- Don't use GDBusProxy but plain GDBusConnection. NMFirewallManager
is very simple, it doesn't use any of the features that GDBusProxy
provides.
- make NMFirewallManagerCallId typedef a pointer to the opaque call-id
struct, instead of the struct itself. It's confusing to have a
variable that does not look like a pointer and assigning %NULL to
it.
- internally drop the CBInfo typename and name the call-id variable
constsistantly as "call_id".
- no need to keep the call-id struct alive after cancelling it. That
simplifies the lifetime managment of the pending call because the
completion callback is always invoked shortly before destroying
the call-id.
- note that the caller is no longer allowed to cancel a call-id from
inside the completion callback. That just complicates the
implementation and is not necessary. Assert against that.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/merge_requests/230
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.
Coccinelle:
@@
expression a, b;
@@
-a ? a : b
+a ?: b
Applied with:
spatch --sp-file ternary.cocci --in-place --smpl-spacing --dir .
With some manual adjustments on spots that Cocci didn't catch for
reasons unknown.
Thanks to the marvelous effort of the GNU compiler developer we can now
spare a couple of bits that could be used for more important things,
like this commit message. Standards commitees yet have to catch up.
../../src/nm-firewall-manager.c: In function ‘_handle_dbus_start’:
../../src/nm-firewall-manager.c:318:2: error: ‘dbus_method’ may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
g_dbus_proxy_call (priv->proxy,
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
dbus_method,
~~~~~~~~~~~~
arg,
~~~~
Fixes: d8bf05d3e6
(cherry picked from commit 3ba614d696)
We want to ignore certain errors from firewalld. In the past,
the error message contained only the error code.
Since recently ([1], [2]), the error message contains a longer text:
NetworkManager[647]: <debug> [1492768494.7475] device[0x7f7f21e78f50] (eth0): Activation: setting firewall zone 'default'
NetworkManager[647]: <debug> [1492768494.7475] firewall: [0x7f7f21ed8900,change:"eth0"]: firewall zone change eth0:default
...
firewalld[2342]: ERROR: UNKNOWN_INTERFACE: 'eth0' is not in any zone
NetworkManager[647]: <warn> [1492768494.7832] firewall: [0x7f7f0400c780,remove:"eth0"]: complete: request failed (UNKNOWN_INTERFACE: 'eth0' is not in any zone)
[1] c77156d7f6
[2] 7c6ab456c5
(cherry picked from commit 2ad8bb0ce3)
We now initialize the NMFirewallManager asynchronously. That means, at
first firewalld appears as "not running", for which we usually would
fake-success right away.
It would be complex for callers to wait for firewall-manager to be
ready. So instead, have the asynchronous requests be queued and
complete them once the D-Bus proxy is initialized.
(cherry picked from commit fb7815df6e)
Next we will get another mode, so an is-idle doesn't cut it.
It can be confusing where the mode is set and where it is only
accessed read-only. For that, add mode_mutable.
(cherry picked from commit 04f4e327a9)
Creating it asynchronously changes that on the first call to
nm_firewall_manager_get() the instance is not yet running.
Note that NMPolicy already connects to the "STARTED" signal and
reapplies the zones when firewalld appears. So, this delayed
change of the running state is handled mostly fine already.
One part is still missing, it's to queue add_or_change/remove calls
while the firewall manager is initializing. That follows next.
(cherry picked from commit 753f39fa82)
- use _NM_GET_PRIVATE() and _NM_GET_PRIVATE_PTR() everywhere.
- reorder statements, to have GObject related functions (init, dispose,
constructed) at the bottom of each file and in a consistent order w.r.t.
each other.
- unify whitespaces in signal and properties declarations.
- use NM_GOBJECT_PROPERTIES_DEFINE() and _notify()
- drop unused signal slots in class structures
- drop unused header files for device factories
- 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
- "gsystem-local-alloc.h" and <gio/gio.h> are already included via
"nm-default.h". No need to include them separately.
- include "nm-macros-internal.h" via "nm-default.h" and drop all
explict includes.
- in the modified files, ensure that we always include "config.h"
and "nm-default.h" first. As second, include the header file
for the current source file (if applicable). Then follow external
includes and finally internal nm includes.
- include nm headers inside source code files with quotes
- internal header files don't need to include default headers.
They can savely assume that "nm-default.h" is already included
and with it glib, nm-glib.h, nm-macros-internal.h, etc.
Always take a reference to the manager when scheaduling an asynchronous
operations. In fact, all callers want to keep the manager alive as long
as there are operations in progress.
Refactor NMFirewallManager to have consistent semantics about
asynchronous calls.
- the callback is always invoked exactly once, but never
synchronously when starting the operation.
- while cancelling the request, the callback is invoked
synchronously with respect to the cancel operation.
- you can cancel a request once (and once only).
- you cannot cancel the request once the callback is invoked.
- when disposing the object with requests pending, the
callbacks are invoked synchronously.
- Add a callback argument to nm_firewall_manager_remove_from_zone().
Otherwise, the user never knows whether a call is still pending and
cancellable (as complete operations cannot be cancelled).
In fact, it makes no sense trying to cancel a call if you don't care
about when it completes.
- get rid of PENDING_CALL_DUMMY. The dummy callback allows cancellation
any number of times. We want to catch wrong usage by asserting that an
operation is only cancelled once.
- nm_firewall_manager_cancel_call() doesn't need the manager argument.
Either the call-id is valid (and has a valid pointer to the manager),
or there is a bug and it is a dangling pointer.
Give it a proper NMFirewallManager* prefix to make it clear where the type belongs.
Also, we will add a similar callback for nm_firewall_manager_remove_from_zone(),
so reflect that in the name.
Rather than randomly including one or more of <glib.h>,
<glib-object.h>, and <gio/gio.h> everywhere (and forgetting to include
"nm-glib-compat.h" most of the time), rename nm-glib-compat.h to
nm-glib.h, include <gio/gio.h> from there, and then change all .c
files in NM to include "nm-glib.h" rather than including the glib
headers directly.
(Public headers files still have to include the real glib headers,
since nm-glib.h isn't installed...)
Also, remove glib includes from header files that are already
including a base object header file (which must itself already include
the glib headers).
Not invoking a callback when cancelling the operation is counter
intuitive.
Note that NMPolicy refs the device, cancelling the call would leave
the reference hanging. That was not an issue because the call was
never cancelled. But still the behavior of NMFirewallManager is
unexpected.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
The directory firewall-manager/ only contained one source and one
header file. Move them to the parent src/ directory.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
2014-11-19 12:58:36 +01:00
Renamed from src/firewall-manager/nm-firewall-manager.c (Browse further)