Information for Netatalk Developers
===================================
-For basic installation instructions, see the INSTALL file.
+For basic installation instructions, see http://netatalk.sourceforge.net .
Netatalk is an implementation of "AFP over TCP".
-Netatalk also support the AppleTalk Protocol Suite for legacy Macs.
-The current release contains support for EtherTalk Phase I and II,
-DDP, RTMP, NBP, ZIP, AEP, ATP, PAP, ASP, AFP and DSI.
-The complete stack looks like this on a BSD-derived system:
-
- AFP AFP
- | |
- ASP PAP DSI
- \ / |
- ATP RTMP NBP ZIP AEP |
- | | | | | |
- -+---------------------------------------------------+- (kernel boundary)
- | Socket |
- +-----------------------+------------+--------------+
- | | TCP | UDP |
- | DDP +------------+--------------+
- | | IP |
- +-----------------------+---------------------------+
- | Network-Interface |
- +---------------------------------------------------+
-
DSI is a session layer used to carry AFP over TCP.
-DDP is in the kernel. "atalkd" implements RTMP, NBP, ZIP, and AEP. It
-is the AppleTalk equivalent of Unix "routed". There is also a
-client-stub library for NBP. ATP and ASP are implemented as
-libraries. "papd" allows Macs to spool to "lpd", and "pap" allows Unix
-machines to print to AppleTalk connected printers. "psf" is a
-PostScript printer filter for "lpd", designed to use "pap". "psorder"
-is a PostScript reverser, called by "psf" to reverse pages printed to
-face-up stacking printers. "afpd" provides Macs with an interface to
-the Unix file system. Refer to the appropriate man pages for
-operational information.
-
+The complete stack looks like this:
+
+ AFP
+ |
+ DSI
+ |
+ | (port:548)
+ |
+ -+---------------------------+- (kernel boundary)
+ | Socket |
+ +------------+--------------+
+ | TCP | UDP |
+ +------------+--------------+
+ | IP v4 or v6 |
+ +---------------------------+
+ | Network-Interface |
+ +---------------------------+
Compilation
===========
creation of libraries. It determines if the local platform can support
shared libraries or if it only supports static libraries.
-Netatalk currently requires libtool 1.4 or higher (1.4b for OpenBSD).
-If you are using Tru64 you must apply the following patch to the file
-acinclude.m4 (normally found in /usr/share/libtool/libltdl).
-
---- acinclude.m4.old Tue Nov 20 15:30:23 2001
-+++ acinclude.m4 Tue Nov 20 15:31:54 2001
-@@ -2226,6 +2226,7 @@
-
- osf3* | osf4* | osf5*)
- version_type=osf
-+ need_lib_prefix=no
- need_version=no
- soname_spec='${libname}${release}.so'
- library_names_spec='${libname}${release}.so$versuffix ${libname}${release}.so $libname.so'
-
Documentation: http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/
-Program: (see the GNU mirrors) /gnu/libtool/libtool-1.4.tar.gz
2. GNU m4
GNU m4 is an implementation of the Unix macro processor. It reads
the text.
Documentation: http://www.gnu.org/software/m4/
-Program: (see the GNU mirrors) /gnu/m4/m4-1.4.tar.gz
3. Autoconf
Autoconf is a package of m4 macros that produce shell scripts to
configure source code packages.
Documentation: http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/
-Program: (see the GNU mirrors) /gnu/autoconf/autoconf-2.52.tar.gz
4. Automake
Automake is a tool that generates 'Makefile.in' files.
Documentation: http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/
-Program: (see the GNU mirrors) /gnu/automake/automake-1.5.tar.gz
Optional
========
EC_CLEANUP:
EC_EXIT;
}
+
+Ini Parser
+==========
+
+The ini parser is taken from <http://ndevilla.free.fr/iniparser/>.
+It has been slightly modified:
+- case-sensitive
+- "include" directive added
+- iniparser_getstrdup() to complemnt iniparser_getstring(), it return allocated strings
+ which the caller must free as necessary
+- the API has been modifed such that all iniparser_get* funcs take a section and a parameter
+ as sepereta args instead of one string of the form "section:parameter" in the original
+ library
+
+CNID Database Daemons
+=====================
+
+The CNID database daemons cnid_metad and cnid_dbd are a implementation of
+the netatalk CNID database support that attempts to put all functionality
+into separate daemons.
+There is one cnid_dbd daemon per netatalk volume. The underlying database
+structure is based on Berkeley DB and the database format is the same
+as in the cdb CNID backend, so this can be used as a drop-in replacement.
+
+Advantages:
+
+- No locking issues or leftover locks due to crashed afpd daemons any
+ more. Since there is only one thread of control accessing the
+ database, no locking is needed and changes appear atomic.
+
+- Berkeley DB transactions are difficult to get right with several
+ processes attempting to access the CNID database simultanously. This
+ is much easier with a single process and the database can be made nearly
+ crashproof this way (at a performance cost).
+
+- No problems with user permissions and access to underlying database
+ files, the cnid_dbd process runs under a configurable user
+ ID that normally also owns the underlying database
+ and can be contacted by whatever afpd daemon accesses a volume.
+
+- If an afpd process crashes, the CNID database is unaffected. If the
+ process was making changes to the database at the time of the crash,
+ those changes will be rolled back entirely (transactions).
+ If the process was not using the database at the time of the crash,
+ no corrective action is necessary. In any case, database consistency
+ is assured.
+
+Disadvantages:
+
+- Performance in an environment of processes sharing the database
+ (files) is potentially better for two reasons:
+
+ i) IPC overhead.
+ ii) r/o access to database pages is possible by more than one
+ process at once, r/w access is possible for nonoverlapping regions.
+
+ The current implementation of cnid_dbd uses unix domain sockets as
+ the IPC mechanism. While this is not the fastest possible method, it
+ is very portable and the cnid_dbd IPC mechanisms can be extended to
+ use faster IPC (like mmap) on architectures where it is
+ supported. As a ballpark figure, 20000 requests/replies to the cnid_dbd
+ daemon take about 0.6 seconds on a Pentium III 733 Mhz running Linux
+ Kernel 2.4.18 using unix domain sockets. The requests are "empty"
+ (no database lookups/changes), so this is just the IPC
+ overhead.
+
+ I have not measured the effects of the advantages of simultanous
+ database access.
+
+
+Installation and configuration
+
+There are two executeables that will be built in etc/cnid_dbd and
+installed into the systems binaries directories of netatalk
+cnid_metad and cnid_dbd. cnid_metad should run all the
+time with root permissions. It will be notified when an instance of
+afpd starts up and will in turn make sure that a cnid_dbd daemon is
+started for the volume that afpd wishes to access. The cnid_dbd daemon runs as
+long as necessary and services any
+other instances of afpd that access the volume. You can safely kill it
+with SIGTERM, it will be restarted automatically by cnid_metad as soon
+as the volume is accessed again.
+
+cnid_dbd changes to the Berkeley DB directory on startup and sets
+effective UID and GID to owner and group of that directory. Database and
+supporting files should therefore be writeable by that user/group.
+
+Current shortcomings:
+
+- The parameter file parsing of db_param is very simpleminded. It is
+easy to cause buffer overruns and the like.
+Also, there is no support for blanks (or weird characters) in
+filenames for the usock_file parameter.
+
+- There is no protection against a malicious user connecting to the
+cnid_dbd socket and changing the database.