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- added timelimit support
(This used to be commit dbac93e313a149bc4c0053f6962289e71b168fb3)
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S390. This is an attempt to avoid the panic we're seeing in the
automatic builds.
The main fixes are:
- assumptions that sizeof(size_t) == sizeof(int), mostly in printf formats
- use of NULL format statements to perform dn searches.
- assumption that sizeof() returns an int
(This used to be commit a58ea6b3854973b694d2b1e22323ed7eb00e3a3f)
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(This used to be commit fcf60823c6171ec109195cb8d61de5b0e02fd005)
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(This used to be commit aa9e7cf63a0e5ce7c9b7d121a4df064cd6fae90f)
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(This used to be commit fe7055df94ecc81d6758ee7ff82534451d620d6a)
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(This used to be commit b9ed92d550f1b821c5402a516eb2dfc2c8d69f0a)
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torture:progress=no
metze
(This used to be commit 820e5a1270d8bd308f03fc96161396fb4b95da61)
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matches the LOCAL-MESSAGING test
(This used to be commit 5883ce16d0b98c9c23ee60fe6089e0adf2ce8d15)
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(This used to be commit 4c0ed7328b14969ea34790b0e80fa714c44ccc5f)
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compared to about 20k messages/sec for the raw messaging layer. I
think that is quite acceptable given the extra functionality.
(This used to be commit a05d38d1d91f1f54d3e3794a596b468992594852)
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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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trouble with the epoll() based event handling
- changes the test to use a local directory instead of the prefix lock
directory, so the LOCAL-MESSAGING test can run as non-root even when
the lock directory is not writeable
(This used to be commit 079e1f4e85832f8d14ac385511ff67473e139ca1)
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I wanted to add a simple 'workstation' argument to the DCERPC
authenticated binding calls, but this patch kind of grew from there.
With SCHANNEL, the 'workstation' name (the netbios name of the client)
matters, as this is what ties the session between the NETLOGON ops and
the SCHANNEL bind. This changes a lot of files, and these will again
be changed when jelmer does the credentials work.
I also correct some schannel IDL to distinguish between workstation
names and account names. The distinction matters for domain trust
accounts.
Issues in handling this (issues with lifetime of talloc pointers)
caused me to change the 'creds_CredentialsState' and 'struct
dcerpc_binding' pointers to always be talloc()ed pointers.
In the schannel DB, we now store both the domain and computername, and
query on both. This should ensure we fault correctly when the domain
is specified incorrectly in the SCHANNEL bind.
In the RPC-SCHANNEL test, I finally fixed a bug that vl pointed out,
where the comment claimed we re-used a connection, but in fact we made
a new connection.
This was achived by breaking apart some of the
dcerpc_secondary_connection() logic.
The addition of workstation handling was also propogated to NTLMSSP
and GENSEC, for completeness.
The RPC-SAMSYNC test has been cleaned up a little, using a loop over
usernames/passwords rather than manually expanded tests. This will be
expanded further (the code in #if 0 in this patch) to use a newly
created user account for testing.
In making this test pass test_rpc.sh, I found a bug in the RPC-ECHO
server, caused by the removal of [ref] and the assoicated pointer from
the IDL. This has been re-added, until the underlying pidl issues are
solved.
(This used to be commit 824289dcc20908ddec957a4a892a103eec2da9b9)
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(This used to be commit b902ea546d2d1327b23f40ddaeeaa8e7e3662454)
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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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(This used to be commit 7f54c8a339f36aa43c9340be70ab7f0067593ef2)
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make it possible to add optimisations to the events code such as
keeping the next timed event in a sorted list, and using epoll for
file descriptor events.
I also removed the loop events code, as it wasn't being used anywhere,
and changed timed events to always be one-shot (as adding a new timed
event in the event handler is so easy to do if needed)
(This used to be commit d7b4b6de51342a65bf46fce772d313f92f8d73d3)
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servers in smbd. The old code still contained a fairly bit of legacy
from the time when smbd was only handling SMB connection. The new code
gets rid of all of the smb_server specific code in smbd/, and creates
a much simpler infrastructures for new server code.
Major changes include:
- simplified the process model code a lot.
- got rid of the top level server and service structures
completely. The top level context is now the event_context. This
got rid of service.h and server.h completely (they were the most
confusing parts of the old code)
- added service_stream.[ch] for the helper functions that are
specific to stream type services (services that handle streams, and
use a logically separate process per connection)
- got rid of the builtin idle_handler code in the service logic, as
none of the servers were using it, and it can easily be handled by
a server in future by adding its own timed_event to the event
context.
- fixed some major memory leaks in the rpc server code.
- added registration of servers, rather than hard coding our list of
possible servers. This allows for servers as modules in the future.
- temporarily disabled the winbind code until I add the helper
functions for that type of server
- added error checking on service startup. If a configured server
fails to startup then smbd doesn't startup.
- cleaned up the command line handling in smbd, removing unused options
(This used to be commit cf6a46c3cbde7b1eb1b86bd3882b953a2de3a42e)
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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 used to be commit c06b25c269fb34601e931079ff5658f6e19956bc)
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I decided to incorporate the udp support into the socket_ipv4.c
backend (and later in socket_ipv6.c) rather than doing a separate
backend, as so much of the code is shareable. Basically this adds a
socket_sendto() and a socket_recvfrom() call and not much all.
For udp servers, I decided to keep the call as socket_listen(), even
though dgram servers don't actually call listen(). This keeps the API
consistent.
I also added a simple local sockets testsuite in smbtorture,
LOCAL-SOCKET
(This used to be commit 9f12a45a05c5c447fb4ec18c8dd28f70e90e32a5)
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- added #if TALLOC_DEPRECATED around the _p functions
- fixes the code that broke from the above
while doing this I fixed quite a number of places that were
incorrectly using the non type-safe talloc functions to use the type
safe ones. Some were even doing multiplies for array allocation, which
is potentially unsafe.
(This used to be commit 6e7754abd0c225527fb38363996a6e241b87b37e)
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talloc(ctx, 0) call.
- cleaned up some talloc usage in various files
I'd like to get to the point that we have no calls to talloc(), at
which point we will rename talloc_p() to talloc(), to encourage
everyone to use the typesafe functions.
(This used to be commit e6c81d7c9f8a6938947d3c1c8a971a0d6d50b67a)
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- added gcov flags to Makefile.talloc
- expanded talloc testsuite to add a test for realloc with a child ptr
- fixed a bug in talloc_realloc() with realloc of a ptr that has child ptrs
(This used to be commit 98b5f73c1ba34d7576c5995069b485c1c5ede324)
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outside the tree, instead defined _SAMBA_BUILD_ inside the Samba
build. This makes it easier to pull code out of Samba for external
use.
(This used to be commit 09e98c8745cca7ccb1ad7134c0c09b8e4c0f4f06)
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(thanks abartlet for telling me)
metze
(This used to be commit 2783bf393f6310f9d827538329d619dad5b02dd0)
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metze
(This used to be commit 3f2c3ce2f0d11ea9f3c058690e0bb14d590c714c)
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1M, or in the case of non-UTF charsets, above 256
(This used to be commit 02595c14ac44403dd193d084dea9b91a67554a94)
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This allows potentially NULL pointers to be referenced, without an if ()
for every use. (previously, it would segfault).
Update doco, and allow talloc_unlink to match.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit 59757c7f9d0e08e3acacfb3116f6205057d5b119)
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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 264ce9181089922547e8f6f67116f2d7277a5105)
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(This used to be commit 70055fb1f499cd40e996e56c7ba9ef8d2267b421)
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The thing that finally convinced me that minimal includes was worth
pursuing for rpc was a compiler (tcc) that failed to build Samba due
to reaching internal limits of the size of include files. Also the
fact that includes.h.gch was 16MB, which really seems excessive. This
patch brings it back to 12M, which is still too large, but
better. Note that this patch speeds up compile times for both the pch
and non-pch case.
This change also includes the addition iof a "depends()" option in our
IDL files, allowing you to specify that one IDL file depends on
another. This capability was needed for the auto-includes generation.
(This used to be commit b8f5fa8ac8e8725f3d321004f0aedf4246fc6b49)
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(This used to be commit 7067bb9b52223cafa28470f264f0b60646a07a01)
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(This used to be commit cc93813e4a09c538ad485dc2b3cb4c9be34f3d18)
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options[0].
(This used to be commit 18582083af800abd3d8de40eb73255c8ae6598dd)
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(This used to be commit a0c4138edf919ee0c4b236f201c09fc4deb2cc09)
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protocol towers
(This used to be commit f41dfc6c5a85bf241e4bcc0669f6191bf531e89a)
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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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- made idtree return a "struct idr_context *" instead of a void*
- more efficient idr_remove for ids that are not present (patch from Jim Houston)
(This used to be commit f8d12d4b4ae5a38de7869deb782cb8f48504844c)
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dcerpc_binding)
Let test fail if messaging_init() fails instead of generating segfault in the LOCAL-MESSAGING test
(This used to be commit 0609f410ef756501d50c04b544387ae547fcd63c)
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Add tests for dcerpc_binding_from_tower()
(This used to be commit 88c6d34bba1a409127b26f86bd963bfab30a804c)
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Add local test for testing the functions dcerpc_parse_binding(),
dcerpc_binding_string() and dcerpc_binding_build_tower()
(This used to be commit 7a07c2c769b8e51178789eed4a31577f5d39f63a)
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full. This means callers can just "send and forget" rather than
having to check for a temporary failure. The mechanism takes nice
advantage of the timed events handling is our events code. A message
will only fail now if we completely run out of some resource (such
as memory).
- changed the test code not to do retries itself, but only to warn on real failures
(This used to be commit 8cddc610a25e64c1ad39dd6a2fc2e7f467e04fc9)
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makes things a bit more efficient
(This used to be commit 8380225d326e4bfb3f15fddc72c097870713132a)
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can fill up, leading to refused
connections. The caller needs to retry. This adds testing of the retry in LOCAL-MESSAGING
(This used to be commit 2c568d4dc20303061a89c815b9a9a0bafc283633)
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(This used to be commit 68890247c1247f5f9e299ac1f579052cd022e79f)
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- added the new messaging system, based on unix domain sockets. It
gets over 10k messages/second on my laptop without any socket
cacheing, which is better than I expected.
- added a LOCAL-MESSAGING torture test
(This used to be commit 3af06478da7ab34a272226d8d9ac87e0a4940cfb)
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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 5045482b14dfcbb535eab3e5fa63ef1c3b46c40f)
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