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They use talloc_tos() internally: hoist that up to the callers, some
of whom don't want to us talloc_tos().
A simple patch, but hits a lot of files.
Signed-off-by: Rusty Russell <rusty@rustcorp.com.au>
Now that we always require a 64 bit off_t, we no longer need SMB_OFF_T.
Andrew Bartlett
Autobuild-User: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
Autobuild-Date: Fri Apr 6 01:47:43 CEST 2012 on sn-devel-104
The performance of these is minimal (these days) and they can return
invalid results when used as part of applications that do not use
sys_fork().
Autobuild-User: Jelmer Vernooij <jelmer@samba.org>
Autobuild-Date: Sat Mar 24 21:55:41 CET 2012 on sn-devel-104
through Get_Pwnam_alloc(), which is the correct wrapper function. We were using
it *some* of the time anyway, so this just makes us properly consistent.
Jeremy.
Autobuild-User: Jeremy Allison <jra@samba.org>
Autobuild-Date: Wed Oct 20 16:02:12 UTC 2010 on sn-devel-104
This will reduce the noise from merges of the rest of the
libcli/security code, without this commit changing what code
is actually used.
This includes (along with other security headers) dom_sid.h and
security_token.h
Andrew Bartlett
Autobuild-User: Andrew Bartlett <abartlet@samba.org>
Autobuild-Date: Tue Oct 12 05:54:10 UTC 2010 on sn-devel-104
This matches the structure that new code is being written to,
and removes one more of the old-style named structures, and
the need to know that is is just an alias for struct dom_sid.
Andrew Bartlett
Signed-off-by: Günther Deschner <gd@samba.org>
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.
We need to keep the names around on the search. Probably a tdb_move would do it
here as well, but RPC is not the fastest thing on earth anyway...
Thanks to Günther for pointing that out to me!
(This used to be commit c9472ae610)
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)
We usually do not get the results from user/group script modifications
immediately. A lot of users do add nscd restart/refresh commands into
their scripts to workaround that while we could flush the nscd caches
directly using libnscd.
Guenther
(This used to be commit 7db6ce295a)