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Except for a 'void *' vs. 'uint8_t *'.
As a first step let make_unix_date() call pull_dos_date(),
so that we he the logic only once. We can fix the callers
later.
metze
Except for a 'void *' vs. 'uint8_t *'.
As a first step let make_unix_date() call pull_dos_date(),
so that we he the logic only once. We can fix the callers
later.
metze
Except for a 'void *' vs. 'uint8_t *'.
As a first step let make_unix_date() call pull_dos_date(),
so that we he the logic only once. We can fix the callers
later.
metze
in the "user.DOSATTRIB" EA. From the docs:
In Samba 3.5.0 and above the "user.DOSATTRIB" extended attribute has been extended to store
the create time for a file as well as the DOS attributes. This is done in a backwards compatible
way so files created by Samba 3.5.0 and above can still have the DOS attribute read from this
extended attribute by earlier versions of Samba, but they will not be able to read the create
time stored there. Storing the create time separately from the normal filesystem meta-data
allows Samba to faithfully reproduce NTFS semantics on top of a POSIX filesystem.
Passes make test but will need more testing.
Jeremy.
On filesystems that can't store less than one second timestamps,
round the incoming timestamp set requests so the client can't discover
that a time set request has been truncated by the filesystem.
Needs backporting to 3.4, 3.3, 3.2 and (even) 3.0.
Jeremy
This patch introduces
struct stat_ex {
dev_t st_ex_dev;
ino_t st_ex_ino;
mode_t st_ex_mode;
nlink_t st_ex_nlink;
uid_t st_ex_uid;
gid_t st_ex_gid;
dev_t st_ex_rdev;
off_t st_ex_size;
struct timespec st_ex_atime;
struct timespec st_ex_mtime;
struct timespec st_ex_ctime;
struct timespec st_ex_btime; /* birthtime */
blksize_t st_ex_blksize;
blkcnt_t st_ex_blocks;
};
typedef struct stat_ex SMB_STRUCT_STAT;
It is really large because due to the friendly libc headers playing macro
tricks with fields like st_ino, so I renamed them to st_ex_xxx.
Why this change? To support birthtime, we already have quite a few #ifdef's at
places where it does not really belong. With a stat struct that we control, we
can consolidate the nanosecond timestamps and the birthtime deep in the VFS
stat calls.
At this moment it is triggered by a request to support the birthtime field for
GPFS. GPFS does not extend the system level struct stat, but instead has a
separate call that gets us the additional information beyond posix. Without
being able to do that within the VFS stat calls, that support would have to be
scattered around the main smbd code.
It will very likely break all the onefs modules, but I think the changes will
be reasonably easy to do.
AC_CHECK_MEMBERS should be a sufficient check, there's no need to do manual
compile tests. We can also assume that we have ctime and atime members when we
have the mtime member.
current_timestring used to return a string talloced to talloc_tos().
When called by DEBUG from a TALLOC_FREE, this produced messages
"no talloc stackframe around, leaking memory". For example when
used from net conf.
This also adds a temporary talloc context to alloc_sub_basic().
For this purpose, the exit strategy is slightly altered: a common
exit point is used for success and failure.
Michael
(This used to be commit 16b5800d4e)
bugs in various places whilst doing this (places that assumed
BOOL == int). I also need to fix the Samba4 pidl generation
(next checkin).
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit f35a266b3c)