Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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(This used to be commit 64514ff5b7734667a1364de925114091fe208b3a)
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(This used to be commit 13739b68d8357d5d330f12b851d0311feb81e545)
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(This used to be commit 1cef44505e5de9b8ae5206522b624082ad2343b2)
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- added the new messaging system, based on unix domain sockets. It
gets over 10k messages/second on my laptop without any socket
cacheing, which is better than I expected.
- added a LOCAL-MESSAGING torture test
(This used to be commit 3af06478da7ab34a272226d8d9ac87e0a4940cfb)
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(This used to be commit b367209a9f94e471efed233639467babbb2b99d7)
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new one
(This used to be commit 283e38aeb210e048302dc2759a75879cfc81eeb5)
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will shortly be using this for a rewrite of the intra-smbd messaging
library, which is needed to get lock timeouts working properly (and
share modes, oplocks etc)
(This used to be commit 6f4926d846965a901e40d24546eab356c4a537c7)
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caller doesn't have to worry about the constraint of only opening a
database a single time in a process. These wrappers will ensure that
only a single open is done, and will auto-close when the last instance
is gone.
When you are finished with a database pointer, use talloc_free() to
close it.
note that this code does not take account of the threads process
model, and does not yet take account of symlinks or hard links to tdb
files.
(This used to be commit 04e1171996612ddb15f84134cadded68f0d173b2)
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(This used to be commit 247421ee648d1935b68a47195fe1709bb861a7d5)
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they have been broken for 4 years (ever since they were added) and
have been never used, which makes them prime candidates for
destruction.
(This used to be commit 0b53ab85aae4569c04495f07c18a65fd6b47bf4c)
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Spotted by Taj Khattra <taj.khattra@gmail.com>.
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit a7d92301bbf45cb9e475e4876fdbb37644ad5871)
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subsystem that does
not (yet) exist
(This used to be commit 0130713fbe3d838964542a700839c4e276b18547)
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(as it could cause a overflow). Print a message giving the character
values involved in the expansion so it can be debugged if it happens.
(This used to be commit 2a6f59f376a132fcbce8c8e9d1b38d8aae3e8561)
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names)
(This used to be commit b3bc055ac73ff239c2b267717ee91669ecdd4c9b)
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- Initialise hive name (reg_interface)
- Fix LDB backend (enumerating keys works now!)
(This used to be commit 5086d6b2494f236ef67096b2dd4da4f7402a65c5)
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(This used to be commit e7c256a92cc6cbe1cd6cc11a8fb37feba272d01c)
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reports easier to read (less noisy)
(This used to be commit e3009492b85ac90836aa9341687df5869f4ea291)
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convert_string_talloc() implementation.
the previous version used a minimum of 512 bytes, which is way above the average
of what is needed.
(This used to be commit abcd841a8530ba3273d56c9001ea277611507be3)
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common
conditions first
(This used to be commit 878f6b565f4e80eefbb08f44551b3b4f647d7aa7)
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making fake tables, instead just do the approximate upper/lower inline
with toupper() and tolower().
(This used to be commit 994392d085e87046212191b8f41eba628467c778)
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on systems that have the intptr_t type, and for systems that don't
have it, they also almost certainly won't have -Wcast-qual, so we can use a
void* cast.
(This used to be commit 2132d38f9c5ba59825558d5ba084a514ebc2626b)
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- Some LDB updates
(This used to be commit 4b5bf739f5a8f39ff3633d738f6de42681a6b30f)
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(This used to be commit f4860afc486da9fcd43798c81181d01eb0120a59)
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(This used to be commit 4bb410756df13c8c23d21b43c1186f3f9cb9f758)
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- switch the fallback case tables to use talloc
- moved the used-once octal_string() inline in loadparm.c
(This used to be commit b04202eaacc87d264d463f75673ee0e68cd54f94)
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this is very usefull we you don't want to use smb_panic()
metze
(This used to be commit 343b575baa528885f76be12b2cd707f092f85189)
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of associated functions.
The motivation for this change was to avoid having to convert to/from
ucs2 strings for so many operations. Doing that was slow, used many
static buffers, and was also incorrect as it didn't cope properly with
unicode codepoints above 65536 (which could not be represented
correctly as smb_ucs2_t chars)
The two core functions that allowed this change are next_codepoint()
and push_codepoint(). These functions allow you to correctly walk a
arbitrary multi-byte string a character at a time without converting
the whole string to ucs2.
While doing this cleanup I also fixed several ucs2 string handling
bugs. See the commit for details.
The following code (which counts the number of occuraces of 'c' in a
string) shows how to use the new interface:
size_t count_chars(const char *s, char c)
{
size_t count = 0;
while (*s) {
size_t size;
codepoint_t c2 = next_codepoint(s, &size);
if (c2 == c) count++;
s += size;
}
return count;
}
(This used to be commit 814881f0e50019196b3aa9fbe4aeadbb98172040)
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so talloc now doesn't contain any ldb specific functions.
allow NULL to be passed to a couple more talloc() functions
(This used to be commit 1246f80d806fb5f63cfbf3879de6d546384552a8)
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which is much clearer and simpler to use. It removes a specific parent
from a pointer, no matter whether that parent is a "reference" or a
direct parent. This gives complete control over the free process.
(This used to be commit 6c563887f1b9b8c842309a523e88b6f2a32db10f)
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(This used to be commit 9a04664531601b8251dbf6a0922ab48e675adb90)
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note that this is not just an optimisation, it fixes a rare edge case
when LANMAN1 is negotiated
(This used to be commit 8d879cf54c2fe09d62a5c28b02a070cb80984744)
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match w2k behaviour for older negotiated protocols.
(This used to be commit bae2baeb0247ae8f840b3d3b5488c98d081789c5)
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(This used to be commit 06c58ad221ec40e46310e847ebf640bd53e8e468)
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the % coverage in terms of lines of code of a test suite. I thought a
good first place to start with gcov was the talloc test suite. When I
started the test suite covered about 60% of all lines of code in
talloc.c, and now it covers about 99%. The only lines not covered are
talloc corruption errors, as that would cause smb_panic() to fire.
It will be interesting to try gcov on the main Samba test suite for
smbd. We won't achieve 100% coverage, but it would be nice to get to
90% or more.
I also modified the talloc.c sources to be able to be build standalone, using:
gcc -c -D_STANDALONE_ -Iinlcude lib/talloc.c
that should make it much easier to re-use talloc in other projects
(This used to be commit 8d4dc99b82efdf24b6811851c7bdd4af5a4c52c9)
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- made the LOCAL-TALLOC smbtorture test much stricter, checking that
block counts for every pointer are correct after every operation
(This used to be commit 18d3e2647f0bedbba699d1ba2649c0cfe4526ef6)
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might not place the pointer in the context specified in the docs. The
code was assuming that pointer was at the head of the child list,
which it may not be, depending on what other operations have happened
in between.
(This used to be commit e62bd7ef7ec80365ab00ce5b2051b7dc1726304b)
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subtree. Useful when cleaning up a mess after testing.
(This used to be commit 476674af5519960300c0a07349c7cdf307af3822)
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(This used to be commit 19925f5bd8dd24742e5d216b0c491975ceb7d3a6)
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server
without changing realms
(This used to be commit fd2725f5c0a2ea89bbfcb0403d1bc03fa7b7ec25)
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- added documentation for talloc_unreference()
- made the abandoned child logic in talloc_free() clearer and more consistent
(This used to be commit a87584c8e3fb06cd3ff29a918f681b5c6c32b9ff)
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(This used to be commit b0c92616fb69d8139f66dc8144cfcc88ea6825dc)
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(This used to be commit 3f776a9b5c240312f161b651201458e43a9dd6a9)
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The problem was that the simple "uint_t ref_count;" in a talloc chunk
did not give enough information. It told us that a pointer was
referenced more than once, but it didn't say who it was referenced
by. This means that when the pointer was freed we had no sane way to
clean up the reference.
I have now replaced ref_count with a "refs" list, which means that
references point to the pointer, and the pointer has a linked list of
references. So now we can cleanup from either direction without losing track of anything.
I've also added a LOCAL-TALLOC smbtorture test that tests talloc
behaviour for some common uses.
(This used to be commit 911a8d590cb184bcb892810729955c2c4cf02550)
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metze
(This used to be commit d1e8b340a9942553ec7f281affd11ea4315ac448)
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multibyte
sequences)
(This used to be commit b90da2337b83eb261a8072f9d0b13ec28caf3c4d)
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(This used to be commit f3844cc0a5ad6b03f166435d44db02763df345d7)
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circular references (circular references are allowed, they just need
to be handled carefully inside talloc)
- mark talloc_reference() pointers nicely in the --leak-report-full
code, so you see what has a reference to what in a useful manner
(This used to be commit a87d3d11344069284604a7294a54cadcc6e1a096)
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void *talloc_reference(const void *context, const void *ptr);
this function makes a secondary reference to ptr, and hangs it off the
given context. This greatly simplifies some of the current reference
counting code in the samr server and I suspect it will be widely used
in other places too.
the way you use it is like this:
domain_state->connect_state = talloc_reference(domain_state, connect_state);
that makes the element connect_state of domain_state a secondary
reference to connect_state. The connect_state structure will then only
be freed when both domain_state and the original connect_state go
away, allowing you to free them independently and in any order.
you could do this alrady using a talloc destructor, and that is what
the samr server did previously, but that meant this construct was
being reinvented in several places. So this convenience function sets
up the destructor for you, giving a much more convenient and less
error prone API.
(This used to be commit dc5315086156644fad093cbe6b02d999adba8540)
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a const pointer really means that "the data pointed to by this pointer
won't change", and that is certainly true of talloc(). The fact that
some behind-the-scenes meta-data can change doesn't matter from the
point of view of const.
this fixes a number of const warnings caused by const data structures
being passed as talloc contexts. That will no longer generate a
warning.
also changed the talloc leak reporting option from --leak-check to
--leak-report, as all it does is generate a report on exit. A new
--leak-report-full option has been added that shows the complete tree
of memory allocations, which is is quite useful in tracking things down.
NOTE: I find it quite useful to insert talloc_report_full(ptr, stderr)
calls at strategic points in the code while debugging memory
allocation problems, particularly before freeing a major context (such
as the connection context). This allows you to see if that context has
been accumulating too much data, such as per-request data, which
should have been freed when the request finished.
(This used to be commit c60ff99c3129c26a9204bac1c6e5fb386114a923)
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call name
(This used to be commit 015db2ed8cdde6d6eb79857cb9b6d72185382acc)
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