There are different types (variants) of UUIDs defined.
Especially variants 3 and 5 are name based variants (rfc4122).
The way we create our UUIDs in nm_utils_uuid_generate_from_string()
however does not create them according to RFC and does not set
the flags to indicate the variant.
Modify the signature of nm_utils_uuid_generate_from_string() to accept
a "uuid_type" argument, so that we later can add other algorithms without
breaking API.
config.h should be included from every .c file, and it should be
included before any other include. Fix that.
(As a side effect of how I did this, this also changes us to
consistently use "config.h" rather than <config.h>. To the extent that
it matters [which is not much], quotes are more correct anyway, since
we're talking about a file in our own build tree, not a system
include.)
The gateway is a global property of the IPv4/IPv6 configuration, not
an attribute of any particular address. So represent it as such in the
API; remove the gateway from NMIPAddress, and add it to
NMSettingIPConfig.
Behind the scenes, the gateway is still serialized along with the
first address in NMSettingIPConfig:addresses, and is deserialized from
that if the settings dictionary doesn't contain a 'gateway' key.
Adjust nmcli's interactive mode to prompt for IP addresses and gateway
separately. (Patch partly from Jirka Klimeš.)
NMSettingIP[46]Config let you associate a gateway with each address,
and the writable settings backends record that information. But it
never actually gets used: NMIP4Config and NMIP6Config only ever use
the first gateway, and completely ignore any others. (And in the
common usage of the term, an interface can only have one gateway
anyway.)
So, stop pretending that multiple gateways are meaningful; don't
serialize or deserialize gateways other than the first in the
'addresses' properties, and don't read or write multiple gateway
values either.
Split a base NMSettingIPConfig class out of NMSettingIP4Config and
NMSettingIP6Config, and update things accordingly.
Further simplifications of now-redundant IPv4-vs-IPv6 code are
possible, and should happen in the future.
Merge NMIP4Address and NMIP6Address into NMIPAddress, and NMIP4Route
and NMIP6Route into NMIPRoute. The new types represent IP addresses as
strings, rather than in binary, and so are address-family agnostic.
Add nm-core-types.h, typedefing all of the GObject types in
libnm-core; this is needed so that nm-setting.h can reference
NMConnection in addition to nm-connection.h referencing NMSetting.
Removing the cross-includes from the various headers causes lots of
fallout elsewhere. (In particular, nm-utils.h used to include
nm-connection.h, which included every setting header, so any file that
included nm-utils.h automatically got most of the rest of libnm-core
without needing to pay attention to specifics.) Fix this up by
including nm-core-internal.h from those files that are now missing
includes.
Each plugin defined its own error domain, though none actually defined
any errors. Replace these with appropriate uses of
NM_SETTINGS_ERROR_INVALID_CONNECTION and NM_SETTINGS_ERROR_FAILED.
Make the :addresses and :routes properties be GPtrArrays of
NMIP4Address, etc, rather than just reflecting the D-Bus data.
Make the :dns properties be arrays of strings rather than arrays of
binary IP addresses (and update the corresponding APIs as well).
"NetworkManager.h"'s name (and non-standard capitalization) suggest
that it's some sort of high-level super-important header, but it's
really just low-level D-Bus stuff. Rename it to "nm-dbus-interface.h"
and likewise "NetworkManagerVPN.h" to "nm-vpn-dbus-interface.h"
Remove the PLUGIN_PRINT() and PLUGIN_WARN() macros and use the
standard NM logging functions instead.
Also changed PLUGIN_PRINT("error: ...") to nm_log_warn("...") in
places.
When freeing one of the collections such as GArray, GPtrArray, GSList,
etc. it is common that the items inside the connections must be
freed/unrefed too.
The previous code often iterated over the collection first with
e.g. g_ptr_array_foreach and passing e.g. g_free as GFunc argument.
For one, this has the problem, that g_free has a different signature
GDestroyNotify then the expected GFunc. Moreover, this can be
simplified either by setting a clear function
(g_ptr_array_set_clear_func) or by passing the destroy function to the
free function (g_slist_free_full).
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
The ctype macros (eg, isalnum(), tolower()) are locale-dependent. Use
glib's ASCII-only versions instead.
Also, replace isascii() with g_ascii_isprint(), since isascii()
accepts control characters, which isn't what the code wanted in any of
the places where it was using it.