DFM_MERGECONTEXTMENU handler works better now. However there is difference
between ours and Windows' menu building systems, which has to be fixed.
Addendum to 64657051c3. CORE-13841 CORE-18577
In explorer filebrowser 'details' view
the column 'comments' had invalid length of zero, and therefore
was hidden under the 'attributes' column.
I guess even after this patch, it will not display any
sane contents in there yet.
Therefore I chose a small width of 10 only, to reduce the chance for
it to trigger an undesired horizontal scrollbar.
As far as I see we don't support manual showing and hiding of additional columns yet.
By default my Windows does not show this column. But when activated manually, it is always
shown on the right hand side of the 'attributes' column.
This DLL was exporting legacy NT-incompatible or ROS-specific SM client
functions, that have been since 10 years now (2012) replaced by the new
NT-compatible SM:
- SmConnectApiPort(): was just SmConnectToSm().
- SmCompleteSession():
The legacy SMSS used it for when a subsystem initialization was finished.
Now (NT-compatible) this function is called by subsystems **only** when a
subsystem session **terminates**: SmSessionComplete().
- SmExecuteProgram(): was just the client side of SmLoadDeferedSubSystem()
(whose server side is not implemented yet). The legacy SM "old" SmExecPgm
implementation actually was "SmLoadDeferedSubSystem"...
- SmLookupSubsystem(): is a utility-only function to read any registry value
inside "Session Manager\SubSystems".
Move SMDLL's readme into SMLIB and update its contents.
Collect some residual useful functions into smutils.c (and moved in SMLIB,
though not compiled yet):
- SmExecuteProgram(), now implemented as a wrapper around SmExecPgm();
- SmLookupSubsystem(), described above;
- SmQueryInformation(), that retrieves a list of currently-running subsystems.
[SMLIB] Validate SbApiPortName's length in SmConnectToSm().
Fix CommandLine length validation in SmStartCsr().
Add documentation (+ SAL annotations) to the NT-compatible SMSS client functions.
smmsg.h: Add both Win32 and Win64 struct sizes C_ASSERTs for those whose size
change between these two processor architecture sizes.
[SMLIB] Introduce SmSendMsgToSm() as helper to send data into the SM LPC port.
+ Make the other API functions use it.
It should be observed that in Vista+, both functions SmConnectToSm() and this
new SmSendMsgToSm() are exported by NTDLL under the names RtlConnectToSm()
and RtlSendMsgToSm() (and use the same signature).
See: https://www.geoffchappell.com/studies/windows/win32/ntdll/history/names60.htm
[NTDLL] Correctly stub RtlConnectToSm() and RtlSendMsgToSm().
[NTDLL_VISTA] Link to SMLIB and simply export RtlConnectToSm() and RtlSendMsgToSm().
Partially revert some aspects of commits 5696e4ba4 and bf40c7a31.
(See PR #4340.)
In order for Win2k3 kernel32.dll to operate with our basesrv.dll (or our
kernel32.dll to operate with Win2k3 basesrv.dll), we need in particular
to have the CreateNlsSecurityDescriptor() helper to exactly take the
expected parameters. Namely, a pointer to a **user-allocated**
SECURITY_DESCRIPTOR buffer, its size (and an access mask).
The function expects its caller to provide all this, and the caller expects
the function to initialize the security descriptor buffer. Note that the
function does *NOT* allocate a new descriptor buffer to be returned!
Indeed, with the way it currently is in master, using Win2k3 kernel32
with our basesrv is now failing with the errors:
```
NLSAPI: Could NOT Create ACL - c0000023.
(subsystems/win/basesrv/nls.c:279) NLS: CreateNlsSecurityDescriptor FAILED!: c0000023
NLSAPI: Could NOT initialize Server - c0000023.
(dll/ntdll/ldr/ldrinit.c:867) LDR: DLL_PROCESS_ATTACH for dll "kernel32.dll" (InitRoutine: 77E40D95) failed
```
(and, if we ever attempted to increase the so-claimed "dummy parameter"
descriptor size in the basesrv call, we would end up with its stack
corrupted and a crash).
Conversely, using our kernel32 with Win2k3 basesrv, would end up with
basesrv receiving a wrongly-initialized descriptor that would not work
(the buffer not being initialized with the contents of a descriptor, but
instead receiving some address to a descriptor allocated somewhere else).