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bug using ifstest.exe, which is a IFS (Installable File System) test
suite. With this fix I was pleasantly surprised to find that Samba4
passes many (maybe even most?) of the tests in ifstest.
(This used to be commit a20cbca7880b66d3cf21213cccf93675e03f8728)
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valgrind)
(This used to be commit b8ba6793c1b27f118083ddfa71af8ffbf2b65125)
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deliberate over-allocation of request structures in smbd and
libcli/raw code for now.
(This used to be commit 07596d87213e8ccbf6a0e7bc216d692065f43403)
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open->generic ntvfs mapping code.
(This used to be commit ed844192d7f7ed487290f719df65f256a5b0b9bc)
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The previous code didn't handle the case where the file got renamed or
deleted while waiting for the sharing violation delay. To handle this
we need to make the 2nd open a full open call, including the name
resolve call etc. Luckily this simplifies the logic.
I also expanded the RAW-MUX test to include the case where we do
open/open/open/close/close, with the 3rd open async, and that open
gets retried after both the first close and the 2nd close, with the
first retry failing and the 2nd retry working. The tests the "async
reply after a async reply" logic in pvfs_open().
(This used to be commit eded2ad9c91f5ba587ef4f7f5f5a6dceb4b51ff3)
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pvfs
(This used to be commit 1d2f0a55c1de01cbbf6552371584847223841bc3)
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number rises by 1, not 2)
(This used to be commit 201ff734d47cb0c335820f11e2629cb3bd18162f)
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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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- use #include <XXX.h> for operating system includes
- use includes relative to include/ for things like system/wait.h
also fixed the thread backend to work somewhat. To fix it properly we need to do this:
- add a configure test for support for thread local storage (the __thread keyword)
- refuse to do pthreads if tls doesn't work
- refuse to do pthreads if seteuid() affects process instead of thread
- defined THREAD_LOCAL as __thread when WITH_PTHREADS
- add THREAD_LOCAL to all the global data structures that should be
thread local (there are quite a few)
right now the thread backend falls over when you hit it with several
connections at once, due to the lack of __thread on some critical
structures.
(This used to be commit 0dc1deabd0b53bc7a6f6cee2ed99e2cbbe422262)
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deferred reply is short-circuited immediately when the file is
closed by another user, allowing it to be opened by the waiting user.
- added a sane set of timeval manipulation routines
- converted all the events code and code that uses it to use struct
timeval instead of time_t, which allows for microsecond resolution
instead of 1 second resolution. This was needed for doing the pvfs
deferred open code, and is why the patch is so big.
(This used to be commit 0d51511d408d91eb5f68a35e980e0875299b1831)
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(This used to be commit 8fa456afc9be113f292a1952119b533e4dc04fc1)
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part of the maxcnt. This caused an allocation failure and server exit.
Note: we need to go back over all the places in the core smb_server
that can cause allocation failures based on user input and fix them to
instead produce a SMB error.
Thanks to Susan for finding this bug.
(This used to be commit 4aed1b7921a3bfef460f8602467ac0dca9561032)
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(This used to be commit c6f486574470a311e0d336c026103f131451e21e)
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(This used to be commit 7c4e6ebf05790dd6e29896dd316db0fff613aa4e)
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ioctl.h)
(This used to be commit b97e395c814762024336c1cf4d7c25be8da5813a)
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(This used to be commit 1087ea830e7aead86d54a1836512e88554afc919)
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structure element called "open" as its a macro on solaris.
(This used to be commit 4e92e15c4e396b1d8cd211192888fea68c2cf0f9)
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(This used to be commit 4f33247f1ca60416415a61a7afac43c9dc8a61fd)
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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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(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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(This used to be commit 3f902f8d851d32fa81d89ed61bfda6edaea00984)
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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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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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searches that go beyond the negotiated max xmit size
(This used to be commit 84762a59763005f5d29106cd409867cb150d648f)
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happens with trans2, trans and echo. Now that smbd is async we queue
the multiples replies all at once, and now need a way to ensure each
reply gets it own smbsrv_request buffer. I have added
req_setup_secondary() to cope with this.
(This used to be commit 2dbd2abc5f197ee21d7dceeda2922c7449c46d99)
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- get rid of req->mid, as it isn't a safe value to use to match
requests in the server (it is safe in the client code, as we choose
the mid, but in the server we can't rely on other clients to choose
the mid carefully)
(This used to be commit 938fb44351e12a515073ea94cd306988d5ca7340)
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ntvfs modules
the idea is that a passthru module can use ntvfs_async_state_push() before
calling ntvfs_next_*() and in the _send function it calls
ntvfs_async_state_pop() and then call the upper layer send_fn itself
- ntvfs_nbench is now fully async
- the ntvfs_map_*() functions and the trans(2) mapping functions are not converted yet
metze
(This used to be commit fde64c0dc142b53d128c8ba09af048dc58d8ef3a)
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means the whole of the SMB handling code is now non-blocking.
(This used to be commit 30acedb943f0170d30e7b08925280d0dffc7873e)
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haven't marked the socket non-blocking yet as I haven't checked that
the send path is OK for non-blocking.
(This used to be commit bda978cc2a921a888534054135b9325427425dd2)
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The main change is to make socket_recv() take a pre-allocated buffer,
rather than allocating one itself. This allows non-blocking users of
this API to avoid a memcpy(). As a result our messaging code is now
about 10% faster, and the ncacn_ip_tcp and ncalrpc code is also
faster.
The second change was to remove the unused mem_ctx argument from
socket_send(). Having it there implied that memory could be allocated,
which meant the caller had to worry about freeing that memory (if for
example it is sending in a tight loop using the same memory
context). Removing that unused argument keeps life simpler for users.
(This used to be commit a16e4756cd68ca8aab4ffc59d4d9db0b6e44dbd1)
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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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(This used to be commit f1c5be396b62203fb183431ea6218eed38976d0b)
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- fixed offset of setup words in nttrans reply
(This used to be commit 86b5118c2ae605560a196ee014b6134ec2928c5b)
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(This used to be commit 977bc87d18d2ea8c6967bd8c1b953b09fff9b434)
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to align the buffer, as that would make the read reply not fit
(This used to be commit 70be45de05993d386ceaf54325d1c3023008eaed)
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means we now pass the BASE-VUID test.
(This used to be commit 560300c0025940d84c9be41447145f4b441e7105)
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session info and server info structures.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 5bdf391b3bc10291739f5640be9a404dbbeda273)
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- Make sure a epm_tower struct is completely initialized
- Some more minor fixes
(This used to be commit d560dcbdb85cb2c6915bdb9e2f82f1872b0f5a52)
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(This used to be commit 3ea9445226a678b410bf565ec114a3c544f8ade3)
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(This used to be commit e11b000319953dfeeb84fed142e857a5247a93e9)
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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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idr_get_new() limits
- change idr_get_new() to use > instead of >= in the limit check
(This used to be commit 834b09929bcb8aabdd151b7c2306001497cabdb4)
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(This used to be commit b572be00b3432317169c6fa6df3f91a0c8f23fcb)
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connect is very cheap now.
(This used to be commit 8856f010e96d2f20d349a51820f225a8493f6eef)
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- converted the tid handling to use a idtree instead of bitmaps
(This used to be commit 4220914179d10132057216650b65ed7f7679717e)
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(This used to be commit cccd59009d54d63ccf57181c15d161998a15da6b)
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of associated functions.
The motivation for this change was to avoid having to convert to/from
ucs2 strings for so many operations. Doing that was slow, used many
static buffers, and was also incorrect as it didn't cope properly with
unicode codepoints above 65536 (which could not be represented
correctly as smb_ucs2_t chars)
The two core functions that allowed this change are next_codepoint()
and push_codepoint(). These functions allow you to correctly walk a
arbitrary multi-byte string a character at a time without converting
the whole string to ucs2.
While doing this cleanup I also fixed several ucs2 string handling
bugs. See the commit for details.
The following code (which counts the number of occuraces of 'c' in a
string) shows how to use the new interface:
size_t count_chars(const char *s, char c)
{
size_t count = 0;
while (*s) {
size_t size;
codepoint_t c2 = next_codepoint(s, &size);
if (c2 == c) count++;
s += size;
}
return count;
}
(This used to be commit 814881f0e50019196b3aa9fbe4aeadbb98172040)
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(This used to be commit 5f5b04196c7930c91e6c00e0276f25f88181b317)
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