When a global checkpoint is created (one with empty device list) we
save the status of all devices to restore it later. After the
checkpoint new interfaces and connections may appear and they can
significantly influence the overall networking status, but we don't
consider them at the moment.
Introduce a new flag DELETE_NEW_CONNECTIONS to delete any connection
added after the checkpoint and similarly a DISCONNECT_NEW_DEVICES to
ensure that the connection active on newly appeared devices doesn't
disrupt network connectivity.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1378393
- use _NM_GET_PRIVATE() and _NM_GET_PRIVATE_PTR() everywhere.
- reorder statements, to have GObject related functions (init, dispose,
constructed) at the bottom of each file and in a consistent order w.r.t.
each other.
- unify whitespaces in signal and properties declarations.
- use NM_GOBJECT_PROPERTIES_DEFINE() and _notify()
- drop unused signal slots in class structures
- drop unused header files for device factories
First, consider all devices and not only realized and managed ones
when an empty list is passed. Also, move the list evaluation to the
checkpoint manager, since the check for device conflicts is done
there.
Fixes: 3e09aed2a0