It's not a severe issue, because the GetConfigMetadataData struct is
larger than GetConfigMetadataMac.
Fixes: 69f048bf0c ('cloud-setup: add tool for automatic IP configuration in cloud')
(cherry picked from commit 460afe6d50)
(cherry picked from commit 181fd5c611)
The BPF filter takes the byte containing IP Flags and performs a
bitwise AND with "ntohs(IP_MF | IP_OFFMASK)".
On little-endian architectures the IP_MF flag (0x20) is ANDed with
0xFF3F and so the presence of the flag is correctly detected ignoring
other flags as IP_DF (0x40) or IP_RF (0x80).
On big-endian, "ntohs(IP_MF | IP_OFFMASK)" is 0x3FFF and so the filter
wrongly checks the presence of *any* flags. Therefore, a packet with
the DF flag set is dropped.
Instead, take the two bytes containing flags and offset:
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|Version| IHL |Type of Service| Total Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Identification |Flags| Fragment Offset |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
and verify that IP_MF and the offset are zero.
Fixes: e43b1791a3 ('Merge commit 'e23b3c9c3ac86b065eef002fa5c4321cc4a87df2' as 'shared/n-dhcp4'')
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1861488https://github.com/nettools/n-dhcp4/pull/19
(cherry picked from commit 03d38e83e558802a82cb0e4847cb1f1ef75ccd16)
(cherry picked from commit 0024cef238)
(cherry picked from commit 80835f8f89)
The systemd DHCPv6 client requires a hardware address only to
determine the IAID; NM always overrides the IAID with its own and
therefore the hwaddr is not used.
Removing such requirement allows DHCPv6 to run over PPP, which is
useful with DHCPv6-PD to get a prefix from the ISP.
To test this, I set up a server with pppoe-server, radvd and the Wide
DHCPv6 server providing an address and a prefix. On the client, NM was
able to obtain a prefix using both dhcp=dhclient and dhcp=systemd.
Note that if there is no hardware address and you specify
ipv6.dhcp-duid=ll or ipv6.dhcp-iaid=mac, a warning will be emitted and
NM will use a random DUID/IAID.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/issues/478
(cherry picked from commit 76a6a30577)
(cherry picked from commit 905d4eb36e)
If IPv6 is disabled, changing the IPv6 MTU fails and NM complains with
a warning. Since this error is expected and doesn't do any harm,
downgrade the logging level to DEBUG.
Since IPv6 kernel support can be built as a module, we have to check
the existence of /proc/sys/net/ipv6 every time. Instead of checking it
and then setting the MTU (adding one /proc access for everyone), just try
to set the MTU; in case of failure, determine the reason for the error.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1840989https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/585
(cherry picked from commit 9c09dcedaf)
(cherry picked from commit ce3dffd24e)
nm_device_cleanup() can be called when the device no longer has an
ifindex. In such case, don't try to reset the MAC address as that
would lead to an assertion failure.
(cherry picked from commit 77b6ce7d04)
(cherry picked from commit 791a888cad)
We already set the MAC of OVS interfaces in the ovsdb. Unfortunately,
vswitchd doesn't create the interface with the given MAC from the
beginning, but first creates it with a random MAC and then changes it.
This causes a race condition: as soon as NM sees the new link, it
starts IP configuration on it and (possibly later) vswitchd will
change the MAC.
To avoid this, also set the desired MAC via netlink before starting IP
configuration.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1852106https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/issues/483
(cherry picked from commit 47ec3d14d4)
(cherry picked from commit 60d10b146d)
When a user creates a ovs-interface with the same name of the parent
ovs-bridge, openvswitch considers the interface as the "local
interface" [1] and assigns the MAC address of the bridge to the
interface [2].
This is confusing for users, as the cloned MAC property is ignored in
some cases, depending on the ovs-interface name.
Instead, detect when the interface is local and set the MAC from the
ovs-interface connection in the bridge table.
[1] https://github.com/openvswitch/ovs/blob/v2.13.0/vswitchd/vswitch.xml#L2546
[2] https://github.com/openvswitch/ovs/blob/v2.13.0/vswitchd/bridge.c#L4744
(cherry picked from commit 5d4c8521a3)
(cherry picked from commit 7548c29a89)
A connection that fails due to dependency-failed is not able to
reconnect until the master connection activates again; when this
happens, the master clears the blocked reason for all its slaves in
activate_slave_connections() and tries to reconnect them. For this to
work, the slave should be marked as blocked when it fails with
dependency-failed.
(cherry picked from commit 725fed01cf)
(cherry picked from commit e1755048e3)
If the device state change (to disconnected or unmanaged) triggered by
a sleep event happens after the wake, the devices becomes wrongly
unmanaged and it's necessary to manually manage it again, or restart
NM.
During the wake event we should disconnect the device_sleep_cb()
callback for all devices because we don't want to react to state
changes anymore; in particular we don't need to detect when the device
becomes disconnected to unmanage it.
(cherry picked from commit fe2d93980b)
(cherry picked from commit 971897195a)
NetworkManager can't control the name of the PPP interface name
created by pppd; so it has to wait for the interface to appear and
then rename it. This happens in nm_device_take_over_link() called by
nm-device-ppp.c:ppp_ifindex_set() when pppd tells NM the ifindex of
the interface that was created.
However, sometimes the initial interface name is already correct, for
example when the connection.interface-name is ppp0 and this is the
first PPP interface created.
When this happens, nm_device_update_from_platform_link() is called on
the NMDevicePPP and it sets the device ifindex. Later, when pppd
notifies NM, nm_device_take_over_link() fails because the ifindex is
already set:
nm_device_take_over_link: assertion 'priv->ifindex <= 0' failed
Make nm_device_take_over_link() more robust to cope with this
situation.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1849386
(cherry picked from commit 75bc21c4cf)
(cherry picked from commit 72d66fffac)
When the get_hw_address() method is called on a device object through
GObject-introspection, the device-specific
(e.g. nm_device_ethernet_get_hw_address()) C function is called
instead of the more generic nm_device_get_hw_address().
Those device-specific functions were deprecated in commit 067a3d6c08
('nm-device: expose via D-Bus the 'hw-address' property') and so libnm
will print out deprecation warnings like:
DeprecationWarning: NM.DeviceEthernet.get_hw_address is deprecated
Omit the device-specific function from the introspection output so
that the generic function will be called instead.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/544
(cherry picked from commit 3124a05d83)
(cherry picked from commit a1de36d917)
If g_vsnprintf() returns that it wants to write 5 characters, it
really needs space for 5+1 characters. If we have 5 characters
available, it would have written "0123\0", which leaves the buffer
broken.
Fixes: eda47170ed ('shared: add NMStrBuf util')
(cherry picked from commit fd34fe50a2)
(cherry picked from commit 28644556e1)
Fixes: b83f07916a ('supplicant: large rework of wpa_supplicant handling')
(cherry picked from commit e12d32bf56)
(cherry picked from commit 5e5f7574b4)
The commit breaks many nmstate CI tests. It also breaks the
autoconnect-slaves functionality: if the master gets reactivated and
the slave was active, the slave is not reconnected.
A different solution is needed for the original issue.
This reverts commit 024e983c8e.
(cherry picked from commit 6e02622f57)
Autoconnect-slaves currently forces an activation of all slaves, even
if there is already an active connection for them. This is bad because
at boot slaves first try to autoconnect, then the autoconnect-slaves
of the master kicks in and disconnects/reactivates them.
The only reason why the forceful reactivation was added was to fix
[1]; in that scenario, a slave connection is already active as
non-slave; then it is updated to be a slave; later, the master with
autoconnect-slaves is manually activated. NetworkManager should detect
that the slave connection must now be activated by autoconnect-slaves.
Add a specific check for such situation, instead of always
reactivating all slaves.
[1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1845018
Fixes: 4985ca5ada ('manager: allow autoconnect-slaves to reconnect the same connection')
(cherry picked from commit 024e983c8e)
When there are two patch ports connected, each of them must reference
the other; however they can't be created in a single transaction
because they are part of different bridges (so, different
connections). Therefore, the first patch that gets activated will
always fail with "No usable peer $x exists in 'system' datapath" until
the second patch exists.
In theory we could also match the error message, however this doesn't
seem very robust as the message may slightly change in the future.
(cherry picked from commit ffeac35f04)
The 'peer' property of ovs-patch is inserted into the 'options' column
of the ovsdb 'Interface' table. The ovs-vswitchd.conf.db man page says
about it:
options : peer: optional string
The name of the Interface for the other side of the patch. The
named Interface’s own peer option must specify this Interface’s
name. That is, the two patch interfaces must have reversed name
and peer values.
Therefore, it is wrong to validate the peer property as an IP address
and document it as such.
Fixes: d4a7fe4679 ('libnm-core: add ovs-patch setting')
(cherry picked from commit beb1dba8c1)
S390 options are stored in a separate [ethernet-s390-options] section.
This group must not be interpreted as a NMSetting name, otherwise we
log a bogus warning:
<warn> [1590523563.7757] keyfile: ethernet-s390-options: invalid setting name 'ethernet-s390-options'
Fixes: cf9b8d3bad ('libnm/keyfile: implement ethernet.s390-options in keyfile')
(cherry picked from commit 82a468c9ad)
When searching an element that is lower than the first list element (for
example RTNL type "batadv"), imax will be -1 after the last iteration.
Use int instead of unsigned to make the termination condition imin > imax
work in this case. This fixes NetworkManager crashing due to an
out-of-bounds array access whenever interfaces of such types exist.
Fixes: 19ad044359 ('platform: use binary search to lookup NMLinkType for rtnl_type')
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/515
(cherry picked from commit 2b54202089)
When the interface is in IPv4 or IPv6 shared mode and the user didn't
specify an explicit zone, use the nm-shared one.
Note that masquerade is still done through iptables direct calls
because at the moment it is not possible for a firewalld zone to do
masquerade based on the input interface.
The firewalld zone is needed on systems where firewalld is using the
nftables backend and the 'iptables' binary uses the iptables API
(instead of the nftables one). On such systems, even if the traffic is
allowed in iptables by our direct rules, it can still be dropped in
nftables by firewalld.
(cherry picked from commit 3e2b723532)
Install a NM-specific firewalld zone to be used for interfaces that
are used for connection sharing. The zone blocks all traffic to the
local machine except some protocols (DHCP, DNS and ICMP) and allows
all forwarded traffic.
(cherry picked from commit c8b5bf402d)