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Start migrating uses of reply_doserror() to reply_nterror() with the
correct mapping. Eventually we'll get to the point where we can
change reply_doserror() to force a DOS error code on the wire,
and can change calls to reply_nterror(req, NT_STATUS_DOS()) - which *does*
force DOS errors on the wire - to reply_doserror(). Which might
actually make the server code look like it's making sense.
Jeremy.
This looks innocent, but it is visible in a netbench run. Due to boolean
short-circuiting we don't have to execute the conditions on the right-hand side
of the &&. So putting the less likely condition left gains a bit.
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.
We were treating a file time set on close as a sticky write time set, and I don't
think it is. I will add a torture test later to RAW-CLOSE to confirm this.
Jeremy.
"Normal" non truncate writes always cause the timestamp to
be set on close. Once a close is done on a handle this can
reset the sticky write time to current time also.
Updated smbtorture4 confirms this.
Jeremy.
This vop is designed to work in tandem with SMB_VFS_READDIR to allow
vfs modules to make modifications to arbitrary filenames before
they're consumed by callers. Subsequently the core directory
enumeration code in smbd is now changed to free the memory that may be
allocated in a module. This vop enables the new version of catia in
the following patch.
Signed-off-by: Tim Prouty <tprouty@samba.org>
W2K3 DC's can have IPv6 addresses but won't serve
krb5/ldap or cldap on those addresses. Make sure when
we're asking for DC's we prefer IPv4.
If you have an IPv6-only network this prioritizing code
will be a no-op. And if you have a mixed network then you
need to prioritize IPv4 due to W2K3 DC's.
Jeremy.
This patch also changes the unix convert flags to make sure the
correct semantics are preservered for allowing/disallowing wildcards
in the last component of the path.
This often times means explicitly denying certain operations on a stream
as they are not supported or don't make sense at a particular level. At
some point in the future these can be enabled, but for now it's better to
remove ambiguity
The values of vuid and tid were not being correctly updated in the struct smb_request
when passed to chain_reply inside sessionsetupX and tconX.
Jeremy.