Naming is important, because the name of a thing should give you a good
idea what it does. Also, to find a thing, it needs a good name in the
first place. But naming is also hard.
Historically, some strv helper API was named as nm_utils_strv_*(),
and some API had a leading underscore (as it is internal API).
This was all inconsistent. Do some renaming and try to unify things.
We get rid of the leading underscore if this is just a regular
(internal) helper. But not for example from _nm_strv_find_first(),
because that is the implementation of nm_strv_find_first().
- _nm_utils_strv_cleanup() -> nm_strv_cleanup()
- _nm_utils_strv_cleanup_const() -> nm_strv_cleanup_const()
- _nm_utils_strv_cmp_n() -> _nm_strv_cmp_n()
- _nm_utils_strv_dup() -> _nm_strv_dup()
- _nm_utils_strv_dup_packed() -> _nm_strv_dup_packed()
- _nm_utils_strv_find_first() -> _nm_strv_find_first()
- _nm_utils_strv_sort() -> _nm_strv_sort()
- _nm_utils_strv_to_ptrarray() -> nm_strv_to_ptrarray()
- _nm_utils_strv_to_slist() -> nm_strv_to_gslist()
- nm_utils_strv_cmp_n() -> nm_strv_cmp_n()
- nm_utils_strv_dup() -> nm_strv_dup()
- nm_utils_strv_dup_packed() -> nm_strv_dup_packed()
- nm_utils_strv_dup_shallow_maybe_a() -> nm_strv_dup_shallow_maybe_a()
- nm_utils_strv_equal() -> nm_strv_equal()
- nm_utils_strv_find_binary_search() -> nm_strv_find_binary_search()
- nm_utils_strv_find_first() -> nm_strv_find_first()
- nm_utils_strv_make_deep_copied() -> nm_strv_make_deep_copied()
- nm_utils_strv_make_deep_copied_n() -> nm_strv_make_deep_copied_n()
- nm_utils_strv_make_deep_copied_nonnull() -> nm_strv_make_deep_copied_nonnull()
- nm_utils_strv_sort() -> nm_strv_sort()
Note that no names are swapped and none of the new names existed
previously. That means, all the new names are really new, which
simplifies to find errors due to this larger refactoring. E.g. if
you backport a patch from after this change to an old branch, you'll
get a compiler error and notice that something is missing.
A MAC address is a relatively common "type". The GObject property is of type string,
but the D-Bus type is a bytestring ("ay"). We will need a special NMSettInfoPropertType.
Note that like most implementations, the from-dbus implementation still is based
on GObject setters. This will change in the future.
Also note that the previous compare function was
_nm_setting_property_compare_fcn_default(). That is, it used to convert
the property to GVariant and compare those. The conversion to GVariant
in that case normalizes the string (e.g. it is case insensitive). Also,
only properties could be compared which were also convertible to D-Bus
(which is probably fine, because there is no guarantee the profiles that
don't verify can be compared).
The code now uses the direct comparison of the strings. That mostly
preserves the case-insensitivity of the previous comparison, because
the property setters for mac addresses all use
_nm_utils_hwaddr_canonical_or_invalid() to normalize the strings.
This is subtle, but still correct. Note that this will improve later,
by ensuring that the property setters for mac addresses automatically
perform the right normalization.
The "to_dbus_data" existed for namespacing the properties inside it.
However, such a struct adds overhead due to the alignment that it
enforces. We can share the memory needed for the bitfield by having
them beside each other.
Various NMSetting API would accept a property_idx parameter. Together
with the NMSettInfoSetting instance, this was useful to find the actual
NMSettInfoProperty instance.
The idea was, to provide the most of the functionality. That is, if you
might need the property_idx too, you had it -- after all, the
property_info you could lookup yourself.
However,
- literally zero users care about the property_idx. The care about
the property_info.
- if the user really, really required the property_idx, then it
is a given that it can be easily computed by
(property_info - sett_info->property_infos)
NMSetting instances either have no private data, they use
g_type_add_class_private(), or they embed the private data in the
NMSetting struct.
In all cases, we can find the private data at a fixed offset. Track that
offset in the NMSettInfoSetting meta data.
This will be useful, because properties really are stored in simple
fields, like a boolean property can be stored in a "bool" field. We will
extend the property meta data to track the offset of this property
field, but we also need to know where the offset starts.
When subclassing a GObject type, the class and object structs
must be available and defined in the header.
For libnm, and in particular for NMSetting classes, we don't want
users to subclass NMSetting. It also doesn't work, because libnm
has internal code that is necessary to hook up the NMSetting class.
You cannot define your own type and make it work together with
libnm.
Having the structs in public headers limits what we can do with them.
For example, we could embed the private data directly in the structures
and avoid the additional indirection.
This is an API break, but for something that most likely nobody cares
about. Or better, nobody should care about. API is not what is
accidentally defined in a header, API was the library provides to
meaningfully use. Subclassing these types is not meaningful and was
only accidentally possible so far.
Only hide the structs for now. More cleanup is possible later. We shall
however aim to keep the padding and struct layout to not also break ABI.
(cherry picked from commit e46d484fae)
This patch is introducing the wired setting accept-all-mac-addresses
property. The value corresponds to the kernel flag IFF_PROMISC.
When accept-all-mac-address is enabled, the interface will accept all
the packets without checking the destination mac address.
Signed-off-by: Fernando Fernandez Mancera <ffmancera@riseup.net>
Asserting against user input is not nice, because it always requires the
caller to check the value first. Don't do that.
Also, don't even check. You can set NM_SETTING_WIRED_S390_OPTIONS
property to any values (except duplicated keys). The C add function
should not be more limited than that. This is also right because
we have verify() which checks for valid settings. And it does so beyond
only checking the keys.
So you could set NM_SETTING_WIRED_S390_OPTIONS properties to invalid
keys. And you could use nm_setting_wired_add_s390_option() to set
invalid values. No need to let nm_setting_wired_add_s390_option() check
for valid keys.
- integers are unsigned. Mark the constants as such.
- assert that we don't overflow G_MAXUINT32. Note that
nm_setting_wired_get_s390_option()'s index argument
is of type guint32. So with that API you cannot track
more than G_MAXUINT32 elements.
- use nm_utils_strdup_reset(). It's less code, but it's
also self-assignment safe (contrary to the previous code).
A const global variable is stored in immutable memory.
You thus get a crash trying to modify it, which is desirable.
The user is really not supposed to modify this buffer,
even if nm_setting_wired_get_valid_s390_options() wrongly
returns a non-const pointer.
"libnm-core/" is rather complicated. It provides a static library that
is linked into libnm.so and NetworkManager. It also contains public
headers (like "nm-setting.h") which are part of public libnm API.
Then we have helper libraries ("libnm-core/nm-libnm-core-*/") which
only rely on public API of libnm-core, but are themself static
libraries that can be used by anybody who uses libnm-core. And
"libnm-core/nm-libnm-core-intern" is used by libnm-core itself.
Move "libnm-core/" to "src/". But also split it in different
directories so that they have a clearer purpose.
The goal is to have a flat directory hierarchy. The "src/libnm-core*/"
directories correspond to the different modules (static libraries and set
of headers that we have). We have different kinds of such modules because
of how we combine various code together. The directory layout now reflects
this.
2021-02-18 19:46:51 +01:00
Renamed from libnm-core/nm-setting-wired.c (Browse further)