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using global_loadparm.
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(This used to be commit 47ffbbf67435904754469544390b67d34c958343)
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uses of global_loadparm.
(This used to be commit a33a5530545086b81a3b205aa109dff11c546926)
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(This used to be commit 566aa14139510788548a874e9213d91317f83ca9)
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(This used to be commit 3fcc960839c6e5ca4de2c3c042f12f369ac5f238)
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(This used to be commit abe8349f9b4387961ff3665d8c589d61cd2edf31)
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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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output in the testsuite rather than just True or False for a
set of tests.
The aim is to use this for:
* known failure lists (run all tests and detect tests that
started working or started failing). This
would allow us to get rid of the RPC-SAMBA3-* tests
* nicer torture output
* simplification of the testsuite system
* compatibility with other unit testing systems
* easier usage of smbtorture (being able to run one test
and automatically set up the environment for that)
This is still a work-in-progress; expect more updates over the next couple of
days.
(This used to be commit 0eb6097305776325c75081356309115f445a7218)
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enable the
unclist parameter for all tests that do two connections, to enable cluster
testing.
Volker
(This used to be commit a5d6db09244d444986f8fded3fc6e72c74c8ca1f)
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(This used to be commit 3c7a5ce29108dd82210dc3e1f00414f545949e1d)
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(This used to be commit 863ca4014d9b821706ee90f58ab5d5cf3899a4c7)
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(This used to be commit 98c4c3051391c6f89df5d133665f51bef66b1563)
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(This used to be commit c722f665c90103f3ed57621c460e32ad33e7a8a3)
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torture prototypes in seperate header
(This used to be commit 73610639b23ca3743077193fa0b1de7c7f65944d)
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(This used to be commit 70e7449318aa0e9d2639c76730a7d1683b2f4981)
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seem to be able to handle incomplete enum types.
(This used to be commit 540155fad3c8e3d79fb631bb3f14273f82130a73)
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(This used to be commit 03647e1321cf6c9bd6ced3945265f635e9468973)
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stuff.
- don't use SMBCLI_REQUEST_* state's in the genreic composite stuff
- move monitor_fn to libnet.
NOTE: I have maybe found some bugs, in code that is dirrectly in DONE or ERROR
state in the _send() function. I haven't fixed this bugs in this
commit! We may need some composite_trigger_*() functions or so.
And maybe some other generic helper functions...
metze
(This used to be commit 4527815a0a9b96e460f301cb1f0c0b3964c166fc)
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another leak in the ASN.1 code that andrew has volunteered to look at
- make the timelimit controllable with -t
(This used to be commit 227d4d2115e768bbae13db2559d27bf8508aa18d)
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GENSEC, and to pull SCHANNEL into GENSEC, by making it less 'special'.
GENSEC now no longer has it's own handling of 'set username' etc,
instead it uses cli_credentials calls.
In order to link the credentails code right though Samba, a lot of
interfaces have changed to remove 'username, domain, password'
arguments, and these have been replaced with a single 'struct
cli_credentials'.
In the session setup code, a new parameter 'workgroup' contains the
client/server current workgroup, which seems unrelated to the
authentication exchange (it was being filled in from the auth info).
This allows in particular kerberos to only call back for passwords
when it actually needs to perform the kinit.
The kerberos code has been modified not to use the SPNEGO provided
'principal name' (in the mechListMIC), but to instead use the name the
host was connected to as. This better matches Microsoft behaviour,
is more secure and allows better use of standard kerberos functions.
To achieve this, I made changes to our socket code so that the
hostname (before name resolution) is now recorded on the socket.
In schannel, most of the code from librpc/rpc/dcerpc_schannel.c is now
in libcli/auth/schannel.c, and it looks much more like a standard
GENSEC module. The actual sign/seal code moved to
libcli/auth/schannel_sign.c in a previous commit.
The schannel credentails structure is now merged with the rest of the
credentails, as many of the values (username, workstation, domain)
where already present there. This makes handling this in a generic
manner much easier, as there is no longer a custom entry-point.
The auth_domain module continues to be developed, but is now just as
functional as auth_winbind. The changes here are consequential to the
schannel changes.
The only removed function at this point is the RPC-LOGIN test
(simulating the load of a WinXP login), which needs much more work to
clean it up (it contains copies of too much code from all over the
torture suite, and I havn't been able to penetrate its 'structure').
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 2301a4b38a21aa60917973451687063d83d18d66)
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handle the inverted memory hierarchy that a normal session
establishment gave. The inverted hierarchy came from that fact that
you first establish a socket, then a transport, then a session and
finally a tree. That leads to the socket being at the top of the
memory hierarchy and the tree at the bottom, which makes no sense from
the users point of view, as they want to be able to free the tree and
have everything disappear.
The core problem was that the libcli interface didn't distinguish
between establishing a primary context and a secondary context. If you
establish a 2nd session on a transport then you want the transport to
be referenced by the session, whereas if you establish a primary
session then you want the transport to be a child of the session.
To fix this I have added "parent_ctx" and "primary" arguments to the
libcli intialisation functions. This makes using the library much
easier, and gives us a memory hierarchy that makes much more sense.
I was prompted to do this by a bug in the cifs backend, which was
caused by the socket not being properly torn down on a disconnect due
to the inverted memory hierarchy.
(This used to be commit 5e8fd5f70178992e249805c2e1ddafaf6840739b)
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encapsulates all the different session setup methods, including the
multi-pass spnego code.
I have hooked this into all the places that previously used the
RAW_SESSSETUP_GENERIC method, and have removed the old
RAW_SESSSETUP_GENERIC code from clisession.c and clitree.c. A nice
side effect is that these two modules are now very simple again, back
to being "raw" session setup handling, which was what was originally
intended.
I have also used this to replace the session setup code in the
smb_composite_connect() code, and used that to build a very simple
replacement for smbcli_tree_full_connection().
As a result, smbclient, smbtorture and all our other SMB connection
code now goes via these composite async functions. That should give
them a good workout!
(This used to be commit 080d0518bc7d6fd4bc3ef783e7d4d2e3275d0799)
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(This used to be commit 264ce9181089922547e8f6f67116f2d7277a5105)
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and made them private
(This used to be commit 386ac565c452ede1d74e06acb401ca9db99d3ff3)
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(This used to be commit 7067bb9b52223cafa28470f264f0b60646a07a01)
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simplifies things quite a bit
(This used to be commit c82a9cf750829c4f6982ca3133295c8599023c4e)
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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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valgrind on smbd with
--show-leak=yes and --show-reachable=yes to track them down.
(This used to be commit 7b23624a0f50c29346e8b1c4057f1c21f3be6d5a)
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