If the agent has dropped off the bus then its proxy may already
be destroyed, so we'll get warnings when trying to make method
calls using it. Track proxy destruction and warn if we try to
use a destroyed proxy.
Turns out this function is useless, because it's only called when the
agent has dropped off the bus or when the whole request is being
freed. If the agent has dropped off the bus then there's no point
in asking it to cancel the request because there's nothing to ask.
So we can collapse request_cancel() into request_free().
If all agents can handle VPN hints, then we'll try to use
ConnectInteractive() to let the VPN plugin ask for secrets
interactively via the SecretsRequired signal. These hints
are then passed to agents during the connection process if
the plugin needs more secrets or different secrets, and when
the new secrets are returned, they are passed back to the VPN
plugin.
If at least one agent does not have the VPN hints capability,
we can't use ConnectInteractive(), but fall back to the old
Connect call, because that agent won't be able to send the
hints to the VPN plugin's authentication dialog, and thus
we won't get back the secrets the VPN plugin is looking for.
So, for interactive secrets to work correctly, you need:
1) A VPN plugin updated for interactive secrets requests
2) NM updated for interactive secrets requests
3) all agents to set the VPN_HINTS capability when
registering with NetworkManager and to pass hints
along to the VPN authentication dialog
4) a VPN authentication dialog updated to look for hints
and only return secrets corresponding to the hints
requested by the plugin
The nm_platform_ip[46]_address_sync() functions no longer use
nm_platform_ip[46]_address_exists() to avoid adding already
existing addresses. That means nm_platform_ip[46]_address_add()
is now called for *all* commited addresses and the lifetimes
are thus always updated.
Because of that, nm_platform_ip[46]_address_add() had to be modified to
accept existing addresses and update their lifetimes when appropriate.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705102
The nm-rdisc subsystem, just as the nm-platform subsystem is separately
testable and it proved convenient to be able to build the test programs
by just typing 'make' in the rdisc/platform directory where the source
code for those modules resides.
Addresses in the platform cache will have timestamp/lifetime/preferred set,
but addresses to be added or removed (like new IP config from DHCP renewal
or new RAs) won't have these set, since they only get set when the address
is actually added to the kernel. So when syncing addresses, we can't look
at any of these items or nothing matches, and all existing addresses get
removed.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=705102
A couple functions depended on the passed-in error being !NULL to
correctly report errors, and we can't depend on that because it might
not be true. So fix up those functions' call chain to ensure that
errors get reported regardless of whether 'error' is !NULL.
src/rdisc doesn't need a makefile just to point to the tests,
we can do that more easily from src/Makefile.am like we do for
all the other tests subdirs.
When link goes !IFF_UP by internal or external action, we need to delete
related routes from the route cache. The same is done for both addresses
and routes upon link removal.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704770
Bluetooth device hardware addresses won't change during the lifetime
of the object (since that would mean a completely new device) and
they also won't have an ifindex because they aren't netdevices.
Various bits of the core periodically call nm_device_update_hw_address()
to update a device's hardware address, but this function expects that
any device with a hardware address also has an ifindex. Except that
Bluetooth devices don't because they aren't netdevices.
Modify the get_hw_address_length() function to return a boolean
indicating whether or not the address can ever change, and set that
for BT devices. nm_device_update_hw_address() then exits early if
there's no point in re-checking the hardware address, avoiding the
assertion.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701744
The previous ignore-carrier rules did not work well with dynamic IP
(dhcp/slaac) connections. Change the rule so that only static IP
connections can be activated when carrier is not present (but both
static and dynamic connections will remain up when carrier is lost).