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A partially-implemented profiler for client time, which basically just
inserts (optional) gettimeofday calls in various places and stashes data
in a flat file containing one data block per pid.
Signed-off-by: Peter Seebach <peter.seebach@windriver.com>
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Initial, incomplete, support for extended attributes. Extended
attributes are implemented fairly naively, using a second table
in the file database using the primary file table's id as a
foreign key. The ON DELETE CASCADE behavior requires sqlite 3.6.19
or later with foreign key and trigger support compiled in.
To reduce round-trips, the client does not check for existing
attributes, but rather, sends three distinct set messages;
OP_SET_XATTR, OP_CREATE_XATTR, OP_REPLACE_XATTR. A SET message
always succeeds, a CREATE fails if the attribute already
exists, and a REPLACE fails if the attribute does not already
exist.
The /* flags */ feature of makewrappers is used to correct
path names appropriately, so all functions are already working
with complete paths, and can always use functions that work
on links; if they were supposed to dereference, the path
fixup code got that.
The xattr support is enabled, for now, conditional on
whether getfattr --help succeeds.
Not yet implemented: Translation for system.posix_acl_access,
which is used by "cp -a" (or "cp --preserve-all") on some
systems to try to copy modes.
Signed-off-by: Peter Seebach <peter.seebach@windriver.com>
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This is a moderately intrusive change. The basic overall effect:
Debugging messages are now controlled, not by a numeric "level",
but by a series of flags, which are expressed as a string of
letters. Each flag has a single-letter form used for string
specifications, a name, a description, a numeric value (1 through N),
and a flag value (which is 1 << the numeric value). (This does mean
that no flag has the value 1, so we only have 31 bits available.
Tiny violins play.)
The other significant change is that the pseudo_debug calls
are now implemented with a do/while macro containing a conditional,
so that computationally-expensive arguments are never evaluated
if the corresponding debug flags weren't set. The assumption is
that in the vast majority of cases (specifically, all of them
so far) the debug flags for a given call are a compile-time constant,
so the nested conditional will never actually show up in code
when compiled with optimization; we'll just see the appropriate
conditional test.
The VERBOSE flag is magical, in that if the VERBOSE flag is
used in a message, the debug flags have to have both VERBOSE and
at least one other flag for the call to be made.
This should dramatically improve performance for a lot of cases
without as much need for PSEUDO_NDEBUG, and improve the ability of
users to get coherent debugging output that means something and is
relevant to a given case.
It's also intended to set the stage for future development work
involving improving the clarity and legibility of pseudo's diagnostic
messages in general.
Old things which used numeric values for PSEUDO_DEBUG will sort
of continue to work, though they will almost always be less verbose
than they used to. There should probably be a pass through adding
"| PDBGF_CONSISTENCY" to a lot of the messages that are specific
to some other type.
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