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broadcast name registration demands per name per interface at 1 second
intervals, then send a name overwrite request and demand. Any name
conflict replies are reported.
(This used to be commit d656fba6f1a2e9d8c03893741327e5fb59c5271e)
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names on the network and answers name queries. Lots of details are
still missing, but at least this now means you don't need a Samba3
nmbd to use Samba4.
missing pieces include:
- name registrations should be "shout 3 times, then demand"
- no WINS server yet
- no master browser code
(This used to be commit d7d31fdc6670f026f96b50e51a4de19f0b920e5b)
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the packets it receives, but it at least shows how the server
structure will work.
To implement it I extended the libcli/nbt/ library to allow for an
incoming packet handler to be registered. That allows the nbt client
library to be used for low level processing of the nbtd server packets.
Other changes:
- made the socket library always set SO_REUSEADDR when binding to an
interface, to ensure that restarts of a server don't have to wait
for a couple of minutes.
- made the nbt port configurable. Defaults to 137, but other ports
will be useful for testing.
(This used to be commit 2fedca6adfd4df9e85cc86896dfa79630777a917)
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control of the event, so instead build that into the function. If you
pass NULL as mem_ctx then it leaves it as a child of the events
structure.
(This used to be commit 7f981b9ed96f39027cbfd500f41e0c2be64cbb50)
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complexity was that events didn't automatically cleanup
themselves. This was because the events code was written before we had
talloc destructors, so you needed to call event_remove_XX() to clean
the event out of the event lists from every piece of code that used
events. I have now added automatic event destructors, which in turn
allowed me to simplify a lot of the calling code.
The 2nd source of complexity was caused by the ref_count, which was
needed to cope with event handlers destroying events while handling
them, which meant the linked lists became invalid, so the ref_count ws
used to mark events for later destruction.
The new system is much simpler. I now have a ev->destruction_count,
which is incremented in all event destructors. The event dispatch code
checks for changes to this and handles it.
(This used to be commit a3c7417cfeab429ffb22d5546b205818f531a7b4)
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annoying "not parsing session request" message on each SMB connection
(This used to be commit b06b8dd2f4f4fea750b05fd29d68372828159f16)
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might destroy our top level context
leaving the tmp context freed (so a double free)
(This used to be commit b20c0561b8ec3ec7010f846be7a39165783e15c2)
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(This used to be commit 9d2d16ce5fd57cad01ddaf1112beed916cc2088d)
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(This used to be commit 9a34af29388d8ca837c670d054a76d1f75098cbd)
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- expanded the generic async name resolver to try multiple methods
- added wins resolutions to the list of methods tried
- fixed up the random trn id generation to use the good random generator
(This used to be commit 266fd2751c01808e5a18d4094032af50554ceb7a)
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which will eventually try all resolution methods setup in smb.conf
- only resolution backend at the moment is bcast, which does a
parallel broadcast to all configured network interfaces, and takes
the first reply that comes in (this nicely demonstrates how to do
parallel requests using the async APIs)
- converted all the existing code to use the new resolve_name() api
- removed all the old nmb code (yay!)
(This used to be commit 239c310f255e43dd2d1c2433f666c9faaacbdce3)
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- structures defined using IDL in nbt.idl
- build around our events structure, and talloc
- fully async
- supports all NBT packet fields as per rfc1002
- easy interfaces for name query and status
For the moment there are just a couple of test functions in
namequery.c, test_name_query() and test_name_status(). These will be
removed when we hook the new library into libcli/ fully
The new library will also be a fairly good basis for a nbt
server. Although it can't be a server as-is, I wrote it with the needs
of a server in mind (for example, extremely scalable idtree based
packet handling)
(This used to be commit ae7e625bfa4b4a3ee32c64566064b6a4c84ee4b9)
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