Assumed slave connections need to be added to their master devices,
which didn't used to happen because the devices activating assumed
connections jumped directly to stage3, bypassing all the master/slave
handling stuff.
Instead, make all assumed connections go through all activation stages,
but make sure that things which touch the device don't get done for
assumed connections. This requires moving the master/slave code out
of the override-able class methods because we need to call the
master/slave code for assumed connections, but we don't want to call
the override-able class activation methods.
Master devices depend on their slaves/ports for carrier status, so the
carrier can't factor into whether a connection is available on that
device or not. If it did, then no connections could be activated
because the device doesn't have a carrier until slaves are attached.
Rather than having NMManager know how to parse various settings to
create each kind of software device, add a _new_for_connection()
constructor to each of them and let them call NMPlatform to create the
device correctly themselves.
Software devices don't have a UDI until udev finds them, and since we need
to know about the software devices before udev finds them the UDI will be
missing. Instead of requiring a UDI on NMDevice creation, update the
property from the NMPlatform link change signal when udev does find the
device.
Now that a UDI is no longer required for device creation, software devices
added by NM would be created in the platform_link_added_cb() signal
handler triggered by the various software device creation methods in
system_create_virtual_device() (eg nm_platform_bridge_add() etc). Then
the NMDevice created in system_create_virtual_device() would be a duplicate
and cause problems when it was added. Since system_create_virtual_device()
needs to do setup on some devices, suppress the device creation from the
platform link added handler in this function.
Much of this is a hack which should be cleaned up later.
This is really, really old 2007-era code. Any NMDevice that gets
created is already supported, so there's no reason to have every
device set NM_DEVICE_CAP_NM_SUPPORTED. For those subclasses that
only set that capability, we can remove the subclass method
entirely. Next, it turns out that the "type capabilities" code
wasn't used anywhere, so remove that too. Lastly, "cipsec"
interfaces haven't been used on linux in about 5 years (they
were created by the Cisco binary-only IPSec kernel module for
Cisco VPNs long before vpnc and openswan came around) so we can
remove that code too.
With carrier handling moved to NMDevice, the only thing left in
NMDeviceWired was speed, which was actually ethernet-specific anyway.
So move that to NMDeviceEthernet, and then kill NMDeviceWired.
Change the way that nm-properties-changed-signal works, and parse the
dbus-binding-tool-generated info to get the exact list of properties
that it's expected to export.
This makes NM_PROPERTY_PARAM_NO_EXPORT unnecessary, and also fixes the
problem of properties like NMDevice:hw-address being exported on
classes where it shouldn't be.