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in the "user.DOSATTRIB" EA. From the docs:
In Samba 3.5.0 and above the "user.DOSATTRIB" extended attribute has been extended to store
the create time for a file as well as the DOS attributes. This is done in a backwards compatible
way so files created by Samba 3.5.0 and above can still have the DOS attribute read from this
extended attribute by earlier versions of Samba, but they will not be able to read the create
time stored there. Storing the create time separately from the normal filesystem meta-data
allows Samba to faithfully reproduce NTFS semantics on top of a POSIX filesystem.
Passes make test but will need more testing.
Jeremy.
Every caller that expects to receive something needs to check if enough was
sent. Make this check mandatory for everyone.
Yes, this makes the parameter list for cli_trans a bit silly, but that's just
the way it is: A silly protocol request :-)
While there, convert some _done functions to tevent_req_simple_finish_ntstatus.
We were treating a file time set on close as a sticky write time set, and I don't
think it is. I will add a torture test later to RAW-CLOSE to confirm this.
Jeremy.
"Normal" non truncate writes always cause the timestamp to
be set on close. Once a close is done on a handle this can
reset the sticky write time to current time also.
Updated smbtorture4 confirms this.
Jeremy.
When something in the cluster blocks, it can happen that we wait indefinitely
long for ctdb, just adding to the blocking condition. In theory, nothing should
block, but as someone said "In practice the difference between theory and
practice is larger than in theory". This adds a timeout parameter in seconds,
after which we stop waiting for ctdb and panic.
smbd just crashed on me: In a debug message I called a routine preparing a
string that itself used debug_ctx. The outer routine also used it after the
inner routine had returned. It was still referencing the talloc context
that the outer debug_ctx() had given us, which the inner DEBUG had already
freed.