warning: function declaration isn’t a prototype [-Wstrict-prototypes]
In C function() and function(void) are two different prototypes (as opposed to
C++).
function() accepts an arbitrary number of arguments
function(void) accepts zero arguments
(cherry picked from commit 94a393e9ed)
Add support for a new section [connection] in NetworkManager.conf.
If the connection leaves an option at "unknown"/"default", we can
support overwriting the value from global configuration.
We also support other sections that are named with "connection"
as a prefix, such as [connection2], [connection-wifi]. This is
to support multiple default values that can be applied depending
on the used device.
I think this has great potential. Only downside is that when
the user looks at a connection value, it will see that it is
unspecified. But the actually used value depends on the device
type and might not be obvious.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=695383https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1164677
(cherry picked from commit dc0193ac02)
There are currently three device spec properties: 'main.ignore-carrier',
'main.no-auto-default' and 'keyfile.unmanaged-devices'.
The first two, called g_key_file_parse_value_as_string() to split
the string into individual device specs. This uses ',' as separator
and supports escaping using '\\'.
'keyfile.unmanaged-devices' is split using ',' or ';' as separator
without supporting escaping.
Add a new function nm_match_spec_split(), to unify these two behaviors
and support both formats. That is, both previous formats are mostly
supported, but obviously there are some behavioral changes if the string
contains one of '\\', ',', or ';'.
nm_match_spec_split() is copied from glibs g_key_file_parse_value_as_string()
and adjusted.
(cherry picked from commit 3bcc5e4bd0)
Extend nm_match_spec_*() to support an "except:" prefix to negate
the result of a match. "except:" only works when followed by
an exact match type, for example "except:interface-name:vboxnet0",
but not "except:vboxnet0".
A matching "except:" spec always wins, regardless of other positive
matchings.
(cherry picked from commit 5c2e1afd1b)
This includes several changes how to match device specs:
- matching the interface name is no longer case-insenstive as
interface names themselves are case-sensitive.
- Now we skip patterns that start with "mac:" or "s390-subchannels:"
for comparing interface names. Previously a spec "mac:1" would have
matched an interface named "mac:1", now it doesn't.
To match such an interface, you would have to specify
"interface-name:mac:1".
- previously, a pattern "a" would have matched an interface
named "interface-name:a", now it doesn't. Since valid interface
name (in the kernel) can be at most 15 characters long, this is
however no problem.
- if the spec has the prefix "interface-name:", we support
simple globbing using GPatternSpec. Globbing without exact
spec type will still not match "vboxnet*" -- with the exception
of "*".
You can disable globbing by putting an '=' immediately
after the ':'.
(a) "interface-name:em1" | matches "em1"
(b) "interface-name:em*" | matches "em", "em1", "em2", etc.
(c) "interface-name:em\*" | matches "em\", "em\1", etc.
(d) "interface-name:=em*" | matches "em*"
(e) "em*" | matches "em*"
(cherry picked from commit 2b518538be)
With this change, NMConfig is really immutable and all
modifyable parts migrated to NMConfigData.
Another advantage is that components can now subscribe to
NMConfig changes to pickup changes to no-auto-default.
(cherry picked from commit 13c7f6a56d)
Make nm_config_new() usable without accessing static/singleton data.
nm_config_setup() is now used to initialize the singleton.
Still, you must not call nm_config_get() before calling
nm_config_setup() or after freeing the provided singleton
instance.
(cherry picked from commit 1ff5154369)
nm_ethernet_address_is_valid() did not check whether @addr was a valid
address in the first place. It only checked whether the address was not
equal to a few notorious MAC addresses.
At the same time, be more forgiving and accept %NULL as argument.
This fixes an assertion nm_ap_match_in_hash().
(cherry picked from commit 842ec6163d)
Before, when having a test with nmtst_init_assert_logging(),
the caller was expected to setup logging separately according
to the log level that the test asserts against.
Since 5e74891b58, the logging
level can be reset via NMTST_DEBUG also for tests that
assert logging. In this case, it would be useful, if the test
would not overwrite the logging level that is set externally
via NMTST_DEBUG.
Instead, let the test pass the logging configuration to
nmtst_init_assert_logging(), and nmtst will setup logging
-- either according to NMTST_DEBUG or as passed in.
This way, setting the log level works also for no-expect-message
tests:
NMTST_DEBUG="debug,no-expect-message,log-level=TRACE" $TEST
(cherry picked from commit b6d3b98655)
We don't need the bus for the tests and the manager may warn when it
is not available.
$ (cd src/tests/config/; env -i DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS=meow ./test-config)
/config/parse-error: OK
/config/no-auto-default: NetworkManager-Message: <info> Could not connect to the system bus; only the private D-Bus socket will be available.
/bin/sh: line 5: 29997 Trace/breakpoint trap ${dir}$tst
FAIL: test-config
This reverts commit 6994454461 for the
most part. It's not sufficient to disable logging warnings. Creating
a DBus Manager might affect the system in undesired ways.
(cherry picked from commit 5040a8a851)
Otherwise the compiler complains that they could be left uninitialized in case
the function returns too early.
Fixes: 76745817c3
(cherry picked from commit 2981839bde)
Error: NEGATIVE_RETURNS (CWE-394): [#def8]
NetworkManager-1.1.0/src/tests/test-general-with-expect.c:139: negative_return_fn: Function "fork()" returns a negative number.
NetworkManager-1.1.0/src/tests/test-general-with-expect.c:139: var_assign: Assigning: signed variable "pgid" = "fork".
NetworkManager-1.1.0/src/tests/test-general-with-expect.c:163: negative_returns: "pgid" is passed to a parameter that cannot be negative.
Error: NEGATIVE_RETURNS (CWE-394): [#def9]
NetworkManager-1.1.0/src/tests/test-general-with-expect.c:302: negative_returns: A negative constant "-1" is passed as an argument to a parameter that cannot be negative.
NetworkManager-1.1.0/src/tests/test-general-with-expect.c:81:2: neg_sink_parm_call: Passing "sig" to "nm_utils_kill_child_async", which cannot accept a negative number.
NetworkManager-1.1.0/src/NetworkManagerUtils.c:448:2: neg_sink_parm_call: Passing "sig" to "kill", which cannot accept a negative number.
(cherry picked from commit 5252287209)
config.h should be included from every .c file, and it should be
included before any other include. Fix that.
(As a side effect of how I did this, this also changes us to
consistently use "config.h" rather than <config.h>. To the extent that
it matters [which is not much], quotes are more correct anyway, since
we're talking about a file in our own build tree, not a system
include.)
The gateway is a global property of the IPv4/IPv6 configuration, not
an attribute of any particular address. So represent it as such in the
API; remove the gateway from NMIPAddress, and add it to
NMSettingIPConfig.
Behind the scenes, the gateway is still serialized along with the
first address in NMSettingIPConfig:addresses, and is deserialized from
that if the settings dictionary doesn't contain a 'gateway' key.
Adjust nmcli's interactive mode to prompt for IP addresses and gateway
separately. (Patch partly from Jirka Klimeš.)
Split a base NMSettingIPConfig class out of NMSettingIP4Config and
NMSettingIP6Config, and update things accordingly.
Further simplifications of now-redundant IPv4-vs-IPv6 code are
possible, and should happen in the future.
Merge NMIP4Address and NMIP6Address into NMIPAddress, and NMIP4Route
and NMIP6Route into NMIPRoute. The new types represent IP addresses as
strings, rather than in binary, and so are address-family agnostic.
/general/nm_utils_kill_child: **
GLib:ERROR:test-general-with-expect.c:105:test_nm_utils_kill_child_sync_do: Did not see expected message NetworkManager-DEBUG: *kill child process 'test-s-1-1' (*): waiting up to 500 milliseconds for process to terminate normally after sending SIGTERM (15)...
Aborted
The first test case assumes the child does not go away immediately after being
delivered a TERM signal. Add some delay to its teardown code path, so that NM
will set up the timeout the test expects.
Add nm-core-types.h, typedefing all of the GObject types in
libnm-core; this is needed so that nm-setting.h can reference
NMConnection in addition to nm-connection.h referencing NMSetting.
Removing the cross-includes from the various headers causes lots of
fallout elsewhere. (In particular, nm-utils.h used to include
nm-connection.h, which included every setting header, so any file that
included nm-utils.h automatically got most of the rest of libnm-core
without needing to pay attention to specifics.) Fix this up by
including nm-core-internal.h from those files that are now missing
includes.