It was confusing to understand the difference between calling nm_device_connection_is_available()
and check_connection_available(), they behaved similar, but not really
the same. Especially nm_device_connection_is_available() would look
first into @available_connetions, and might call check_connection_available()
itself. Whereas @available_connetions was also populated by testing
check_connection_available(). This interrelation makes it hard to
understand when nm_device_connection_is_available() returned true.
Rename nm_device_connection_is_available() to nm_device_check_connection_available()
and remove all direct calls of check_connection_available() in favor of
the wrapper nm_device_check_connection_available().
Now we only call nm_device_check_connection_available() with different
parameters (@flags and @specific_object). We also have the additional
guarantee that specifying more @flags will widen the result and making
a connection "more" available, while specifying a @specific_object will
restrict it.
This also changes behavior in several cases. For example before
nm_device_connection_is_available() for user-requests would always
declare matching connections available on Wi-Fi devices (only)
regardless of the device state. Now the device state gets consistently
considered.
For default-unmanaged devices it also changes behavior in complicated
ways, because before we would put connections into @available_connetions
for every device-state, but nm_device_connection_is_available() had a
special over-ride only for unmanaged-state.
This also fixes a bug, that user can activate an unavailable Wi-Fi
device:
nmcli radio wifi off
nmcli connection up wlan0
==12663== 45 bytes in 1 blocks are definitely lost in loss record 2,464 of 4,708
==12663== at 0x4C29BCF: malloc (in /usr/lib64/valgrind/vgpreload_memcheck-amd64-linux.so)
==12663== by 0x7F4A6F5: g_malloc (gmem.c:97)
==12663== by 0x7F6301E: g_strdup (gstrfuncs.c:356)
==12663== by 0x4B8AE5: nm_manager_new (nm-manager.c:4793)
==12663== by 0x432F3D: main (main.c:413)
The manager wrote the user state to the state file in /var with
the key "WiMAXEnabled", but it was read from the state file as
"WimaxEnabled". Clearly that's not going to work.
Note also the comment "Just make sure we don't expect specific data being
in the connection till then (especially in validate_activation_request())."
in impl_manager_add_and_activate_connection().
Creating a connection caused a failed assertion:
#0 0x00007ff8da3aa4e9 in g_logv (log_domain=0x7ff8ddf41036 "NetworkManager", log_level=G_LOG_LEVEL_CRITICAL, format=<optimized out>, args=args@entry=0x7ffff5a0a090) at gmessages.c:989
#1 0x00007ff8da3aa63f in g_log (log_domain=<optimized out>, log_level=<optimized out>, format=<optimized out>) at gmessages.c:1025
#2 0x00007ff8dde8c47a in nm_utils_get_ip_config_method (connection=0x7ff8def21d20, ip_setting_type=140706868598912) at NetworkManagerUtils.c:1252
#3 0x00007ff8dde7d654 in validate_activation_request (self=0x7ff8def62150, context=0x7ff8deff5a00, connection=0x7ff8def21d20, device_path=0x7ff8def3f770 "/org/freedesktop/NetworkManager/Devices/2", out_device=0x7ffff5a0a370,
out_vpn=0x7ffff5a0a36c, error=0x7ffff5a0a378) at nm-manager.c:3061
#4 0x00007ff8dde7b7a2 in impl_manager_add_and_activate_connection (self=0x7ff8def62150, settings=0x7ff8def95460, device_path=0x7ff8def3f770 "/org/freedesktop/NetworkManager/Devices/2",
specific_object_path=0x7ff8deeeced0 "/org/freedesktop/NetworkManager/AccessPoint/227", context=0x7ff8deff5a00) at nm-manager.c:3386
#5 0x00007ff8dde6bd9c in dbus_glib_marshal_nm_manager_VOID__BOXED_BOXED_BOXED_POINTER (closure=0x7ffff5a0a5f0, return_value=0x0, n_param_values=5, param_values=0x7ff8defb9d30, invocation_hint=0x0,
marshal_data=0x7ff8dde7b660 <impl_manager_add_and_activate_connection>) at ./nm-manager-glue.h:189
#6 0x00007ff8dc506885 in invoke_object_method (message=0x7ff8def99a00, connection=0x7ff8deeec940, method=0x7ff8de1a6878 <dbus_glib_nm_manager_methods+72>, object_info=0x7ff8de1a2e70 <dbus_glib_nm_manager_object_info>,
object=0x7ff8def62150) at dbus-gobject.c:1899
#7 object_registration_message (connection=0x7ff8deeec940, message=message@entry=0x7ff8def99a00, user_data=user_data@entry=0x7ff8def16da0) at dbus-gobject.c:2161
#8 0x00007ff8dc2cef86 in _dbus_object_tree_dispatch_and_unlock (tree=0x7ff8deeec5e0, message=message@entry=0x7ff8def99a00, found_object=found_object@entry=0x7ffff5a0a814) at dbus-object-tree.c:862
#9 0x00007ff8dc2c10d9 in dbus_connection_dispatch (connection=connection@entry=0x7ff8deeec940) at dbus-connection.c:4699
#10 0x00007ff8dc503d65 in message_queue_dispatch (source=source@entry=0x7ff8deeee720, callback=<optimized out>, user_data=<optimized out>) at dbus-gmain.c:90
#11 0x00007ff8da3a32a6 in g_main_dispatch (context=0x7ff8deebd320) at gmain.c:3066
#12 g_main_context_dispatch (context=context@entry=0x7ff8deebd320) at gmain.c:3642
#13 0x00007ff8da3a3628 in g_main_context_iterate (context=0x7ff8deebd320, block=block@entry=1, dispatch=dispatch@entry=1, self=<optimized out>) at gmain.c:3713
#14 0x00007ff8da3a3a3a in g_main_loop_run (loop=0x7ff8deebd3e0) at gmain.c:3907
#15 0x00007ff8dddc0979 in main (argc=1, argv=0x7ffff5a0afd8) at main.c:442
Fixes: 477033b9ef
Merge the two nm_connectivity_set_online() calls into one, after
tweaking NMConnectivity to always update its internal state before
alerting callers to the new state.
When a connection has finished activating, but we don't know yet that
we have full connectivity, then find_best_device_state() should return
CONNECTED_SITE, not CONNECTING. Fixes a bug where the manager state
would repeatedly switch between those two states.
On resume configured interfaces are unmanaged to clear their pre-resume
state and then re-managed. Eventually the interface should end up moving
to the DISCONNECTED state, which should trigger an auto-activate check in
the Policy. If connectivity checking was enabled, that auto-activate check
would fail because the Manager's state was still NM_STATE_ASLEEP.
This caused bridge slaves not to auto-activate on resume, which left bridges
without connectivity.
The manager never left NM_STATE_ASLEEP when connectivity checking was
enabled due to nm_manager_update_state() returning early when kicking
off a connectivity check. Instead, the manager's state should always
be updated to accurately reflect the current state.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1162636https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=742675
Also no longer increment the reference count in the getter and
properly disconnect the signals in NMManager:dispose().
Also use the defines for the signal names instead of plain strings.
Add an NMSettingsConnection:ready property, which indicates if the
connection is ready to use. Add NMSettings:startup-complete, which is
TRUE when all connections are ready. Make NMManager:startup-complete
take NMSettings:startup-complete into account.
There's no need to call `nm_session_monitor_get()` individually for each
call to `nm_auth_is_subject_in_acl()`.
Acked-By: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
INTERNAL is actually a nop right now because the only thing that
sets it is suspend/resume, which is covered by the preceding
manager_sleeping() call. But we may use this more in the future,
so add it while we're here.
Devices that are unmanaged because their parent is unmanaged
probably shouldn't assume connections either, per 4e105c50.
We've previously been just watching for state changes into UNMANAGED state. No
state change is emitted upon removal of a device which is already unmanaged.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=737659
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.)
When quitting, the Manager asks each device to spawn the interface helper,
which persists and manages dynamic address on the interface after NetworkManager
is gone. If the dynamic address cannot be maintaned, the helper quits and
the interface's address may be removed when their lifetime runs out.
To keep the helper as simple as possible, NetworkManager passes most of the
configuration on the command-line, including some properties of the device's
current state, which are necessary for the helper to maintain DHCP leases
or IPv6 SLAAC addresses.
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.
This will provide an extremely easy way for applications to find out
what type of connection the system is currently using. They might want
to do this to avoid using data if a phone is on a 3G connection, for
example.
Having this as a separate property provides at least two advantages:
1) it reduces code complexity for those wanting only this one simple
piece of information
2) we could allow access to this property (but nothing else) to
privilege-separated applications in the future
This patch adds the missing nm_active_connection_get_connection_type()
which was in the header file but never actually implemented.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=739080
NMManagerError has other operation-specific errors (like
NM_MANAGER_ERROR_ALREADY_ASLEEP_OR_AWAKE), so it makes sense to move
NM_LOGGING_ERROR_UNKNOWN_LEVEL and NM_LOGGING_ERROR_UNKNOWN_DOMAIN
there too rather than having them in their own tiny error domain.
Move the definition of NMManagerError to nm-errors, register it with
D-Bus, and verify in the tests that it maps correctly.
NM_MANAGER_ERROR_INTERNAL gets renamed to NM_MANAGER_ERROR_FAILED for
consistency. NM_MANAGER_ERROR_UNMANAGED_DEVICE is dropped since that
name doesn't really describe the one place it was previously used in.
NM_MANAGER_ERROR_SYSTEM_CONNECTION is dropped because it was't being
used. NM_MANAGER_ERROR_UNSUPPORTED_CONNECTION_TYPE is dropped because
it can be replaced with an NM_CONNECTION_ERROR.
NM_MANAGER_ERROR_AUTOCONNECT_NOT_ALLOWED is turned into the more
generic NM_MANAGER_ERROR_CONNECTION_NOT_AVAILABLE.
Also, remove the <tp:possible-errors> sections from nm-manager.xml,
since they were completely out of date.
When a child device is found and an IP configuration already exists
for it even though it is under NM control (like when pppd applies
IP config to a WWAN device before NM gets the IP details from the pppd
plugin), don't deconfigure the child device when removing it from the
device list, because this breaks the device's configuration.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=738479
This makes NetworkManager independent of <polkit/polkit.h>
development headers and libpolkit-gobject-1.so library.
Instead communicate directly with polkit using its DBUS
interface.
PolicyKit support is now always compiled in. You can control
polkit authorization with the configuration option
[main]
auth-polkit=yes|no
If the configure option is omitted, a build time default
value is used. This default value can be set with the
configure option --enable-polkit.
This commit adds a new class NMAuthManager that reimplements the
relevant DBUS client parts. It takes source code from the polkit
library.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=734146
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
NM_SETTINGS_CONNECTION_FLAGS_NM_GENERATED_ASSUMED is a special kind of
NM_SETTINGS_CONNECTION_FLAGS_NM_GENERATED, that was generated for
connection assumption.
At the moment, the flag is used identical to NM_GENERATED. Later,
NM_GENERATED will get a slightly different meaning.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
Before, NMSettingsConnection had two internal properties 'unsaved' and
'nm-generated'. Now, implement these properties as #NMSettingsConnectionFlags.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
Port libnm-core/libnm to GDBus.
The NetworkManager daemon continues to use dbus-glib; the
previously-added connection hash/variant conversion methods are now
moved to NetworkManagerUtils (along with a few other utilities that
are now only needed by the daemon code).
In preparation for porting to GDBus, make nm_connection_to_dbus(),
etc, represent connections as GVariants of type 'a{sa{sv}}' rather
than as GHashTables-of-GHashTables-of-GValues.
This means we're constantly converting back and forth internally, but
this is just a stepping stone on the way to the full GDBus port, and
all of that code will go away again later.
UINT is just 32bit, truncating the GType on 64-bit platforms. We do already use
cast to SIZE, which is as wide as a pointer, when we need a GType in another
place (nmtui); let's do it here as well.
Broken by [0bc1b5138] core: add support for internal device factories
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=736780