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Patch 1 of 3:
- Patch 1 adds the new variables
- Patch 2 makes uses of them for files belonging to the "state" path
and the "code pages" path
This patch seemed more easily acceptable, which explains why we
separated it from patch 3
- Patch 3 reassigns files to the "cache" path. Indeed all "debatable"
changes have been moved to that one
The point is adding:
- a path for non discardable state data: basically all TDB files
that may need to be backed up
- a path for shared data: mostly codepage stuff
- a path for cache data to host files such as
browse.dat, printers.tbd, <printer>.tdb
All these are currently mixed in "libdir" (${prefix}/lib/samba by default).
The patch keeps these new paths to point to ${prefix}/lib/samba by default
and does therefore not change the software behaviour. Used alone, it just
adds unused variables...so it can safely be used in sources without any
behaviour change and no impact on Samba developers work.
We don't use gethostbyname any more except in one case where
we're looking for host aliases (I don't know how to do that
with getaddrinfo yet). New function should be getaddrinfo().
Next step will be fixing lib/access.c, and then changing
libsmb/namequery.c to cope with IPv6 address returns.
Jeremy.
IPv6 in winbindd, but moves most of the socket functions that were
wrongly in lib/util.c into lib/util_sock.c and provides generic
IPv4/6 independent versions of most things. Still lots of work
to do, but now I can see how I'll fix the access check code.
Nasty part that remains is the name resolution code which is
used to returning arrays of in_addr structs.
Jeremy.
under the 2 clause *BSD license for future use in IPv6 code. Original
code was from PostgreSQL and I've maintained their license even though
I've rewritten large parts of it (I probably should donate this back
to them).
Jeremy.
new standard getifaddrs() and freeifaddrs() interfaces. Currently
we only return IPv4 af_families. Needs fixing for binds to IPv6
but this has to be careful work.
Jeremy.
the main server code paths. We should now be able to cope with
paths up to PATH_MAX length now.
Final job will be to add the TALLOC_CTX * parameter to
unix_convert to make it explicit (for Volker).
Jeremy.
The proposed new API convention is to start with a 0 bcc length and then
push things step by step. These routines reallocate the outbuf and
adjust the length and bcc fields as necessary.
I'm 100% certain I've forgotten to merge something, but the main code
should be in. It's mainly in dbwrap_ctdb.c, ctdbd_conn.c and
messages_ctdbd.c.
There should be no changes to the non-cluster case, it does survive make
test on my laptop.
It survives some very basic tests with ctdbd enables, I did not do the
full test suite for clusters yet.
Phew...
Volker
doing this because for the clustering the marshalling is needed in more
than one place, so I wanted a decent routine to marshall a message_rec
struct which was not there before.
Tridge, this seems about the same speed as it used to be before, the
librpc/ndr overhead in my tests was under the noise.
Volker
works from smbclient and Windows, and I am promising to
support and fix both client and server code moving forward.
Still need to test the RPC admin support but I haven't
changed that code.
Jeremy.
process deep dfs links (ie. links that go to non root
parts of a share). Make the directory handling conanonical
in POSIX and Windows pathname processing.
dfs should not be fully working in client tools. Please
bug me if not.
Jeremy.
others don't get stuck with the winbindd hang.
Still waiting on additional confirmation from Guenther
that this fixes thes issues he was observing as well.
But it's been running in my local tree for a day without
problems.