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dcerpc_interface_table struct rather then a tuple of interface
name, UUID and version.
This removes the requirement for having a global list of DCE/RPC interfaces,
except for these parts of the code that use that list explicitly
(ndrdump and the scanner torture test).
This should also allow us to remove the hack that put the authservice parameter
in the dcerpc_binding struct as it can now be read directly from
dcerpc_interface_table.
I will now modify some of these functions to take a dcerpc_syntax_id
structure rather then a full dcerpc_interface_table.
disabled. The main change is to turn off spnego, which cannot work at
all without nt status codes (w2k3 gives a ERRHRD:ERRgeneral error when
you try)
I also modified NT_STATUS_EQUAL() to allow for nt->dos code equality,
but only when nt status codes are disabled in smb.conf. That keeps all
the existing torture code working, while still allowing us to
correctly catch the cases where forced dos error codes are needed
The dos->ntstatus mapping table has been removed completely, as it
doesn't really make sense, is impossible to get right, and with the
new dos status handling isn't needed. When matching a nt status code
to a dos status code it makes far more sense to map from the nt code
to the dos code and compare, rather than the reverse, as the nt->dos
mapping is what windows has to do internally, so there really is a
valid mapping table.
with 'nt status support' option.
- make nt_errstr() display nice strings for dos status codes encoded
using NT_STATUS_DOS()
- no longer map between dos and nt status codes in the client library,
instead return using NT_STATUS_DOS()
- fixed the RAW-CONTEXT test to look for
NT_STATUS_DOS(ERRSRV, ERRbaduid) instead of NT_STATUS_INVALID_HANDLE
- this involved changing the buffer handling in the ldap server quite a
lot, as it didn't handle partial packets at all
- removed completely bogus asn1_object_length() function. You can't
do that with BER/DER
event_context for the socket_connect() call, so that when things that
use dcerpc are running alongside anything else it doesn't block the
whole process during a connect.
Then of course I needed to change any code that created a dcerpc
connection (such as the auth code) to also take an event context, and
anything that called that and so on .... thus the size of the patch.
There were 3 places where I punted:
- abartlet wanted me to add a gensec_set_event_context() call
instead of adding it to the gensec init calls. Andrew, my
apologies for not doing this. I didn't do it as adding a new
parameter allowed me to catch all the callers with the
compiler. Now that its done, we could go back and use
gensec_set_event_context()
- the ejs code calls auth initialisation, which means it should pass
in the event context from the web server. I punted on that. Needs fixing.
- I used a NULL event context in dcom_get_pipe(). This is equivalent
to what we did already, but should be fixed to use a callers event
context. Jelmer, can you think of a clean way to do that?
I also cleaned up a couple of things:
- libnet_context_destroy() makes no sense. I removed it.
- removed some unused vars in various places
- hooked into events system, so requests can be truly async and won't
interfere with other processing happening at the same time
- uses NTSTATUS codes for errors (previously errors were mostly
ignored). In a similar fashion to the DOS error handling, I have
reserved a range of the NTSTATUS code 32 bit space for LDAP error
codes, so a function can return a LDAP error code in a NTSTATUS
- much cleaner packet handling
instead of a search expression. This allows our ldap server to pass
its ASN.1 parsed search expressions straight to ldb, instead of going
via strings.
- updated all the ldb modules code to handle the new interface
- got rid of the separate ldb_parse.h now that the ldb_parse
structures are exposed externally
- moved to C99 structure initialisation in ldb
- switched ldap server to using ldb_search_bytree()
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.
asn1-tied-to-blocking-sockets code into the ldap client and torture
suite, and out of the generic libs, so nobody else is tempted to use
it for any new code.
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.
socket connections. This was complicated by a few factors:
- it meant moving the event context from clitransport to clisocket,
so lots of structures changed
- we need to asynchronously handle connection to lists of port
numbers, not just one port number. The code internally tries each
port in the list in turn, without ever blocking
- the man page on how connect() is supposed to work asynchronously
doesn't work in practice (now why doesn't this surprise me?). The
getsockopt() for SOL_ERROR is supposed to retrieve the error, but
in fact the next (unrelated) connect() call on the same socket also
gets an error, though not the right error. To work around this I
need to tear down the whole socket between each attempted port. I
hate posix.
Note that clisocket.c still does a blocking name resolution call in
smbcli_sock_connect_byname(). That will be fixed when we add the async
NBT resolution code.
Also note that I arranged things so that every SMB connection is now
async internally, so using plain smbclient or smbtorture tests all the
async features of this new code.
- there is no alter_nak or alter_ack packet, its all done in an
alter_response
- auto-allocated the contex_ids
- tried to fix up the dcom code to work again with
alter_context. Jelmer, please take a look :)
dcerpc_alter_context and multiple context_ids in the dcerpc client
library.
This stage does the following:
- split "struct dcerpc_pipe" into two parts, the main part being "struct dcerpc_connection", which
contains all the parts not dependent on the context, and "struct dcerpc_pipe" which has
the context dependent part. This is similar to the layering in libcli_*() for SMB
- disable the current dcerpc_alter code. I've used a #warning until i
get the 2nd phase finished. I don't know how portable #warning is, but
it won't be long before I add full alter context support anyway, so it won't last long
- cleanup the allocation of dcerpc_pipe structures. The previous code
was quite awkward.
- added #if TALLOC_DEPRECATED around the _p functions
- fixes the code that broke from the above
while doing this I fixed quite a number of places that were
incorrectly using the non type-safe talloc functions to use the type
safe ones. Some were even doing multiplies for array allocation, which
is potentially unsafe.