Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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This avoid symbol and structure conflicts between Samba3 and Samba4,
and chooses a less generic name.
Andrew Bartlett
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We previously allocated sockets as direct children of the event
context. That led to crashes if a service called
task_server_terminate(), as it left the socket open and handling
events for a dead protocol.
Making them a child of the task allows the task to terminate and take
all its sockets with it.
Pair-Programmed-With: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
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this converts all callers that use the Samba4 loadparm lp_ calling
convention to use the lpcfg_ prefix.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
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and tstream_context
metze
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This is an improved version of commit 69d5cea2e59162f19460e7ce4b6382fc5fdd6ca0,
which was reverted by commit 71c20f703b0c603d6aada63ed5634070a26df052.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Metzmacher <metze@samba.org>
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This reverts commit 69d5cea2e59162f19460e7ce4b6382fc5fdd6ca0.
This commit causes issues with the RPC server, revert it until we find the
exact issue and possibly have a torture test to avoid it happening again.
Found playing with w2k8r2 and forest trusts.
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metze
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metze
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metze
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metze
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for sockets
metze
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list=""
list="$list event_context:tevent_context"
list="$list fd_event:tevent_fd"
list="$list timed_event:tevent_timer"
for s in $list; do
o=`echo $s | cut -d ':' -f1`
n=`echo $s | cut -d ':' -f2`
r=`git grep "struct $o" |cut -d ':' -f1 |sort -u`
files=`echo "$r" | grep -v source3 | grep -v nsswitch | grep -v packaging4`
for f in $files; do
cat $f | sed -e "s/struct $o/struct $n/g" > $f.tmp
mv $f.tmp $f
done
done
metze
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The problem here was that with the packet code set to serialise, we
can have multiple packets 'processing' at once, and previously the
second packet (allowed because we are spining on an event context down
the stack) would clear the flag.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 33789111241a1d97fc105ec4edd7b8054895b28c)
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metze
(This used to be commit 91e9062265a68e3a1fe5e092503ec44ae5ea034e)
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(This used to be commit 16f36ce499e93860dd535034a584ec2b93e7a172)
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(This used to be commit 5d274f19aedbb022d61b1493857dce66877dc809)
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<node>.<pid>.<fd> to be unique in a prefork process environment.
Andrew Bartlett and David Disseldorp
(This used to be commit 931994a7f185bbc98924823e9e8cef1011dd0957)
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(This used to be commit 18cd08623eaad7d2cd63b82ea5275d4dfd21cf00)
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(This used to be commit 32007c6277efa46341da7741b749a98633d71640)
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(This used to be commit 6fd0d9d3b75546d08c24c513e05b1843d5777608)
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(This used to be commit 3809113d86dbd35b906356a05bb481a1e2bfe4b7)
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ports...
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 70de473980e99eeeb719bf9f63d23a399847b23b)
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(This used to be commit 9243b551f30c7aa2763115516a6adcfe5bbddc58)
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2007-09-29 More higher-level passing around of lp_ctx.
2007-09-29 Fix warning.
2007-09-29 Pass loadparm contexts on a higher level.
2007-09-29 Avoid using global loadparm context.
(This used to be commit 3468952e771ab31f90b6c374ade01c5550810f42)
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(This used to be commit 3fcc960839c6e5ca4de2c3c042f12f369ac5f238)
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number in more places.
(This used to be commit df9cebcb97e20564359097148665bd519f31bc6f)
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(This used to be commit abe8349f9b4387961ff3665d8c589d61cd2edf31)
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(This used to be commit 9b256a0ca232ea6e89771bf73a1adf877273a752)
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complete. This is needed because messaging setup with ctdb involve
events, and we don't want a SMB packet to be processed on this stream
until after the stream structure is fully setup
(This used to be commit 8e378051e594372dfb2c00a380ef4bc151021ea2)
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There are still a few tidyups of old FSF addresses to come (in both s3
and s4). More commits soon.
(This used to be commit fcf38a38ac691abd0fa51b89dc951a08e89fdafa)
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model. It's much cleaner to get the event system to close the fd,
especially with the complexity of forks
(This used to be commit d1b710f09c95a8181d2b642081282d8c97b37811)
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uint32_t server_id
to
struct server_id server_id;
which allows a server ID to have an node number. The node number will
be zero in non-clustered case. This is the most basic hook needed for
clustering, and ctdb.
(This used to be commit 2365abaa991d57d68c6ebe9be608e01c907102eb)
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(This used to be commit f11112d7f0a6b1550008fd8192be2592412fb222)
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with NULL.
metze
(This used to be commit 3711b968adf8a0951171ad1a90be65a9ae0dc03b)
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contexts from the application layer into the socket layer.
This improves a number of correctness aspects, as we now allow LDAP
packets to cross multiple SASL packets. It should also make it much
easier to write async LDAP tests from windows clients, as they use SASL
by default. It is also vital to allowing OpenLDAP clients to use GSSAPI
against Samba4, as it negotiates a rather small SASL buffer size.
This patch mirrors the earlier work done to move TLS into the socket
layer.
Unusual in this pstch is the extra read callback argument I take. As
SASL is a layer on top of a socket, it is entirely possible for the
SASL layer to drain a socket dry, but for the caller not to have read
all the decrypted data. This would leave the system without an event
to restart the read (as the socket is dry).
As such, I re-invoke the read handler from a timed callback, which
should trigger on the next running of the event loop. I believe that
the TLS code does require a similar callback.
In trying to understand why this is required, imagine a SASL-encrypted
LDAP packet in the following formation:
+-----------------+---------------------+
| SASL Packet #1 | SASL Packet #2 |
----------------------------------------+
| LDAP Packet #1 | LDAP Packet #2 |
----------------------------------------+
In the old code, this was illegal, but it is perfectly standard
SASL-encrypted LDAP. Without the callback, we would read and process
the first LDAP packet, and the SASL code would have read the second SASL
packet (to decrypt enough data for the LDAP packet), and no data would
remain on the socket.
Without data on the socket, read events stop. That is why I add timed
events, until the SASL buffer is drained.
Another approach would be to add a hack to the event system, to have it
pretend there remained data to read off the network (but that is ugly).
In improving the code, to handle more real-world cases, I've been able
to remove almost all the special-cases in the testnonblock code. The
only special case is that we must use a deterministic partial packet
when calling send, rather than a random length. (1 + n/2). This is
needed because of the way the SASL and TLS code works, and the 'resend
on failure' requirements.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 5d7c9c12cb2b39673172a357092b80cd814850b0)
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- add set_title hook to the process models
- use setproctitle library in process_model standard if available
- the the title for the task servers and on connections
metze
(This used to be commit 526f20bbecc9bbd607595637c15fc4001d3f0c70)
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structure that is more generic than just 'IP/port'.
It now passes make test, and has been reviewed and updated by
metze. (Thankyou *very* much).
This passes 'make test' as well as kerberos use (not currently in the
testsuite).
The original purpose of this patch was to have Samba able to pass a
socket address stucture from the BSD layer into the kerberos routines
and back again. It also removes nbt_peer_addr, which was being used
for a similar purpose.
It is a large change, but worthwhile I feel.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 88198c4881d8620a37086f80e4da5a5b71c5bbb2)
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so that I can remove all the other versions of it
metze
(This used to be commit 82de98b8e9f3030449225634935a71a3dd7e117c)
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existing socket connection, that's used for protocols
which switch the client/server roles inside a session
metze
(This used to be commit d4b4d963353e6986da5b42680739329069f5affe)
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ensures
destructors hanging off the stream connection don't trip more socket
events.
this should help with the problem volker described
(This used to be commit fd8eccd5bf0c742a7809f3991101f4ac75b5e037)
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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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(This used to be commit b902ea546d2d1327b23f40ddaeeaa8e7e3662454)
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(This used to be commit 7f54c8a339f36aa43c9340be70ab7f0067593ef2)
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