this module deals with packets: sending, receiving, queueing and some basic interpretation (e.g it excludes datagram error packets at the moment). the packet queueing mechanism was originally introduced when samba dealt with responses by sending a packet, receiving packets and queueing all packets that didn't match up with the response expected. this is fine in a single-thread environment, but samba now deals with response packets by queueing the responses. to some extent, therefore, this queue_packet mechanism is redundant. /************************************************************************* send_mailslot_reply() *************************************************************************/ this function is responsible for sending a MAILSLOT packet. it will _not_ send packets to the pseudo WINS subnet's address of 255.255.255.255: this would be disastrous. each packet sent out has a unique transaction identifier. this is done so that responses can be matched later with the original purpose for the packet being sent out in the first place. /************************************************************************* listen_for_packets() *************************************************************************/ this function is responsible for reading NMB and DGRAM packets, and then queueing them. it will normally time-out for NMBD_SELECT_LOOP seconds, but if there is an election currently running or we are expecting a response then this time is reduced to 1 second. note: the time-out period needs refining to the millisecond level. /************************************************************************* queue_packet() *************************************************************************/ this function is responsible for queueing any NMB and DGRAM packets passed to it. these packets will be removed from the queue in run_packet_queue(). /************************************************************************* run_packet_queue() *************************************************************************/ this function is responsible for taking a packet off the queue, identifying whether it is an NMB or a DGRAM packet, processing it accordingly and deleting it. this process continues until there are no more packets on the queue. /************************************************************************* process_nmb() *************************************************************************/ this function receives a packet identified as a netbios packet. it further identifies whether it is a response or a query packet. by identifying the type of packet (name registration, query etc) process_nmb() will call the appropriate function to deal with the type of packet received. /************************************************************************* process_dgram() *************************************************************************/ this function is responsible for identifying whether the datagram packet received is a browser packet or a domain logon packet. it also does some filtering of certain types of packets (e.g it filters out error packets). /************************************************************************* reply_netbios_packet() *************************************************************************/ this function is responsible for sending a reply to another NetBIOS packet from another host. it can be used to send a reply to a name registration, name release, name query or name status request. the reply can be either a positive or a negative one. /************************************************************************* initiate_netbios_packet() *************************************************************************/ this function is responsible for construction a netbios packet and sending it. if the packet has not had a unique transaction id allocated to it, then initiate_netbios_packet() will give it one. /************************************************************************* update_name_trn_id() *************************************************************************/ this function is responsible for allocating unique transaction identifiers for each new packet sent on the network.