Create a GDBusProxy for the service to be monitored and use that to
tell whether it is running, rather than using NMDBusManager and the
global NameOwnerChanged signal.
In the gdbus port, the :options properties will be GVariant-valued
(and thus immutable), so having APIs that let you repeatedly modify
them would make things complicated. Since we actually only ever set
all the options at once, just change the APIs to do that, rather than
setting the options one-by-one.
Since nm-dispatcher already works in terms of GVariant, it makes
things simpler there if NMDhcp[46]Config can return its options as a
GVariant. And since we'll need it to be a GVariant internally later
anyway, just port everything to GVariant now, and convert it to a
GHashTable for dbus-glib only in get_property().
Move D-Bus export/unexport handling into NMExportedObject and remove
type-specific export/get_path methods (export paths are now specified
at the class level, and NMExportedObject handles the counters for all
exported types automatically).
Since all exportable objects now use the same get_path() method, we
can also add some helper methods to simplify get_property()
implementations for object-path and object-path-array properties.
Add NMExportedObject, make it the base class of all D-Bus-exported
types, and move the nm-properties-changed-signal logic into it. (Also,
make NMSettings use the same properties-changed code as everything
else, which it was not previously doing, presumably for historical
reasons).
(This is mostly just shuffling code around at this point, but
NMExportedObject will be more important in the gdbus port, since
gdbus-codegen doesn't do a very good job of supporting objects that
export multiple interfaces [as each NMDevice subclass does, for
example], so we will need more glue/helper code in NMExportedObject
then.)
Rather than randomly including one or more of <glib.h>,
<glib-object.h>, and <gio/gio.h> everywhere (and forgetting to include
"nm-glib-compat.h" most of the time), rename nm-glib-compat.h to
nm-glib.h, include <gio/gio.h> from there, and then change all .c
files in NM to include "nm-glib.h" rather than including the glib
headers directly.
(Public headers files still have to include the real glib headers,
since nm-glib.h isn't installed...)
Also, remove glib includes from header files that are already
including a base object header file (which must itself already include
the glib headers).
Add a file containing the defines like DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS from
dbus-shared.h, and use it from the gdbus-using files.
Also, convert a bunch of other places that were previously hardcoding
the string values to use the defines instead, and fix the ifcfg-rh
plugin to properly namespace its own D-Bus-related defines.
Commit d51975e changed, that we treat assumed and non-assumed
connections the same with respect to the default route. This is
certainly wrong, if we have an nm-generated-assumed connection
at hand. In this case, NM just generated a connection based on what
was configured on the system. Looking at that result and re-enforcing
the default-route is wrong.
We want to manage the default-route for assumed, persistent connections.
If the connection was assumed and generated, we do not.
This commit reverts d51975ed for nm-generated-assumed connection and
restores the previous behavior.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1244483
Fixes: d51975ed92
Rename "default_route.v4_configure_first_time" to "v4_commit_first_time".
For one, the name "commit" matches better to the @commit variable in ip4_config_merge_and_apply()
and ip6_config_merge_and_apply(). Then, we don't need this information
only for default-routes, so move the variable out of the @default_route
struct.
This makes wifi preferred to wwan (the modem and bluetooth device types
to be specific) by default, so that users that care about being
connected at all times can keep both enabled with auto-connect. As wifi
is usually unmetered and often faster than wwan, it makes sense to
prefer it. This is also how pretty much every smart-phone in the world
behaves, so it aligns better with user expectations too.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744754
In most cases, when syncing routes, we should only remove routes
that were configured by us previously. Otherwise, there is a race
that we can remove routes added externally.
Now, when applying IP configuration for a device, only do a full-sync
at the first time when we activate the device. Later on, only remove
routes that were added by us.
priv->iface could change in device_link_changed() which reacts on platform link
changes caused by nm_platform_link_set_user_ipv6ll_enabled(). (The variable could
change between obtaining and using its value, because emitting a glib signal runs
callbacks synchronously).
Actually, the problem is already fixed by commit 04caae735f.
But still this is better.
Related: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1224366
Internal configuration is written as keyfile to
NMSTATEDIR"/NetworkManager-intern.conf"
Basically, the content of this file is merged with user
configuration from "NetworkManager.conf" files. After loading
the configuration, NMConfig exposes a merged view of user-provided
settings and internal overwrites.
All sections/groups named [.intern*] are reserved for internal
configuration values. They can be written by API, but are ignored
when the user sets them via "NetworkManager.conf". For these
internal sections, no conflicts can arise.
We can also overwrite individual properties from user configuration.
In this case, we store the value we want to set, but also remember
the value that the user configuration had, at the time of setting.
If on a later reload the user configuration changed, we ignore our
internal value -- as we assume that the user modified the value
afterwards.
We can also hide/delete value from user configuration.
This works on a per-setting basis.
When adding an IPv4 address, kernel will also add a device-route.
We don't want that route because it has the wrong metric. Instead,
we add our own route (with a different metric) and remove the
kernel-added one.
This could be avoided if kernel would support an IPv4 address flag
IFA_F_NOPREFIXROUTE like it does for IPv6 (see related bug rh#1221311).
One important thing is, that we want don't want to manage the
device-route on assumed devices. Note that this is correct behavior
if "assumed" means "do-not-touch".
If "assumed" means "seamlessly-takeover", then this is wrong.
Imagine we get a new DHCP address. In this case, we would not manage
the device-route on the assumed device. This cannot be fixed without
splitting unmanaged/assumed with related bug bgo 746440.
This is no regression as we would also not manage device-routes
for assumed devices previously.
We also don't want to remove the device-route if the user added
it externally. Note that here we behave wrongly too, because we
don't record externally added kernel routes in update_ip_config().
This still needs fixing.
Let IPv4 device-routes also be managed by NMRouteManager. NMRouteManager
has a list of all routes and can properly add, remove, and restore
the device route as needed.
One problem is, that the device-route does not get added immediately
with the address. It only appears some time later. This is solved
by NMRouteManager watching platform and if a matchin device-route shows up
within a short time after configuring addresses, remove it.
If the route appears after the short timeout, assume they were added for
other reasons (e.g. by the user) and don't remove them.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751264https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1211287
When ping is launched to check the connectivity to the gateway it may
return earlier than the given timeout in case of error. When this
happens we need to respawn it until the timeout is reached.
While at it, increase maximum timeout value to 600 seconds.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1128581
When the platform link gets removed outside of NetworkManager, we would
unmanage the device first. By checking the device state reason
NM_DEVICE_STATE_REASON_REMOVED, we would then not deconfigure the
interface, as it is already gone.
This was not correct because we must at least stop the dhcp client.
Otherwise the dhclient process keeps running. That meant, if the device
reappeared later, we would start dhclient again. Then we would find the
PID of the still running instance in the pidfile and kill it only than.
Fix it by replacing the 'deconfigure' boolean by a tri-state
'cleanup_type'.
Since commit ab6548c621 ("device: better accept external IP
changes"), ipX_config_merge_and_apply() applies the configuration
static settings to an intermediate, initially empty configuration
(priv->con_ipX_config) instead of the composite configuration, and
thus the handling of ignore-auto-routes and ignore-auto-dns options
done in nm_ipX_config_merge_setting() has no effect.
Fix this by clearing the routes and the DNS information when needed
before merging static settings to the composite configuration.
Fixes: ab6548c621
Without that we can remove addresses from con-ip6-config due to external
changes *before* it is applied and thus manual IPv6 addresses are not applied
together with ipv6.method=auto.
Testcase:
$ nmcli con add type ether con-name AAA ifname eth0 autoconnect no
$ nmcli con mod AAA ipv4.addresses 1.1.1.1/24 ipv6.addresses 99::99/64
$ nmcli con up AAA
Fixes:Beaker:NetworkManager_Test37_run_once_new_connection
Fixes:Beaker:NetworkManager_Test84_ipv6_addresses_no_when_static_switch_asked
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=751430
Change nm_platform_link_get() to return the cached NMPlatformLink
instance. Now what all our implementations (fake and linux) have such a
cache internal object, let's just expose it directly.
Note that the lifetime of the exposed link object is possibly quite
short. A caller must copy the returned value if he intends to preserve
it for later.
Also add nm_platform_link_get_by_ifname() and modify nm_platform_link_get_by_address()
to return the instance.
Certain functions, such as nm_platform_link_get_name(),
nm_platform_link_get_ifindex(), etc. are solely implemented based
on looking at the returned NMPlatformLink object. No longer implement
them as virtual functions but instead implement them in the base class
(nm-platform.c).
This removes code and eliminates the redundancy of the exposed
NMPlatformLink instance and the nm_platform_link_get_*() accessors.
Thereby also fix a bug in NMFakePlatform that tracked the link address
in a separate "address" field, instead of using "link.addr". That was
a case where the redundancy actually led to a bug in fake platform.
Also remove some stub implementations in NMFakePlatform that just
bail out. Instead allow for a missing virtual functions and perform
the "default" action in the accessor.
An example for that is nm_platform_link_get_permanent_address().
When inside a state-change, we set for example the device up.
This triggers a link-changed event, which then causes further
state-changes of the devices.
A state-change in process of a device is not reentrant, so we must
delay the handling of the link-changed event.
Unconditionally log a warning if the function fails.
We are about to drop nm_platform_get_error(), it's anyway unclear
why we don't want to log a warning about non-existing interface.
Later remove nm_platform_get_error() and signal errors via return
error codes.
Also, fix nm_platform_infiniband_partition_add() and
nm_platform_vlan_add() to check the type of the existing link
and fail with WRONG_TYPE otherwise.