Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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messaging_deregister()
- added a pvfs_lock_close_pending() hook to remove pending locks on file close
- fixed the private ptr argument to messaging_deregister() in pvfs_wait
- fixed a bug in continuing lock requests after a lock that is blocking a pending lock is removed
- removed bogus brl_unlock() call in lock continue
- corrected error code for LOCKING_ANDX_CHANGE_LOCKTYPE
- expanded the lock cancel test suite to test lock cancel by unlock and by close
- added a testsuite for LOCKING_ANDX_CHANGE_LOCKTYPE
(This used to be commit 5ef80f034d4aa4dd6810532c63ad041bfc019cb8)
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an early lock timeout
added support for more of the bizarre special lock offset semantics of w2k3
(This used to be commit d5bfc910b1200fb283e26572dc57fcf93652fd32)
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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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backends to open databases and perform any other privileged
operations that might be needed.
(This used to be commit 54fd395025656d9b264ba1c1fab6e3ce8ca3d357)
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(This used to be commit 1cef44505e5de9b8ae5206522b624082ad2343b2)
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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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existing
(This used to be commit c6a922dbd844c69bbba83c259169655d17e9f87f)
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(This used to be commit dac00ef3b0d0f8467367d7b6ff77db7b63a042cc)
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server supplied info structure.
- added SID_WORLD and SID_NETWORK to the foreign sids in the
provisioning, as these are auto-added to the nt_user_token (why is
that done? Andrew?)
(This used to be commit 1dff12fba88827660a2647457867bf4ff6bc8d3d)
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characters in pvfs_unix_path()
(This used to be commit 0acf95d84c51d564f7215d34364c37ca74a2a150)
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doesn't actually leave us in the requested sec context between
requests yet, but it does prevent us from doing the samdb lookup on
every packet.
This change speeds up the BASE-MANGLE test against Samba4 with 5000
operations from 61 seconds to 16 seconds. For reference, Samba3 takes
27 seconds for the same test (the string and filename handling in
Samba4 is much more efficient than Samba3)
(This used to be commit da0481ac75a01270897da5aa24dbb2b431928b30)
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ACCESS_DENIED)
- don't check for '.' specially in checking for legal names. Longhorn
doesn't do this any more, and its a real pain. Longhorn allows for
filenames ending in '.', and with as many '.' elements as you like.
(This used to be commit 0a475175c53016bfa5b8246819676ddcd8b66feb)
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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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(This used to be commit f85a0b725d3bf67531e6874d4e8558fb050bb66f)
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when opening directories. This change allows samba4 server to work
with longhorn client.
(This used to be commit 4a8b0302eff37ccfcb66b91259ee5da20879c652)
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truncated long name.
- short name can be up to 12 bytes, not 11
(This used to be commit 657103ec6264bf4c2986fedd3fc6577746395d49)
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(This used to be commit 749fa73544201f521d9cd3fa972b89cae99bc2c0)
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(This used to be commit f522728728fa523ce7d9e73c93b27e71f3757d50)
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considerably more complete than the simple handler
(This used to be commit e6ecd31be8e91f552d891c41b2f8737519a490a1)
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"unixName" to be more ldap traditional
- register the unixuid module as all 3 ntvfs backend types, as it doesn't care what type of backend
it filters
(This used to be commit cd43def6ce280442306f14ca61508b4f7eb92cb6)
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conjunction with the posix backend this gives us a way to correctly
setup the unix security context in Samba4.
I chose the following method to determine the unix uid's and gid's to
use given the list of SIDs from the login process
- look for a "UnixID" field in the sam record. If present, then use it
(check if the record is of the right type as well)
- if UnixID is not present, then look for the "UnixName" sam
field. If it is present then use getpwnam() or getgrnam() to find
the unix id.
- if UnixID and UnixName are not present, then look for a unix
account of the right type called by the same name as the sAMAccountName field.
- if none of the above work then fail the operation with NT_STATUS_ACCESS_DENIED
obviously these steps only work well with a local SAM. It will need to
be more sophisticated in future.
I did not put any cache in place at all. That will need to be added
for decent performance.
(This used to be commit 78b67d19b9766131f0270e451089ee5bb1aa8bd9)
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(This used to be commit a34ba8dafebb65e59616a0e68cc3d6fe3a349801)
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(This used to be commit 1de22070610231e60d329f56997bbec2cc674a4e)
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- a final name component of . is illegal
(This used to be commit 11c852170b83e5adbdb58407e1c7d3aeb4ab5bb8)
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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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possible to a structure creation routine. This makes for much easier
global cleanup.
(This used to be commit e14ee428ec357fab76a960387a9820a673786e27)
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(This used to be commit 9087fab0adcf1791caeb795509ca9f14f5f47e82)
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taking a context (so when you pass a NULL pointer you end up with
memory in a top level context). Fixed it by changing the API to take a
context. The context is only used if the pointer you are reallocing is
NULL.
(This used to be commit 8dc23821c9f54b2f13049b5e608a0cafb81aa540)
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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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don't actually work yet, that will come later)
(This used to be commit 46b790c19da25ba88d29f555f828688bb05e531d)
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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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(This used to be commit 56ecda2178e33508c55c6195ccec41c06e099d6f)
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(This used to be commit e9803058ecc0b0f849aee48a077bff4e2c8feaa5)
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server code. This fixes a number of memory leaks I found when testing
with valgrind and smbtorture, as the cascading effect of a
talloc_free() ensures that anything derived from the top level object
is destroyed on disconnect.
(This used to be commit 76d0b8206ce64d6ff4a192979c43dddbec726d6e)
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on abnormal termination of a connection. As long as the top level
connection structure is freed then that should cascade down to the
file structure, and call this destructor which will close the open file descriptor.
In general I'd like to use this technique in any place in Samba4 where
we hold operating system resources that we need to make sure are
released on abnormal termination.
(This used to be commit ed87b7fcbd9fedc155528ce6dd8ab5d5fce637b2)
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(This used to be commit 1730882b9d2ecff1b65e5fc85961edb300a9ce17)
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syntax
(This used to be commit be20b3164cfe1d5c228072722cb6e5894fdacb23)
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(This used to be commit 0806378b0e34ba3d665a9db739539819f3f52054)
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(recently Linux systems support this, allowing us to support the
full resolution in NTTIME)
- use nanosecond resolution in the posix backend if available
- moved the configure tests and list of object files for the posix
backend into ntvfs/posix/ to keep them more neatlly separated.
(This used to be commit d92ad9f307fe16a3b253a0555b437f14c94b4dd7)
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(This used to be commit 4103392a597349890e0e7ea1c41d5b0ab3816853)
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too stale to be of any use as a reference.
(This used to be commit 8d455a6f091d7aa528e86ae3b3712170b5fc6c2c)
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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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The intial motivation for this commit was to merge in some of the
bugfixes present in Samba3's chrcnv and string handling code into
Samba4. However, along the way I found a lot of unused functions, and
decided to do a bit more...
The strlen_m code now does not use a fixed buffer, but more work is
needed to finish off other functions in str_util.c. These fixed
length buffers hav caused very nasty, hard to chase down bugs at some
sites.
The strupper_m() function has a strupper_talloc() to replace it (we
need to go around and fix more uses, but it's a start). Use of these
new functions will avoid bugs where the upper or lowercase version of
a string is a different length.
I have removed the push_*_allocate functions, which are replaced by
calls to push_*_talloc. Likewise, pstring and other 'fixed length'
wrappers are removed, where possible.
I have removed the first ('base pointer') argument, used by push_ucs2,
as the Samba4 way of doing things ensures that this is always on an
even boundary anyway. (It was used in only one place, in any case).
(This used to be commit dfecb0150627b500cb026b8a4932fe87902ca392)
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(This used to be commit 98c1c75076fdb0df3a7c616f8c2e1ed138a6ff9a)
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(This used to be commit 4e4859c06b9de5fe60ebd17cfb09eed480b79ec1)
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(This used to be commit 9710f24b1fd103d5656c9585cdfed96449cf9f97)
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original core level calls). The old code was completely wrong in many respects.
also fixed the EA_SIZE level in the server
extended the RAW-SEARCH test suite to test the new code properly
(This used to be commit 71480271ad84b57fcdde264a54bb2408cf783255)
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metze
(This used to be commit 2fd577d2417e117a7e8c1a56feb147eae805df34)
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get to that later)
(This used to be commit 5e2027f8ec7248e48d1dfb94c3688c78c64a85c5)
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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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