Some targets are missing dependencies on some generated sources in
the meson port. These makes the build to fail due to missing source
files on a highly parallelized build.
These dependencies have been resolved by taking advantage of meson's
internal dependencies which can be used to pass source files,
include directories, libraries and compiler flags.
One of such internal dependencies called `core_dep` was already in
use. However, in order to avoid any confusion with another new
internal dependency called `nm_core_dep`, which is used to include
directories and source files from the `libnm-core` directory, the
`core_dep` dependency has been renamed to `nm_dep`.
These changes have allowed minimizing the build details which are
inherited by using those dependencies. The parallelized build has
also been improved.
The commit was accidentally reverted during systemd code merge from
upstream.
devices/test: give more time to dad checking in test-arping
# random seed: R02Sc708af827453d4ace33cd27ffd3d7f0b
1..2
# Start of arping tests
**
NetworkManager:ERROR:src/devices/tests/test-arping.c:95:test_arping_common: assertion failed (nm_arping_manager_check_address (manager, info->addresses[i]) == info->expected_result[i]): (1 == 0)
ok 1 /arping/1
PASS: src/devices/tests/test-arping 1 /arping/1
./tools/run-nm-test.sh: line 193: 2836 Aborted "${NMTST_DBUS_RUN_SESSION[@]}" "$TEST" "$@"
# NetworkManager:ERROR:src/devices/tests/test-arping.c:95:test_arping_common: assertion failed (nm_arping_manager_check_address (manager, info->addresses[i]) == info->expected_result[i]): (1 == 0)
ERROR: src/devices/tests/test-arping - too few tests run (expected 2, got 1)
ERROR: src/devices/tests/test-arping - exited with status 134 (terminated by signal 6?)
Fixes: 8c0dfd7188
Systemd instroduces a macro _fallthrough_, see
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/pull/7389.
However, it does not yet seem conclusive how to
handle this properly in ever situation.
While shared/nm-utils/siphash24.c makes use of
the new macro, don't do that in our fork. siphash24.h
does not include all systemd headers, hence _fallthrough_
is not defined. We could re-implement it as _nm_fallthrough,
but given the open questions, that doesn't seem the
Keep the include paths clean and separate. We use directories to group source
files together. That makes sense (I guess), but then we should use this
grouping also when including files. Thus require to #include files with their
path relative to "src/".
Also, we build various artifacts from the "src/" tree. Instead of having
individual CFLAGS for each artifact in Makefile.am, the CFLAGS should be
unified. Previously, the CFLAGS for each artifact differ and are inconsistent
in which paths they add to the search path. Fix the inconsistency by just
don't add the paths at all.
Our internal copy of systemd should not be in the search path.
Instead, let users only
#include "systemd/nm-sd.h"
which then includes everything from systemd that we need.
We want to avoid to accidentally include anything from our
systemd-copy. Any user of that should only include "nm-sd.h",
which then includes everything that is needed further.
For example, "src/devices/wwan/nm-modem-manager.c" has
#include <systemd/nm-daemon.h>
which in turn includes
#include "_sd-common.h"
This works all correctly before, because #include "" will first
look in the directory where sd-daemon.h is. However, our mixing of
external systemd library and internal copy is rather dangerous.
Try to avoid it further by keeping the include paths clean.
A large part of "nm-test-utils.h" is only relevant for tests inside "src/"
directory, as they are helpers related to NetworkManager core part.
Split this part out of "nm-test-utils.h" header.
This allows tests to use these functions on a different platform instance
then on the singleton. The change makes the argument list longer, which is
unfortunate. On the other hand, it makes those functions more useful
in general.
You can't have it all.
Also, they now follow the pattern of most functions in NM where the type
is a singleton: you always pass the singleton to the function, although
in the usual case there is only one singleton instance. This allows to
use the function also on the non-singleton instance.
For internal compilation we want to be able to use deprecated
API without warnings.
Define the version min/max macros to effectively disable deprecation
warnings.
However, don't do it via CFLAGS option in the makefiles, instead hack it
to "nm-default.h". After all, *every* source file that is for internal
compilation needs to include this header as first.
The systemd event tells which neighbor changed. Make use
of this information and don't rebuild all the neighbors
all the time.
That means, we must also change our rate limiting. Instead of
rate limiting the processing of all neighbors, we process neighbors
right away but limit the notification that gobject property changed.
Make the test helper independent from the platform singleton instance.
That way, we can also use them for other platform instances (e.g. in a
different namespace).
Now we have:
"nm-sd.h" is a header file of NetworkManager with utilities
related to systemd. It can be used anywhere freely.
Also, systemd headers that are considered public API (like
"sd-event.h") can be used without restrictions.
When compiling the systemd sources, we always must include
"nm-sd-adapt.h" as first. Similarly, systemd headers must
not include "nm-sd-adapt.h", because they are either public
(in which case the adapter is not needed) or they are internal
(in which case they are themself included via a systemd source).
Sometimes, we must internal API (like "dhcp-lease-internal.h").
In this case, we also must include "nm-sd-adapt.h".
As the lldp API changed, adjust "nm-lldp-listener.c".
Note that the commit is not yet functional due to missing
sd_event_source_set_enabled() and sd_event_source_set_time().
Also assert against the number of properties in the attributes
and explicitly assert against the values of chassis-id-type,
port-id-type, and system-description.
Coverity complains rightly about "strncpy (dst, ifname, IFNAMSIZ)"
because it might leave @dst non-NULL-terminated, in case @ifname
is too long (which already would be a bug in the first place).
Replace the strcpy() uses by a new helper nm_utils_ifname_cpy()
that asserts against valid arguments.
- All internal source files (except "examples", which are not internal)
should include "config.h" first. As also all internal source
files should include "nm-default.h", let "config.h" be included
by "nm-default.h" and include "nm-default.h" as first in every
source file.
We already wanted to include "nm-default.h" before other headers
because it might contains some fixes (like "nm-glib.h" compatibility)
that is required first.
- After including "nm-default.h", we optinally allow for including the
corresponding header file for the source file at hand. The idea
is to ensure that each header file is self contained.
- Don't include "config.h" or "nm-default.h" in any header file
(except "nm-sd-adapt.h"). Public headers anyway must not include
these headers, and internal headers are never included after
"nm-default.h", as of the first previous point.
- Include all internal headers with quotes instead of angle brackets.
In practice it doesn't matter, because in our public headers we must
include other headers with angle brackets. As we use our public
headers also to compile our interal source files, effectively the
result must be the same. Still do it for consistency.
- Except for <config.h> itself. Include it with angle brackets as suggested by
https://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/autoconf.html#Configuration-Headers
Up to now, the "include" directory contained (only) header files that were
used project-wide by libs, core, clients, et al.
Since the directory now also contains a non-header file, the "include"
name is misleading. Instead of adding yet another directory that is
project-wide, with non-header-only content, rename the "include"
directory to "shared".