Notes and changes by jklimes:
- fix reading TeamPort without TYPE=Ethernet
- fix tests
Ideally this should be solved on initscripts side. But teamd doesn't want to do
any changes to initscripts, so we make a workaround here.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1074160
reader.c: In function 'parse_infiniband_p_key':
reader.c:3947:5: error: 'id' may be used uninitialized in this function [-Werror=maybe-uninitialized]
id = (id | 0x8000);
^
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
When config is NULL libteam will use its own default configuration.
Commit 76c3bd9898 changed that and refused to
create 'team' setting making connection invalid. It didn't set an error as
well, which resulted in
ifcfg-rh: parsing /etc/sysconfig/network-scripts/ifcfg-team ...
ifcfg-rh: error: (unknown)
GLib-CRITICAL **: g_propagate_error: assertion `src != NULL' failed
4f3a9cca6f stopped unescaping Team
configuration when reading ifcfg files due to inefficient algorithms
in svUnescape(). Unfortunately, since Team configuration is escaped
when written out, reading it in creates invalid configuration that
teamd rejects.
The pathological case was a 9MB invalid Team configuration. Since a
Team configuration will never, ever be that large, fix the issue by
warning the user or rejecting the configuration if it is over 20000
bytes in size (an arbitrary number). Thus svUnescape() will never
be called with huge strings, but the configuration is still unescaped.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1051517
Move DHCP_SEND_HOSTNAME parsing out of the check for DHCP_HOSTNAME so that
users can disable NM sending the system hostname to the DHCP server when
DHCP_HOSTNAME is not defined.
It is an extension compared to initscripts (not in sysconfig.txt). But it is
necessary for preserving dhcp-send-hostname. Missing DHCP_SEND_HOSTNAME is
treated as "yes", which matches dhcp-send-hostname default value being TRUE.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1001529
These are (most likely) only warnings and not severe bugs.
Some of these changes are mostly made to get a clean run of
Coverity without any warnings.
Error found by running Coverity scan
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1025894
Co-Authored-By: Jiří Klimeš <jklimes@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
Doing so may cause NetworkManager to run into an very intensive loop in
svUnescape() in shvar.c.
This is 'top' output for very long (invalid team config) - 9309865 bytes long:
PID USER PR NI VIRT RES SHR S %CPU %MEM TIME+ COMMAND
26855 root 20 0 305m 35m 6092 R 99.8 0.9 8:08.11 NetworkManager
and still not finished.
In Fedora, OVS ports are now identified in ifcfg files as
"TYPE=OVSPort", which NM doesn't recognize, and so it would ignore
those ifcfg files. Unfortunately, this meant that if auto-default
wasn't disabled, and there was no other configuration defined for the
device, then NM would create an NMDefaultWiredConnection for it and
screw things up.
So, add an "unrecognized-specs" settings plugin property, which allows
a plugin to indicate to NetworkManager that it knows of some
non-NetworkManager-supported connection defined for a device. This
will suppress default-wired connection creation for that device,
similar to the "no-auto-default" config file option, but determined by
the plugin instead of by manual configuration. Devices listed in
unrecognized-specs may still be managed by NetworkManager, unless they
are also listed in unmanaged-specs.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1022256
Rather than having each connection-parsing function do its own
unmanaged-spec handling, just do it all directly from
connection_from_file(), and don't bother trying to fully parse the
file if it is unmanaged, since it won't ever be seen outside of the
plugin in that case anyway.
This also makes it possible to have an ifcfg file of an unrecognized
type be unmanaged.
Support new bonding options and set them carefully. The options cannot
be set arbitrarily because they interfere with each other.
This commit is forward-ported from rhel-6.5, see patch
rh901662-bond-more-options.patch, originally written by Dan Williams.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=901662https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=905532
Co-Authored-By: Dan Williams <dcbw@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
Static IP addresses were only read from ifcfg-* file when IP method was
'manual' (BOOTPROTO=none|static). This was to match the legacy initscripts
behaviour. However, NetworkManager supports using additional static IPs in
addition to automatically obtained (DHCP, etc.) addresses. So we now read
static IPs even for automatic methods to be able to use this feature.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=998135
ifcfg-rh had the rule that if an ifcfg file had no BOOTPROTO and no
IPv4 addresses, then it should be treated as method=auto for
compatibility. But in fact, current ifup treats it as method=disabled,
so we should too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708875
Make sure that all connections returned from NMSettings or created via
AddAndActivateConnection have an NMSettingIP4Config and an
NMSettingIP6Config, with non-NULL methods, and get rid of
now-unnecessary checks for those.
Also move the slaves-can't-have-IP-config checks into the
platform-independent code as well. This also gets rid of spurious
"ignoring IP4/IP6 configuration" warnings in ifcfg-rh when reading a
slave ifcfg file.
Partly based on a patch from Pavel.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=708875
The problem is that there is only a single variable in ifcfg file holding dns
domains - DOMAIN. Thus NetworkManager writes both IPv4 and IPv6 dns-search into
it. While reading there is no way to distinguish between IPv4 and IPv6 values,
so the DOMAIN value is read and only put into IPv4 dns-search.
But, when IPv4 is disabled or invalid, the domains got lost. So in such case
we put DOMAIN variable into IPv6 instead.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1004866
Routes without gateway are legal and should be treated as a device route
(direct route).
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=697525
The original patch was written by Scott Shambarger <scott-gnome@shambarger.net>.
This is a modified version of the patch.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
Reported-by: Scott Shambarger <scott-gnome@shambarger.net>
If BOOTPROTO is set to "none", user states that no ipv4 setting should
be set. So respect that.
Introduce helper is_any_ip4_address_defined() along the way to make the
code more readable.
Signed-off-by: Jiri Pirko <jiri@resnulli.us>
The initscripts do this:
MATCH='^.+\.[0-9]{1,4}$'
if [[ "${DEVICE}" =~ $MATCH ]]; then
VID=$(echo "${DEVICE}" | LC_ALL=C sed 's/^.*\.\([0-9]\+\)/\1/')
PHYSDEV=${DEVICE%.*}
fi
MATCH='^vlan[0-9]{1,4}?'
if [[ "${DEVICE}" =~ $MATCH ]]; then
VID=$(echo "${DEVICE}" | LC_ALL=C sed 's/^vlan0*//')
# PHYSDEV should be set in ifcfg-vlan* file
if test -z "$PHYSDEV"; then
net_log $"PHYSDEV should be set for device ${DEVICE}"
exit 1
fi
fi
which means that if the VLAN name starts with "vlan" then
PHYSDEV must be set, otherwise the parent interface cannot
be determined.
Since PHYSDEV, if set, reflects the explicit intentions of the
user instead of assuming the name from DEVICE, make PHYSDEV
take precedence over determining the parent interface from
heuristics.
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.
Add a "monitor-connection-files" config option, which can be set to
"false" to disable automatic reloading of connections on file change.
To go with this, add a new ReloadConnections method on
o.fd.NM.Settings that can be used to manually reload connections, and
add an nm-cli command to call it.
For settings corresponding to devices that have a :carrier property
(ie bond, bridge, infiniband, vlan, and wired), add a :carrier-detect
property specifying how that affects the connection:
yes: The connection can only be activated when the device
has carrier, and will be deactivated if the device loses
carrier (for more than 4 seconds).
no: The connection ignores carrier on the device; it can be
activated when there is no carrier, and stays activated
when carrier is lost.
on-activate: The connection can only be activated when the
device has carrier, but it will not be deactivated if the
device loses carrier.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=688284
GObject creation cannot normally fail, except for types that implement
GInitable and take a GError in their _new() method. Some NM types
override constructor() and return NULL in some cases, but these
generally only happen in the case of programmer error (eg, failing to
set a mandatory property), and so crashing is reasonable (and most
likely inevitable anyway).
So, remove all NULL checks after calls to g_object_new() and its
myriad wrappers.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=693678
Allows to attach any connection to a bridge using the BRIDGE= key.
IP configuration is optional for bridge components but not
prohibited. Test case included.
This patch makes DHCPv6 support more or less equivalent to that
one of IPv4 DHCP.
(dcbw: fix some formatting, rearrange code so it's less convoluted,
fix up writing hostname to ifcfg files)