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I have created the include/system/ directory, which will contain the
wrappers for the system includes for logical subsystems. So far I have
created include/system/kerberos.h and include/system/network.h, which
contain all the system includes for kerberos code and networking code.
These are the included in subsystems that need kerberos or networking
respectively.
Note that this method avoids the mess of #ifdef HAVE_XXX_H in every C
file, instead each C module includes the include/system/XXX.h file for
the logical system support it needs, and the details are kept isolated
in include/system/
This patch also creates a "struct ipv4_addr" which replaces "struct
in_addr" in our code. That avoids every C file needing to import all
the system networking headers.
(This used to be commit 2e25c71853f8996f73755277e448e7d670810349)
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 c315d6ac1cc40546fde1474702a6d66d07ee13c8)
write_data and read_data, which are inherently blocking operations
- got rid of some old NBT keepalive routines that are not needed
(This used to be commit e73b4ae4e500d3b7ee57e160e0f8b63c99b2542a)
This version does the following:
1) talloc_free(), talloc_realloc() and talloc_steal() lose their
(redundent) first arguments
2) you can use _any_ talloc pointer as a talloc context to allocate
more memory. This allows you to create complex data structures
where the top level structure is the logical parent of the next
level down, and those are the parents of the level below
that. Then destroy either the lot with a single talloc_free() or
destroy any sub-part with a talloc_free() of that part
3) you can name any pointer. Use talloc_named() which is just like
talloc() but takes the printf style name argument as well as the
parent context and the size.
The whole thing ends up being a very simple piece of code, although
some of the pointer walking gets hairy.
So far, I'm just using the new talloc() like the old one. The next
step is to actually take advantage of the new interface
properly. Expect some new commits soon that simplify some common
coding styles in samba4 by using the new talloc().
(This used to be commit e35bb094c52e550b3105dd1638d8d90de71d854f)
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 96bf4da3edc4d64b0f58ef520269f3b385b8da02)
- We can now connect to hosts that follow the SPNEGO RFC, and *do not*
give us their principal name in the mechListMIC.
- The client code now remembers the hostname it connects to
- We now kinit for a user, if there is not valid ticket already
- Re-introduce clock skew compensation
TODO:
- See if the username in the ccache matches the username specified
- Use a private ccache, rather then the global one, for a 'new' kinit
- Determine 'default' usernames.
- The default for Krb5 is the one in the ccache, then $USER
- For NTLMSSP, it's just $USER
Andrew Bartlett
(This used to be commit de5da669397db4ac87c6da08d3533ca3030da2b0)
request (a dead socket). I discovered this when testing against Sun's
PC-NetLink.
cleaned up the naming of some of the samr requests
add IDL and test code for samr_QueryGroupMember(),
samr_SetMemberAttributesOfGroup() and samr_Shutdown(). (actually, I
didn't leave the samr_Shutdown() test in, as its fatal to windows
servers due to doing exactly what it says it does).
(This used to be commit 925bc2622c105dee4ffff809c6c35cd209a839f8)