Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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section until we decide if we want to idle SMB2 directory handles.
Jeremy.
Autobuild-User: Jeremy Allison <jra@samba.org>
Autobuild-Date: Fri Mar 18 01:13:53 CET 2011 on sn-devel-104
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These variables, of type struct auth_serversupplied_info were poorly
named when added into 2001, and in good consistant practice, this has
extended all over the codebase in the years since.
The structure is also not ideal for it's current purpose. Originally
intended to convey the results of the authentication modules, it
really describes all the essential attributes of a session. This
rename will reduce the volume of a future patch to replaced these with
a struct auth_session_info, with auth_serversupplied_info confined to
the lower levels of the auth subsystem, and then eliminated.
(The new structure will be the output of create_local_token(), and the
change in struct definition will ensure that this is always run, populating
local groups and privileges).
Andrew Bartlett
Signed-off-by: Stefan Metzmacher <metze@samba.org>
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Since commit 7022554, smbds share a printcap cache (printer_list.tdb),
therefore ordering of events between smbd processes is important when
updating printcap cache information. Consider the following two process
example:
1) smbd1 receives HUP or printcap cache time expiry
2) smbd1 checks whether pcap needs refresh, it does
3) smbd1 marks pcap as refreshed
4) smbd1 forks child1 to obtain cups printer info
5) smbd2 receives HUP or printcap cache time expiry
6) smbd2 checks whether pcap needs refresh, it does not (due to step 3)
7) smbd2 reloads printer shares prior to child1 completion (stale pcap)
8) child1 completion, pcap cache (printer_list.tdb) is updated by smbd1
9) smbd1 reloads printer shares based on new pcap information
In this case both smbd1 and smbd2 are reliant on the pcap update
performed on child1 completion.
The prior commit "reload shares after pcap cache fill" ensures that
smbd1 only reloads printer shares following pcap update, however smbd2
continues to present shares based on stale pcap data.
This commit addresses the above problem by driving pcap cache and
printer share updates from the parent smbd process.
1) smbd0 (parent) receives a HUP or printcap cache time expiry
2) smbd0 forks child0 to obtain cups printer info
3) child0 completion, pcap cache (printer_list.tdb) is updated by smbd0
4) smbd0 reloads printer shares
5) smbd0 notifies child smbds of pcap update via message_send_all()
6) child smbds read fresh pcap data and reload printer shares
This architecture has the additional advantage that only a single
process (the parent smbd) requests printer information from the printcap
backend.
Use time_mono in housekeeping functions As suggested by Björn Jacke.
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128 credits.
Jeremy.
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SMB2 also.
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The all UPPER case typedef is no longer the preferred Samba style
and this makes it easier to see that this is the IDL-derivied structure
Andrew Bartlett
Signed-off-by: Andrew Tridgell <tridge@samba.org>
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This breaks the perfcol_onefs() build.
Tim, Steve, this use of smbd_server_fd is replacable by calls into
substitute.c. I don't have a onefs environment around to build a fix, so I've
decided to insert an #error, making it not compile. The fix should be pretty
obvious, you can get the socket data via "%I" and "%i" substitutions.
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This moves those arrays from dynamic to static, shared memory, removing them
from globals.c.
I did it by dumping the result of init_tables() with dump_data(). Some massage
by an editor macro made it the initializer.
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into negprot_spnego() where it belongs (it's not an SPNEGO operation).
Add a TALLOC_CTX for callers of negprot_spnego(). Closer to unifying all
the gen_negTokenXXX calls.
Jeremy.
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Volker pointed out I'd missed the "last directory" cache
part of this code. Return us to caching the directory we're
in (reduces sys call load).
Mea maxima culpa.
Jeremy.
This reverts commit 2f30aea3324f32f9b8555e961256fc1280da2871.
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It would be obvious to initialize this in smbd_init_globals(), but there the
messaging_context can't be initialized yet because we don't have smb.conf
loaded yet.
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Jeremy.
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If a file is closed we must also NULL out all chained_fsp
pointers when the fsp is freed to prevent invalid pointer
access.
Jeremy.
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Reviewed-by: Simo Sorce <idra@samba.org>
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The my_yp_domain variable is just a static cache needed to avoid
making over and over expensive and potentially blocking calls to
yp_get_default_domain().
Instead of keeping this onto the smbd_server_connection struct, just
keep it local to the only function ever using this variable.
This disentagle this function (and a number of calling functions)
from having to pass around smbd_server_connection and thus having
to link against smbd. It also removes a few ifdefs.
Nothing changes from a global/local pov, as the smbd_server_connection
variable passed around is also a global one.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Schneider <asn@samba.org>
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typedefs are no longer preferred Samba style.
Andrew Bartlett
Signed-off-by: Stefan Metzmacher <metze@samba.org>
Signed-off-by: Günther Deschner <gd@samba.org>
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64-bit Vista client
It turns out that the persistent handles are used by the Microsoft
redirector to index files on oplock break requests. So even if we
don't do durable handles (yet) we must set the persistent handle
on create. For now just use the same handle value as we use for
volatile.
Jeremy.
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spec required).
Jeremy.
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global.
Jeremy.
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messages to SMB2 oplock levels.
Jeremy.
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smblctx in our locking code. 2). Widens smblctx to 64-bits internally. Preparing to use the SMB2 handle as the locking context.
Jeremy.
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next :-).
Jeremy.
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Jeremy.
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Metze, you'll probably be happier with this work as it
doesn't abuse tevent in the way you dislike. This is a
first cut at the code, which will need lots of testing
but I'm hoping this will give people an idea of where I'm
going with this.
Jeremy.
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Jeremy.
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Jeremy
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Jeremy.
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metze
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Seems to work but needs more tests (to be added).
Jeremy.
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Jeremy.
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Makes SMB2Create call re-entrant internally.
Now this infrastructure is in place, oplocks will follow shortly.
Tested with Win7 client and with W2K8R2.
Jeremy.
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right.
Gets us handling SMB2 compound async requests similar to W2K8R2
(and triggers the same client bug in the Win7 redirector). Great
thanks to Ira Cooper <samba@ira.wakeful.net> for helping with
this and to Metze for the wonderful async framework. The one
thing I need to fix to make us identical to W2K8R2 is that
when a compound request goes async at the end W2K8R2 splits
the replies up into a compound non-async reply followed by
a separate async reply. Currently we're doing the whole thing
in a compound reply.
Jeremy.
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This will allow us to share logic much easier between SMB1 and SMB2
servers.
Jeremy
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