From the files under "shared/nm-utils" we build an internal library
that provides glib-based helper utilities.
Move the files of that basic library to a new subdirectory
"shared/nm-glib-aux" and rename the helper library "libnm-core-base.la"
to "libnm-glib-aux.la".
Reasons:
- the name "utils" is overused in our code-base. Everything's an
"utils". Give this thing a more distinct name.
- there were additional files under "shared/nm-utils", which are not
part of this internal library "libnm-utils-base.la". All the files
that are part of this library should be together in the same
directory, but files that are not, should not be there.
- the new name should better convey what this library is and what is isn't:
it's a set of utilities and helper functions that extend glib with
funcitonality that we commonly need.
There are still some files left under "shared/nm-utils". They have less
a unifying propose to be in their own directory, so I leave them there
for now. But at least they are separate from "shared/nm-glib-aux",
which has a very clear purpose.
(cherry picked from commit 80db06f768)
Support importing ".conf" files as `wg-quick up` supports it.
`wg-quick` parses several options under "[Interface]" and
passes the remainder to `wg setconf`.
The PreUp/PreDown/PostUp/PostDown options are of course not supported.
"Table" for the moment behaves different.
(cherry picked from commit a3a8583c31)
Subsequent calls to nm_strerror_native() overwrite the previous
buffer. That is potentially dangerious. At least functions in
shared/nm-utils (which are lower-layer utilities) should not do
that and instead use a stack-local buffer. That is because these
functions should not make assumptions about the way they are called.
On the other end, nmcli passing the return-value of nm_strerror_native()
to g_print() is clearly OK because the higher layers are in control of
when the call nm_strerror_native() -- by relying that lower layers don't
interfere.
Use the NM_ERRNO_NATIVE() macro that asserts that these errno numbers are
indeed positive. Using the macro also serves as a documentation of what
the meaning of these numbers is.
That is often not obvious, whether we have an nm_errno(), an nm_errno_native()
(from <errno.h>), or another error number (e.g. WaitForNlResponseResult). This
situation already improved by merging netlink error codes (nle),
NMPlatformError enum and <errno.h> as nm_errno(). But we still must
always be careful about not to mix error codes from different
domains or transform them appropriately (like nm_errno_from_native()).