Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Files | Lines |
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less likely that anyone will use pstring for new code
- got rid of winbind_client.h from includes.h. This one triggered a
huge change, as winbind_client.h was including system/filesys.h and
defining the old uint32 and uint16 types, as well as its own
pstring and fstring.
(This used to be commit 9db6c79e902ec538108d6b7d3324039aabe1704f)
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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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This removes the duplicate named SEC_RIGHTS_MAXIMUM_ALLOWED and
SEC_RIGHTS_FULL_CONTROL, which are just other names for
SEC_FLAG_MAXIMUM_ALLOWED and SEC_RIGHTS_FILE_ALL. The latter names
match the new naming conventions in security.idl
Also added names for the generic->specific mappings for files are
directories
(This used to be commit 17a4e0b3aca227b40957ed1e0c57e498debc6ddf)
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definitions for security access masks, in security.idl
The previous definitions were inconsistently named, and contained many
duplicate and misleading entries. I kept finding myself tripping up
while using them.
(This used to be commit 01c0fa722f80ceeb3f81f01987de95f365a2ed3d)
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metze
(This used to be commit 234166606dc86b9e98226cff94b3869ec173671e)
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and made them private
(This used to be commit 386ac565c452ede1d74e06acb401ca9db99d3ff3)
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library can handle
them properly (they are difficult to do in an async fashion).
By choosing trans.in.max_data to fix in the negotiated buffer size a
server won't send us multi-part replies.
I notice that windows seems to avoid them too :)
(This used to be commit e23edf762cace35f937959c9ffbef718431a79b9)
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(This used to be commit 7067bb9b52223cafa28470f264f0b60646a07a01)
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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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rename CLI_ -> SMBCLI_
metze
(This used to be commit 8441750fd9427dd6fe477f27e603821b4026f038)
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Up to now the client code has had an async API, and operated
asynchronously at the packet level, but was not truly async in that it
assumed that it could always write to the socket and when a partial
packet came in that it could block waiting for the rest of the packet.
This change makes the SMB client library full async, by adding a
separate outgoing packet queue, using non-blocking socket IO and
having a input buffer that can fill asynchonously until the full
packet has arrived.
The main complexity was in dealing with the events structure when
using the CIFS proxy backend. In that case the same events structure
needs to be used in both the client library and the main smbd server,
so that when the client library is waiting for a reply that the main
server keeps processing packets. This required some changes in the
events library code.
Next step is to make the generated rpc client code use these new
capabilities.
(This used to be commit 96bf4da3edc4d64b0f58ef520269f3b385b8da02)
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metze
(This used to be commit af6f1f8a01bebbecd99bc8c066519e89966e65e3)
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- added a CHARSET set of tests, which determines how the server deals
with some specific charset issues related to UTF-16
support. Interestingly, Samba3 already passes all but one of these
tests, because our incorrect UCS-2 and UTF-8 implementations where we
don't check the validity of characters actually matches what Windows
does! This means that adding UTF-16 support to Samba is going to be
_much_ easier than we expected.
(This used to be commit c8497a42364d186f08102224d5062d176ee81f5b)
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