Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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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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Previously, we didn’t call SMB_VFS_OPEN_DIR from the streams module,
instead we called fdopendir(). As a result we failed to populate the
dir_state list in the readdirplus module. So when we tried to view the
stream data, we will always returned NULL.
To solve this I separated onefs_opendir() and the initialization of
the dir_state list. This is done by introducing a new utility function
“onefs_rdp_add_dir_state()”, which initializes the dir_state structure
and adds it to the dir_state list. This function is called from the
streams module before calling readdir().
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names to the one given by anonymize_prefix, without generating a hash number. This setting is optional and is compatible with the module configuration format of Samba 3.3.
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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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This patch adds 3 new VFS OPs for Windows byte range locking: BRL_LOCK_WINDOWS,
BRL_UNLOCK_WINDOWS and BRL_CANCEL_WINDOWS. Specifically:
* I renamed brl_lock_windows, brl_unlock_windows and brl_lock_cancel to
*_default as the default implementations of the VFS ops.
* The blocking_lock_record (BLR) is now passed into the brl_lock_windows and
brl_cancel_windows paths. The Onefs implementation uses it - future
implementations may find it useful too.
* Created brl_lock_cancel to do what brl_lock/brl_unlock do: set up a
lock_struct and call either the Posix or Windows lock function. These happen
to be the same for the default implementation.
* Added helper functions: increment_current_lock_count() and
decrement_current_lock_count().
* Minor spelling correction in brl_timeout_fn: brl -> blr.
* Changed blocking_lock_cancel() to return the BLR that it has cancelled. This
allows us to assert its the lock that we wanted to cancel. If this assert ever
fires, this path will need to take in the BLR to cancel, rather than choosing
on its own.
* Adds a small helper function: find_blocking_lock_record_by_id(). Used by the
OneFS implementation, but could be useful for others.
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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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search requests.
By default this VFS call is a NOOP, but the onefs vfs module takes advantage
of it to initialize direntry search caches at the beginning of each
TRANS2_FIND_FIRST, TRANS2_FIND_NEXT, SMBffirst, SMBsearch, and SMBunique
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* this allows VFS implementations that prefetch stat information on
readdir to return it through one VFS call
* backwards compatibility is maintained by passing in NULL
* if the system readdir doesn't return stat info, the stat struct is
set to invalid
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This ensures that getting/stting a security descriptor does not
contend an oplock. The correct access checks will be still be done in
the kernel on the get/set rather than the open.
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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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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 checkin enables setting arbitrary timestamps on files matching
the pattern stored in smb.conf. This was a customer request for a
specific workflow.
Changes include:
1) configuration state machine to avoid tons of string comparisons on
each and every stat.
2) Code to adjust post-stat() times to match time now, or sloptime +
time now.
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This allows module implementors to customize what allocation size is
returned to the client.
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metze
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1) Add in smb_file_time struct to clarify code and make room for createtime.
2) Get and set create time from SMB messages.
3) Fixup existing VFS modules + examples Some OS'es allow for the
setting of the birthtime through kernel interfaces. This value is
generically used for Windows createtime, but is not settable in the
code today.
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Updates the onefs vfs module to add configurable behavior to deal
with sids that are unknown to us. The best examples are aces that
come from robocopy/xcopy.
Adds the following share level options (which are specific to the vfs_onefs
module):
onefs: ignore unmappable sids (Default = false)
If this option is set to true, sids which could not be resolved to
a uid/gid are ignored. If an unmappable sid is encountered as the owner
or group, the owner/group is converted to BUILTIN\Administrators.
onefs: unmappable sids ignore list (Default = empty)
Only the sids in the list are ignored.
onefs: ignore sacls (Default = false)
SACLs are ignored
onefs: unmappable sids deny everyone (Default = false)
If an unmappable sid is found in a deny ACE, the ACE's identity is
changed to Everyone.
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to NFSv4 ACL code as this uses the same flawed logic as posix_acls.c.
Jeremy.
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to ourselves unless that was passed in.
Jeremy.
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This fixes bug #5956.
Thanks to Oskar Wycislak <cantorek [at] gmail.com> for reporting
and providing a patch!
Karolin
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"fileid:mapping" is still supported as fallback.
metze
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Michael
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Michael
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metze
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Thanks to Hodur <coil93@gmail.com> for testing!
Volker
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work with NTRENAME
Handling of error codes when renaming a file to a stream and a stream
to a file is now done in rename_internals_fsp.
The NTRENAME stream path only passes in the stream name, so the new
base can now be different from the old base.
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