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smbsrv_session and smbsrv_tcon for management tools
metze
(This used to be commit 2c87f210e9e68de42dc45ca6532f3f33f4b6ce95)
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used for replication conflicts
metze
(This used to be commit d7d14cb2bd9823d7e7d81266ca4014ea5263c714)
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- add an idtree_limit to limit the max VUID we give the clients
it's UINT16_MAX (0xffff) for the SMB protocol
- add auth_time to the smbsrv_session statistics
- use the session_info as marker for finished and non-finished
session setups
metze
(This used to be commit 7eb10048b2c4e5ee9c39750dc877514ed9235a76)
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them
- add a idtree_limit to the tcons substructure of smbsrv_connection
this controls what the highest TID is we give away to the client
it's UINT16_MAX (0xFFFF) for the SMB protocol
metze
(This used to be commit f3bf5a2c0947e33d4167fa4fa290968204a826e8)
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smbsrv_connection
metze
(This used to be commit acd3e644e030a3544ddc6cdcd4e0ec9617732cba)
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(This used to be commit b773d848e854394f36351f97130a20a245367b2c)
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problem was that the return string was declared as:
[out] astring dcname
which means "this is a non-NULL string". The server code sometimes
returned NULL however (on getdc lookup failure), which caused the NDR
marshalling code to crash. When you declare a non-pointer return value
you are promising that the value can never be NULL.
The trivial fix is to use:
[out] astring *dcname
which leaves the API alone, but includes a pointer in the wire format,
which in turn means it is valid to send a NULL string as a response.
(This used to be commit e39bac61960f6ce8957f148a482e39499a8e9096)
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domain and gets the DC's name via a mailslot call.
Metze, I renamed wbsrv_queue_reply to wbsrv_send_reply in accordance with
irpc_send_reply. Having _queue_ here and _send_ there is a bit confusing. And
as everything is async anyway, the semantics should not be too much of a
problem.
Volker
(This used to be commit 4637964b19c6e9f7d201b287e2d409d029fced01)
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- make every irpc server support the irpc_uptime() call
(This used to be commit eee90448268b9f673cc43076ad87529aa80d17ae)
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(This used to be commit 658befc1e4df44bee1f365a730951001f0f36640)
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(This used to be commit 391cfe3c9645a19f8f5ff5c11b1ac03ee0b10f8f)
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count, as they
are really the same packet (you can register with a refresh)
(This used to be commit 5006528554a70c25fea15966d68b4002850ebb3e)
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functions we don't need. That is a lot of functions, as ejs is only
client side, so it only needs push functions for [out] vars, and pull
functions for [in] vars
added irpc and srvsvc IDL to list of available pipes.
(This used to be commit c7a9dbe70a39156a20e56b4dd732fd838437eecd)
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nbtd_information() call that has just one level for now, a
NBTD_STATISTICS level for packet statistics
(This used to be commit d0772eb5a7a023e08a7fff5ca8f4891630994e34)
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management system I proposed on samba-technical a couple of days
ago. Essentially it is a very lightweight way for any code in Samba to
make IDL based rpc calls to anywhere else in the code, without the
client or server having to go to the trouble of setting up a full rpc
service.
It can be used with any of our existing IDL, but I expect it will
mostly be used for a new set of Samba specific management calls.
The LOCAL-IRPC torture test demonstrates how it can be used by calling
the echo_AddOne() call over this transport.
(This used to be commit 3d589a09954eb8b318f567e1150b0c27412fb942)
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