Commit graph

226 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Thomas Haller
cc1ee1d286 all: rework configuring route table support by adding "route-table" setting
We added "ipv4.route-table-sync" and "ipv6.route-table-sync" to not change
behavior for users that configured policy routing outside of NetworkManager,
for example, via a dispatcher script. Users had to explicitly opt-in
for NetworkManager to fully manage all routing tables.

These settings were awkward. Replace them with new settings "ipv4.route-table"
and "ipv6.route-table". Note that this commit breaks API/ABI on the unstable
development branch by removing recently added API.

As before, a connection will have no route-table set by default. This
has the meaning that policy-routing is not enabled and only the main table
will be fully synced. Once the user sets a table, we recognize that and
NetworkManager manages all routing tables.

The new route-table setting has other important uses: analog to
"ipv4.route-metric", it is the default that applies to all routes.
Currently it only works for static routes, not DHCP, SLAAC,
default-route, etc. That will be implemented later.

For static routes, each route still can explicitly set a table, and
overwrite the per-connection setting in "ipv4.route-table" and
"ipv6.route-table".
2017-10-09 22:05:36 +02:00
Thomas Haller
b31226532d device: refactor function nm_device_get_priority() / _get_route_metric_default()
The name nm_device_get_priority() is misleading. Nowadays it's only used
for the default route metric, and nothing else.

Rename it, and make it static.
2017-10-06 11:13:43 +02:00
Thomas Haller
3dd60d0ef0 device/trivial: rename nm_device_get_ip_route_metric() to nm_device_get_route_metric()
Brevity!
2017-10-06 11:13:43 +02:00
Thomas Haller
4804fb778a device: remove wrappers for nm_device_get_ip_route_metric() 2017-10-06 11:13:43 +02:00
Thomas Haller
5778bc6a34 device: add configuration option to mark devices as unmanaged
We already have various ways to mark a device as unmanaged.

1) via udev-rule ENV{NM_UNMANAGED}. This can be overwritten via D-Bus
  at runtime.

2) via settings plugin. That is NM_CONTROLLED=no for ifcfg-rh and
  keyfile.unmanaged-devices in NetworkManager.conf.

3) at runtime, via D-Bus. This is persisted in the run state file
  and persists restarts (but not reboot).

This adds another way via NetworkManager.conf file. Note that the
existing keyfile.unmanaged-devices (above 2) is also a configuration
optin in NetworkManager.conf. However it has various downsides:

  - it cannot be overwritten at runtime (see commit
    c210134bd5).

  - you can only explicitly mark a device as unmanaged. That means,
    you cannot use it to manage a device which is unmanaged due to
    a udev rule.

  - the name "keyfile.*" sounds like it's only relevant for the keyfile settings
    plugin. Nowadays the keyfile plugin is always loaded, so the option applies
    to NetworkManager in general.

https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/29
2017-09-28 14:44:46 +02:00
Thomas Haller
1aa36dde94 device: enable support for ipv6.dhcp-timeout
- cleanup data type and use guint32 consistently. We might want to
  introduce a new "infinity" value. But since libnm's
  NM_SETTING_IP_CONFIG_DHCP_TIMEOUT asserts against the range
  0 - G_MAXINT32, we cannot express it as -1 anyway. So, infinity
  will have the numerical value G_MAXINT32, hence guint32 is just
  fine.

- make use of existing ipv6.dhcp-timeout setting and add global
  default configuration in NetworkManager.conf

- instead of having subclasses call nm_device_set_dhcp_timeout(),
  add a virtual function get_dhcp_timeout().
2017-09-11 15:05:57 +02:00
Thomas Haller
77ec302714 core: rework handling of default-routes and drop NMDefaultRouteManager
Remove NMDefaultRouteManager. Instead, add the default-route to the
NMIP4Config/NMIP6Config instance.

This basically reverts commit e8824f6a52.
We added NMDefaultRouteManager because we used the corresponding to `ip
route replace` when configuring routes. That would replace default-routes
on other interfaces so we needed a central manager to coordinate routes.
Now, we use the corresponding of `ip route append` to configure routes,
and each interface can configure routes indepdentently.

In NMDevice, when creating the default-route, ignore @auto_method for
external devices. We shall not touch these devices.

Especially the code in NMPolicy regarding selection of the best-device
seems wrong. It probably needs further adjustments in the future.
Especially get_best_ip_config() should be replaced, because this
distinction VPN vs. devices seems wrong to me.
Thereby, remove the @ignore_never_default argument. It was added by
commit bb75026004, I don't think it's
needed anymore.

This brings another change. Now that we track default-routes in
NMIP4Config/NMIP6Config, they are also exposed on D-Bus like regular
routes. I think that makes sense, but it is a change in behavior, as
previously such routes were not exposed there.
2017-09-08 11:11:21 +02:00
Thomas Haller
e99a603944 device: expose nm_device_get_ip_route_metric() function
Will be used later.
2017-09-08 11:05:04 +02:00
Thomas Haller
89385bd968 core: pass NMDedupMultiIndex instance to NMIP4Config and other
NMIP4Config, NMIP6Config, and NMPlatform shall share one
NMDedupMultiIndex instance.

For that, pass an NMDedupMultiIndex instance to NMPlatform and NMNetns.
NMNetns than passes it on to NMDevice, NMDhcpClient, NMIP4Config and NMIP6Config.
So currently NMNetns is the access point to the shared NMDedupMultiIndex
instance, and it gets it from it's NMPlatform instance.

The NMDedupMultiIndex instance is really a singleton, we don't want
multiple instances of it. However, for testing, instead of adding a
singleton instance, pass the instance explicitly around.
2017-07-05 14:22:10 +02:00
Thomas Haller
98651b90a1 device: handle default for unset ignore-carrier option depending on device
Currently, device types like Bond hack around ignore-carrier
setting, as they always want to ignore-carrier.

Prepare so that also for such master types, we rely and honor the
ignore-carrier setting better. In the next commit, bond, bridge and
team devices they will get ignore-carrier turned on by default.
2017-06-22 13:26:53 +02:00
Thomas Haller
10c0632df0 device: fix taking over device after modifying external connection
For externally managed interfaces, we create an in-memory connection
and keep the device with sys-iface-state=external.

When the user actively modifies the connection, we persist it to
storage. But we also must take over managing the device.

One problem is that nm_device_reapply() errors out if the device
is still activating. It's unclear how to reapply the connection
while the device is in the process of activation. So, if the user
modifies the created connection very quickly, reapplying the settings
will fail.

https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1462223
2017-06-19 14:57:48 +02:00
Thomas Haller
0c26ffd638 device: suppress logging and return error reason from nm_device_generate_connection()
Don't log in a function that basically just inspects state, without
mutating it. Instead, pass the reason why a connection could not be
generated to the caller so that we have one sensible log message.
2017-06-08 21:50:23 +02:00
Thomas Haller
1f6078bcf5 manager: add logging macro _NMLOG2() for logging device messages
It unifies the way how we print the logging prefix, but also it
passes the ifname down for structured logging.
2017-06-08 21:50:23 +02:00
Thomas Haller
4b15df2656 device: expose nm_device_state_to_str() function for NMDeviceState 2017-06-08 21:50:23 +02:00
Thomas Haller
729de7d7f0 manager: fix preserving assume state during activation
Originally 850c977 "device: track system interface state in NMDevice",
intended that a connection can only be assumed initially when seeing
a device for the first time. Assuming a connection later was to be
prevented by setting device's sys-iface-state to MANAGED.

That changed too much in behavior, because we used to assume external
connections also when they are activated later on. So this was attempted
to get fixed by
  - acf1067 nm-manager: try assuming connections on managed devices
  - b6b7d90 manager: avoid generating in memory connections during startup for managed devices

It's probably just wrong to prevent assuming connections based on the
sys-iface-state. So drop the check for sys-iface-state from
recheck_assume_connection(). Now, we can assume anytime on managed,
disconnected interfaces, like previously.
Btw, note that priv->startup is totally wrong to check there, because
priv->startup has the sole purpose of tracking startup-complete property.
Startup, as far as NMManager is concerned, is platform_query_devices().

However, the problem is that we only assume connections (contrary to
doing external activation) when we have a connection-uuid from the state
file or with guess-assume during startup.

When assuming a master device, it can fail with

  (nm-bond): ignoring generated connection (IPv6LL-only and not in master-slave relationship)

thus, for internal reason the device cannot be assumed yet.

Fix that by attatching the assume-state to the device, so that on multiple
recheck_assume_connection() calls we still try to assume. Whenever we try
to assume the connection and it fails due to external reasons (like, the connection
no longer matching), we clear the assume state, so that we only try as
long as there are internal reasons why assuming fails.

https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1452062
2017-06-08 21:46:34 +02:00
Thomas Haller
d83848be9d device: only set nm-owned from statefile during initial setup
The state file should only be read initially when NM starts, that is:
during NMManager's platform_query_devices().

At all later points, for example when a software device gets destroyed
and re-realized, the state file is clearly no longer relevant.

Hence, pass the set-nm-owned flag from NMManager to realize_start_setup().

This is very much the same as with the NM_UNMANAGED_FLAG_USER_EXPLICT flag,
which we also read from the state-file.
2017-06-08 21:44:22 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani
8cce037bf8 device: rename priv->is_nm_owned to priv->nm_owned
Only a matter of taste, but nm_device_get_is_nm_owned() sounds
strange.
2017-06-07 10:27:02 +02:00
Thomas Haller
c79a97657b device: transform NM_DEVICE_IS_MASTER gobject property to field in NMDeviceClass
We don't need this flexibility of having a full fledged GObject
property for is-master. The property value only depends on the
device's class.
2017-06-02 21:06:08 +02:00
Thomas Haller
c3aa52530c core: add nm_device_spec_match_list_full()
This gives a third return value: whether the device did not
match.
2017-06-02 21:06:08 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
bf7e86128c bridge: move the Bluetooth NAP logic to bridge device
The Bluetooth NAP functionality seems only useful for the bridges. Move
it away from NMDevice.
2017-06-01 11:57:42 +02:00
Thomas Haller
1be01bd51f device: don't include header of bluetooth plugin in nm-device.h
The plugins may use stuff from core, but not the other way around.
Including "bluetooth/nm-bluez-common.h" is wrong.

The UUID argument is always "nap" in the NAP case. We don't need
the flexibility that it might be anything else. Just drop it.

As far as NMDevice is concerned, it anyway wouldn't (or shouldn't
know what the uuid is. It says register, and NMBluez5Manager should
figure out the details.
2017-06-01 11:28:57 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
53482c38e2 device: register a bridge for Bluetooth NAP with Bluez
Bluez needs to know about then so that it can eventually enslave the BNEP links
for PANU client connections to it.
2017-05-31 20:18:24 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
805d3240f9 devices/factory: allow announcing a NULL component
We'll use this to let the devices know they can retry autoactivation
because some component became available without actually having any
data that would be useful for that device.

Adjust the comment.
2017-05-31 20:17:54 +02:00
Thomas Haller
5a7374d8be device: don't call virtual function carrier_changed() directly
Don't give the subclass the ability to override the parents
behavior. The parent implementation is not intended to allow
for that. Instead, restrict the flexibility of how the virtual
function integrates with the larger picture. That means, the
virtual function is only called at one place, and there is only
one implementation in NMDeviceEthernet (and it doesn't really
matter whether the implementation chains up the parent implementation
or not).
2017-05-15 17:38:47 +02:00
Thomas Haller
d875df5ab4 device: simplify check for ready slaves 2017-05-14 09:52:18 +02:00
Thomas Haller
785b51ed02 device: leave device up when setting it as unmanaged by user
Before, setting a device to unmanaged causes it to go down and clear
the interface state.

It may be useful to instruct NetworkManager not to touch the device
anymore but leave the current state up. Changing behavior for

  nmcli device set "$DEV" managed no

To get the previous behavior, one has to first disconnect the interface
via

  nmcli device disconnect "$DEV"
  nmcli device set "$DEV" managed no

Note that non-permanent addresses like from DHCP will eventually time
out because NetworkManager stops the DHCP client. When instructing
NetworkManager to let go of the device, you have to take it over in
any way you see fit.

https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1371433
(cherry picked from commit 9e8218f99a)
2017-04-18 21:48:01 +02:00
Thomas Haller
8a6eef6aa7 device: keep NMNetns instance per device
This also ensures that we own a reference to the
NMPlatform, NMRouteManager and NMDefaultRouteManager
instances. See bug rh#1440089 where we might access
the singleton getter after destroing the singleton
instance of NMRouteManager. This is prevented by
keeping a reference to those instances -- indirectly
via the netns instance.

Later, we may add support for multiple namespaces. Then it might
make sense to swap the NMNetns instance of a device when moving
the device between namespaces.

Also, drop the use of singelton instances.

https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1440089
(cherry picked from commit c48a19b7c6)
2017-04-18 15:53:11 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
9d43869e47 core: make connectivity checking per-device
This moves tracking of connectivity to NMDevice and makes the NMManager
negotiate the best of known connectivity states of devices. The NMConnectivity
singleton handles its own configuration and scheduling of the permission
checks, but otherwise greatly simplifies it.

This will be useful to determine correct metrics for multiple default routes
depending on actual internet connectivity.

The per-device connection checks is not yet exposed on the D-Bus, since they
probably should be per-address-family as well.
2017-03-28 15:26:47 +02:00
Thomas Haller
850c977953 device: track system interface state in NMDevice
When deciding whether to touch a device we sometimes look at whether
the active connection is external/assumed. In many cases however,
there is no active connection around (e.g. while moving the device
from state unmanaged to disconnected before assuming).
So in most cases we instead look at the device-state-reason to decide
whether to touch the interface (see nm_device_state_reason_check()).

Often it's desirable to have no state and passing data as function
arguments. However, the state reason has to be passed along several hops
(e.g. a queued state change). Or a change to a master/slave can affect
the slave/master, where we pass on the state reason. Or an intermediate
event might invalidate a previous state reason. Passing the state
whether to touch a device or not as a state-reason is cumbersome
and limited.

Instead, the device should be aware of whats going on. Add a
sys-iface-state with:
  - SYS_IFACE_STATE_EXTERNAL: meaning, NM should not touch it
  - SYS_IFACE_STATE_ASSUME: meaning, NM is gracefully taking over
  - SYS_IFACE_STATE_MANAGED: meaning, the device is managed by NM
  - SYS_IFACE_STATE_REMOVED: the device no longer exists

This replaces most checks of nm_device_state_reason_check() and
nm_active_connection_get_activation_type() by instead looking at
the sys-iface-state of the device.

This patch probably has still issues, but the previous behavior was
not very clear either. We will need to identify those issues in future
tests and tweak the behavior. At least, now there is one flag that
describes how to behave.
2017-03-16 18:27:33 +01:00
Thomas Haller
fa015f2aab core/trivial: rename activation-type related checks for device and active-connection
nm_device_uses_assumed_connection() basically called
nm_active_connection_get_assumed() on the device.

Rename those functions to be closer to the activation-type
flags.

The concepts of "assume", "external", and "assume_or_external"
will make sense with the following commits.
2017-03-16 18:27:33 +01:00
Thomas Haller
f84b8f7afc device: pass the user-explict flag to nm_device_realize_start()
No change in behavior yet, because for unrealized devices the
user-explict unmanaged flag is always cleared.

The new option is still unused.
2017-03-16 18:27:33 +01:00
Thomas Haller
6466b5da6a device: force restart of IP method during reapply
Scenario:
Have a connection with DHCPv4 and a default-route. When externally
removing the default route (`ip route delete 0.0.0.0/0`) and issuing
`nmcli device reapply $IF`, the default route was not restored.
That was because when externally removing the default route,
we would remove the gateway from priv->con_ip4_config (see
update_ip4_config()). Later, when reapplying the connection,
the IP method doesn't actually change. So we would not restart
DHCP and thus there is no gateway around to add the default route.
The default route would only be restored after receiving a DHCP lease
in the far future.

Fix that, by always restarting the IP method.
2017-03-16 15:35:13 +01:00
Beniamino Galvani
86388f41b8 device: introduce class methods for connection reapply
Add two new methods can_reapply_change() and reapply_connection() to
the device class. In this way device subclasses can declare that they
support the changes in a given setting and take care of reapplying it.
2017-03-06 10:29:37 +01:00
Thomas Haller
405ee7cad0 device: mark uses of device's state-reason with nm_device_state_reason_check()
The state-change of a device has a reason argument, which is mostly for information
only.

There are many places in code that are the source of a state-reason.
Mostly these are calls to:
  - nm_device_state_changed()
  - nm_device_queue_state()
  - nm_device_queue_recheck_available()
  - nm_device_set_unmanaged_by_*()
  - nm_device_master_release_one_slave()
  - nm_device_ip_method_failed()
  - nm_modem_emit_prepare_result()
  - nm_modem_emit_ppp_failed()
  - nm_manager_deactivate_connection()
  - NM_SET_OUT (out_failure_reason, NM_DEVICE_STATE_REASON_*);

However, there are a few places in code that look at the reason
to decide how to proceed. I think this is a bad pattern, because
cause and effect are decoupled and it gets hard to understand where
a certain reason is set and what consequences that has.

Add a nop-function nm_device_state_reason_check() to mark all uses
of the device state reason that derive decisions from it. That is,
highlight the "effect" part.
2017-02-23 17:07:28 +01:00
Beniamino Galvani
029a0a21ea device: split out cloned MAC decision from nm_device_hw_addr_set_cloned()
In this way, we can query the final cloned address (after special
values as 'random', 'stable', etc. have been evaluated) from
subclasses.
2017-02-23 10:05:48 +01:00
Thomas Haller
437c12fc89 device: rename device-state-reason argument to out_failure_reason
This argument is only relevant when the NMActStageReturn argument
indicates NM_ACT_STAGE_RETURN_FAILURE. In all other cases it is ignored.

Rename the argument to make the meaning clearer. The argument is passed
through several layers of code, it isn't obvious that this argument only
matters for the failure case. Also, the distinct name makes it easier
to distinguish from other uses of the "reason" name.

While at it, do some drive-by cleanup:

  - use g_return_*() instead of g_assert() to have a more graceful
    assertion.
  - functions like dhcp4_start() don't need to return a failure reason.
    Most callers don't care, and the caller who does can determine the
    proper reason.
  - allow omitting the out-argument via NM_SET_OUT().
2017-02-22 21:37:47 +01:00
Beniamino Galvani
07570e245a device: add support for 802-1x.auth-timeout
Use the per-connection authentication timeout for 802.1X Ethernet,
MACsec and Wi-Fi connections. In case the value is not defined, fall
back to the global one.
2017-02-21 09:18:53 +01:00
Thomas Haller
6eaded9071 device: add get_autoconnect_allowed() virtual function
It allows derived classes to override the autoconnect-allowed
state.

We already have

- NM_DEVICE_AUTOCONNECT property, which is two parts:
  - NMDevicePrivate::autoconnect_user, which is settable via
    D-Bus by the use, to allow the device to autoconnect.
  - NMDevicePrivate::autoconnect_intern, which is set by
    internal decision.
- NM_DEVICE_AUTOCONNECT_ALLOWED signal, where other devices can
  subscribe to block autoconnect. Currently that is only used
  by NMDeviceOlpcMesh.

These two make up for nm_device_autoconnect_allowed().

Add another way to allow derived classes to disable autoconnect
temporarily. This could also be achieved by having the device
subscribe to NM_DEVICE_AUTOCONNECT_ALLOWED of self, or by adding
a signal slot. But a plain function pointer seems easier.
2017-02-17 14:41:27 +01:00
Thomas Haller
2f9166e6b9 device: separately handle NMDevice's autoconnect by user and internal decision
The NMDevice's autoconnect property is settable via D-Bus and is is
also modified by internal decision, like when no PIN is available.

Certain internal actions cause clearing the internal autoconnect flag,
but they should not override the user desicion.

For example, when NM awaks from sleep it would reenable autoconnect,
but it should not reenable it for devices where the user explicitly
said that autoconnect is to be disabled.

Similarly, activating a device alone is not yet an instruction to
re-enable autoconnect. If the user consciously disables autoconnect,
it should stay enabled. On the other hand, activating a device should
reenable autoconnect if it was blocked by internal decision.

We need to track these two flags separately, and set them accordingly.
2017-02-17 14:41:27 +01:00
Thomas Haller
e234673a4a device: refactor pending-action strings as named defines 2017-02-10 14:40:23 +01:00
Thomas Haller
ba1cc6a288 core: refactor evaluation of device's match-spec
Previously, we would have different functions like
  - nm_match_spec_device_type()
  - nm_match_spec_hwaddr()
  - nm_match_spec_s390_subchannels()
  - nm_match_spec_interface_name()
which all would handle one type of match-spec.

So, to get the overall result whether the arguments
match or not, nm_device_spec_match_list() had to stich
them together and iterate the list multiple times.

Refactor the code to have one nm_match_spec_device()
function that gets all relevant paramters.

The upside is:

  - the logic how to evaluate the match-spec is all at one place
    (match_device_eval()) instead of spread over multiple
    functions.

  - It requires iterating the list at most twice. Twice, because
    we do a fast pre-search for "*".

One downside could be, that we have to pass all 4 arguments
for the evaluation, even if the might no be needed. That is,
because "nm-core-utils.c" shall be independend from NMDevice, it
cannot receive a device instance to get the parameters as needed.
As we would add new match-types, the argument list would grow.
However, all arguments are cached and fetching them from the
device's private data is very cheap.

(cherry picked from commit b957403efd)
2017-01-20 21:18:30 +01:00
Thomas Haller
6e52efe950 device: refactor setting user-configured MTU during config commit
Instead of overwriting ip4_config_pre_commit(), add a new function
get_mtu().

This also adds a default value in case there is no user-configuration.
This will allow us later to reset a default MTU based on the device
type.
2017-01-16 17:29:06 +01:00
Thomas Haller
5051a04d81 device: drop unused virtual function NMDevice:ip6_config_pre_commit 2017-01-16 17:24:36 +01:00
Thomas Haller
2a14a1c7bd device: drop unused hook nm_device_notify_new_device_added()
The only implementations were there for tracking the parent device.
That is now donw via nm_device_parent_*(), parent_changed_notify()
and _parent_notify_changed().
2017-01-04 14:18:01 +01:00
Thomas Haller
3be1811a7d device: move tracking of parent device from NMDeviceIPTunnel to NMDevice 2017-01-04 14:18:01 +01:00
Thomas Haller
f703f4bb65 device: track parent device in NMDevice
Multiple subclasses have a parent/link interface (NMDeviceIPTunnel,
NMDeviceVlan). Tracking the parent interface properly is midly
complicated to get right. So, instead of repeating it in each
subclass, track it in the parent device.
2017-01-04 14:18:01 +01:00
Thomas Haller
0eb4b404f2 device: have realize_start_notify() call link_changed()
Most implementations of realize_start_notify() do the same
for link_changed().

Let NMDevice's base implementation of realize_start_notify() call
link_changed() -- which by default does notthing. This allows subclasses
to only overwrite link_changed().
2017-01-04 14:18:01 +01:00
Thomas Haller
c2bc2fbac3 device: make @pllink argument in link_changed() function const 2017-01-04 14:18:01 +01:00
Lubomir Rintel
479ad5065e device: add IPv6 configuration delegation machinery
There's two parts of the configuration involved: the subnet addresses
and the DNS information.

For the addressing, the shared (downlink) device signals the policy needs for a
/64 subnet. When it gets one, it merges it into the autoconf configuration and
forwards to the NDisc. When more prefixes are needed, the (uplink) device asks
the DHCP manager and eventually signals delegation (reception) of a prefix.
The NMDevice only provides the mechanism, the actual subnetting needs to
be done by the NMPolicy.

For the DNS configuration, the shared device just copies it from
whichever device the policy deems suitable.
2016-11-09 17:23:32 +01:00
Thomas Haller
c0d249b733 device: delay evaluating unmanaged-by-user-settings flags until link initialized
Before the link is initialized, that is before UDEV completed
initializing the device, we should not evaluate the user-settings
unmanaged flags.

The reason is, that evaluating it likely involves looking at the
permanent MAC address, which might use the wrong fake MAC address
(before UDEV set the right one). Also, it might use the wrong ifname
to lookup the permanent MAC address via ethtool.
2016-10-28 16:44:57 +02:00