Move reading and writing of the state file to NMConfig
("/var/lib/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.state" file).
Originally, I intended to persist more state, thus it made
sense to cleanup handling of the state file and move it all
at one place. Now, it's not clear that will happen anytime soon.
Still, the change is a worthy cleanup, so do it anyway.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764474
Clone the connection upon activation. This makes it safe for the user
to modify the original connection while it is activated.
This involves several changes:
- NMActiveConnection gets @settings_connection and @applied_connection.
To support add-and-activate, we constructing a NMActiveConnection with
no connection set. Previously, we would set the "connection" field to
a temporary NMConnection. Now NMManager piggybacks this temporary
connection as object-data (TAG_ACTIVE_CONNETION_ADD_AND_ACTIVATE).
- get rid of the functions nm_active_connection_get_connection_type()
and nm_active_connection_get_connection_uuid(). From their names
it is unclear whether this returns the settings or applied connection.
The (few) callers should figure that out themselves.
- rename nm_active_connection_get_id() to
nm_active_connection_get_settings_connection_id(). This function
is only used internally for logging.
- dispatcher calls now get two connections as well. The
applied-connection is used for the connection data, while
the settings-connection is used for the connection path.
- needs special handling for properties that apply immediately
when changed (nm_device_reapply_settings_immediately()).
Co-Authored-By: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724041
WiMAX support was dropped in commit 721e917cb6.
Also, remove support for the WiMAX rfkill flag and only preserve the
D-Bus property for backward compatibility.
Rename nm_manager_new() to nm_manager_setup(), and change the local
@singleton variable to @singleton_instance. (Also, add a local @self
variable inside nm_manager_setup().)
Also, make NMManager own NMSettings rather than having them both owned
by main().
NMManager was failing to initialize if there was only a private bus,
despite the fact that this is exactly the use case that the private
bus was added for.
The only other potentially-failing code in nm_manager_new() was adding
prop_filter to the D-Bus connection, but this can't really fail, so
just assert that it doesn't. And now, nm_manager_new() always
succeeds, so update the caller for that.
Add NMExportedObject, make it the base class of all D-Bus-exported
types, and move the nm-properties-changed-signal logic into it. (Also,
make NMSettings use the same properties-changed code as everything
else, which it was not previously doing, presumably for historical
reasons).
(This is mostly just shuffling code around at this point, but
NMExportedObject will be more important in the gdbus port, since
gdbus-codegen doesn't do a very good job of supporting objects that
export multiple interfaces [as each NMDevice subclass does, for
example], so we will need more glue/helper code in NMExportedObject
then.)
Rather than randomly including one or more of <glib.h>,
<glib-object.h>, and <gio/gio.h> everywhere (and forgetting to include
"nm-glib-compat.h" most of the time), rename nm-glib-compat.h to
nm-glib.h, include <gio/gio.h> from there, and then change all .c
files in NM to include "nm-glib.h" rather than including the glib
headers directly.
(Public headers files still have to include the real glib headers,
since nm-glib.h isn't installed...)
Also, remove glib includes from header files that are already
including a base object header file (which must itself already include
the glib headers).
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.
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
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.
Previously, src/nm-ip4-config.h, libnm/nm-ip4-config.h, and
libnm-glib/nm-ip4-config.h all used "NM_IP4_CONFIG_H" as an include
guard, which meant that nm-test-utils.h could not tell which of them
was being included (and so, eg, if you tried to include
nm-ip4-config.h in a libnm test, it would fail to compile because
nm-test-utils.h was referring to symbols in src/nm-ip4-config.h).
Fix this by changing the include guards in the non-API-stable parts of
the tree:
- libnm-glib/nm-ip4-config.h remains NM_IP4_CONFIG_H
- libnm/nm-ip4-config.h now uses __NM_IP4_CONFIG_H__
- src/nm-ip4-config.h now uses __NETWORKMANAGER_IP4_CONFIG_H__
And likewise for all other headers.
The two non-"nm"-prefixed headers, libnm/NetworkManager.h and
src/NetworkManagerUtils.h are now __NETWORKMANAGER_H__ and
__NETWORKMANAGER_UTILS_H__ respectively, which, while not entirely
consistent with the general scheme, do still mostly make sense in
isolation.
Clean up some of the cross-includes between headers (which made it so
that, eg, if you included NetworkManagerUtils.h in a test program, you
would need to build the test with -I$(top_srcdir)/src/platform, and if
you included nm-device.h you'd need $(POLKIT_CFLAGS)) by moving all
GObject struct definitions for src/ and src/settings/ into nm-types.h
(which already existed to solve the NMDevice/NMActRequest circular
references).
Update various .c files to explicitly include the headers they used to
get implicitly, and remove some now-unnecessary -I options from
Makefiles.
Virtual devices may be created and destroyed, but we need to keep
their autoconnect state across that. Previously this was handled by
NMManager, but it really belongs with the other autoconnect tracking
in NMPolicy and NMSettingsConnection.
This also fixes a bug where NMPolicy would sometimes decide to
autoactivate a virtual device connection which NMManager would then
have to cancel.
When an interface is manually disconnected NM remembers that, and prevents
automatic activation of the device.
However, software devices are removed when they are disconnected, and thus
the state of the device is lost. We need to track autoconnect outside the
device - hash table of interface names not allowed to activate automatically.
Without that the device would be auto-activated again and again, even if
explicitly disconnected.
Test case:
$ nmcli con add type bond ifname bb con-name bb-con
$ nmcli con add type bond-slave ifname em1 con-name b1-con master bb
$ nmcli dev disconnect bb
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1005913
Add properties to track the "primary" connection (ie, the active
connection with either the default route, or the route to the VPN with
the default route), and the active connection that is currently
activating, and likely to become the :primary-connection when it
completes.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=704841
NM_STATE_CONNECTED_SITE doesn't distinguish between "behind a captive
portal" and "limited network connectivity" (ie, connected to a router
that has lost its upstream connection). Add a new NMManager
:connectivity property to provide this information.
Also add a CheckConnectivity method, which can be used to force NM to
re-check the connectivity state, which could be called by a client
after it completed a portal login, or fixed a network problem.
Add a property on NMManager indicating that it is currently starting
up and activating startup-time/boot-time network connections.
"startup" is initially TRUE, and becomes FALSE once all NMDevices
report that they have no pending activity (eg, trying to activate,
waiting for a wifi scan to complete, etc). This is tracked via a new
NMDevice:has-pending-activity property, which is maintained partially
by the device itself, and partially by other parts of the code.
Change the way that nm-properties-changed-signal works, and parse the
dbus-binding-tool-generated info to get the exact list of properties
that it's expected to export.
This makes NM_PROPERTY_PARAM_NO_EXPORT unnecessary, and also fixes the
problem of properties like NMDevice:hw-address being exported on
classes where it shouldn't be.
Will replace the VPN manager's activated/deactivated signals; listeners
can attach to the active connection's 'state' property and listen
for the changes to ACTIVATED and DEACTIVATED. Works for all connections,
not just VPN ones.
When NM was registering all of its enum types by hand, it was using
NamesLikeThis rather than the default names-like-this for the "nick"
values. When we switched to using glib-mkenums, this resulted in
dbus-glib using different strings for the D-Bus error names, causing
compatibility problems.
Fix this by using glib-mkenums annotations to manually fix all the
enum values back to what they were before. (This can't be done in a
more automated way, because the old names aren't 100% consistent. Eg,
"UNKNOWN" frequently becomes "UnknownError" rather than just
"Unknown".)
They are the basic class that tracks active connections, and we're
going to use them for connection dependencies. So use the fact that
both NMVPNConnection and NMActRequest have the same base class
instead of using object paths.
* use libsoup to compare a http response from a given
uri with a given response (use g_str_has_prefix () to compare)
* do periodically check the connectivity. Check interval is configurable
* check connectivity when device state change
from/to NM_DEVICE_STATE_ACTIVATED
Rather than generating enum classes by hand (and complaining in each
file that "this should really be standard"), use glib-mkenums.
Unfortunately, we need a very new version of glib-mkenums in order to
deal with NM's naming conventions and to fix a few other bugs, so just
import that into the source tree temporarily.
Also, to simplify the use of glib-mkenums, import Makefile.glib from
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/654395.
To avoid having to run glib-mkenums for every subdirectory of src/,
add a new "generated" directory, and put the generated enums files
there.
Finally, use Makefile.glib for marshallers too, and generate separate
ones for libnm-glib and NetworkManager.
For a slave to be activatetable the master connection must be present.
Activation of the slave is postponed until this condition is met.
Once the slave is being activated, a reference to the master connection
is acquired and held for the lifetime of the bond.
Changes v2:
- Made check_master_dependency() return TRUE/FALSE
Signed-off-by: Thomas Graf <tgraf@redhat.com>