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This function allows us to connect to samdb as a particular user by
passing in that user's session info.
BUG: https://bugzilla.samba.org/show_bug.cgi?id=14833
Signed-off-by: Joseph Sutton <josephsutton@catalyst.net.nz>
Reviewed-by: Douglas Bagnall <douglas.bagnall@catalyst.net.nz>
dcesrv_irpc_forward_rpc_call() can be used to forward an arbitrary RPC
request to another task in Samba4, with the return being handled
asynchronously.
This is useful for forwarding DRS requests to the repl or kcc tasks
this stage does the following:
- simplifies the dcerpc_handle handling, and all the callers of it
- split out the context_id depenent state into a linked list of established contexts
- fixed some talloc handling in several rpc servers that i noticed while doing the above
(This used to be commit fde042b3fc)
samr_CreateUser2(), samr_LookupNames(), samr_OpenUser(),
and samr_DeleteUser()
this uses a user template in the SAM db, of objectclass "userTemplate"
and dn CN=TemplateUser,CN=Templates,$BASEDN. Using a template allows
an admin to add any default user attributes that they might want to
the user template and all new users will receive those attributes.
(This used to be commit 10b6e0011b)
servers. Previously the server pipe code needed to return the RPC
level status (nearly always "OK") and separately set the function call
return using r->out.result. All the programmers writing servers
(metze, jelmer and me) were often getting this wrong, by doing things
like "return NT_STATUS_NO_MEMORY" which was really quite meaningless
as there is no code like that at the dcerpc level.
I have now modified pidl to generate the necessary boilerplate so that
just returning the status you want from the function will work. So for
a NTSTATUS function you return NT_STATUS_XXX and from a WERROR
function you return WERR_XXX. If you really want to generate a DCERPC
level fault rather than just a return value in your function then you
should use the DCESRV_FAULT() macro which will correctly generate a
fault for you.
As a side effect, this also adds automatic type checking of all of our
server side rpc functions, which was impossible with the old API. When
I changed the API I found and fixed quite a few functions with the
wrong type information, so this is definately useful.
I have also changed the server side template generation to generate a
DCERPC "operation range error" by default when you have not yet filled
in a server side function. This allows us to correctly implement
functions in any order in our rpc pipe servers and give the client the
right information about the fault.
(This used to be commit a4df5c7cf8)