From c61a011006ae91cd1befbf02966d5e67292f35bc Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Andrew Tridgell Date: Wed, 7 Oct 1998 04:24:42 +0000 Subject: added a document on how to port smbwrapper to a new system (This used to be commit bf1e257afb51f93e707bd7c1f75c8a2b35e69bed) --- source3/smbwrapper/PORTING | 77 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 77 insertions(+) create mode 100644 source3/smbwrapper/PORTING (limited to 'source3/smbwrapper/PORTING') diff --git a/source3/smbwrapper/PORTING b/source3/smbwrapper/PORTING new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..884246d078 --- /dev/null +++ b/source3/smbwrapper/PORTING @@ -0,0 +1,77 @@ +This describes how to port the smbwrapper portion of Samba to a new +unix-like platform. Note that porting smbwrapper is considerably +harder than porting Samba, for Samba you generally just need to run +configure and recompile whereas for smbwrapper some extra effort is +generally required. + + +STEP 1 +------ + +The first step is to work out how to create a shared library on your +OS and how to compile C code to produce position independent object +files (PIC files). You shoud be able to find this information in the +man pages for your compiler and loader (ld). Then modify configure.in +to give that information to Samba. + + +STEP 2 +------ + +The next step is to work out how to preload shared objects. On many +systems this is done using a LD_PRELOAD environment variable. On +others (shc as IRIX) it may use a _RTL_LIST variable. + +To make sure it works I suggest you create two C files like this: + +/* first C file */ +main() +{ + unlink("foo.txt"); +} + +/* second C file */ +#include + +int unlink(char *fname) +{ + fprintf(stderr,"unlink(%s) called\n",fname); +} + + +then compile the first as an ordinary C program and the second as a +shared library. Then use LD_PRELOAD to preload the resulting shared +library. Then run the first program. It should print "unlink(foo.txt) +called". If it doesn't then consult your man pages till you get it +right. + +Once you work this out then edit smbwrapper/smbsh.in and add a section +if necessary to correctly set the necessary preload options for your +OS. + + +STEP 3 +------ + +The next step is to work out how to make direct system calls. On most +machines this will work without any source code changes to +smbwrapper. To test that it does work create the following C program: + +#include +main() +{ + syscall(SYS_write, 1, "hello world\n", 12); +} + +and try to compile/run it. If it produces "hello world" then syscall() +works as expected. If not then work out what needs to be changed and +then make that change in realcalls.h. For example, on IRIX 6.4 the +system call numbers are wrong and need to be fixed up by getting an +offset right. + + +STEP 4 +------ + +Try compiling smbwrapper! Then test it. Then debug it. Simple really :) + -- cgit