This allows reusing this function for other uses that just need to
remove this client from others' accept lists on nick change and not have
duplicates of this code everywhere
Move opername and privset storage to struct User, so it can exist for
remote opers.
On /oper and when bursting opers, send:
:foo OPER opername privset
which sets foo's opername and privset. The contents of the privset on
remote servers come from the remote server's config, so the potential
for confusion exists if these do not match.
If an oper's privset does not exist on a server that sees it, it will
complain, but create a placeholder privset. If the privset is created by
a rehash, this will be reflected properly.
/privs is udpated to take an optional argument, the server to query, and
is now local by default:
/privs [[nick_or_server] nick]
When a server disconnects the client_exit hook will only be called once
but there could be multiple servers and clients behind that server.
After any client exits, check if the agent is still present.
Outgoing servers are not added to the client hash until they reach
IsServer() status, so if they're unknown when they exit then don't
attempt to delete them.
As well as leaking a connid and leaving the connection open,
these calls to free_client() leave the client in the unknown_list
causing check_unknowns_list() to crash when either ptr->data
(ptr being the freed client_p->localClient->tnode) is NULL or
when client_p->localClient is NULL.
Flag the client as an IO error so that we don't try to send it
any data (as this is not a normal plaintext connection).
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== 280 bytes in 8 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 876 of 1,020
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== at 0x4C2DB8F: malloc (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x4E93F4F: rb_strdup (rb_memory.h:70)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x4E95280: ssl_process_cipher_string (sslproc.c:476)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x4E95540: ssl_process_cmd_recv (sslproc.c:561)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x4E9582A: ssl_read_ctl (sslproc.c:632)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x56CBAB6: rb_select_epoll (epoll.c:199)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x56C4EB5: rb_select (commio.c:2085)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x56C7FD6: rb_lib_loop (rb_lib.c:228)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x4E69987: charybdis_main (ircd.c:872)
==01:17:20:36.919 5966== by 0x400815: main (main.c:8)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== 48 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 544 of 1,020
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== at 0x4C2FB55: calloc (in /usr/lib/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x4E93F0C: rb_malloc (rb_memory.h:41)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x4E961E8: start_zlib_session (sslproc.c:901)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x4E86FAC: server_estab (s_serv.c:877)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x13B2921A: mr_server (m_server.c:304)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x4E7AF03: handle_command (parse.c:241)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x4E7A96A: parse (parse.c:157)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x4E7A3DC: client_dopacket (packet.c:354)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x4E798D6: parse_client_queued (packet.c:98)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x4E79FAC: read_packet (packet.c:282)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x56CBAB6: rb_select_epoll (epoll.c:199)
==01:17:20:36.906 5966== by 0x56C4EB5: rb_select (commio.c:2085)
This also lays the groundwork for the netjoin batch type, but that isn't
implemented yet. I don't like how some of this is implemented but it'll
have to do for now...
Compile tested, needs more testing.
It seems to come from an era where long long didn't exist and 64-bit
machines weren't common. 32-bit machines are still common but I can't
imagine this will have much performance impact there.
This "fixes" #179 in title only, but see comments within.
This also does a lot of surgery on the conf system to reconfigure authd.
/!\ WARNING! ACHTUNG! ADVERTENCIA! ATTENTION! AVVERTIMENTO! /!\
This code has not been run-time tested yet (though it compiles)!
now connid's are allocated on demand and clients may have as many connid's as necessary.
this allows us to build chains of helpers while ensuring the ircd properly tracks and GCs the resources.