We sometimes have functions foo() and foo_full(), in which case
foo() has fewer arguments and just calls foo_full(). The "full"
function here is the more powerful one, and foo() is implemented
in terms of the former.
nm_platform_ip4_route_cmp_full() and m_platform_ip4_route_cmp() inverted
that pattern. The "_full" there stands for the full comparison, to not
allowing to select the comparison type.
That inconsistency is ugly. Also, these wrappers were used at only few
places. Let's drop them.
While at it, also drop nm_platform_qdisc_cmp() and rename
nm_platform_qdisc_cmp_full(). Here cmp()/cmp_full() followed the common
pattern foo()/foo_full(), but it's still hardly used and unnecessary.
These string functions allow to omit the string buffer. This is for
convenience, to use a global (thread-local) buffer. I think that is
error prone and we should drop that "convenience" feature.
At various places, pass a stack allocated buffer.
(cherry picked from commit b87afac8e8)
We use clang-format for automatic formatting of our source files.
Since clang-format is actively maintained software, the actual
formatting depends on the used version of clang-format. That is
unfortunate and painful, but really unavoidable unless clang-format
would be strictly bug-compatible.
So the version that we must use is from the current Fedora release, which
is also tested by our gitlab-ci. Previously, we were using Fedora 34 with
clang-tools-extra-12.0.1-1.fc34.x86_64.
As Fedora 35 comes along, we need to update our formatting as Fedora 35
comes with version "13.0.0~rc1-1.fc35".
An alternative would be to freeze on version 12, but that has different
problems (like, it's cumbersome to rebuild clang 12 on Fedora 35 and it
would be cumbersome for our developers which are on Fedora 35 to use a
clang that they cannot easily install).
The (differently painful) solution is to reformat from time to time, as we
switch to a new Fedora (and thus clang) version.
Usually we would expect that such a reformatting brings minor changes.
But this time, the changes are huge. That is mentioned in the release
notes [1] as
Makes PointerAligment: Right working with AlignConsecutiveDeclarations. (Fixes https://llvm.org/PR27353)
[1] https://releases.llvm.org/13.0.0/tools/clang/docs/ReleaseNotes.html#clang-format
"nm-test-utils.h" is a header-only, helper library for our unit tests.
It was somewhat unmotivated in "shared/nm-utils", because all tests use
it, but it was not part of a "module".
Move it to "src/libnm-glib-aux/". It fits there very well. They both
have (only) a dependency on glib.
glib requires G_LOG_DOMAIN defined so that log messages are labeled
to belong to NetworkManager or libnm.
However, we don't actually want to use glib logging. Our library libnm
MUST not log anything, because it spams the user's stdout/stderr.
Instead, a library must report notable events via its API. Note that
there is also LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG to explicitly enable debug logging,
but that doesn't use glib logging either.
Also, the daemon does not use glib logging instead it logs to syslog.
When run with `--debug`.
Hence, it's not useful for us to define different G_LOG_DOMAIN per
library/application, because none of our libraries/applications should
use glib logging.
It also gets slightly confusing, because we have the static library like
`src/libnm-core-impl`, which is both linked into `libnm` (the library)
and `NetworkManager` (the daemon). Which logging domain should they use?
Set the G_LOG_DOMAIN to "nm" everywhere. But no longer do it via `-D`
arguments to the compiler.
See-also: https://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Message-Logging.html#G-LOG-DOMAIN:CAPS
"libnm-core/" is rather complicated. It provides a static library that
is linked into libnm.so and NetworkManager. It also contains public
headers (like "nm-setting.h") which are part of public libnm API.
Then we have helper libraries ("libnm-core/nm-libnm-core-*/") which
only rely on public API of libnm-core, but are themself static
libraries that can be used by anybody who uses libnm-core. And
"libnm-core/nm-libnm-core-intern" is used by libnm-core itself.
Move "libnm-core/" to "src/". But also split it in different
directories so that they have a clearer purpose.
The goal is to have a flat directory hierarchy. The "src/libnm-core*/"
directories correspond to the different modules (static libraries and set
of headers that we have). We have different kinds of such modules because
of how we combine various code together. The directory layout now reflects
this.
Before there was a licensing conflict between the keyfile code
(libnm-keyfile) and libnm. The latter would require LGPL-2.1+ while
keyfile code was GPL-2.0+.
Consequently we were linking libnm-keyfile into the daemon, but not in
libnm.so.
This conflict has been resolved and keyfile API is part of libnm.so.
There is no more need to build a separate (intermediary) library. Merge
them.
This also makes sense because keyfile code needs access to private code
from libnm-core. It is closely tied to libnm-core, so that building them
separate makes no sense (anymore).
Currently "src/" mostly contains the source code of the daemon.
I say mostly, because that is not true, there are also the device,
settings, wwan, ppp plugins, the initrd generator, the pppd and dhcp
helper, and probably more.
Also we have source code under libnm-core/, libnm/, clients/, and
shared/ directories. That is all confusing.
We should have one "src" directory, that contains subdirectories. Those
subdirectories should contain individual parts (libraries or
applications), that possibly have dependencies on other subdirectories.
There should be a flat hierarchy of directories under src/, which
contains individual modules.
As the name "src/" is already taken, that prevents any sensible
restructuring of the code.
As a first step, move "src/" to "src/core/". This gives space to
reorganize the code better by moving individual components into "src/".
For inspiration, look at systemd's "src/" directory.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/743