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This made Python 2's print behave like Python 3's print().
In some cases, where we had:
from __future__ import print_function
"""Intended module documentation..."""
this will have the side effect of making the intended module documentation
work as the actual module documentation (i.e. becoming __doc__), because
it is once again the first statement in the module.
Signed-off-by: Douglas Bagnall <douglas.bagnall@catalyst.net.nz>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
This changes script/attr_count_read to take the samba private directory
as an argument and load all the databases at once, printing them as
one big table. It isn't extremely clear what it all means, but it
*tries* to tell you.
With --plot, it will attempt to load matplotlib and plot the number of
requested attributes against the number returned, with colour
of each point indicating its relative frequency. It is a scatterplot
that wants to be a heatmap.
With --no-casefold, you can get an extra confusing table where,
for instance, something repeatedly asks for "attributeId" which is not
accounted for, while in a completely different row an unrequested
"attributeID" is found many times over.
Signed-off-by: Douglas Bagnall <douglas.bagnall@catalyst.net.nz>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
Autobuild-User(master): Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
Autobuild-Date(master): Wed May 1 06:46:36 UTC 2019 on sn-devel-184
The dsdb module stack can turn a simple search request into a
complicated tree of sub-queries that include attributes not originally
asked for and excluding those that were. The corresponding replies
might contain unrequested attributes or (for good reasons, according
to some module) hide requested ones. The entire stack is there to
meddle and that is what is does. Except *this* module. It just counts.
To understand dsdb performance it helps to have some idea what
requests and replies are flying too and fro. This module, when
inserted anywhere in the stack, counts the requests and replies
passing through and the attributes they contain. This data is stored
in on-disk tdbs in the private/debug directory.
The module is not loaded by default. To load it you need to patch the
source4/dsdb/samdb/ldb_modules/samba_dsdb.c and put "count_attrs"
somewhere in the module lists in the samba_dsdb_init() function. For
example, to examine the traffic between repl_meta_data and
group_audit_log, you would do something like this around line 316:
"subtree_delete",
"repl_meta_data",
+ "count_attrs",
"group_audit_log",
"encrypted_secrets",
and recompile. Samba will then write to a number of tdb files in the
debug directory as requests and replies pass through. A simple script
is included to read these files. Doing this:
./script/attr_count_read st/ad_dc/private/debug/debug/attr_counts_not_found.tdb
will print a table showing how often various attritbutes were
requested but not found (from the point of view of the module).
A more sophisticated version of the script is coming in the next
commit, but this one is included first because in its simplicity it
documents the storage format reasonably well. The tdb keys are
attribute names, and the values are uint32_t in machine native order.
When the module is included in the stack there will be a very small
decrease in performance.
Signed-off-by: Douglas Bagnall <douglas.bagnall@catalyst.net.nz>
Reviewed-by: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>