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major changes include:
- added NSTATUS type
- added automatic mapping between dos and nt error codes
- changed all ERROR() calls to ERROR_DOS() and many to ERROR_NT()
these calls auto-translate to the client error code system
- got rid of the cached error code and the writebmpx code
We eventually will need to also:
- get rid of BOOL, so we don't lose error info
- replace all ERROR_DOS() calls with ERROR_NT() calls
but that is too much for one night
link from Seattle is having problems.
I've added 3 things here to work on the fcntl spin
problem.
1). Check *all* tdb return codes... :-).
2). If we're asking ourselves to break an oplock, and we can't
find a fsp pointer that matches the entry, this is a *logic bug*
and we should abort and panic so someone with gdb can pick up
the pieces.
3). After we've broken an oplock, ensure that the entry itself
has been removed, and if not remove it ourselves. This should
not be neccessary in a correctly working environmen,t, but will
provide an added layer of robustness in error situations.
4). I hate german keyboards :-) :-).
Jeremy.
break code path that was invalid (ie. we were assuming
we could infer a non-levelII oplock when such an oplock
was detected - this may no longer be valid once we've
processed the break process dealing with the break will
change the state of it anyway.
This prevents the state where we get the following packet
trace :
client server
NTcreate ->
<- NTcreate resp
NTcreate ->
<- break to level II
ok - broken ->
<- break to none
Thanks to Alan Romeril for providing the trace that allowed
me to track this down.
Jeremy.
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.
fact that an NT client can open a file for O_RDONLY,
but set the create disposition to FILE_EXISTS_TRUNCATE.
If the client *can* write to the file, then it expects to
truncate the file, even though it is opening for readonly.
Quicken uses this stupid trick in backup file creation...
Thanks *greatly* to "David W. Chapman Jr." <dwcjr@inethouston.net>
for helping track this one down. It didn't bite us in 2.0.x
as we always opened files read-write in that release.
Jeremy.
configure.in:
include/config.h.in:
include/profile.h:
smbd/vfs-wrap.c:
smbd/vfs.c:
Added fchmod and fchown to VFS (sorry Gerald - but we needed them anyway).
smbd/dosmode.c:
smbd/files.c:
printing/printfsp.c:
smbd/close.c:
smbd/open.c:
Fixed "dos filemode" correctly so there are no race conditions. Forces test
of open of file O_WRONLY before allowing fchmod as root. Afterwards, calls
standard close function that preserves POSIX locks due to POSIX-me-harder
braindamage. :-). Andrew please review this code.
Also - in removing the tmpdir param in smbrun an extra NULL parameter
was missed in each print_run_command() call (which is a varargs fn.).
Now fixed.
Jeremy.
when copying to a full disk problem, I discovered that we were not allowing
the delete on close flag to be set properly, this led to other things, and
after investigation of the proper delete on close semantics and their relationship
to the file_share_delete flag I discovered there were some cases where we
weren't doing the deny modes properly. And this after only 5 years working
on them..... :-) :-).
So here's the latest attempt. I realised the delete on close flag needs to
be set across all smbds with a dev/ino pair open - in addition, the delete
on close flag, allow share delete and delete access requested all need to
be stored in the share mode tdb.
The "delete_on_close" entry in the fsp struct is now redundant and should
really be removed. This may also mean we can get rid of the "iterate_fsp"
calls that I didn't like adding in the first place. Whilst doing this patch,
I also discovered we needed to do the se_map_generic() call for file opens
and POSIX ACL mapping, so I added that also.
This code, although ugly, now passes the deny mode torture tests plus the
delete on close tests I added. I do need to add one more multiple connection
delete on close test to make sure I got the semantics exactly right, plus we
should also (as Andrew suggested) move to random testing here.
The good news is that NT should now correctly delete the file on disk
full error when copying to a disk :-).
Jeremy.
a choice of invalid share mode and access denied. We must return the
access denied by preference, but also remember to break the oplocks...
This is needed for multi-user MS-Access.
Jeremy.
I hope not). If you encounter strange file-serving behavior after this
patch then back it out. I analysed our stat() usage and realised we
were doing approx. 3 stat calls per open, and 2 per getattr/setattr.
This patch should fix all that. It causes the stat struct returned
from unix_convert() (which now *must* be passed a valid SMB_STRUCT_STAT
pointer) to be passed through into the open code. This should prevent
the multiple stats that were being done so as not to violate layer
encapsulation in the API's.
Herb - if you could run a NetBench test with this code and do a
padc/par syscall test and also run with the current 2.2.0 code
and test the padc/par syscalls I'd appreciate it - you should
find the number of stat calls reduced - not sure by how much.
The patch depends on unix_convert() actually finding the file
and returning a stat struct, or returning a zero'd out stat
struct if the file didn't exist. I believe we can guarentee this
to be the case - I just wasn't confident enough to make this
an assertion before.
Ok ok - I did write this whilst at the Miami conference.....
sometimes you get a little free time at these things :-).
Jeremy.
a conn struct depending on the call.
We need this to have a clean NT ACL call interface.
This will break any existing VFS libraries (that's why this is pre-release
code).
Andrew gets credit for this one :-) :-).
In addition - added Herb's WITH_PROFILE changes - Herb - please examine
the changes I've made to the smbd/reply.c code you added. The original
code was very ugly and I have replaced it with a
START_PROFILE(x)/END_PROFILE(x) pair using the preprocessor.
Please check this compiles ok with the --with-profile switch.
Jeremy.
fd_close now calls fd_close_posix() directly.
set_posix_lock/release_posix_lock() now handle the reference counting.
More changes due when this gets moved to the file locking/posix.c
Jeremy.
When a file is being closed, once it passes the fnum and tid tests then
the locking context should be ignored when removing all locks. This is
what is done in the brl close case, but when you have outstanding
POSIX locks, then you cannot remove all the brl locks in one go, you
have to get the lock list and call do_unlock individually. As this
uses global_smbpid as the locking context, you need to make sure
that this is set correctly for the specific lock being removed. I
now do this by storing the smbpid in each entry in the unlock list returned from
the query call. I removed the smbpid from fsp (not needed) and
things seem ok (even with the stupid smbpid tricks that smbtorture plays :-).
Jeremy.
smbpid used when a file was opened in the files_struct. Else we use
the wrong global_smbpid when we are closing the file and trying to
remove the brl locks - this causes the brl locks to be left when the
file is closed as the samba_context check fails.
Jeremy.
removed from the smbd/open.c code.
We now use a dlink list of structures indexed by dev/inode to store
all pending fd's for close. This could be rewritten to use lib/hash.c
if this is discovered to be too slow in use.
Andrew, please take a look and let me know if this is what you
had in mind.
Jeremy.
test. Was miscounting posix locks, plus was not taking into account
the case where other_fsp == fsp in the 'move locks' case. DOH ! This
code will be re-written anyway :-).
Jeremy.
open on the same dev/inode pair with existing POSIX locks.
This is done at the smbd/open layer, so smbd just calls fd_close() and
the transfer of any open fd's is done under the covers of fd_close().
When an fsp is closed and no other fsp's open on the same dev/inode
pair have existing POSIX locks then all fd's associated with this fsp
are closed.
Now only the hard part of doing the POSIX range unlock code when read
locks overlap remains for full POSIX/SMB lock integration....
Jeremy.
fsp->open is no longer needed (if an fsp pointer is valid, then it's open :-).
NB for Luke, this patch also did not apply to TNG. TNG is not yet
identical w.r.t file serving with HEAD. This makes it impossible for
me to help maintain TNG. Please fix asap.
lib/substitute.c: Removed unused variable (pidstr).
Jeremy.
new open mechanism Andrew & I discussed.
config.sub:
configure: Included the QNX patch.
include/vfs.h:
smbd/vfs-wrap.c:
smbd/vfs.c: Added ftruncate vfs call (needed).
Note that we will also need locking calls in the vfs (to be added).
lib/util_unistr.c:
nmbd/nmbd_processlogon.c: Fix for NT domain logons causing nmbd to core dump.
Also fix for sidsize DOS bug.
locking/locking.c: Check value of ret before using it for memdup.
printing/printing.c: Convert print_fsp_open to return an allocated fsp.
rpc_server/srv_lsa.c: Fix for NT domain logons.
I have removed all use of lp_share_modes() from the code (although I
left the parameter in the table for backwards compatibility). It no longer makes
sense for this to exist.
smbd/close.c: Removed lp_share_modes().
smbd/fileio.c: Fixed parameters to unlock_share_entry call in panic code.
smbd/files.c: Correctly set the unix_ERR_code to ERRnofids on fsp allocation fail.
smbd/nttrans.c:
smbd/reply.c:
smbd/trans2.c: Changed all occurrences of open_file_shared/open_directory/
open_file_stat to return an fsp from the call.
smbd/open.c: Changed all occurrences of open_file_shared/open_directory/
open_file_stat to return an fsp from the call.
In addition I have fixed a long standing race condition in the deny mode
processing w.r.t. two smbd's creating a file. Andrew, please note that
your original idea of using open with O_EXCL in this case would not work
(I went over the races very carefully) and so we must re-check deny modes
*after* the open() call returns. This is because there is a race between
the open with O_EXCL and the lock of the share mode entry. Imagine the
case where the first smbd does the open with O_EXCL and a deny mode of DENY_ALL,
but is pre-empted before it locks the share modes and creates the deny
mode entry for DENY_ALL. A second smbd could then come in with O_RDONLY
and a deny mode of DENY_NONE and the two opens would be allowed.
The *only* way to fix this race is to lock the share modes after the
open and then do the deny mode checks *after* this lock in the case
where the file did not originally exist.
This code will need extensive testing but seems to initially work.
Jeremy.
------------
The following series of commits are for the new tdb based printing
backend. This completely replaces our old printing backend.
Major changes include:
- all print ops are now done in printing/*.c rather than scattered all
over the place
- system job ids are decoupled from SMB job ids
- the lpq parsers don't need to be nearly so smart, they only need to
parse the filename, the status and system job id
- we can store lots more info about a job, including the full job name
- the queue cache control is much better
I also added a new utility routine file_lines_load() that loads a text
file and parses it into lines. This is used in out lpq parsing and I
also want to use it to replace all of our fgets() based code in other
places.
handling to printing/printing.c
most of this was just replacing things like fsp->fd_ptr->fd with fsp->fd
the changes in open.c are quite dramatic. Most of it is removing all
the functions that handled the fd multiplexing
I've finally got the access table code right for the case where the
two opens are on the same connection. It is _incredibly_ complex, but
now all 1296 test cases pass.
I'll be very surprised if anyone by MS and us gets this right at
CIFS2000