from a few functions that weren't
really using them.
- Added a utility function for detecting whether an smb_filename is a
stream.
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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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Signed-off-by: Tim Prouty <tprouty@samba.org>
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The function was removed in:
c16c90a1cb3b0e2ceadd3dea835a4e69acfc2fae
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Do not attempt to delete streams on a truncating open, if the name we're
opening is itself a stream
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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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torture test
This third patch cleans up by removing all of the code that is made
obsolete by the first patch. It should cause no functional changes.
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This is the first pass at extending the onefs vfs module to support
the CIFS-specific enhancements available on OneFS. Most of this patch
is massaging the sama open path to work with ifs_createfile.
ifs_createfile is a CIFS-specific syscall for opening/files and
directories. It adds support for:
- Full in-kernel access checks using a windows access_mask
- Cluster-coherent share mode locks
- Cluster-coherent oplocks
- Streams
- Setting security descriptors at create time
- Setting dos_attributes at create time
This patch does not implement the samba side of the streams support or
oplocks support. Tests that expect oplocks to be granted or streams
to be supported will fail. This will be remedied in upcoming patches.
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This is an intermediate step that makes it much easier to see how the
OneFS SMB_VFS_CREATE_FILE implementation diverges from stock samba.
The goal is that more common code can be refactored into utility
functions.
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