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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)
one horror (pstring_clean_name()) which will have to
remain until I've removed all pstrings from the client code.
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit 1ea3ac8014)
to struct sockaddr_storage in most places that matter (ie.
not the nmbd and NetBIOS lookups). This passes make test
on an IPv4 box, but I'll have to do more work/testing on
IPv6 enabled boxes. This should now give us a framework
for testing and finishing the IPv6 migration. It's at
the state where someone with a working IPv6 setup should
(theorecically) be able to type :
smbclient //ipv6-address/share
and have it work.
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit 98e154c312)
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)
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.
(This used to be commit 3f6bd0e1ec)
Swat has not been built by default for a while, so I did not notice that
the _ macro is actually used. Re-add the lang_msg_rotate function, this
time only to swat so that this is the only binary that has to take the
16k penalty.
(This used to be commit 191e1ef840)
and connections_forall. This centralizes all the routines that did individual
tdb_open("connections.tdb") and direct tdb_traverse.
Volker
(This used to be commit e43e94cda1)
This changes "struct process_id" to "struct server_id", keeping both is
just too much hassle. No functional change (I hope ;-))
Volker
(This used to be commit 0ad4b1226c)
for utimes - change the call to ntimes. This preserves
nsec timestamps we get from stat (if the system supports
it) and only maps back down to usec or sec resolution
on time set. Looks bigger than it is as I had to move
lots of internal code from using time_t and struct utimebuf
to struct timespec.
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit 8f3d530c5a)
share_mode struct. Allows us to know the unix
uid of the opener of the file/directory. Needed
for info level queries on open files.
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit d929323d6f)
to make the following possible:
timelimit 20000 bin/nmbd -F -S --no-process-group
timelimit 20000 bin/smbd -F -S --no-process-group
this is needed to 'make test' working without losing child processes
metze
(This used to be commit c3a9f30e2a)
realloc can return NULL in one of two cases - (1) the realloc failed,
(2) realloc succeeded but the new size requested was zero, in which
case this is identical to a free() call.
The error paths dealing with these two cases should be different,
but mostly weren't. Secondly the standard idiom for dealing with
realloc when you know the new size is non-zero is the following :
tmp = realloc(p, size);
if (!tmp) {
SAFE_FREE(p);
return error;
} else {
p = tmp;
}
However, there were *many* *many* places in Samba where we were
using the old (broken) idiom of :
p = realloc(p, size)
if (!p) {
return error;
}
which will leak the memory pointed to by p on realloc fail.
This commit (hopefully) fixes all these cases by moving to
a standard idiom of :
p = SMB_REALLOC(p, size)
if (!p) {
return error;
}
Where if the realloc returns null due to the realloc failing
or size == 0 we *guarentee* that the storage pointed to by p
has been freed. This allows me to remove a lot of code that
was dealing with the standard (more verbose) method that required
a tmp pointer. This is almost always what you want. When a
realloc fails you never usually want the old memory, you
want to free it and get into your error processing asap.
For the 11 remaining cases where we really do need to keep the
old pointer I have invented the new macro SMB_REALLOC_KEEP_OLD_ON_ERROR,
which can be used as follows :
tmp = SMB_REALLOC_KEEP_OLD_ON_ERROR(p, size);
if (!tmp) {
SAFE_FREE(p);
return error;
} else {
p = tmp;
}
SMB_REALLOC_KEEP_OLD_ON_ERROR guarentees never to free the
pointer p, even on size == 0 or realloc fail. All this is
done by a hidden extra argument to Realloc(), BOOL free_old_on_error
which is set appropriately by the SMB_REALLOC and SMB_REALLOC_KEEP_OLD_ON_ERROR
macros (and their array counterparts).
It remains to be seen what this will do to our Coverity bug count :-).
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit 1d710d06a2)
bloody placeholder share mode entries (I hate
these - I've had to add this filter code now to too
many places :-).
Jeremy.
(This used to be commit 815340e1a4)
lp_load() could not be called multiple times to modify parameter settings based
on reading from multiple configuration settings. Each time, it initialized all
of the settings back to their defaults before reading the specified
configuration file.
This patch adds a parameter to lp_load() specifying whether the settings should
be initialized. It does, however, still force the settings to be initialized
the first time, even if the request was to not initialize them. (Not doing so
could wreak havoc due to uninitialized values.)
(This used to be commit f2a24de769)