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We need to pass the 'secure channel type' to the NETLOGON layer, which
must match the account type.
(Yes, jelmer objects to this inclusion of the kitchen sink ;-)
Andrew Bartlett
puts support for it into popt_common, adds a few utility functions
(in lib/credentials.c) and the callback functions for the command-line
(lib/cmdline/credentials.c). Comments are welcome :-)
DCOM paper in lorikeet. This is the result of 1.5 months work (mainly
figuring out how things *really* work) at the end of 2004.
In general:
- Clearer distinction between COM and DCOM. DCOM is now merely
the glue between DCE/RPC+ORPC and COM. COM can also work without
DCOM now. This makes the code a lot clearer.
- Clearer distinction between NDR and DCOM. Before, NDR had a couple of
"if"s to cope with DCOM, which are now gone.
- Use "real" arguments rather then structures for function arguments in
COM, mainly because most of these calls are local so packing/unpacking
data for every call is too much overhead (both speed- and code-wise)
- Support several mechanisms to load class objects:
- from memory (e.g. part of the current executable, registered at start-up)
- from shared object files
- remotely
- Most things are now also named COM rather then DCOM because that's what it
really is. After an object is created, it no longer matters whether it
was created locally or remotely.
There is a very simple example class that contains
both a class factory and a class that implements the IStream interface.
It can be tested (locally only, remotely is broken at the moment)
by running the COM-SIMPLE smbtorture test.
Still to-do:
- Autogenerate parts of the class implementation code (using the coclass definitions in IDL)
- Test server-side
- Implement some of the common classes, add definitions for common interfaces.
Add #include "system/time.h" back (it was removed in some of these
places because the definitions were provided by <sys/time.h> on tridge's
platform.)
Andrew Bartlett
decide to reinstate the mutex code for the threads process model, I'd
like to do it a little differently. At least this gets it out of
includes.h for now.
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.
- 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?
the header, and defined on the wire as a 4 byte network byte order
IP. This means the calling code doesn't have to worry about network
byte order conversions.
servers in smbd. The old code still contained a fairly bit of legacy
from the time when smbd was only handling SMB connection. The new code
gets rid of all of the smb_server specific code in smbd/, and creates
a much simpler infrastructures for new server code.
Major changes include:
- simplified the process model code a lot.
- got rid of the top level server and service structures
completely. The top level context is now the event_context. This
got rid of service.h and server.h completely (they were the most
confusing parts of the old code)
- added service_stream.[ch] for the helper functions that are
specific to stream type services (services that handle streams, and
use a logically separate process per connection)
- got rid of the builtin idle_handler code in the service logic, as
none of the servers were using it, and it can easily be handled by
a server in future by adding its own timed_event to the event
context.
- fixed some major memory leaks in the rpc server code.
- added registration of servers, rather than hard coding our list of
possible servers. This allows for servers as modules in the future.
- temporarily disabled the winbind code until I add the helper
functions for that type of server
- added error checking on service startup. If a configured server
fails to startup then smbd doesn't startup.
- cleaned up the command line handling in smbd, removing unused options
files don't need to match the type names in the generated headers
- with this type mapping we no longer need definitions for the
deprecated "int32", "uint8" etc form of types. We can now force
everyone to use the standard types int32_t, uint8_t etc.
- fixed all the code that used the deprecated types
- converted the IDL types "int64" and "uint64" to "dlong" and
"udlong". These are the 4 byte aligned 64 bit integers that
Microsoft internally define as two 32 bit integers in a
structure. After discussions with Ronnie Sahlberg we decided that
calling these "int64" was confusing, as it implied a true 8 byte
aligned type
- fixed all the cases where we incorrectly used things like
"NTTIME_hyper" in our C code. The generated API now uses a NTTIME for
those. The fact that it is hyper-aligned on the wire is not relevant
to the API, and should remain just a IDL property
"distinguishedName" checking in that module is incorrect and should be
removed, but meanwhile, lets not make it slow down the compile of
every other module.
- 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.
- added gcov flags to Makefile.talloc
- expanded talloc testsuite to add a test for realloc with a child ptr
- fixed a bug in talloc_realloc() with realloc of a ptr that has child ptrs
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.
queryfileinfo/setfileinfo logic, so querying/setting a security
descriptor is treated as just another file query/set operation.
This will allow NTVFS backends to see the query/set security
descriptor operations as RAW_FILEINFO_SEC_DESC and
RAW_SFILEINFO_SEC_DESC operations.
- Support for sending over the object UUID in DCERPC calls
- Simple torture test for the DCOM "Simple" object
- Generate extra argument for "object" interfaces in pidl
- Some stubs for common DCOM functions
- tidied up some of the system includes
- moved a few more structures back from misc.idl to netlogon.idl and samr.idl now that pidl
knows about inter-IDL dependencies
- fix rep_inet_ntoa() for IRIX
- lib/signal.c needs system/wait.h
- some systems define a macro "accept", which breaks the lib/socket/ structures.
use fn_ as a prefix for the structure elements to avoid the problem