Commit graph

152 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Fernando Fernandez Mancera
3dc202579e libnm: NMDeviceEthernet uses PRIO_20 instead of PRIO_30
As NMDeviceVeth has a NMDeviceEthernet as parent, it should use PRIO_20
in order to report NMDeviceVeth when configured and do not report
NMDeviceEthernet.

An unit test case has been added.

Signed-off-by: Fernando Fernandez Mancera <ffmancera@riseup.net>
2020-12-14 17:35:07 +01:00
Thomas Haller
13fc9134fa
libnm/tests: add unit test for more consistency check of NMObject type information
The type information of NMObject is entirely static. And there
are certain conditions how this information should be. Add some
more checks.

We need priv_ptr_offset set if (and only if) we also have
property_ao_info or property_o_info registered.
2020-11-18 11:41:26 +01:00
Fernando Fernandez Mancera
f40ec3344d
utils: introduce new NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_20
This patch is replacing NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_LOW
with NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_10 and
NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_HIGH with
NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_30. In addition it is
introducing NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_20 which is a
middle point between the existing priorities.

This new priority is needed due to Veth support incoming. It will be
used to prevent the creation a NMDeviceWired instance.

Signed-off-by: Fernando Fernandez Mancera <ffmancera@riseup.net>

[thaller@redhat.com: split original patch]
2020-11-18 10:21:57 +01:00
Fernando Fernandez Mancera
23972add8c
libnm/trivial: rename enums NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_*
We will need more levels of priority. Change the naming
to make room for that.

  sed 's/NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_LOW/NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_10/g' `git grep -l NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_ ` -i
  sed 's/NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_LOW/NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_10/g' `git grep -l NML_DBUS_META_INTERFACE_PRIO_INSTANTIATE_ ` -i
  ./contrib/scripts/nm-code-format-container.sh

Signed-off-by: Fernando Fernandez Mancera <ffmancera@riseup.net>

[thaller@redhat.com: split original patch]
2020-11-18 10:21:57 +01:00
Thomas Haller
88071abb43
all: unify comment style for SPDX-License-Identifier tag
Our coding style recommends C style comments (/* */) instead of C++
(//). Also, systemd (which we partly fork) uses C style comments for
the SPDX-License-Identifier.

Unify the style.

  $ sed -i '1 s#// SPDX-License-Identifier: \([^ ]\+\)$#/* SPDX-License-Identifier: \1 */#' -- $(git ls-files -- '*.[hc]' '*.[hc]pp')
2020-09-29 16:50:53 +02:00
Thomas Haller
740b092fda
format: replace tabs for indentation in code comments
sed -i \
     -e 's/^'$'\t'' \*/     */g' \
     -e 's/^'$'\t\t'' \*/         */g' \
     -e 's/^'$'\t\t\t'' \*/             */g' \
     -e 's/^'$'\t\t\t\t'' \*/                 */g' \
     -e 's/^'$'\t\t\t\t\t'' \*/                     */g' \
     -e 's/^'$'\t\t\t\t\t\t'' \*/                         */g' \
     -e 's/^'$'\t\t\t\t\t\t\t'' \*/                             */g' \
     $(git ls-files -- '*.[hc]')
2020-09-28 16:07:52 +02:00
Antonio Cardace
328fb90f3e
all: reformat all with new clang-format style
Run:

    ./contrib/scripts/nm-code-format.sh -i
    ./contrib/scripts/nm-code-format.sh -i

Yes, it needs to run twice because the first run doesn't yet produce the
final result.

Signed-off-by: Antonio Cardace <acardace@redhat.com>
2020-09-28 16:07:51 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani
63e0ed1a08 libnm: remove early return statement in test_nm_auth_permissions()
Reported by coverity:

>>> CID 210230: Control flow issues (UNREACHABLE)
>>> This code cannot be reached: "i = 0;".

Fixes: 09e17888f7 ('libnm: add mapping functions between string and NMClientPermission enum')
(cherry picked from commit a29b13c7f1)
2020-05-07 10:53:59 +02:00
Thomas Haller
46dd4d0fbf meson: merge branch 'inigomartinez/meson-license'
Add SPDX license headers for meson files.

As far as I can tell, according to RELICENSE.md file, almost everybody
who contributed to the meson files agreed to the LGPL-2.1+ licensing.
This entails the vast majority of code in question.

https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/397
2020-03-28 12:45:19 +01:00
Thomas Haller
52dbab7d07 all: use nm_clear_pointer() instead of g_clear_pointer()
g_clear_pointer() would always cast the destroy notify function
pointer to GDestroyNotify. That means, it lost some type safety, like

   GPtrArray *ptr_arr = ...

   g_clear_pointer (&ptr_arr, g_array_unref);

Since glib 2.58 ([1]), g_clear_pointer() is also more type safe. But
this is not used by NetworkManager, because we don't set
GLIB_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED to 2.58.

[1] f9a9902aac

We have nm_clear_pointer() to avoid this issue for a long time (pre
1.12.0). Possibly we should redefine in our source tree g_clear_pointer()
as nm_clear_pointer(). However, I don't like to patch glib functions
with our own variant. Arguably, we do patch g_clear_error() in
such a manner. But there the point is to make the function inlinable.

Also, nm_clear_pointer() returns a boolean that indicates whether
anything was cleared. That is sometimes useful. I think we should
just consistently use nm_clear_pointer() instead, which does always
the preferable thing.

Replace:

   sed 's/\<g_clear_pointer *(\([^;]*\), *\([a-z_A-Z0-9]\+\) *)/nm_clear_pointer (\1, \2)/g' $(git grep -l g_clear_pointer) -i
2020-03-23 11:22:38 +01:00
Iñigo Martínez
648155e4a1 license: Add license using SPDX identifiers to meson build files
License is missing in meson build files. This has been added using
SPDX identifiers and licensed under LGPL-2.1+.
2020-02-17 13:16:57 +01:00
Thomas Haller
c1ec829099 libnm/secret-agent: rework NMSecretAgentOld
Note that the name "NMSecretAgentOld" comes from when libnm was forked
from libnm-glib. There was a plan to rework the secret agent API and
replace it by a better one. That didn't happen (yet), instead our one
and only agent implementation is still lacking. Don't add a new API, instead
try to improve the existing one, without breaking existing users. Just
get over the fact that the name "NMSecretAgentOld" is ugly.

Also note how nm-applet uses NMSecretAgentOld. It subtypes a class
AppletAgent. The constructor applet_agent_new() is calling the synchronous
g_initable_init() initialization with auto-register enabled. As it was,
g_initable_init() would call nm_secret_agent_old_register(), and if the
"Register" call failed, initialization failed for good. There are even
unit tests that test this behavior. This is bad behavior. It means, when
you start nm-applet without NetworkManager running, it will fail to create
the AppletAgent instance. It would hence be the responsibility of the applet
to recover from this situation (e.g. by retrying after timeout or watching
the D-Bus name owner). Of course, nm-applet doesn't do that and won't recover
from such a failure.
NMSecretAgentOld must try hard not to fail and recover automatically. The
user of the API is not interested in implementing the registration,
unregistration and retry handling. Instead, it should just work best
effort and transparently to the user of the API.

Differences:

- no longer use gdbus-codegen generate bindings. Use GDBusConnection
  directly instead. These generated proxies complicate the code by
  introducing an additional, stateful layer.

- properly handle GMainContext and synchronous initialization by using an
  internal GMainContext.
  With this NMSecretAgentOld can be used in a multi threaded context
  with separate GMainContext. This does not mean that the object
  itself became thread safe, but that the GMainContext gives the means
  to coordinate multi-threaded access.

- there are no more blocking calls except g_initiable_init() which
  iterates an internal GMainContext until initialization completes.

- obtaining the Unix user ID with "GetConnectionUnixUser" to authenticate
  the server is now done asynchronously and only once per name-owner.

- NMSecretAgentOld will now register/export the Agent D-Bus object
  already during initialization and stay registered as long as the
  instance is alive. This is because usually registering a D-Bus
  object would not fail, unless the D-Bus path is already taken.
  Such an error would mean that another agent is registered for the same
  GDBusConnection, that likely would be a bug in the caller. Hence,
  such an issue is truly non-recoverable and should be reported early to
  the user. There is a change in behavior compared to before, where previously
  the D-Bus object would only be registered while the instance is enabled.
  This makes a difference if the user intended to keep the NMSecretAgentOld
  instance around in an unregistered state.
  Note that nm_secret_agent_old_destroy() was added to really unregister
  the D-Bus object. A destroyed instance can no longer be registered.

- the API no longer fully exposes the current registration state. The
  user either enables or disables the agent. Then, in the background
  NMSecretAgentOld will register, and serve requests as they come. It
  will also always automatically re-register and it can de-facto no
  longer fail. That is, there might be a failure to register, or the
  NetworkManager peer might not be authenticated (non-root) or there
  might be some other error, or NetworkManager might not be running.
  But such errors are not exposed to the user. The instance is just not
  able to provide the secrets in those cases, but it may recover if the
  problem can be resolved.

- In particular, it makes no sense that nm_secret_agent_old_register*()
  fails, returns an error, or waits until registration is complete. This
  API is now only to enable/disable the agent. It is idempotent and
  won't fail (there is a catch, see next point).
  In particular, nm_secret_agent_old_unregister*() cannot fail anymore.

- However, with the previous point there is a problem/race. When you create
  a NMSecretAgentOld instance and immediately afterwards activate a
  profile, then you want to be sure that the registration is complete
  first. Otherwise, NetworkManager might fail the activation because
  no secret agent registered yet. A partial solution for this is
  that g_initiable_init()/g_async_initable_init_async() will block
  until registration is complete (or with or without success). That means,
  if NetworkManager is running, initializing the NMSecretAgentOld will
  wait until registration is complete (or failed). However, that does not
  solve the race if NetworkManager was not running when creating the
  instance.
  To solve that race, the user may call nm_secret_agent_old_register_async()
  and wait for the command to finish before starting activating. While
  async registration no longer fails (in the sense of leaving the agent
  permanently disconnected), it will try to ensure that we are
  successfully registered and ready to serve requests. By using this
  API correctly, a race can be avoided and the user can know that the
  instance is now ready to serve request.
2020-01-28 10:54:14 +01:00
Thomas Haller
13d050a3b7 libnm/secret-agent/tests: iterate main context during test cleanup
The test only uses one GMainContext (the g_main_context_get_default()
singleton.

Between tests, ensure that we iterate the main context long enough,
so that no more sources from the previous test are queued. Otherwise,
there is an ugly dependency between tests and the order in which
they run.
2020-01-28 10:54:14 +01:00
Thomas Haller
8dc760d2c2 libnm/secret-agent/tests: test async/sync initialization of NMSecretAgentOld
Use nmtstc_context_object_new() to create the NMSecretAgentOld. This
randomly uses sync or async initialization, and checks whether the
main context gets iterated.
2020-01-28 10:54:14 +01:00
Thomas Haller
18512274ea libnm/secret-agent/tests: cleanup test code 2020-01-28 10:54:14 +01:00
Thomas Haller
90bb46c8ee shared/tests/trivial: rename nmtst_main_context_iterate_until() to nmtst_main_context_iterate_until_assert()
nmtst_main_context_iterate_until*() iterates until the condition is
satisfied. If that doesn't happen within timeout, it fails an assertion.

Rename the function to make that clearer.
2020-01-28 10:54:14 +01:00
Thomas Haller
bd9b253540 all: rename time related function to spell out nsec/usec/msec/sec
The abbreviations "ns" and "ms" seem not very clear to me. Spell them
out to nsec/msec. Also, in parts we already used the longer abbreviations,
so it wasn't consistent.
2019-12-13 16:54:40 +01:00
Thomas Haller
09e17888f7 libnm: add mapping functions between string and NMClientPermission enum 2019-12-10 07:53:25 +01:00
Thomas Haller
ce0e898fb4 libnm: refactor caching of D-Bus objects in NMClient
No longer use GDBusObjectMangaerClient and gdbus-codegen generated classes
for the NMClient cache. Instead, use GDBusConnection directly and a
custom implementation (NMLDBusObject) for caching D-Bus' ObjectManager
data.

CHANGES
-------

- This is a complete rework. I think the previous implementation was
difficult to understand. There were unfixed bugs and nobody understood
the code well enough to fix them. Maybe somebody out there understood the
code, but I certainly did not. At least nobody provided patches to fix those
issues. I do believe that this implementation is more straightforward and
easier to understand. It removes a lot of layers of code. Whether this claim
of simplicity is true, each reader must decide for himself/herself. Note
that it is still fairly complex.

- There was a lingering performance issue with large number of D-Bus
objects. The patch tries hard that the implementation scales well. Of
course, when we cache N objects that have N-to-M references to other,
we still are fundamentally O(N*M) for runtime and memory consumption (with
M being the number of references between objects). But each part should behave
efficiently and well.

- Play well with GMainContext. libnm code (NMClient) is generally not
thread safe. However, it should work to use multiple instances in
parallel, as long as each access to a NMClient is through the caller's
GMainContext. This follows glib's style and effectively allows to use NMClient
in a multi threaded scenario. This implies to stick to a main context
upon construction and ensure that callbacks are only invoked when
iterating that context. Also, NMClient itself shall never iterate the
caller's context. This also means, libnm must never use g_idle_add() or
g_timeout_add(), as those enqueue sources in the g_main_context_default()
context.

- Get ordering of messages right. All events are consistently enqueued
in a GMainContext and processed strictly in order. For example,
previously "nm-object.c" tried to combine signals and emit them on an
idle handler. That is wrong, signals must be emitted in the right order
and when they happen. Note that when using GInitable's synchronous initialization
to initialize the NMClient instance, NMClient internally still operates fully
asynchronously. In that case NMClient has an internal main context.

- NMClient takes over most of the functionality. When using D-Bus'
ObjectManager interface, one needs to handle basically the entire state
of the D-Bus interface. That cannot be separated well into distinct
parts, and even if you try, you just end up having closely related code
in different source files. Spreading related code does not make it
easier to understand, on the contrary. That means, NMClient is
inherently complex as it contains most of the logic. I think that is
not avoidable, but it's not as bad as it sounds.

- NMClient processes D-Bus messages and state changes in separate steps.
First NMClient unpacks the message (e.g. _dbus_handle_properties_changed()) and
keeps track of the changed data. Then we update the GObject instances
(_dbus_handle_obj_changed_dbus()) without emitting any signals yet. Finally,
we emit all signals and notifications that were collected
(_dbus_handle_changes_commit()). Note that for example during the initial
GetManagedObjects() reply, NMClient receive a large amount of state at once.
But we first apply all the changes to our GObject instances before
emitting any signals. The result is that signals are always emitted in a moment
when the cache is consistent. The unavoidable downside is that when you receive
a property changed signal, possibly many other properties changed
already and more signals are about to be emitted.

- NMDeviceWifi no longer modifies the content of the cache from client side
during poke_wireless_devices_with_rf_status(). The content of the cache
should be determined by D-Bus alone and follow what NetworkManager
service exposes. Local modifications should be avoided.

- This aims to bring no API/ABI change, though it does of course bring
various subtle changes in behavior. Those should be all for the better, but the
goal is not to break any existing clients. This does change internal
(albeit externally visible) API, like dropping NM_OBJECT_DBUS_OBJECT_MANAGER
property and NMObject no longer implementing GInitableIface and GAsyncInitableIface.

- Some uses of gdbus-codegen classes remain in NMVpnPluginOld, NMVpnServicePlugin
and NMSecretAgentOld. These are independent of NMClient/NMObject and
should be reworked separately.

- While we no longer use generated classes from gdbus-codegen, we don't
need more glue code than before. Also before we constructed NMPropertiesInfo and
a had large amount of code to propagate properties from NMDBus* to NMObject.
That got completely reworked, but did not fundamentally change. You still need
about the same effort to create the NMLDBusMetaIface. Not using
generated bindings did not make anything worse (which tells about the
usefulness of generated code, at least in the way it was used).

- NMLDBusMetaIface and other meta data is static and immutable. This
avoids copying them around. Also, macros like NML_DBUS_META_PROPERTY_INIT_U()
have compile time checks to ensure the property types matches. It's pretty hard
to misuse them because it won't compile.

- The meta data now explicitly encodes the expected D-Bus types and
makes sure never to accept wrong data. That would only matter when the
server (accidentally or intentionally) exposes unexpected types on
D-Bus. I don't think that was previously ensured in all cases.
For example, demarshal_generic() only cared about the GObject property
type, it didn't know the expected D-Bus type.

- Previously GDBusObjectManager would sometimes emit warnings (g_log()). Those
probably indicated real bugs. In any case, it prevented us from running CI
with G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings, because there would be just too many
unrelated crashes. Now we log debug messages that can be enabled with
"LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG=trace". Some of these messages can also be turned
into g_warning()/g_critical() by setting LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG=warning,error.
Together with G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings, this turns them into assertions.
Note that such "assertion failures" might also happen because of a server
bug (or change). Thus these are not common assertions that indicate a bug
in libnm and are thus not armed unless explicitly requested. In our CI we
should now always run with LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG=warning,error and
G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings and to catch bugs. Note that currently
NetworkManager has bugs in this regard, so enabling this will result in
assertion failures. That should be fixed first.

- Note that this changes the order in which we emit "notify:devices" and
"device-added" signals. I think it makes the most sense to emit first
"device-removed", then "notify:devices", and finally "device-added"
signals.
This changes behavior for commit 52ae28f6e5 ('libnm: queue
added/removed signals and suppress uninitialized notifications'),
but I don't think that users should actually rely on the order. Still,
the new order makes the most sense to me.

- In NetworkManager, profiles can be invisible to the user by setting
"connection.permissions". Such profiles would be hidden by NMClient's
nm_client_get_connections() and their "connection-added"/"connection-removed"
signals.
Note that NMActiveConnection's nm_active_connection_get_connection()
and NMDevice's nm_device_get_available_connections() still exposes such
hidden NMRemoteConnection instances. This behavior was preserved.

NUMBERS
-------

I compared 3 versions of libnm.

  [1] 962297f908, current tip of nm-1-20 branch
  [2] 4fad8c7c64, current master, immediate parent of this patch
  [3] this patch

All tests were done on Fedora 31, x86_64, gcc 9.2.1-1.fc31.
The libraries were build with

  $ ./contrib/fedora/rpm/build_clean.sh -g -w test -W debug

Note that RPM build already stripped the library.

---

N1) File size of libnm.so.0.1.0 in bytes. There currently seems to be a issue
  on Fedora 31 generating wrong ELF notes. Usually, libnm is smaller but
  in these tests it had large (and bogus) ELF notes. Anyway, the point
  is to show the relative sizes, so it doesn't matter).

  [1] 4075552 (102.7%)
  [2] 3969624 (100.0%)
  [3] 3705208 ( 93.3%)

---

N2) `size /usr/lib64/libnm.so.0.1.0`:

          text             data              bss                dec               hex   filename
  [1]  1314569 (102.0%)   69980 ( 94.8%)   10632 ( 80.4%)   1395181 (101.4%)   1549ed   /usr/lib64/libnm.so.0.1.0
  [2]  1288410 (100.0%)   73796 (100.0%)   13224 (100.0%)   1375430 (100.0%)   14fcc6   /usr/lib64/libnm.so.0.1.0
  [3]  1229066 ( 95.4%)   65248 ( 88.4%)   13400 (101.3%)   1307714 ( 95.1%)   13f442   /usr/lib64/libnm.so.0.1.0

---

N3) Performance test with test-client.py. With checkout of [2], run

```
prepare_checkout() {
    rm -rf /tmp/nm-test && \
    git checkout -B test 4fad8c7c64 && \
    git clean -fdx && \
    ./autogen.sh --prefix=/tmp/nm-test && \
    make -j 5 install && \
    make -j 5 check-local-clients-tests-test-client
}
prepare_test() {
    NM_TEST_REGENERATE=1 NM_TEST_CLIENT_BUILDDIR="/data/src/NetworkManager" NM_TEST_CLIENT_NMCLI_PATH=/usr/bin/nmcli python3 ./clients/tests/test-client.py -v
}
do_test() {
  for i in {1..10}; do
      NM_TEST_CLIENT_BUILDDIR="/data/src/NetworkManager" NM_TEST_CLIENT_NMCLI_PATH=/usr/bin/nmcli python3 ./clients/tests/test-client.py -v || return -1
  done
  echo "done!"
}
prepare_checkout
prepare_test
time do_test
```

  [1]  real 2m14.497s (101.3%)     user 5m26.651s (100.3%)     sys  1m40.453s (101.4%)
  [2]  real 2m12.800s (100.0%)     user 5m25.619s (100.0%)     sys  1m39.065s (100.0%)
  [3]  real 1m54.915s ( 86.5%)     user 4m18.585s ( 79.4%)     sys  1m32.066s ( 92.9%)

---

N4) Performance. Run NetworkManager from build [2] and setup a large number
of profiles (551 profiles and 515 devices, mostly unrealized). This
setup is already at the edge of what NetworkManager currently can
handle. Of course, that is a different issue. Here we just check how
long plain `nmcli` takes on the system.

```
do_cleanup() {
    for UUID in $(nmcli -g NAME,UUID connection show | sed -n 's/^xx-c-.*:\([^:]\+\)$/\1/p'); do
        nmcli connection delete uuid "$UUID"
    done
    for DEVICE in $(nmcli -g DEVICE device status | grep '^xx-i-'); do
        nmcli device delete "$DEVICE"
    done
}

do_setup() {
    do_cleanup
    for i in {1..30}; do
        nmcli connection add type bond autoconnect no con-name xx-c-bond-$i ifname xx-i-bond-$i ipv4.method disabled ipv6.method ignore
        for j in $(seq $i 30); do
            nmcli connection add type vlan autoconnect no con-name xx-c-vlan-$i-$j vlan.id $j ifname xx-i-vlan-$i-$j vlan.parent xx-i-bond-$i  ipv4.method disabled ipv6.method ignore
        done
    done
    systemctl restart NetworkManager.service
    sleep 5
}

do_test() {
    perf stat -r 50 -B nmcli 1>/dev/null
}

do_test
```

  [1]

   Performance counter stats for 'nmcli' (50 runs):

              456.33 msec task-clock:u              #    1.093 CPUs utilized            ( +-  0.44% )
                   0      context-switches:u        #    0.000 K/sec
                   0      cpu-migrations:u          #    0.000 K/sec
               5,900      page-faults:u             #    0.013 M/sec                    ( +-  0.02% )
       1,408,675,453      cycles:u                  #    3.087 GHz                      ( +-  0.48% )
       1,594,741,060      instructions:u            #    1.13  insn per cycle           ( +-  0.02% )
         368,744,018      branches:u                #  808.061 M/sec                    ( +-  0.02% )
           4,566,058      branch-misses:u           #    1.24% of all branches          ( +-  0.76% )

             0.41761 +- 0.00282 seconds time elapsed  ( +-  0.68% )

  [2]

   Performance counter stats for 'nmcli' (50 runs):

              477.99 msec task-clock:u              #    1.088 CPUs utilized            ( +-  0.36% )
                   0      context-switches:u        #    0.000 K/sec
                   0      cpu-migrations:u          #    0.000 K/sec
               5,948      page-faults:u             #    0.012 M/sec                    ( +-  0.03% )
       1,471,133,482      cycles:u                  #    3.078 GHz                      ( +-  0.36% )
       1,655,275,369      instructions:u            #    1.13  insn per cycle           ( +-  0.02% )
         382,595,152      branches:u                #  800.433 M/sec                    ( +-  0.02% )
           4,746,070      branch-misses:u           #    1.24% of all branches          ( +-  0.49% )

             0.43923 +- 0.00242 seconds time elapsed  ( +-  0.55% )

  [3]

   Performance counter stats for 'nmcli' (50 runs):

              352.36 msec task-clock:u              #    1.027 CPUs utilized            ( +-  0.32% )
                   0      context-switches:u        #    0.000 K/sec
                   0      cpu-migrations:u          #    0.000 K/sec
               4,790      page-faults:u             #    0.014 M/sec                    ( +-  0.26% )
       1,092,341,186      cycles:u                  #    3.100 GHz                      ( +-  0.26% )
       1,209,045,283      instructions:u            #    1.11  insn per cycle           ( +-  0.02% )
         281,708,462      branches:u                #  799.499 M/sec                    ( +-  0.01% )
           3,101,031      branch-misses:u           #    1.10% of all branches          ( +-  0.61% )

             0.34296 +- 0.00120 seconds time elapsed  ( +-  0.35% )

---

N5) same setup as N4), but run `PAGER= /bin/time -v nmcli`:

  [1]

        Command being timed: "nmcli"
        User time (seconds): 0.42
        System time (seconds): 0.04
        Percent of CPU this job got: 107%
        Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 0:00.43
        Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
        Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
        Average stack size (kbytes): 0
        Average total size (kbytes): 0
        Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 34456
        Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
        Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 0
        Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 6128
        Voluntary context switches: 1298
        Involuntary context switches: 1106
        Swaps: 0
        File system inputs: 0
        File system outputs: 0
        Socket messages sent: 0
        Socket messages received: 0
        Signals delivered: 0
        Page size (bytes): 4096
        Exit status: 0

  [2]
        Command being timed: "nmcli"
        User time (seconds): 0.44
        System time (seconds): 0.04
        Percent of CPU this job got: 108%
        Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 0:00.44
        Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
        Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
        Average stack size (kbytes): 0
        Average total size (kbytes): 0
        Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 34452
        Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
        Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 0
        Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 6169
        Voluntary context switches: 1849
        Involuntary context switches: 142
        Swaps: 0
        File system inputs: 0
        File system outputs: 0
        Socket messages sent: 0
        Socket messages received: 0
        Signals delivered: 0
        Page size (bytes): 4096
        Exit status: 0

  [3]

        Command being timed: "nmcli"
        User time (seconds): 0.32
        System time (seconds): 0.02
        Percent of CPU this job got: 102%
        Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 0:00.34
        Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
        Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
        Average stack size (kbytes): 0
        Average total size (kbytes): 0
        Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 29196
        Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
        Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 0
        Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 5059
        Voluntary context switches: 919
        Involuntary context switches: 685
        Swaps: 0
        File system inputs: 0
        File system outputs: 0
        Socket messages sent: 0
        Socket messages received: 0
        Signals delivered: 0
        Page size (bytes): 4096
        Exit status: 0

---

N6) same setup as N4), but run `nmcli monitor` and look at `ps aux` for
  the RSS size.

      USER       PID %CPU %MEM    VSZ   RSS TTY      STAT START   TIME COMMAND
  [1] me     1492900 21.0  0.2 461348 33248 pts/10   Sl+  15:02   0:00 nmcli monitor
  [2] me     1490721  5.0  0.2 461496 33548 pts/10   Sl+  15:00   0:00 nmcli monitor
  [3] me     1495801 16.5  0.1 459476 28692 pts/10   Sl+  15:04   0:00 nmcli monitor
2019-11-25 15:08:00 +01:00
Thomas Haller
6bf206eb81 libnm/tests: drop test_activate_failed() test
With this test the stub service simulates a failure to add-and-activate
the connection.

However the implementation of the stub service was not simulating the
real behavior of NetworkManager service. libnm will add the possibility
to assert against invalid server behavior by setting LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG=error.
With that change, libnm will complain that the stub service behaves
invalid, and rightly so.

Instead of fixing the test, just drop it.
2019-11-07 11:34:36 +01:00
Thomas Haller
feea4222ef libnm/tests: unsubscribe signal handler during test_activate_virtual()
libnm is gonna change, where it would still emit signals when the
instance gets destructed. In particular, when the device gets removed
from the NMClient cache, the references to other objects would be
cleared (and consequently property changed signals emitted).

This will cause a test failure, because the signal was not unsubscribed:

    test:ERROR:libnm/tests/test-nm-client.c:694:device_ac_changed_cb: assertion failed: (nm_device_get_active_connection (NM_DEVICE (device)) != NULL)
2019-11-07 11:34:36 +01:00
Thomas Haller
f21b8781ed tests: use nmtstc_client_new() to create NMClient instance and cleanup tests
The advantage of nmtstc_client_new() is that it randomly either uses the
synchronous or asynchronous constructor. Of course, both should behave
pretty much the same. Hence, this increases our test coverage.
2019-11-07 11:34:36 +01:00
Thomas Haller
dab1d780fd libnm: retire deprecated WiMAX NMObject types
WiMAX is deprecated since NetworkManager 1.2.0. Note that also
NetworkManager on server side no longer supports this type, hence
the server's D-Bus API will never expose devices of this type.

Note that NMDeviceWimax and NMWimaxNsp are NMObject types. That means,
they are instantiated by NMClient to represent information on the D-Bus
interface. As NetworkManager no longer exposes WiMAX devices, such
devices are never created. Note that it makes no sense that a user would
directly instantiate NMObject types, because they only work together with
NMClient.

Don't drop the related symbols and definitions from libnm, so that there
is no API/ABI change (as far as building and linking is concerned). But
make the types defunctional (which of course is a behavioral API change).
Calling the API now triggers a g_return_*() warning.

Also belatedly mark the WimaxNsp API as deprecated. It should have been
done in 1.2. Note that here we deprecate the API and retire it at the
same time. Optimally, we would have deprecated it a few releases ago,
before retiring it. However, marking something for deprecation is anyway
no excuse for anything. I mean, removing or retiring API is usually
painful, regardless whether it was marked for deprecation or not. In this
case, there is no possibility that a libnm user gets hold on a NMDeviceWimax
or NMWimaxNsp instance, because NMClient simply no longer instantiates
them. Hence, this change should not affect any user in practice.

https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/merge_requests/316
2019-10-23 15:31:51 +02:00
Thomas Haller
4400f6de77 libnm: include "nm-libnm-utils.h" by default in libnm sources
The majority of sources in "libnm/" are implementations of NMObject.
"nm-libnm-utils.h" will contain common definitions for handling such
objects. This means, most of the source files under libnm will require
this include. Include it by default.
2019-10-18 22:09:18 +02:00
Thomas Haller
a57a1ba2fc libnm/tests: add test for checking types
If a "nm_${TYPE}_class_init()" function has a bug, then this
code only runs when the class gets instanciated. And for types
like NMDeviceBridge, that didn't happen for unit tests (so far).

Instanciate all glib types. In the future we may want to perform
additional checks on the types.
2019-10-18 22:09:18 +02:00
Thomas Haller
256ba8c4cd libnm/tests: fix test for nm_client_add_and_activate_connection_async()
nm_client_add_and_activate_connection_async() must be completed by
nm_client_add_and_activate_connection_finish().

Fixes: be8060f42f ('libnm: add an object-creation-failed test')
2019-10-16 08:56:00 +02:00
Thomas Haller
3b69f02164 all: unify format of our Copyright source code comments
```bash

readarray -d '' FILES < <(
  git ls-files -z \
    ':(exclude)po' \
    ':(exclude)shared/c-rbtree' \
    ':(exclude)shared/c-list' \
    ':(exclude)shared/c-siphash' \
    ':(exclude)shared/c-stdaux' \
    ':(exclude)shared/n-acd' \
    ':(exclude)shared/n-dhcp4' \
    ':(exclude)src/systemd/src' \
    ':(exclude)shared/systemd/src' \
    ':(exclude)m4' \
    ':(exclude)COPYING*'
  )

sed \
  -e 's/^\(--\|#\| \*\) *\(([cC]) *\)\?Copyright \+\(\(([cC])\) \+\)\?\(\(20\|19\)[0-9][0-9]\) *[-–] *\(\(20\|19\)[0-9][0-9]\) \+\([^ ].*\)$/\1 C1pyright#\5 - \7#\9/' \
  -e 's/^\(--\|#\| \*\) *\(([cC]) *\)\?Copyright \+\(\(([cC])\) \+\)\?\(\(20\|19\)[0-9][0-9]\) *[,] *\(\(20\|19\)[0-9][0-9]\) \+\([^ ].*\)$/\1 C2pyright#\5, \7#\9/' \
  -e 's/^\(--\|#\| \*\) *\(([cC]) *\)\?Copyright \+\(\(([cC])\) \+\)\?\(\(20\|19\)[0-9][0-9]\) \+\([^ ].*\)$/\1 C3pyright#\5#\7/' \
  -e 's/^Copyright \(\(20\|19\)[0-9][0-9]\) \+\([^ ].*\)$/C4pyright#\1#\3/' \
  -i \
  "${FILES[@]}"

echo ">>> untouched Copyright lines"
git grep Copyright "${FILES[@]}"

echo ">>> Copyright lines with unusual extra"
git grep '\<C[0-9]pyright#' "${FILES[@]}" | grep -i reserved

sed \
  -e 's/\<C[0-9]pyright#\([^#]*\)#\(.*\)$/Copyright (C) \1 \2/' \
  -i \
  "${FILES[@]}"

```

https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/merge_requests/298
2019-10-02 17:03:52 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez
caf470f788 meson: Improve targets involving libnm library
The targets that involve the use of the `libnm` library have been
improved by applying a set of changes:

- Generated enum sources variable `libnm_enum` has been renamed to
  `libnm_enum_sources` to clearly specify what it is holding.
- Indentation in the `libnm` build and test files has been fixed.
- Set of objects used in targets have been grouped together.
2019-10-01 09:49:33 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez
f427f4771e meson: Improve the libnm-core build file
The `libnm-core` build file has been improved by applying a set of
changes:

- Indentation has been fixed to be consistent.
- Library variable names have been changed to `lib{name}` pattern
  following their filename pattern.
- `shared` prefix has been removed from all variables using it.
- Dependencies have been reviewed to store the necessary data.
- The use of the libraries and dependencies created in this file
  has been reviewed through the entire source code. This has
  required the addition or the removal of different libraries and
  dependencies in different targets.
- Some files used directly with the `files` function have been moved
  to their nearest path build file because meson stores their full
  path seamessly and they can be used anywhere later.
2019-10-01 09:49:33 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez
70a34c54fe meson: Use dependency for nm-default header
The `nm-default.h` header is used widely in the code by many
targets. This header includes different headers and needs different
libraries depending the compilation flags.

A new set of `*nm_default_dep` dependencies have been created to
ease the inclusion of different directorires and libraries.

This allows cleaner build files and avoiding linking unnecessary
libraries so this has been applied allowing the removal of some
dependencies involving the linking of unnecessary libraries.
2019-10-01 09:49:33 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez
c74e428342 meson: Improve the shared build file
The `shared` build file has been improved by applying a set of
changes:

- Indentation has been fixed to be consistent.
- Unused libraries and dependencies have been removed.
- Dependencies have been reviewed to store the necessary data.
- Set of objects used in targets have been grouped together.
- Header files have been removed from sources lists as it's
  unnecessary.
- Library variable names have been changed to `lib{name}` pattern
  following their filename pattern.
- `shared` prefix has been removed from all variables using it.
- `version_header` its related configuration `version_conf`
  variables have been renamed to `nm_version_macro*` following
  its input and final file names.
2019-10-01 09:49:33 +02:00
Thomas Haller
50f146f6e3 libnm/tests: fix compiler warning about unused variable
Fixes: ad68f3f402 ('libnm/tests: assert that callers GMainContext is not iterated while nm_client_new()')
2019-10-01 09:31:14 +02:00
Thomas Haller
abff46cacf all: manually drop code comments with file description 2019-10-01 07:50:52 +02:00
Thomas Haller
ad68f3f402 libnm/tests: assert that callers GMainContext is not iterated while nm_client_new()
Libraries must not iterate a GMainContext that they don't own.

Add an assertion that we don't do so during nm_client_new().

See https://developer.gnome.org/programming-guidelines/unstable/main-contexts.html.en#using-gmaincontext-in-a-library
2019-09-30 16:01:16 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
24028a2246 all: SPDX header conversion
$ find * -type f |xargs perl contrib/scripts/spdx.pl
  $ git rm contrib/scripts/spdx.pl
2019-09-10 11:19:56 +02:00
Thomas Haller
c0e075c902 all: drop emacs file variables from source files
We no longer add these. If you use Emacs, configure it yourself.

Also, due to our "smart-tab" usage the editor anyway does a subpar
job handling our tabs. However, on the upside every user can choose
whatever tab-width he/she prefers. If "smart-tabs" are used properly
(like we do), every tab-width will work.

No manual changes, just ran commands:

    F=($(git grep -l -e '-\*-'))
    sed '1 { /\/\* *-\*-  *[mM]ode.*\*\/$/d }'     -i "${F[@]}"
    sed '1,4 { /^\(#\|--\|dnl\) *-\*- [mM]ode/d }' -i "${F[@]}"

Check remaining lines with:

    git grep -e '-\*-'

The ultimate purpose of this is to cleanup our files and eventually use
SPDX license identifiers. For that, first get rid of the boilerplate lines.
2019-06-11 10:04:00 +02:00
Thomas Haller
6b7264e4aa build/meson: introduce libnm/liblibnm.la as static library for libnm/libnm.la
Same as done for autotools.
2019-05-22 20:04:08 +02:00
Thomas Haller
fbe2fdd167 libnm/tests: rename libnm's "test-general" to "test-libnm" 2019-05-19 14:41:00 +02:00
Thomas Haller
e7836cd151 build/meson: rename "nm_core_dep" to "libnm_core_dep"
The library is called "libnm_core". So the dependency should be called
"libnm_core_dep", like in all other cases.

(cherry picked from commit c27ad37c27)
2019-04-18 20:13:49 +02:00
Thomas Haller
a3370af3a8 all: drop unnecessary includes of <errno.h> and <string.h>
"nm-macros-interal.h" already includes <errno.h> and <string.h>.
No need to include it everywhere else too.
2019-02-12 08:50:28 +01:00
Thomas Haller
c4512f839f libnm: use "libnm-systemd-shared.a" in "libnm-core.la" (and "libnm.so")
It's not yet used, but it will be. We will need nm_sd_utils_unbase64mem()
to strictly validate WireGuard settings, which contain keys in base64 encoding.

Note that we also need a stub implementation for logging. This will do
nothing for all logging from "libnm-systemd-shared.a". This makes
sense because "libnm.so" as a library should not log directly. Also,
"libnm.so" will only use a small portion of "libnm-systemd-shared.a" which
doesn't log anything. Thus this code is unused and dropped by the linker
with "--gc-sections".
2019-01-02 17:08:41 +01:00
Iñigo Martínez
35171b3c3f build: meson: Add trailing commas
Add missing trailing commas that avoids getting noise when another
file/parameter is added and eases reviewing changes[0].

[0] https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/dconf/merge_requests/11#note_291585
2018-12-20 13:50:34 +01:00
Thomas Haller
9bc33a687e libnm: fix endless loop in nm_vpn_service_plugin_read_vpn_details()
Previously, a "DONE\n" was required to break the loop.
2018-10-25 16:37:35 +02:00
Thomas Haller
21f94e9265 libnm/tests: add test for nm_vpn_service_plugin_read_vpn_details() 2018-10-25 16:37:35 +02:00
Thomas Haller
43b28e06ed test/meson: increase timeout for some tests
During gitlab-ci, some tests may take a long time. Increase
the default timeout.
2018-10-22 16:16:52 +02:00
Thomas Haller
a75ab799e4 build: create "config-extra.h" header instead of passing directory variables via CFLAGS
1) the command line gets shorter. I frequently run `make V=1` to see
   the command line arguments for the compiler, and there is a lot
   of noise.

2) define each of these variables at one place. This makes it easy
   to verify that for all compilation units, a particular
   define has the same value. Previously that was not obvious or
   even not the case (see commit e5d1a71396
   and commit d63cf1ef2f).
   The point is to avoid redundancy.

3) not all compilation units need all defines. In fact, most modules
   would only need a few of these defines. We aimed to pass the necessary
   minium of defines to each compilation unit, but that was non-obvious
   to get right and often we set a define that wasn't used. See for example
   "src_settings_plugins_ibft_cppflags" which needlessly had "-DSYSCONFDIR".
   This question is now entirely avoided by just defining all variables in
   a header. We don't care to find the minimum, because every component
   gets anyway all defines from the header.

4) this also avoids the situation, where a module that previously did
   not use a particular define gets modified to require it. Previously,
   that would have required to identify the missing define, and add
   it to the CFLAGS of the complation unit. Since every compilation
   now includes "config-extra.h", all defines are available everywhere.

5) the fact that each define is now available in all compilation units
   could be perceived as a downside. But it isn't, because these defines
   should have a unique name and one specific value. Defining the same
   name with different values, or refer to the same value by different
   names is a bug, not a desirable feature. Since these defines should
   be unique accross the entire tree, there is no problem in providing
   them to every compilation unit.

6) the reason why we generate "config-extra.h" this way, instead of using
   AC_DEFINE() in configure.ac, is due to the particular handling of
   autoconf for directory variables. See [1].
   With meson, it would be trivial to put them into "config.h.meson".
   While that is not easy with autoconf, the "config-extra.h" workaround
   seems still preferable to me.

[1] https://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/autoconf-2.63/html_node/Installation-Directory-Variables.html
2018-07-17 17:46:39 +02:00
Thomas Haller
e1c7a2b5d0 all: don't use gchar/gshort/gint/glong but C types
We commonly don't use the glib typedefs for char/short/int/long,
but their C types directly.

    $ git grep '\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>' | wc -l
    587
    $ git grep '\<\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>' | wc -l
    21114

One could argue that using the glib typedefs is preferable in
public API (of our glib based libnm library) or where it clearly
is related to glib, like during

  g_object_set (obj, PROPERTY, (gint) value, NULL);

However, that argument does not seem strong, because in practice we don't
follow that argument today, and seldomly use the glib typedefs.
Also, the style guide for this would be hard to formalize, because
"using them where clearly related to a glib" is a very loose suggestion.

Also note that glib typedefs will always just be typedefs of the
underlying C types. There is no danger of glib changing the meaning
of these typedefs (because that would be a major API break of glib).

A simple style guide is instead: don't use these typedefs.

No manual actions, I only ran the bash script:

  FILES=($(git ls-files '*.[hc]'))
  sed -i \
      -e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>\( [^ ]\)/\1\2/g' \
      -e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>  /\1   /g' \
      -e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>/\1/g' \
      "${FILES[@]}"
2018-07-11 12:02:06 +02:00
Thomas Haller
f445128af4 build/meson: fix meson build for shared files
The files in shared/nm-utils are not compiled as one static library,
instead each subproject that needs (parts of) them, re-compiles the
files individually.

The major reason for that is, because we might have different compile
flags, depending on whether we build libnm-core or
libnm-util/libnm-glib. Actually, I think that is not really the case,
and maybe this should be refactored, to indeed build them all as a
static library first.

Anyway, libnm-util, libnm-glib, clients' common lib, they all need a
different set of shared files that they should compile. Refactor
"shared/meson.build" to account for that and handle it like autotools
does.

Another change is, that "shared_c_siphash_dep" no longer advertises
"include_directories: include_directories('c-siphash/src')". We don't
put c-siphash.h into the include search path. Users who need it, should
include it via "#include <c-siphash/src/c-siphash.h>". The only exception
is when building shared_n_acd library, which is not under our control.
2018-05-31 15:59:38 +02:00
Thomas Haller
b7426e91db build: use default NM_BUILD_* defines for tests
Use two common defines NM_BUILD_SRCDIR and NM_BUILD_BUILDDIR
for specifying the location of srcdir and builddir.

Note that this is only relevant for tests, as they expect
a certain layout of the directories, to find files that concern
them.
2018-05-31 15:59:38 +02:00
Thomas Haller
9628aabc2f tests: use libnm via pygobject in tools/test-networkmanager-service.py
tools/test-networkmanager-service.py is our NetworkManager stub server.

NetworkManager uses libnm(-core) heavily, for example to decide whether
a connection verifies (nm_connection_verify()) and for normalizing
connections (nm_connection_normalize()).

If the stub server wants to mimic NetworkManager, it also must use these
function. Luckily, we already can do so, by loading libnm using python
GObject introspection.

We already correctly set GI_TYPELIB_PATH search path, so that the
correct libnm is loaded -- provided that we build with introspection
enabled.

We still need to gracefully fail, if starting the stub server fails.
That requries some extra effort. If the stub server notices that
something is missing, it shall exit with status 77. That will cause
the tests to g_test_skip().
2018-05-11 16:51:20 +02:00