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The number of arguments is getting a bit excessive now, so it
probably makes sense to pass in the smbcli_options struct rather than
all members individually and add a convenience function for obtaining a
smbcli_options struct from a loadparm context.
(This used to be commit 9f64213463)
isn't what memset wants anyway.
Thanks to Indar Kriplani <indar.kriplani@gmail.com>. Fixes bug 5010
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit fd309065bb)
This includes some of the original ildap ldap client API. ldb
provides a much easier abstraction on this to use, and doesn't use
these functions.
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit dc27a7e41c)
context. We now have an event context on the torture_context, and we
can also get one from the cli_credentials structure
(This used to be commit c0f65eb656)
This changes the main selftest code to be in perl rather than in shell script.
The selftest script is now no longer a black box but a regular executable that takes
--help.
This adds the following features:
* "make test TESTS=foo" will run only the tests that match the regex "foo"
* ability to deal with expected failures. the suite will not warn about tests
that fail and are known to fail, but will warn about other failing tests and
tests that are succeeding tests but incorrectly marked as failing.
* ability to print a summary with all failures at the end of the run
It also opens up the way to the following features, which I hope to implement later:
* "environments", for example having a complete domains with DCs and domain members
in a testenvironment
* only set up smbd if necessary (not when running LOCAL tests, for example)
* different mktestsetup scripts per target. except for the mktestsetup script, we can
use the same infrastructure for samba 3 or windows.
(This used to be commit 38f867880b)
generate a random buffer explicit to make valgrind happy
found by valgrind in the build-farm on fort, there are some more places
like this...
metze
(This used to be commit 2654f595ca)
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 0eb6097305)
emacs compile mode (hint, paste to a file, and compile as "cat
filename").
This allowed me to fix nearly all the warnings for a IA_64 SuSE build
very quickly.
(This used to be commit eba6c84eff)
* Move dlinklist.h, smb.h to subsystem-specific directories
* Clean up ads.h and move what is left of it to dsdb/
(only place where it's used)
(This used to be commit f7afa1cb77)
/* Test 21 -- Test removal of file after socket close. */
I think it might be because they are too slow to delete the file.
Jeremy, can you check this test does not change semantics in a way you don't
want it?
Volker
(This used to be commit 92aa95f820)
badly in getting rid of set_saved_ntstatus in Samba3. If this is not the
appropriate place to put it, please tell me.
Volker
(This used to be commit cc9634d586)
"." for "..". These express the intention better that strcmp or strequal
and improve searchability via cscope/ctags.
(This used to be commit 7e4ad7e8e5)
metze on his quest to unify the ntvfs strucures for the smb and smb2
servers. The only place we needed flags2 inside ntvfs was for the
FLAGS2_READ_PERMIT_EXECUTE bit, which only affects readx, so I added a
readx.in.read_for_execute flag instead.
(This used to be commit b78abbbce6)
a union smb_file, to abtract
- const char *path fot qpathinfo and setpathinfo
- uint16_t fnum for SMB
- smb2_handle handle for SMB2
the idea is to later add a struct ntvfs_handle *ntvfs
so that the ntvfs subsystem don't need to know the difference between SMB and SMB2
metze
(This used to be commit 2ef3f59709)
sent me arrived on time... :-).
Refactor this code to make it comprehensible. Tested
against W2K3 SP 1 and W2K SP 4. Test 19 is different
from what I thought. Turns out delete on close on
"open" of a directory (not create) does have an
effect - even if not reported in the flag bit.
trige please test against Vista (my XP box is
refusing to serve at the moment - have to reinstall).
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit 2b708e2618)
Jeremy, to run this against Samba3 at all you need to insert a "goto line 957"
in line 548. Without this we fail some tests before # 16 and bail out.
While looking at it, you wanted to fix the directory-based ones a while
ago.... :-))
Volker
(This used to be commit 45cd224102)
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 4527815a0a)
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 a58ea6b385)
Creating a file in a directory with delete-on-close set returns
DELETE_PENDING, and trying to set the flag on a non-empty directory returns
DIRECTORY_NOT_EMPTY.
Volker
(This used to be commit 5680f34778)
A delete-on-close deleted file is still around while open on another fd. But
only for findfirst, not for qpathinfo :-)
Volker
(This used to be commit dbc7a1a978)
The biggest change was fixing the RAW-CONTEXT test. It was forcing
capabilities to zero in an attempt to not negotiated extended
security, but as a side effect it was forcing negotiation of dos error
codes. This confused the hell out of the test code!
Also fixed a bunch of places incorrectly using NT_STATUS_V() instead
of NT_STATUS_EQUAL() and several places that had the wrong dos status
codes
(This used to be commit 0b22744f40)
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 2301a4b38a)
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 9db6c79e90)
- removed the u32 hack in events.c as I think this was only needed as
tdb.h defines u32. Metze, can you check that this hack is indeed no
longer needed on your suse system?
(This used to be commit 6f79432fe6)
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 5e8fd5f701)
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 080d0518bc)
talloc_size() or talloc_array_p() where appropriate.
also fixed a memory leak in pvfs_copy_file() (failed to free a memory
context)
(This used to be commit 89b74b5354)
- 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 e6c81d7c9f)
- change smbcli_read/write to take void * for the buffers to match read(2)/write(2)
all this fixes a lot of gcc-4 warnings
metze
(This used to be commit b94f92bc66)
This removes the duplicate named SEC_RIGHTS_MAXIMUM_ALLOWED and
SEC_RIGHTS_FULL_CONTROL, which are just other names for
SEC_FLAG_MAXIMUM_ALLOWED and SEC_RIGHTS_FILE_ALL. The latter names
match the new naming conventions in security.idl
Also added names for the generic->specific mappings for files are
directories
(This used to be commit 17a4e0b3ac)
- removed the clitar code. It is unmaintained, and a horribly badly done hack
- removed client.h as it contained mostly unused definitions
- removed the unused clidfs.c code
(This used to be commit 31a7bddbb3)
definitions for security access masks, in security.idl
The previous definitions were inconsistently named, and contained many
duplicate and misleading entries. I kept finding myself tripping up
while using them.
(This used to be commit 01c0fa722f)
write time is sticky, and causes any subsequent writes not to update
the last write time. Added write that extends the file followed by
fnum specific smbflush. It stays the same time :-).
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit a2ea2166dc)
with setfileinfo modifying the write time. I have some ideas on how
to emulate this in the Samba server now but the commented case will
be very hard...
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit c9211d0847)
test that uses 2 connections and queries the time via pathinfo, not fileinfo.
MSDN states : "When writing to a file, the last write time is not fully updated
until all handles used for writing have been closed." - but this is obviously
untrue. W2K3 seems to use a 2 second granularity for this. Next I'll try using
SetFileTime equivalent to see if this takes the same time to take effect.
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit 2e47e241f9)
clear what the correct behaviour is for delayed stat info update.
- use a common torture_setup_dir() function for setting up a test
directory in torture tests.
(This used to be commit f7fb34715b)
waiting for a chkpath response
- fixed open async send in BASE-DISCONNECT
with these changes BASE-DISCONNECT crashes Samba4, as it was designed
to do. I'll work on a fix :)
(This used to be commit 25e0138464)
parsing, so that module init can take account of lp_ parms (thats
why gensec:krb5=no wasn't working)
- added a BASE-DISCONNECT torture test that tests server response to
clients disconnecting with open lock and open requests pending
(This used to be commit 5205f598b8)
this test demonstrates how w2k3 handles the special semantics of
DENY_DOS when 2 opens happen on the same connection. The 2nd open
doesn't actually do a NTFS open, it happens as a secondary reference
to the same internal file handle in the CIFS layer. The evidence is
that the 2nd open shares the same POSITION_INFORMATION field as the
first open, but only for the special DENY_DOS cases that would
normally be refused.
(This used to be commit eeec57d4f6)
- pvfs now passes BASE-OPENATTR
- pvfs also passes the BASE-DEFER_OPEN test, but it is not a well
formed test for regular running so I am removing it from the list of
tests to run in test_posix.sh (the test is covered better by RAW-MUX
anyway)
(This used to be commit cb76bd218e)
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 0d51511d40)
- added new tests BASE-NTDENY1 and BASE-NTDENY2. These are the
ntcreatex equivalents of the BASE-DENY1 and BASE-DENY2
tests. Unfortunately, with ntcreatex there are 4 million combination
and trying each one takes 1 second, so randomised testing is the
only choice. The BASE-DENY1 test can operate in parallel with
hundreds of connections, speeding things up a bit (as most time is
spent waiting 1 second for a sharing violation to come back)
(This used to be commit b95493d3d1)
them properly (they are difficult to do in an async fashion).
By choosing trans.in.max_data to fix in the negotiated buffer size a
server won't send us multi-part replies.
I notice that windows seems to avoid them too :)
(This used to be commit e23edf762c)
This adds a pvfs_wait_message() routine which uses the new messaging
system, event timers and talloc destructors to give a nice generic
async event handling system with a easy to use interface. The
extensions to pvfs_lock.c are based on calls to pvfs_wait_message()
routines.
We now pass all of our smbtorture locking tests, although while
writing this code I have thought of some additonal tests that should
be added, particularly for lock cancel operations. I'll work on that
soon.
This commit also extends the smbtorture lock tests to test the rather
weird 0xEEFFFFFF locking semantics that I have discovered in
win2003. Win2003 treats the 0xEEFFFFFF boundary as special, and will
give different error codes on either side of it. Locks on both sides
are allowed, the only difference is which error code is given when a
lock is denied. Anyone like to hazard a guess as to why? It has
me stumped.
(This used to be commit 4395c0557a)
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 814881f0e5)
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 c315d6ac1c)
The intial motivation for this commit was to merge in some of the
bugfixes present in Samba3's chrcnv and string handling code into
Samba4. However, along the way I found a lot of unused functions, and
decided to do a bit more...
The strlen_m code now does not use a fixed buffer, but more work is
needed to finish off other functions in str_util.c. These fixed
length buffers hav caused very nasty, hard to chase down bugs at some
sites.
The strupper_m() function has a strupper_talloc() to replace it (we
need to go around and fix more uses, but it's a start). Use of these
new functions will avoid bugs where the upper or lowercase version of
a string is a different length.
I have removed the push_*_allocate functions, which are replaced by
calls to push_*_talloc. Likewise, pstring and other 'fixed length'
wrappers are removed, where possible.
I have removed the first ('base pointer') argument, used by push_ucs2,
as the Samba4 way of doing things ensures that this is always on an
even boundary anyway. (It was used in only one place, in any case).
(This used to be commit dfecb01506)
I had previously thought this was unnecessary, as windows doesn't use
standards compliant UTF-16, and for filesystem operations treats bytes
as UCS-2, but Bjoern Jacke has pointed out to me that this means we
don't correctly store extended UTF-16 characters as UTF-8 on
disk. This can be seen with (for example) the gothic characters with
codepoints above 64k.
This commit also adds a LOCAL-ICONV torture test that tests the first
1 million codepoints against the system iconv library, and tests 5
million random UTF-16LE buffers for identical error handling to the
system iconv library.
the lib/iconv.c changes need backporting to samba3
(This used to be commit 756f28ac95)
Up to now the client code has had an async API, and operated
asynchronously at the packet level, but was not truly async in that it
assumed that it could always write to the socket and when a partial
packet came in that it could block waiting for the rest of the packet.
This change makes the SMB client library full async, by adding a
separate outgoing packet queue, using non-blocking socket IO and
having a input buffer that can fill asynchonously until the full
packet has arrived.
The main complexity was in dealing with the events structure when
using the CIFS proxy backend. In that case the same events structure
needs to be used in both the client library and the main smbd server,
so that when the client library is waiting for a reply that the main
server keeps processing packets. This required some changes in the
events library code.
Next step is to make the generated rpc client code use these new
capabilities.
(This used to be commit 96bf4da3ed)
This has found some signing errors in the Samba3.0 implementation
of the deferred open code. Still working on these...
Jeremy
(This used to be commit 0068cb12ef)
- added a CHARSET set of tests, which determines how the server deals
with some specific charset issues related to UTF-16
support. Interestingly, Samba3 already passes all but one of these
tests, because our incorrect UCS-2 and UTF-8 implementations where we
don't check the validity of characters actually matches what Windows
does! This means that adding UTF-16 support to Samba is going to be
_much_ easier than we expected.
(This used to be commit c8497a4236)