Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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(This used to be commit 9adacb0d1620d4cfadd515239b853977cf03a719)
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(This used to be commit 1f35642bed1129d0834906b3e94e8868992d6eb9)
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the filesystem
(This used to be commit 71e281ae2fe2ce169aeb09f72376a60d28845808)
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Fix memory handling for blkid caches which need to be cleared when session is
done.
(This used to be commit c623cc60541f747f0a801eb77d97bb0a3bb6956f)
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macro...
metze
(This used to be commit 9ec6c0e97765e60ef195296f17d6a27b5d0dcca9)
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- removed the u32 hack in events.c as I think this was only needed as
tdb.h defines u32. Metze, can you check that this hack is indeed no
longer needed on your suse system?
(This used to be commit 6f79432fe656164d4770dbce114a30dda5e7bf9a)
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servers in smbd. The old code still contained a fairly bit of legacy
from the time when smbd was only handling SMB connection. The new code
gets rid of all of the smb_server specific code in smbd/, and creates
a much simpler infrastructures for new server code.
Major changes include:
- simplified the process model code a lot.
- got rid of the top level server and service structures
completely. The top level context is now the event_context. This
got rid of service.h and server.h completely (they were the most
confusing parts of the old code)
- added service_stream.[ch] for the helper functions that are
specific to stream type services (services that handle streams, and
use a logically separate process per connection)
- got rid of the builtin idle_handler code in the service logic, as
none of the servers were using it, and it can easily be handled by
a server in future by adding its own timed_event to the event
context.
- fixed some major memory leaks in the rpc server code.
- added registration of servers, rather than hard coding our list of
possible servers. This allows for servers as modules in the future.
- temporarily disabled the winbind code until I add the helper
functions for that type of server
- added error checking on service startup. If a configured server
fails to startup then smbd doesn't startup.
- cleaned up the command line handling in smbd, removing unused options
(This used to be commit cf6a46c3cbde7b1eb1b86bd3882b953a2de3a42e)
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large commit. I thought this was worthwhile to get done for
consistency.
(This used to be commit ec32b22ed5ec224f6324f5e069d15e92e38e15c0)
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- stream_socket services
the smb, ldap and rpc service which sets up a srtam socket end then
waits for connections
and
- task services
which this you can create a seperate task that do something
(this is also going through the process_model subsystem
so with -M standard a new process for this created
with -M thread a new thread ...
I'll add datagram services later when we whave support for datagram sockets in lib/socket/
see the next commit as an example for service_task's
metze
(This used to be commit d5fa02746c6569b09b6e05785642da2fad3ba3e0)
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CREATOR_GROUP inheritance rules
(This used to be commit 0a29fb45c310b4b8c348d187b8ff1833deaac6c3)
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metze
(This used to be commit c44f4d44b51789916e50c9da93046d0a15245edc)
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attributes (streams, EAs, NT ACLs, timestamps etc) to be used on
filesystems that don't support xattrs. It also allows for large
streams, although they are very inefficient.
I won't enable this by default, as I really wrote it as a way of
testing large stream support while still using ext3, but perhaps with
a bit more work this could be generally usable.
To enable this use:
posix:eadb = /home/test/myeas.tdb
(This used to be commit 0c927d912cb65754351189d3a0442004a14aa5c6)
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better default NT ACL in pvfs
(This used to be commit 9ff6ecbdb6c08528193f7958d7ea7d9a8df6defd)
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(This used to be commit 052d91c59f177851b5e0e53c8a033bdd28702f64)
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- added support for sticky write times after a setfileinfo, by using a
write_time field in the DosAttrib xattr structure.
(This used to be commit 4a52fae82d8305e999f94f1947daa21dab54cdfd)
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based on the current nttoken, which is completely wrong, but works as a start.
The ACL is stored in the xattr system.DosAcl, using a NDR encoded IDL
union with a version number to allow for future expansion.
pvfs does not yet check the ACL for file access. At the moment the ACL
is just query/set.
We also need to do some RPC work to allow the windows ACL editor to be
used. At the moment is queries the ACL fine, but displays an error
when it fails to map the SIDs via rpc.
(This used to be commit 3a1f20d874ab2d8b2a2f2485b7a705847abf1263)
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filesystem attribute reply
- pvfs passes the RAW-STREAMS test
(This used to be commit c1a48a7542a52df734b54031f405d574e4c891e3)
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(the IDL, and the load/save meta-data logic)
- changed pvfs_resolve_name() to default to non-wildcard, needing
PVFS_RESOLVE_WILDCARD to enable wildcards. Most callers don't want
wildcards, so defaulting this way makes more sense.
- fixed deletion of EAs
(This used to be commit e7afd4403cc1b7e0928776929f8988aa6f15640b)
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- Re-disable tdbtool (it was building fine on my Debian box but other
machines were having problems)
(This used to be commit 0d7bb2c40b7a9ed59df3f8944133ea562697e814)
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preparation for adding code to pass the BASE-DENY1 and BASE-DENYDOS
tests, which require a shared filesystem handle for some specific
combinations of two DENY_DOS opens on the same connection.
(This used to be commit 6e4fdf01d19051e3923d7703dbf990fc1722b09a)
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attributes of files.
I decided to use IDL/NDR to encode the attribute, as it gives us a
simple way to describe and extend the saved attributes.
The xattr code needs to hook into quite a few more places in the pvfs
code, but this at least gets the basics done. I will start encoding
alternate data streams streams, DOS EAs etc soon using the same basic
mechanism.
I'll probably stick to "version 1" for the xattr.idl for quite a while
even though it will be changing, as I don't expect anyone to be
deploying this in production just yet. Once we have production users
we will need to keep compatibility by supporting all the old version
numbers in xattr.idl.
(This used to be commit c54253ed1b7dce1d14f43e747da61089aea87094)
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"posix:sharedelay = usecs"
(This used to be commit c4758776491e5ed9f5b8c387226d1e75bc70eb2e)
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outstanding async operation (triggering an immediate timeout).
pvfs now passes the RAW-MUX test
(This used to be commit 3423e2f41461d054067ef168b9b986f62cc8f77c)
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(This used to be commit 1087ea830e7aead86d54a1836512e88554afc919)
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rather extensive test reveals some really bizarre error code
handling in w2k3.
- extended and simplified the RAW-CHKPATH test, making it easier to
read (note that Samba3 fails the new tests - jra may wish to look)
- marked RAW-CHKPATH as pass for pvfs
(This used to be commit 32dccf91cfa5b57f84dd6307720b3f45faa10ae0)
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- catch the SIGXFSZ signal, which for some completely insane reason is
generated in current Linux systems when you write before the maximum
offset in a file (maximum is 2^41 on my box). Why wasn't errno good
enough for this?
- give the right ntstatus code for large offset write failures
(This used to be commit 367f0c2af409e4292f727e8a865762a008fd7e67)
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backend that the underlying filesystem is case insensitive, so it can
bypass the directory search if the name is not found.
(This used to be commit d84ade90ce7e03ec749d6ae8dcdcb41de85d836e)
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(This used to be commit a953d4a42c8fa3fe930c319d5157fc406a1035da)
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anything yet, but will soon be the core of the shares modes code.
(This used to be commit ad1edabf95c6c331aac4f0caa7d31193e26bc176)
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an extremely efficient way of mapping from an integer handle (such as
an open file handle) to a pointer (such as the structure containing
the open file information). The code is taken from lib/idr.c in the
2.6 Linux kernel, and is very fast and space efficient. By using
talloc it even has auto cleanup.
This commit converts the handling of open file handles and open
directory search handles to use the idtree routines. In combination
with talloc destructors, this simplifies the structure handling in the
pvfs backend a lot. For example, we no longer need to keep a linked
list of open directory searches at all, and we no longer need to do
linear scans of the list of open files on most operations.
The end result is that the pvfs code is now extremely scalable. You
can have 10s of thousands of open files and open searches and the code
still runs very fast.
I have also added a small optimisation into the file close path, to
avoid looking in the byte range locking database if we know that there
are no locks outstanding.
(This used to be commit 16835a0ef91a16fa01145b773aad8d43da215dbf)
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in the right state when called. For example, when we use the unixuid
handler in the chain of handlers, and a backend decides to continue a
call asynchronously then we need to ensure that the continuation
happens with the right security context.
The solution is to add a new ntvfs operation ntvfs_async_setup(),
which calls all the way down through the layers, setting up anything
that is required, and takes a private pointer. The backend wanting to
make a async calls can use ntvfs_async_setup() to ensure that the
modules above it are called when doing async processing.
(This used to be commit a256e71029727fa1659ade6257085df537308c7d)
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This adds a pvfs_wait_message() routine which uses the new messaging
system, event timers and talloc destructors to give a nice generic
async event handling system with a easy to use interface. The
extensions to pvfs_lock.c are based on calls to pvfs_wait_message()
routines.
We now pass all of our smbtorture locking tests, although while
writing this code I have thought of some additonal tests that should
be added, particularly for lock cancel operations. I'll work on that
soon.
This commit also extends the smbtorture lock tests to test the rather
weird 0xEEFFFFFF locking semantics that I have discovered in
win2003. Win2003 treats the 0xEEFFFFFF boundary as special, and will
give different error codes on either side of it. Locks on both sides
are allowed, the only difference is which error code is given when a
lock is denied. Anyone like to hazard a guess as to why? It has
me stumped.
(This used to be commit 4395c0557ab175d6a8dd99df03c266325949ffa5)
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enough for us to pass locktest, but does not yet support lock timeouts
and some of the other esoteric features.
(This used to be commit 58a92abd88f190bc60894a68e0528e95ae33fe39)
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(This used to be commit dac00ef3b0d0f8467367d7b6ff77db7b63a042cc)
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heavily modified to suit the Samba4 architecture.
Samba4 with posix backend now passes the BASE-MANGLE test
(This used to be commit ed52d69e8a065b6a8df2fb73c89be67acfdbca65)
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considerably more complete than the simple handler
(This used to be commit e6ecd31be8e91f552d891c41b2f8737519a490a1)
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- the stacking of modules
- finding the modules private data
- hide the ntvfs details from the calling layer
- I set NTVFS_INTERFACE_VERSION 0 till we are closer to release
(because we need to solve some async problems with the module stacking)
metze
(This used to be commit 3ff03b5cb21bb79afdd3b1609be9635f6688a539)
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rather than manual reference counts
- properly support SMBexit in the cifs and posix backends
- added a logoff method to all backends
With these changes the RAW-CONTEXT test now passes against the posix backend
(This used to be commit c315d6ac1cc40546fde1474702a6d66d07ee13c8)
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of 16 bytes, caused by the 16 byte data_blob in the smb_signing
code.
(This used to be commit 2f1b788e09686e065d22f621f5c0c585192c6740)
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something like:
ntvfs handler = nbench posix
and the nbench pass-thru module will be called before the posix
module. The chaining logic is now much saner, and less racy, with each
level in the chain getting its own private pointer rather than relying
on save/restore logic in the pass-thru module.
The only pass-thru module we have at the moment is the nbench one
(which records all traffic in a nbench compatibe format), but I plan
on soon writing a "unixuid" pass-thru module that will implement the
setegid()/setgroups()/seteuid() logic for standard posix uid
handling. This separation of the posix backend from the uid handling
should simplify the code, and make development easier.
I also modified the nbench module so it can do multiple chaining, so
if you want to you can do:
ntvfs module = nbench nbench posix
and it will save 2 copies of the log file in /tmp. This is really only
useful for testing at the moment until we have more than one pass-thru
module.
(This used to be commit f84c0af35cb54c8fdc4933afefc18fa4c062aae4)
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(This used to be commit 98c1c75076fdb0df3a7c616f8c2e1ed138a6ff9a)
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this is still just a skeleton, and many of the functions are just
based on the simple vfs backend, they are there to allow me to run
smbtorture tests against the real parts of the posix backend.
(This used to be commit f2fa7fe565e89360dba3bb5434d3a6a36f398348)
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this is still very much a skeleton (with many limbs missing too!). I
am committing this early to get some feedback on the approach taken.
(This used to be commit 40d5cae5ebbfe328e193eadb685df6a370730299)
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(This used to be commit fdb675bbad1322ddd94c646f67803b9678468a64)
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note that this is just a skeleton so far. More to come soon.
(This used to be commit efc8850b9aa9348f5f7c4b342aa76dab1635e7d4)
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(This used to be commit 21ef338cbbe96acc8594ffc550ef60c6a40fb951)
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metze
(This used to be commit a908f831cb9dd265f9b183512053f9e608feec3d)
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metze
(This used to be commit a6c0ca9de52b2395b092cb245bb94cbd55dfdd46)
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metze
(This used to be commit a85d2db5826a84b812ea5162a11f54edd25f74e3)
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and print out an error message to the debug log which say:
use 'cifs' or 'simple' as ntvfs handler
this also warns about 'root' fileaccess in the 'simple' module
the 'default' ntvfs handler is now registered by the posix backend
metze
(This used to be commit 84b3589daa60cfdd2c868d9468192b0a6e1eebae)
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