Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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a union smb_file, to abtract
- const char *path fot qpathinfo and setpathinfo
- uint16_t fnum for SMB
- smb2_handle handle for SMB2
the idea is to later add a struct ntvfs_handle *ntvfs
so that the ntvfs subsystem don't need to know the difference between SMB and SMB2
metze
(This used to be commit 2ef3f5970901b5accdb50f0d0115b5d46b0c788f)
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- added test for chained OpenX/ReadX, simulating the OS/2 workplace shell
- fixed a bug in handling chained fnum in openx and ntcreatex in the server
(yes, I'm on holiday, but this bug was annoying me ....)
(This used to be commit b3b8958a18e302b815d98c0e3879e404bced6a08)
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Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit cef31134ec4cd09eafd4f9f8f64e5fe3d68f19de)
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and made them private
(This used to be commit 386ac565c452ede1d74e06acb401ca9db99d3ff3)
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- combine setattre and standard levels in setfileinfo, as they use the
same structure
(This used to be commit e9aa1f789955533aca4fe43d5d74ffa1e8d1300b)
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preparation for the full share modes and ntcreatex code that I am
working on.
highlights include:
- changed the way a backend determines if it is allowed to process a
request asynchronously. The previous method of looking at the
send_fn caused problems when an intermediate ntvfs module disabled
it, and the caller then wanted to finished processing using this
function. The new method is a REQ_CONTROL_MAY_ASYNC flag in
req->control_flags, which is also a bit easier to read
- fixed 2 bugs in the readbraw server code. One related to trying to
answer a readbraw with smb signing (which can't work, and crashed
our signing code), the second related to error handling, which
attempted to send a normal SMB error packet, when readbraw must
send a 0 read reply (as it has no header)
- added several more ntvfs_generic.c generic mapping functions. This
means that backends no longer need to implement such esoteric
functions as SMBwriteunlock() if they don't want to. The backend
can just request the mapping layer turn it into a write followed by
an unlock. This makes the backends considerably simpler as they
only need to implement one style of each function for lock, read,
write, open etc, rather than the full host of functions that SMB
provides. A backend can still choose to implement them
individually, of course, and the CIFS backend does that.
- simplified the generic structures to make them identical to the
principal call for several common SMB calls (such as
RAW_WRITE_GENERIC now being an alias for RAW_WRITE_WRITEX).
- started rewriting the pvfs_open() code in preparation for the full
ntcreatex semantics.
- in pvfs_open and ipc_open, initially allocate the open file
structure as a child of the request, so on error we don't need to
clean up. Then when we are going to succeed the open steal the
pointer into the long term backend context. This makes for much
simpler error handling (and fixes some bugs)
- use a destructor in the ipc backend to make sure that everthing is
cleaned up on receive error conditions.
- switched the ipc backend to using idtree for fnum allocation
- in the ntvfs_generic mapping routines, use a allocated secondary
structure not a stack structure to ensure the request pointer
remains valid even if the backend replies async.
(This used to be commit 3457c1836c09c82956697eb21627dfa2ed37682e)
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This version does the following:
1) talloc_free(), talloc_realloc() and talloc_steal() lose their
(redundent) first arguments
2) you can use _any_ talloc pointer as a talloc context to allocate
more memory. This allows you to create complex data structures
where the top level structure is the logical parent of the next
level down, and those are the parents of the level below
that. Then destroy either the lot with a single talloc_free() or
destroy any sub-part with a talloc_free() of that part
3) you can name any pointer. Use talloc_named() which is just like
talloc() but takes the printf style name argument as well as the
parent context and the size.
The whole thing ends up being a very simple piece of code, although
some of the pointer walking gets hairy.
So far, I'm just using the new talloc() like the old one. The next
step is to actually take advantage of the new interface
properly. Expect some new commits soon that simplify some common
coding styles in samba4 by using the new talloc().
(This used to be commit e35bb094c52e550b3105dd1638d8d90de71d854f)
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rename CLI_ -> SMBCLI_
metze
(This used to be commit 8441750fd9427dd6fe477f27e603821b4026f038)
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added ldbedit, a _really_ useful command
added ldbadd, ldbdel, ldbsearch and ldbmodify to build
solved lots of timezone issues, we now pass the torture tests with
client and server in different zones
fixed several build issues
I know this breaks the no-LDAP build. Wait till I arrive in San Jose for that
fix.
(This used to be commit af34710d4da1841653624fe304b1c8d812c0fdd9)
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- always use the 14 word writex varient even for small transfers as
long as large offsets are negotiated (this matches windows
behaviour)
- make sure we fill in the top 16 bits of the count for large writex
calls
(This used to be commit 9ea20d0c9a1cb4800f3f54195cbbe70c98c8e423)
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(This used to be commit b0510b5428b3461aeb9bbe3cc95f62fc73e2b97f)
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