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samba-mirror/source4/dsdb/samdb/samdb.c

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/*
Unix SMB/CIFS implementation.
interface functions for the sam database
Copyright (C) Andrew Tridgell 2004
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
*/
#include "includes.h"
#include "librpc/gen_ndr/ndr_netlogon.h"
#include "lib/ldb/include/ldb.h"
#include "system/time.h"
#include "system/filesys.h"
#include "db_wrap.h"
/*
connect to the SAM database
return an opaque context pointer on success, or NULL on failure
*/
struct ldb_context *samdb_connect(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx)
{
return ldb_wrap_connect(mem_ctx, lp_sam_url(), 0, NULL);
}
/*
search the sam for the specified attributes in a specific domain, filter on
objectSid being in domain_sid.
*/
int samdb_search_domain(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
const char *basedn,
struct ldb_message ***res,
const char * const *attrs,
const struct dom_sid *domain_sid,
const char *format, ...) _PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(7,8)
{
va_list ap;
int i, count;
va_start(ap, format);
count = gendb_search_v(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, basedn,
res, attrs, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
i=0;
while (i<count) {
struct dom_sid *entry_sid;
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
entry_sid = samdb_result_dom_sid(mem_ctx, (*res)[i], "objectSid");
if ((entry_sid == NULL) ||
(!dom_sid_in_domain(domain_sid, entry_sid))) {
/* Delete that entry from the result set */
(*res)[i] = (*res)[count-1];
count -= 1;
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
talloc_free(entry_sid);
continue;
}
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
talloc_free(entry_sid);
i += 1;
}
return count;
}
/*
search the sam for a single string attribute in exactly 1 record
*/
const char *samdb_search_string_v(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
const char *basedn,
const char *attr_name,
const char *format, va_list ap) _PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(5,0)
{
int count;
const char * const attrs[2] = { attr_name, NULL };
struct ldb_message **res = NULL;
count = gendb_search_v(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, basedn, &res, attrs, format, ap);
if (count > 1) {
DEBUG(1,("samdb: search for %s %s not single valued (count=%d)\n",
attr_name, format, count));
}
if (count != 1) {
talloc_free(res);
return NULL;
}
return samdb_result_string(res[0], attr_name, NULL);
}
/*
search the sam for a single string attribute in exactly 1 record
*/
const char *samdb_search_string(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
const char *basedn,
const char *attr_name,
const char *format, ...) _PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(5,6)
{
va_list ap;
const char *str;
va_start(ap, format);
str = samdb_search_string_v(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, basedn, attr_name, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
return str;
}
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
/*
search the sam for a dom_sid attribute in exactly 1 record
*/
struct dom_sid *samdb_search_dom_sid(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
const char *basedn,
const char *attr_name,
const char *format, ...) _PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(5,6)
{
va_list ap;
int count;
struct ldb_message **res;
const char * const attrs[2] = { attr_name, NULL };
struct dom_sid *sid;
va_start(ap, format);
count = gendb_search_v(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, basedn, &res, attrs, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
if (count > 1) {
DEBUG(1,("samdb: search for %s %s not single valued (count=%d)\n",
attr_name, format, count));
}
if (count != 1) {
talloc_free(res);
return NULL;
}
sid = samdb_result_dom_sid(mem_ctx, res[0], attr_name);
talloc_free(res);
return sid;
}
/*
return the count of the number of records in the sam matching the query
*/
int samdb_search_count(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
const char *basedn,
const char *format, ...) _PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(4,5)
{
va_list ap;
struct ldb_message **res;
const char * const attrs[] = { NULL };
int ret;
va_start(ap, format);
ret = gendb_search_v(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, basedn, &res, attrs, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
return ret;
}
/*
search the sam for a single integer attribute in exactly 1 record
*/
uint_t samdb_search_uint(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
uint_t default_value,
const char *basedn,
const char *attr_name,
const char *format, ...) _PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(6,7)
{
va_list ap;
int count;
struct ldb_message **res;
const char * const attrs[2] = { attr_name, NULL };
va_start(ap, format);
count = gendb_search_v(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, basedn, &res, attrs, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
if (count != 1) {
return default_value;
}
return samdb_result_uint(res[0], attr_name, default_value);
}
/*
search the sam for a single signed 64 bit integer attribute in exactly 1 record
*/
int64_t samdb_search_int64(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
int64_t default_value,
const char *basedn,
const char *attr_name,
const char *format, ...) _PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(6,7)
{
va_list ap;
int count;
struct ldb_message **res;
const char * const attrs[2] = { attr_name, NULL };
va_start(ap, format);
count = gendb_search_v(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, basedn, &res, attrs, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
if (count != 1) {
return default_value;
}
return samdb_result_int64(res[0], attr_name, default_value);
}
/*
search the sam for multipe records each giving a single string attribute
return the number of matches, or -1 on error
*/
int samdb_search_string_multiple(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
const char *basedn,
const char ***strs,
const char *attr_name,
const char *format, ...) _PRINTF_ATTRIBUTE(6,7)
{
va_list ap;
int count, i;
const char * const attrs[2] = { attr_name, NULL };
struct ldb_message **res = NULL;
va_start(ap, format);
count = gendb_search_v(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, basedn, &res, attrs, format, ap);
va_end(ap);
if (count <= 0) {
return count;
}
/* make sure its single valued */
for (i=0;i<count;i++) {
if (res[i]->num_elements != 1) {
DEBUG(1,("samdb: search for %s %s not single valued\n",
attr_name, format));
talloc_free(res);
return -1;
}
}
*strs = talloc_array(mem_ctx, const char *, count+1);
if (! *strs) {
talloc_free(res);
return -1;
}
for (i=0;i<count;i++) {
(*strs)[i] = samdb_result_string(res[i], attr_name, NULL);
}
(*strs)[count] = NULL;
return count;
}
/*
pull a uint from a result set.
*/
uint_t samdb_result_uint(struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr, uint_t default_value)
{
return ldb_msg_find_uint(msg, attr, default_value);
}
/*
pull a (signed) int64 from a result set.
*/
int64_t samdb_result_int64(struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr, int64_t default_value)
{
return ldb_msg_find_int64(msg, attr, default_value);
}
/*
pull a string from a result set.
*/
const char *samdb_result_string(struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr,
const char *default_value)
{
return ldb_msg_find_string(msg, attr, default_value);
}
/*
pull a rid from a objectSid in a result set.
*/
uint32_t samdb_result_rid_from_sid(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
const char *attr, uint32_t default_value)
{
struct dom_sid *sid;
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
uint32_t rid;
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
sid = samdb_result_dom_sid(mem_ctx, msg, attr);
if (sid == NULL) {
return default_value;
}
rid = sid->sub_auths[sid->num_auths-1];
talloc_free(sid);
return rid;
}
/*
pull a dom_sid structure from a objectSid in a result set.
*/
struct dom_sid *samdb_result_dom_sid(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr)
{
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
const struct ldb_val *v;
struct dom_sid *sid;
NTSTATUS status;
v = ldb_msg_find_ldb_val(msg, attr);
if (v == NULL) {
return NULL;
}
sid = talloc(mem_ctx, struct dom_sid);
if (sid == NULL) {
return NULL;
}
status = ndr_pull_struct_blob(v, sid, sid,
(ndr_pull_flags_fn_t)ndr_pull_dom_sid);
if (!NT_STATUS_IS_OK(status)) {
talloc_free(sid);
return NULL;
}
return sid;
}
/*
pull a guid structure from a objectGUID in a result set.
*/
struct GUID samdb_result_guid(struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr)
{
const struct ldb_val *v;
NTSTATUS status;
struct GUID guid;
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx;
ZERO_STRUCT(guid);
v = ldb_msg_find_ldb_val(msg, attr);
if (!v) return guid;
mem_ctx = talloc_named_const(NULL, 0, "samdb_result_guid");
if (!mem_ctx) return guid;
status = ndr_pull_struct_blob(v, mem_ctx, &guid,
(ndr_pull_flags_fn_t)ndr_pull_GUID);
talloc_free(mem_ctx);
if (!NT_STATUS_IS_OK(status)) {
return guid;
}
return guid;
}
/*
pull a sid prefix from a objectSid in a result set.
this is used to find the domain sid for a user
*/
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
struct dom_sid *samdb_result_sid_prefix(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr)
{
struct dom_sid *sid = samdb_result_dom_sid(mem_ctx, msg, attr);
if (!sid || sid->num_auths < 1) return NULL;
sid->num_auths--;
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
return sid;
}
/*
pull a NTTIME in a result set.
*/
NTTIME samdb_result_nttime(struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr, const char *default_value)
{
const char *str = ldb_msg_find_string(msg, attr, default_value);
return nttime_from_string(str);
}
/*
pull a uint64_t from a result set.
*/
uint64_t samdb_result_uint64(struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr, uint64_t default_value)
{
return ldb_msg_find_uint64(msg, attr, default_value);
}
/*
construct the allow_password_change field from the PwdLastSet attribute and the
domain password settings
*/
NTTIME samdb_result_allow_password_change(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
const char *domain_dn,
struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr)
{
uint64_t attr_time = samdb_result_uint64(msg, attr, 0);
int64_t minPwdAge;
if (attr_time == 0) {
return 0;
}
minPwdAge = samdb_search_int64(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, 0,
domain_dn, "minPwdAge", "dn=%s", domain_dn);
/* yes, this is a -= not a += as minPwdAge is stored as the negative
of the number of 100-nano-seconds */
attr_time -= minPwdAge;
return attr_time;
}
/*
construct the force_password_change field from the PwdLastSet attribute and the
domain password settings
*/
NTTIME samdb_result_force_password_change(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb,
TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
const char *domain_dn,
struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr)
{
uint64_t attr_time = samdb_result_uint64(msg, attr, 0);
int64_t maxPwdAge;
if (attr_time == 0) {
return 0;
}
maxPwdAge = samdb_search_int64(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, 0, domain_dn,
"maxPwdAge", "dn=%s", domain_dn);
if (maxPwdAge == 0) {
return 0;
} else {
attr_time -= maxPwdAge;
}
return attr_time;
}
/*
pull a samr_Password structutre from a result set.
*/
struct samr_Password samdb_result_hash(struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr)
{
struct samr_Password hash;
const struct ldb_val *val = ldb_msg_find_ldb_val(msg, attr);
ZERO_STRUCT(hash);
if (val) {
memcpy(hash.hash, val->data, MIN(val->length, sizeof(hash.hash)));
}
return hash;
}
/*
pull an array of samr_Password structutres from a result set.
*/
uint_t samdb_result_hashes(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr, struct samr_Password **hashes)
{
uint_t count = 0;
const struct ldb_val *val = ldb_msg_find_ldb_val(msg, attr);
int i;
*hashes = NULL;
if (!val) {
return 0;
}
count = val->length / 16;
if (count == 0) {
return 0;
}
*hashes = talloc_array(mem_ctx, struct samr_Password, count);
if (! *hashes) {
return 0;
}
for (i=0;i<count;i++) {
memcpy((*hashes)[i].hash, (i*16)+(char *)val->data, 16);
}
return count;
}
NTSTATUS samdb_result_passwords(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
struct samr_Password **lm_pwd, struct samr_Password **nt_pwd)
{
const char *unicodePwd = samdb_result_string(msg, "unicodePwd", NULL);
struct samr_Password *lmPwdHash, *ntPwdHash;
if (unicodePwd) {
if (nt_pwd) {
ntPwdHash = talloc(mem_ctx, struct samr_Password);
if (!ntPwdHash) {
return NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY;
}
E_md4hash(unicodePwd, ntPwdHash->hash);
*nt_pwd = ntPwdHash;
}
if (lm_pwd) {
BOOL lm_hash_ok;
lmPwdHash = talloc(mem_ctx, struct samr_Password);
if (!lmPwdHash) {
return NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY;
}
/* compute the new nt and lm hashes */
lm_hash_ok = E_deshash(unicodePwd, lmPwdHash->hash);
if (lm_hash_ok) {
*lm_pwd = lmPwdHash;
} else {
*lm_pwd = NULL;
}
}
} else {
if (nt_pwd) {
int num_nt;
num_nt = samdb_result_hashes(mem_ctx, msg, "ntPwdHash", &ntPwdHash);
if (num_nt == 0) {
*nt_pwd = NULL;
} else if (num_nt > 1) {
return NT_STATUS_INTERNAL_DB_CORRUPTION;
} else {
*nt_pwd = &ntPwdHash[0];
}
}
if (lm_pwd) {
int num_lm;
num_lm = samdb_result_hashes(mem_ctx, msg, "lmPwdHash", &lmPwdHash);
if (num_lm == 0) {
*lm_pwd = NULL;
} else if (num_lm > 1) {
return NT_STATUS_INTERNAL_DB_CORRUPTION;
} else {
*lm_pwd = &lmPwdHash[0];
}
}
}
return NT_STATUS_OK;
}
/*
pull a samr_LogonHours structutre from a result set.
*/
struct samr_LogonHours samdb_result_logon_hours(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr)
{
struct samr_LogonHours hours;
const int units_per_week = 168;
const struct ldb_val *val = ldb_msg_find_ldb_val(msg, attr);
ZERO_STRUCT(hours);
hours.bits = talloc_array(mem_ctx, uint8_t, units_per_week);
if (!hours.bits) {
return hours;
}
hours.units_per_week = units_per_week;
memset(hours.bits, 0xFF, units_per_week);
if (val) {
memcpy(hours.bits, val->data, MIN(val->length, units_per_week));
}
return hours;
}
/*
pull a set of account_flags from a result set.
*/
uint16_t samdb_result_acct_flags(struct ldb_message *msg, const char *attr)
{
uint_t userAccountControl = ldb_msg_find_uint(msg, attr, 0);
return samdb_uf2acb(userAccountControl);
}
/*
copy from a template record to a message
*/
int samdb_copy_template(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx,
struct ldb_message *msg, const char *expression)
{
struct ldb_message **res, *t;
int ret, i, j;
/* pull the template record */
ret = gendb_search(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, NULL, &res, NULL, "%s", expression);
if (ret != 1) {
DEBUG(1,("samdb: ERROR: template '%s' matched %d records\n",
expression, ret));
return -1;
}
t = res[0];
for (i=0;i<t->num_elements;i++) {
struct ldb_message_element *el = &t->elements[i];
/* some elements should not be copied from the template */
if (strcasecmp(el->name, "cn") == 0 ||
strcasecmp(el->name, "name") == 0 ||
strcasecmp(el->name, "sAMAccountName") == 0) {
continue;
}
for (j=0;j<el->num_values;j++) {
if (strcasecmp(el->name, "objectClass") == 0 &&
(strcasecmp((char *)el->values[j].data, "Template") == 0 ||
strcasecmp((char *)el->values[j].data, "userTemplate") == 0 ||
strcasecmp((char *)el->values[j].data, "groupTemplate") == 0 ||
strcasecmp((char *)el->values[j].data, "foreignSecurityTemplate") == 0 ||
strcasecmp((char *)el->values[j].data, "aliasTemplate") == 0 ||
strcasecmp((char *)el->values[j].data, "trustedDomainTemplate") == 0 ||
strcasecmp((char *)el->values[j].data, "secretTemplate") == 0)) {
continue;
}
samdb_msg_add_string(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, msg, el->name,
(char *)el->values[j].data);
}
}
return 0;
}
/*
allocate a new id, attempting to do it atomically
return 0 on failure, the id on success
*/
static NTSTATUS _samdb_allocate_next_id(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, const char *dn,
const char *attr, uint32_t *id)
{
struct ldb_message msg;
int ret;
const char *str;
struct ldb_val vals[2];
struct ldb_message_element els[2];
str = samdb_search_string(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, dn, attr, "dn=%s", dn);
if (!str) {
DEBUG(1,("id not found at %s %s\n", dn, attr));
return NT_STATUS_OBJECT_NAME_INVALID;
}
*id = strtol(str, NULL, 0);
if ((*id)+1 == 0) {
/* out of IDs ! */
return NT_STATUS_INSUFFICIENT_RESOURCES;
}
/* we do a delete and add as a single operation. That prevents
a race */
ZERO_STRUCT(msg);
msg.dn = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, dn);
if (!msg.dn) {
return NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY;
}
msg.num_elements = 2;
msg.elements = els;
els[0].num_values = 1;
els[0].values = &vals[0];
els[0].flags = LDB_FLAG_MOD_DELETE;
els[0].name = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, attr);
if (!els[0].name) {
return NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY;
}
els[1].num_values = 1;
els[1].values = &vals[1];
els[1].flags = LDB_FLAG_MOD_ADD;
els[1].name = els[0].name;
vals[0].data = (uint8_t *)talloc_asprintf(mem_ctx, "%u", *id);
if (!vals[0].data) {
return NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY;
}
vals[0].length = strlen((const char *)vals[0].data);
vals[1].data = (uint8_t *)talloc_asprintf(mem_ctx, "%u", (*id)+1);
if (!vals[1].data) {
return NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY;
}
vals[1].length = strlen((const char *)vals[1].data);
ret = ldb_modify(sam_ldb, &msg);
if (ret != 0) {
return NT_STATUS_UNEXPECTED_IO_ERROR;
}
(*id)++;
return NT_STATUS_OK;
}
/*
allocate a new id, attempting to do it atomically
return 0 on failure, the id on success
*/
NTSTATUS samdb_allocate_next_id(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, const char *dn, const char *attr,
uint32_t *id)
{
int tries = 10;
NTSTATUS status;
/* we need to try multiple times to cope with two account
creations at the same time */
while (tries--) {
status = _samdb_allocate_next_id(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, dn, attr, id);
if (!NT_STATUS_EQUAL(NT_STATUS_UNEXPECTED_IO_ERROR, status)) {
break;
}
}
if (NT_STATUS_EQUAL(NT_STATUS_UNEXPECTED_IO_ERROR, status)) {
DEBUG(1,("Failed to increment id %s at %s\n", attr, dn));
}
return status;
}
/*
add a string element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_string(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, const char *str)
{
char *s = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, str);
char *a = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, attr_name);
if (s == NULL || a == NULL) {
return -1;
}
return ldb_msg_add_string(sam_ldb, msg, a, s);
}
r7860: switch our ldb storage format to use a NDR encoded objectSid. This is quite a large change as we had lots of code that assumed that objectSid was a string in S- format. metze and simo tried to convince me to use NDR format months ago, but I didn't listen, so its fair that I have the pain of fixing all the code now :-) This builds on the ldb_register_samba_handlers() and ldif handlers code I did earlier this week. There are still three parts of this conversion I have not finished: - the ltdb index records need to use the string form of the objectSid (to keep the DNs sane). Until that it done I have disabled indexing on objectSid, which is a big performance hit, but allows us to pass all our tests while I rejig the indexing system to use a externally supplied conversion function - I haven't yet put in place the code that allows client to use the "S-xxx-yyy" form for objectSid in ldap search expressions. w2k3 supports this, presumably by looking for the "S-" prefix to determine what type of objectSid form is being used by the client. I have been working on ways to handle this, but am not happy with them yet so they aren't part of this patch - I need to change pidl to generate push functions that take a "const void *" instead of a "void*" for the data pointer. That will fix the couple of new warnings this code generates. Luckily it many places the conversion to NDR formatted records actually simplified the code, as it means we no longer need as many calls to dom_sid_parse_talloc(). In some places it got more complex, but not many. (This used to be commit d40bc2fa8ddd43560315688eebdbe98bdd02756c)
2005-06-24 04:18:20 +04:00
/*
add a dom_sid element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_dom_sid(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, struct dom_sid *sid)
{
struct ldb_val v;
NTSTATUS status;
status = ndr_push_struct_blob(&v, mem_ctx, sid,
(ndr_push_flags_fn_t)ndr_push_dom_sid);
if (!NT_STATUS_IS_OK(status)) {
return -1;
}
return ldb_msg_add_value(sam_ldb, msg, attr_name, &v);
}
/*
add a delete element operation to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_delete(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name)
{
char *a = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, attr_name);
if (a == NULL) {
return -1;
}
/* we use an empty replace rather than a delete, as it allows for
samdb_replace() to be used everywhere */
return ldb_msg_add_empty(sam_ldb, msg, a, LDB_FLAG_MOD_REPLACE);
}
/*
add a add attribute value to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_addval(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, const char *value)
{
struct ldb_message_element *el;
char *a, *v;
int ret;
a = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, attr_name);
if (a == NULL)
return -1;
v = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, value);
if (v == NULL)
return -1;
ret = ldb_msg_add_string(sam_ldb, msg, a, v);
if (ret != 0)
return ret;
el = ldb_msg_find_element(msg, a);
if (el == NULL)
return -1;
el->flags = LDB_FLAG_MOD_ADD;
return 0;
}
/*
add a delete attribute value to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_delval(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, const char *value)
{
struct ldb_message_element *el;
char *a, *v;
int ret;
a = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, attr_name);
if (a == NULL)
return -1;
v = talloc_strdup(mem_ctx, value);
if (v == NULL)
return -1;
ret = ldb_msg_add_string(sam_ldb, msg, a, v);
if (ret != 0)
return ret;
el = ldb_msg_find_element(msg, a);
if (el == NULL)
return -1;
el->flags = LDB_FLAG_MOD_DELETE;
return 0;
}
/*
add a uint_t element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_uint(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, uint_t v)
{
const char *s = talloc_asprintf(mem_ctx, "%u", v);
return samdb_msg_add_string(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, msg, attr_name, s);
}
/*
add a (signed) int64_t element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_int64(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, int64_t v)
{
const char *s = talloc_asprintf(mem_ctx, "%"PRIi64, v);
return samdb_msg_add_string(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, msg, attr_name, s);
}
/*
add a uint64_t element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_uint64(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, uint64_t v)
{
const char *s = talloc_asprintf(mem_ctx, "%"PRIu64, v);
return samdb_msg_add_string(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, msg, attr_name, s);
}
/*
add a samr_Password element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_hash(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, struct samr_Password *hash)
{
struct ldb_val val;
val.data = talloc_memdup(mem_ctx, hash->hash, 16);
if (!val.data) {
return -1;
}
val.length = 16;
return ldb_msg_add_value(sam_ldb, msg, attr_name, &val);
}
/*
add a samr_Password array to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_hashes(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, struct samr_Password *hashes, uint_t count)
{
struct ldb_val val;
int i;
val.data = talloc_array_size(mem_ctx, 16, count);
val.length = count*16;
if (!val.data) {
return -1;
}
for (i=0;i<count;i++) {
memcpy(i*16 + (char *)val.data, hashes[i].hash, 16);
}
return ldb_msg_add_value(sam_ldb, msg, attr_name, &val);
}
/*
add a acct_flags element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_acct_flags(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, uint32_t v)
{
return samdb_msg_add_uint(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, msg, attr_name, samdb_acb2uf(v));
}
/*
add a logon_hours element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_logon_hours(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, struct samr_LogonHours *hours)
{
struct ldb_val val;
val.length = hours->units_per_week / 8;
val.data = hours->bits;
return ldb_msg_add_value(sam_ldb, msg, attr_name, &val);
}
/*
add a general value element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_add_value(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, const struct ldb_val *val)
{
return ldb_msg_add_value(sam_ldb, msg, attr_name, val);
}
/*
sets a general value element to a message
*/
int samdb_msg_set_value(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, const struct ldb_val *val)
{
struct ldb_message_element *el;
el = ldb_msg_find_element(msg, attr_name);
if (el) {
el->num_values = 0;
}
return ldb_msg_add_value(sam_ldb, msg, attr_name, val);
}
/*
set a string element in a message
*/
int samdb_msg_set_string(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, const char *str)
{
struct ldb_message_element *el;
el = ldb_msg_find_element(msg, attr_name);
if (el) {
el->num_values = 0;
}
return samdb_msg_add_string(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, msg, attr_name, str);
}
/*
set a ldaptime element in a message
*/
int samdb_msg_set_ldaptime(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg,
const char *attr_name, time_t t)
{
char *str = ldap_timestring(mem_ctx, t);
if (!str) {
return -1;
}
return samdb_msg_set_string(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, msg, attr_name, str);
}
/*
add a record
*/
int samdb_add(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg)
{
return ldb_add(sam_ldb, msg);
}
/*
delete a record
*/
int samdb_delete(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, const char *dn)
{
return ldb_delete(sam_ldb, dn);
}
/*
modify a record
*/
int samdb_modify(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg)
{
return ldb_modify(sam_ldb, msg);
}
/*
replace elements in a record
*/
int samdb_replace(struct ldb_context *sam_ldb, TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx, struct ldb_message *msg)
{
int i;
/* mark all the message elements as LDB_FLAG_MOD_REPLACE */
for (i=0;i<msg->num_elements;i++) {
msg->elements[i].flags = LDB_FLAG_MOD_REPLACE;
}
/* modify the samdb record */
return samdb_modify(sam_ldb, mem_ctx, msg);
}
/*
return a default security descriptor
*/
struct security_descriptor *samdb_default_security_descriptor(TALLOC_CTX *mem_ctx)
{
struct security_descriptor *sd;
sd = security_descriptor_initialise(mem_ctx);
return sd;
}