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structure element called "open" as its a macro on solaris.
(This used to be commit 4e92e15c4e396b1d8cd211192888fea68c2cf0f9)
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arrgh.
(This used to be commit 7842b23d01c53009259a2461600bd01159cecebf)
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include files.
this brings us down to about 11k lines of headers included with
includes.h, while still retaining the speed of building with pch
(This used to be commit 10188869ef072309ca580b8b933e172571fcdda7)
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- tidied up some of the system includes
- moved a few more structures back from misc.idl to netlogon.idl and samr.idl now that pidl
knows about inter-IDL dependencies
(This used to be commit 7b7477ac42d96faac1b0ff361525d2c63cedfc64)
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the ldb part isn't ideal, I will have to think of a better solution
(This used to be commit 6b1f86aea8427a8e957b1aeb0ec2f507297f07cb)
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(This used to be commit 264ce9181089922547e8f6f67116f2d7277a5105)
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I have created the include/system/ directory, which will contain the
wrappers for the system includes for logical subsystems. So far I have
created include/system/kerberos.h and include/system/network.h, which
contain all the system includes for kerberos code and networking code.
These are the included in subsystems that need kerberos or networking
respectively.
Note that this method avoids the mess of #ifdef HAVE_XXX_H in every C
file, instead each C module includes the include/system/XXX.h file for
the logical system support it needs, and the details are kept isolated
in include/system/
This patch also creates a "struct ipv4_addr" which replaces "struct
in_addr" in our code. That avoids every C file needing to import all
the system networking headers.
(This used to be commit 2e25c71853f8996f73755277e448e7d670810349)
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(This used to be commit 73ea8ee6c268371d05cf74160f2ad451dd2ae699)
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The thing that finally convinced me that minimal includes was worth
pursuing for rpc was a compiler (tcc) that failed to build Samba due
to reaching internal limits of the size of include files. Also the
fact that includes.h.gch was 16MB, which really seems excessive. This
patch brings it back to 12M, which is still too large, but
better. Note that this patch speeds up compile times for both the pch
and non-pch case.
This change also includes the addition iof a "depends()" option in our
IDL files, allowing you to specify that one IDL file depends on
another. This capability was needed for the auto-includes generation.
(This used to be commit b8f5fa8ac8e8725f3d321004f0aedf4246fc6b49)
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(This used to be commit 3f902f8d851d32fa81d89ed61bfda6edaea00984)
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and made them private
(This used to be commit 386ac565c452ede1d74e06acb401ca9db99d3ff3)
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- added testing of the FLAGS2_READ_PERMIT_EXECUTE bit in the ntdeny tests
(This used to be commit adf4a682705871186f3b77ea6d417942445fc5d3)
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(This used to be commit eb3366d3667ddddf7ab5eae5d1fbc5de86c41072)
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Samba4.
(This used to be commit 01f5c1c72d9fc8f21029adc586154b0c54f76c9e)
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debugging
(This used to be commit 91139ed8d41a1d4b99379142b3e09c6d0a8ff159)
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library can handle
them properly (they are difficult to do in an async fashion).
By choosing trans.in.max_data to fix in the negotiated buffer size a
server won't send us multi-part replies.
I notice that windows seems to avoid them too :)
(This used to be commit e23edf762cace35f937959c9ffbef718431a79b9)
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setting of "server signing = auto", which means to offer signing
only if we have domain logons enabled (ie. we are a DC). This is a
better match for what windows clients want, as unfortunately windows
clients always use signing if it is offered, and when they use signing
they not only go slower because of the signing itself, they also
disable large readx/writex support, so they end up sending very small
IOs for.
- changed the default max xmit again, this time matching longhorn,
which uses 12288. That seems to be a fairly good compromise value.
(This used to be commit e63edc81716fefd58a3be25deb3b25e45471f196)
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the session info.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 5db5c30ebedca1fee8924a9416bcb94ed13af372)
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Samba3's winbind. This is also the start of domain membership code in
Samba4, as we now (partially) parse the info3, and use it like Samba3
does.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit c1b7303c1c7d9fb815006c3bd2af20a0010d15a8)
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var/locks/smbd.tmp/
and deletes that dir on startup.
(This used to be commit 7e942e7f1bd2c293a0e6648df43a96f8b8a2a295)
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place. (I always have trouble finding one half or the other).
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 224b59edba7c00ad515b4c5e3e9a886700247ad4)
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We found a few months ago that TDB_CLEAR_IF_FIRST is extremely
inefficient for large numbers of connections, due to a fundamental
limitation in the way posix byte range locking is implemented. Rather
than the nasty workaround we had for Samba3, we now have a single
"cleanup tmp files" function that runs when smbd starts. That deletes
the tmp tdbs, so TDB_CLEAR_IF_FIRST is not needed at all.
(This used to be commit ffa285bc783c775a2d53a58fb691ca339e6c76ae)
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is important as it allows the test suite to exercise the multiple
reply logic in smbd for trans2 search replies.
(This used to be commit 865159016ab1e806465a55697444228fb3fa286e)
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SMB buffer sizes
(This used to be commit 320ca0214d97dc6cebb00ddc98a1eb71e2b4c917)
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(This used to be commit 1d374cdeb09b856449287cf12a77b23296c82a1d)
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(This used to be commit 5921587ec26e4892efc678421277e4969417d7f5)
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was a real bug
(This used to be commit 02d5d0f685e44bd66aff4a007f0bf34c8f915574)
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(This used to be commit 1e62aa262aac1c8e3676caac7b65086d21b7a01e)
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allows me to test with the socket:testnonblock option. It passes.
(This used to be commit 7cb4bf8662825d507d8246647ffb10aa08bad794)
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Dahyabhai <nalin@redhat.com>.
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit afed78f359a15809b2d9b7566e16ade294944fa9)
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can we decide to not break WinXP clients:-)
metze
(This used to be commit 5eb0ff78d5e68f488a439545fdaec90c28ef877a)
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rather than doing everything itself. This greatly simplifies the
code, although I really don't like the socket_recv() interface (it
always allocates memory for you, which means an extra memcpy in this
code)
- fixed several bugs in the socket_ipv4.c code, in particular client
side code used a non-blocking connect but didn't handle EINPROGRESS,
so it had no chance of working. Also fixed the error codes, using
map_nt_error_from_unix()
- cleaned up and expanded map_nt_error_from_unix()
- changed interpret_addr2() to not take a mem_ctx. It makes absolutely
no sense to allocate a fixed size 4 byte structure like this. Dozens
of places in the code were also using interpret_addr2() incorrectly
(precisely because the allocation made no sense)
(This used to be commit 7f2c771b0e0e98c5c9e5cf662592d64d34ff1205)
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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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Not sure which Samba3 you mean, but *my* one bails out with
INVALID_PARAMETER...
Volker
(This used to be commit d91659b0370a6bd5eebd5730d304b5a2cf496594)
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- force disable spnego in the RAW-CONTEXT test (it breaks the test)
(This used to be commit 3f247ec21c59af92b420a3e550552b5a1f1f08e2)
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(This used to be commit 2c852539ed089b584b721a31cd411667bb5669c7)
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This required reworking the auth_sam code, so that it would export the
'name -> server_info' functionality. It's a bit ugly from a modular
point of view, but it's what we have to do...
Fix up some of the code to better use the new talloc()
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 18e08b4497ebabc2f31210254e145458b7c6a198)
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not Microsoft). Unfortunetly it's harder to fix Samba3 than to make
Samba4 cope...
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit bbd52ab2641d5d6fc184235ac838ce4a022174a9)
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errno is 0
- more consistent checking for system call return values in simple backend
(This used to be commit 375a9a1347abf0b917cf94ea0cabcdea37d60e98)
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skipping 'bad encryption type'.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 4efb87eb03acfa888d455e4ca0aff18bda7f7ba5)
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Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 9f19aae0c0812b156054385ef77785971488e21c)
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were also gensec bugs that didn't turn up until we hit error paths in
the krb5 code.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit e08366ffeb52e8c522d3808a2af1aa0bc632b55f)
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metze
(This used to be commit c730d7d638875c239f0b67c1d4b25eb1fb01c5ff)
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metze
(This used to be commit f1d8f4bc5df5b4f284739096684c9dbc76352511)
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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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Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 9c911b361c4dbb058eb48150c113c2e95b8053da)
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ensure we don't segfault on the cleanup from an incomplete schannel
bind.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 173f29a1d8db111d5adb258eead5379d681d3bb2)
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metze
(This used to be commit c79bbe54b400f8e088401e1d59a626cb2a37ee34)
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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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