Previously, each (non abstract) NMSetting class had to register
its name and priority via _nm_register_setting().
Note, that libnm-core.la already links against "nm-meta-setting.c",
which also redundantly keeps track of the settings name and gtype
as well.
Re-use NMMetaSettingInfo also in libnm-core.la, to track this meta
data.
The goal is to get rid of private data structures that track
meta data about NMSetting classes. In this case, "registered_settings"
hash. Instead, we should have one place where all this meta data
is tracked. This was, it is also accessible as internal API,
which can be useful (for keyfile).
Note that NMSettingClass has some overlap with NMMetaSettingInfo.
One difference is, that NMMetaSettingInfo is const, while NMSettingClass
is only initialized during the class_init() method. Appart from that,
it's mostly a matter of taste, whether we attach meta data to
NMSettingClass, to NMMetaSettingInfo, or to a static-array indexed
by NMMetaSettingType.
Note, that previously, _nm_register_setting() was private API. That
means, no user could subclass a functioning NMSetting instance. The same
is still true: NMMetaSettingInfo is internal API and users cannot access
it to create their own NMSetting subclasses. But that is almost desired.
libnm is not designed, to be extensible via subclassing, nor is it
clear why that would be a useful thing to do. One day, we should remove
the NMSetting and NMSettingClass definitions from public headers. Their
only use is subclassing the types, which however does not work.
While libnm-core was linking already against nm-meta-setting.c,
nm_meta_setting_infos was unreferenced. So, this change increases
the binary size of libnm and NetworkManager (1032 bytes). Note however
that roughly the same information was previously allocated at runtime.
- Don't use @parent_class name. This local variable (and @object_class) is
the class instance up-cast to the pointer types of the parents. The point
here is not that it is the direct parent. The point is, that it's the
NMSettingClass type.
Also, it can only be used inconsistently, in face of NMSettingIP4Config,
who's parent type is NMSettingIPConfig. Clearly, inside
nm-setting-ip4-config.c we wouldn't want to use the "parent_class"
name. Consistently rename @parent_class to @setting_class.
- Also rename the pointer to the own class to @klass. "setting_class" is also the
wrong name for that, because the right name would be something like
"setting_6lowpan_class".
However, "klass" is preferred over the latter, because we commonly create new
GObject implementations by copying an existing one. Generic names like "klass"
and "self" inside a type implementation make that simpler.
- drop useless comments like
/* virtual functions */
/* Properties */
It's better to logically and visually structure the code, and avoid trival
remarks about that. They only end up being used inconsistently. If you
even need a stronger visual separator, then an 80 char /****/ line
should be preferred.
Properties that are backed by a GObject property are fundamentally
different.
I think it's clearer to rework the check, to first check whether
we have a param_spec, and then implement different checks.
Add a new option that allows to activate a profile multiple times
(at the same time). Previoulsy, all profiles were implicitly
NM_SETTING_CONNECTION_MULTI_CONNECT_SINGLE, meaning, that activating
a profile that is already active will deactivate it first.
This will make more sense, as we also add more match-options how
profiles can be restricted to particular devices. We already have
connection.type, connection.interface-name, and (ethernet|wifi).mac-address
to restrict a profile to particular devices. For example, it is however
not possible to specify a wildcard like "eth*" to match a profile to
a set of devices by interface-name. That is another missing feature,
and once we extend the matching capabilities, it makes more sense to
activate a profile multiple times.
See also https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=997998, which
previously changed that a connection is restricted to a single activation
at a time. This work relaxes that again.
This only adds the new property, it is not used nor implemented yet.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1555012
_nm_utils_init() is a __attribute__((constructor)) function,
that is, it runs during dlopen().
On the other head, g_module_open() itself calls dlopen().
It is prone to deadlock. Don't do it.
The check is only an aggressive assertion to crash the application
if it wrongly loads libnm and libnm-util/libnm-glib at the same time.
If that happens, all is lost already. We can just as well call the
assertion later. It's not supposed to fail anyway.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=796804
Utilize _nm_setting_to_dbus() to serialize the setting. The main reason
is that this way we can also print the more complicated values
g_strdup_value_contents() can't grok, e.g. the GArrays and GHashTables.
Some effort was spent on tidying up the results in a manner it was done
previously, instead of reducing this to a plain g_variant_print(). It
looks good that way:
Before:
vpn
service-type : "org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.VPN.Novpn" (s)
user-name : NULL (sd)
persistent : FALSE (sd)
data : ((GHashTable*) 0xc61060) (s)
secrets : ((GHashTable*) 0xdda640) (s)
timeout : 0 (sd)
After:
vpn
service-type : 'org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.VPN.Novpn'
data : {'gateway': 'novpn.example.com', 'username': 'hello'}
secrets : {'password': 'world'}
Note that no effort was spent on printing the defaults. There are
multiple ways that could be achieved, but I'm not sure it would be all
that necessary given this is really just a quick'n'dirty debugging facilty.
Note the special error codes NM_UTILS_ERROR_CONNECTION_AVAILABLE_*.
This will be used to determine, whether the profile is fundamentally
incompatible with the device, or whether just some other properties
mismatch. That information will be importand during a plain `nmcli
connection up`, where NetworkManager searches all devices for a device
to activate. If no device is found (and multiple errors happened),
we want to show the error that is most likely relevant for the user.
Also note, how NMDevice's check_connection_compatible() uses the new
class field "device_class->connection_type_check_compatible" to simplify
checks for compatible profiles.
The error reason is still unused.
1) the command line gets shorter. I frequently run `make V=1` to see
the command line arguments for the compiler, and there is a lot
of noise.
2) define each of these variables at one place. This makes it easy
to verify that for all compilation units, a particular
define has the same value. Previously that was not obvious or
even not the case (see commit e5d1a71396
and commit d63cf1ef2f).
The point is to avoid redundancy.
3) not all compilation units need all defines. In fact, most modules
would only need a few of these defines. We aimed to pass the necessary
minium of defines to each compilation unit, but that was non-obvious
to get right and often we set a define that wasn't used. See for example
"src_settings_plugins_ibft_cppflags" which needlessly had "-DSYSCONFDIR".
This question is now entirely avoided by just defining all variables in
a header. We don't care to find the minimum, because every component
gets anyway all defines from the header.
4) this also avoids the situation, where a module that previously did
not use a particular define gets modified to require it. Previously,
that would have required to identify the missing define, and add
it to the CFLAGS of the complation unit. Since every compilation
now includes "config-extra.h", all defines are available everywhere.
5) the fact that each define is now available in all compilation units
could be perceived as a downside. But it isn't, because these defines
should have a unique name and one specific value. Defining the same
name with different values, or refer to the same value by different
names is a bug, not a desirable feature. Since these defines should
be unique accross the entire tree, there is no problem in providing
them to every compilation unit.
6) the reason why we generate "config-extra.h" this way, instead of using
AC_DEFINE() in configure.ac, is due to the particular handling of
autoconf for directory variables. See [1].
With meson, it would be trivial to put them into "config.h.meson".
While that is not easy with autoconf, the "config-extra.h" workaround
seems still preferable to me.
[1] https://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/autoconf-2.63/html_node/Installation-Directory-Variables.html
We commonly don't use the glib typedefs for char/short/int/long,
but their C types directly.
$ git grep '\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>' | wc -l
587
$ git grep '\<\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>' | wc -l
21114
One could argue that using the glib typedefs is preferable in
public API (of our glib based libnm library) or where it clearly
is related to glib, like during
g_object_set (obj, PROPERTY, (gint) value, NULL);
However, that argument does not seem strong, because in practice we don't
follow that argument today, and seldomly use the glib typedefs.
Also, the style guide for this would be hard to formalize, because
"using them where clearly related to a glib" is a very loose suggestion.
Also note that glib typedefs will always just be typedefs of the
underlying C types. There is no danger of glib changing the meaning
of these typedefs (because that would be a major API break of glib).
A simple style guide is instead: don't use these typedefs.
No manual actions, I only ran the bash script:
FILES=($(git ls-files '*.[hc]'))
sed -i \
-e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>\( [^ ]\)/\1\2/g' \
-e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\> /\1 /g' \
-e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>/\1/g' \
"${FILES[@]}"
$ nmcli c add type ovs-port ifname ovsport0
Error: Failed to add 'ovs-port-ovsport0' connection: connection.type:
Only 'ovs-port' connections can be enslaved to 'ovs-bridge'
nm_streq0() is not good here. It fails (with a wrong error message) even
when the slave_type is not set, which it shouldn't since slave_type can
be normalized. The real problem is the lack of the master property.
This fixes the condition:
$ nmcli c add type ovs-port ifname ovsport0
Error: Failed to add 'ovs-port-ovsport0' connection: connection.master:
A connection with a 'ovs-port' setting must have a master.
Corrects the error message:
$ nmcli c add con-name br0 type bridge
$ nmcli c add type ovs-port ifname ovsport0 parent br0
Error: Failed to add 'bridge-slave-ovsport0' connection: connection.slave-type:
'ovs-port' connections must be enslaved to 'ovs-bridge', not 'bridge'
And gets rid of a confusing nm_streq0 use when comparing the type, since
at that point type must not be NULL anymore.
Fixes: 4199c976da
gretap and ip6gretap ip-tunnel interfaces encapsulate L2 packets over
IP. Allow adding a wired setting for such connections so that users
can change the interface MAC.
Although we don't really need protect for thread safety in _nm_utils_init(),
avoid using static variables without lock/atomic operations. libnm is not
thread-safe, but we still should try to avoid potential issues whenever it is
easy.
constructor functions are ugly, because code is running before
main() starts. Instead, as the registration code for NMSetting types
is insid the GType constructor, we just need to ensure at the
right place, that the GType was created.
The right place here is _register_settings_ensure_inited(), because
that is called before we need the registration information.
_nm_register_setting() and _nm_register_setting_impl() are called from within
the GType constructor for the NMSetting subtype. As such, at that point it
runs inside a g_once_init_enter() block. However, each implementation
for initializing the GType has a separate g_once_init_enter() variable, hence,
if two threads create GType instances for different NMSetting subclasses, there
is a race.
libnm is not thread safe. However, it should be at least thread safe
with respect to constructing the GType instances.
For NMSetting subtypes, we need the static dictionaries "registered_settings" and
"registered_settings_by_type" to keep track of existing NMSetting types.
Initialize these dictionaries inside NMSetting's type initialization code.
This is guaranteed to run before any use of NMSetting type, and is also
guarded by a mutex.
Also, drop the __attribute__((constructor)) function to initialize the
hash tables. They are not needed, and it's ugly to run code before
main().
Add support for a new wireguard link type to the platform code. For now
this only covers querying existing links via genetlink and parsing them
into platform objects.
It's for 6LoWPAN devices. "o.fd.NM.Device.6Lowpan" wouldn't be a valid
interface name -- just skip the leading numeral, that's what kernel also
does on similiar occassions.