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We need to migrate all pathname based VFS calls to use a struct
to finish modernising the VFS with extra timestamp and flags parameters.
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Allison <jra@samba.org>
Reviewed-by: Ralph Boehme <slow@samba.org>
We need to migrate all pathname based VFS calls to use a struct
to finish modernising the VFS with extra timestamp and flags parameters.
Requires a few extra cleanups in calling code.
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Allison <jra@samba.org>
Reviewed-by: Ralph Boehme <slow@samba.org>
We need to migrate all pathname based VFS calls to use a struct
to finish modernising the VFS with extra timestamp and flags parameters.
Signed-off-by: Jeremy Allison <jra@samba.org>
Reviewed-by: Ralph Boehme <slow@samba.org>
This avoids issues with whatever sys.platform may return, fixes the
order of arguments to the CHECK_FUNCS_IN call, and only runs after
Linux-style POSIX ACL detection fails.
Andrew Bartlett
Change-Id: I930dff1e03c1cd1ceb8f3a35823ceb805694b66a
Signed-off-by: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
Reviewed-by: David Disseldorp <ddiss@samba.org>
Tested-by: Thomas Schulz <schulz@adi.com>
This changes from allocation on NULL to allocation on the supplied
memory context.
Currently that supplied context is talloc_tos() at the the final consumer of
the ACL.
Andrew Bartlett
The acl element is changed to be a talloc child, and is no longer one element
longer than requested by virtue of the acl[1] base pointer.
This also avoids one of the few remaining cases of over-allocation of a structure.
Andrew Bartlett
This makes it possible to print the entire string again.
Andrew Bartlett
Autobuild-User: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
Autobuild-Date: Wed May 9 06:07:06 CEST 2012 on sn-devel-104
modularizes our interface into the special posix API used on
the system. Without this patch the specific API flavor is
determined at compile time, something which severely limits
usability on systems with more than one file system. Our
first targets are AIX with its JFS and JFS2 APIs, at a later
stage also GPFS. But it's certainly not limited to IBM
stuff, this abstraction is also necessary for anything that
copes with NFSv4 ACLs. For this we will check in handling
very soon.
Major contributions can be found in the copyright notices as
well as the checkin log of the vl-posixacls branch. The
final merge to 3_0 post-3.0.23 was done by Peter Somogyi
<psomogyi@gamax.hu>
(This used to be commit ca0c73f281)
realloc can return NULL in one of two cases - (1) the realloc failed,
(2) realloc succeeded but the new size requested was zero, in which
case this is identical to a free() call.
The error paths dealing with these two cases should be different,
but mostly weren't. Secondly the standard idiom for dealing with
realloc when you know the new size is non-zero is the following :
tmp = realloc(p, size);
if (!tmp) {
SAFE_FREE(p);
return error;
} else {
p = tmp;
}
However, there were *many* *many* places in Samba where we were
using the old (broken) idiom of :
p = realloc(p, size)
if (!p) {
return error;
}
which will leak the memory pointed to by p on realloc fail.
This commit (hopefully) fixes all these cases by moving to
a standard idiom of :
p = SMB_REALLOC(p, size)
if (!p) {
return error;
}
Where if the realloc returns null due to the realloc failing
or size == 0 we *guarentee* that the storage pointed to by p
has been freed. This allows me to remove a lot of code that
was dealing with the standard (more verbose) method that required
a tmp pointer. This is almost always what you want. When a
realloc fails you never usually want the old memory, you
want to free it and get into your error processing asap.
For the 11 remaining cases where we really do need to keep the
old pointer I have invented the new macro SMB_REALLOC_KEEP_OLD_ON_ERROR,
which can be used as follows :
tmp = SMB_REALLOC_KEEP_OLD_ON_ERROR(p, size);
if (!tmp) {
SAFE_FREE(p);
return error;
} else {
p = tmp;
}
SMB_REALLOC_KEEP_OLD_ON_ERROR guarentees never to free the
pointer p, even on size == 0 or realloc fail. All this is
done by a hidden extra argument to Realloc(), BOOL free_old_on_error
which is set appropriately by the SMB_REALLOC and SMB_REALLOC_KEEP_OLD_ON_ERROR
macros (and their array counterparts).
It remains to be seen what this will do to our Coverity bug count :-).
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit 1d710d06a2)
changed some code to exploit the fact that Realloc(NULL, size) == malloc(size)
fixed some possible mem leaks, or seg faults.
thanks to andreas moroder (mallocs not checked in client/client.c, client/smbumount.c)
(This used to be commit 7f33c01688)
This commit gets rid of all our old codepage handling and replaces it with
iconv. All internal strings in Samba are now in "unix" charset, which may
be multi-byte. See internals.doc and my posting to samba-technical for
a more complete explanation.
(This used to be commit debb471267)