If users wrote a FQDN in ipv4.dhcp-hostname presumably it's because
they really want to send the full value, not only the host part, so
let's send it as-is.
This obviously is a change in behavior, but only for users that have a
FQDN in ipv4.dhcp-hostname, where it's not clear if they really want the
domain to be stripped.
When the property is unset, we keep sending only the host part of the
system hostname to maintain backwards compatibility.
This commit aligns NM behavior to initscripts.
(cherry picked from commit cf5fab8f55)
Since they are mutually exclusive, pass a string and a boolean to
indicate whether we want to use the hostname or the FQDN option.
(cherry picked from commit d286aa9dfa)
Commit #acf1067a allowed to assume connections on already managed
devices. Anyway, in complex scenario with layered connections, during
the startup of NetworkManager, this could interfere with the connection
assumption based on saved state.
So, avoid to re-assume connections on already managed devices during
startup.
Fixes: acf1067a45
(cherry picked from commit b6b7d909f7)
Set the @was_active flag for external activations with DHCP, so that
DHCP is retried multiple times in case of failure, as we do for
managed connections when the lease expires and for assumed
connections.
Fixes test: renewal_gw_after_dhcp_outage_for_assumed_var1
Fixes: e3113fdc4b
(cherry picked from commit ddfeed4530)
We check the return value of _get_stable_id(); when it is NULL
priv->ndisc would stay NULL too and we would crash when dereferencing
@error.
Actually, _get_stable_id() can never return NULL, so replace the check
with an assertion.
(cherry picked from commit 8b73812062)
src/devices/nm-device-ip-tunnel.c:257:8: warning: Branch condition evaluates to a garbage value
if (local4)
^~~~~~
src/devices/nm-device-ip-tunnel.c:264:8: warning: Branch condition evaluates to a garbage value
if (remote4)
^~~~~~~
(cherry picked from commit aaaefd827e)
Most of the IPv6 methods require a non-tentative link local address
configured on the interface; we look at priv->ip6_config to determine
if such address exist. If the configuration is out-of-sync, we may
proceed with configuration when the link-local address does not exist
or is still tentative, especially because we toggle the "disable_ipv6"
sysctl parameter just before, which clears all IPv6 addresses on the
interface.
Ensure that priv->ext_ip6_config_captured is up-to-date before
continuing with the IPv6 configuration, and use it to determine
whether suitable addresses are present.
Fixes test: @ipv6_set_ra_announced_mtu
Fixes: 8f4caab601
(cherry picked from commit 0461da2690)
update_ip6_config() also removes addresses and routes no longer
present externally from the configuration, so it can't be called
before the changes are committed.
This reverts commit 8f4caab601.
(cherry picked from commit d626298b48)
The user data values are encoded in shell variables named
prefix "NM_USER_". The variable name is an encoded form of the
data key, consisting only of upper-case letters, digits, and underscore.
The alternative would be something like
NM_USER_1_KEY=my.keys.1
NM_USER_1_VAL='some value'
NM_USER_2_KEY=my.other.KEY.42
NM_USER_2_VAL='other value'
contary to
NM_USER_MY__KEYS__1='some value'
NM_USER_MY__OTHER___K_E_Y__42='other value'
The advantage of the former, numbered scheme is that it may be easier to
find the key of a user-data entry. With the current implementation, the
shell script would have to decode the key, like the ifcfg-rh plugin
does.
However, user data keys are opaque identifers for values. Usually, you
are not concerned with a certain name of the key, you already know it.
Hence, you don't need to write a shell script to decode the key name,
instead, you can use it directly:
if [ -z ${NM_USER_MY__OTHER___K_E_Y__42+x} ]; then
do_something_with_key "$NM_USER_MY__OTHER___K_E_Y__42"
fi
Otherwise, you'd first have to search write a shell script to search
for the interesting key -- in this example "$NM_USER_2_KEY", before being
able to access the value "$NM_USER_2_VAL".
(cherry picked from commit 79be44d990)
Most of the IPv6 methods require a non-tentative link local address
configured on the interface; we look at priv->ip6_config to determine
if such address exist. If the configuration is out-of-sync, we may
proceed with configuration when the link-local address does not exist
or is still tentative, especially because we toggle the "disable_ipv6"
sysctl parameter just before, which clears all IPv6 addresses on the
interface.
Ensure that priv->ip6_config is up-to-date before continuing with the
IPv6 configuration.
Fixes test: @ipv6_set_ra_announced_mtu
(cherry picked from commit 78b43f7ea1)
nm_device_update_firewall_zone() would only reconfigure the firewall
zone when the device is fully activated. That means, while the device
is activating, changing the firewall zone is not working. Activation
might take a long time with DHCP, or with master devices waiting
for their slaves.
For example:
nmcli connection add type team con-name t-team ifname i-team autoconnect no
nmcli connection up t-team
Note how t-team/i-team is waiting for a slave device. During stage3,
we already set firewall.zone to default.
nmcli connection modify t-team connection.zone external
Note how changing the firewall zone does not immidiately take
effect. Only later, during IP_CHECK state the firewall zone
is reset -- but only for devices with differing ip_ifindex.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1445242
(cherry picked from commit 20ccbb97d5)
For regular devices that don't have a separate ip_iface/ip_ifindex,
the ip_ifindex is left at zero. Hence, the condition is always
true and does not work as intended, resulting in setting the
firewall zone twice.
Fixes: 7cf5c326bc
(cherry picked from commit baa8b4029c)
Commit 850c97795 ("device: track system interface state in NMDevice")
introduced interface states for devices and prevented checking if a
connection should be assumed on already managed devices.
This prevented to properly manage the event of an ip configuration added
externally to NM to a managed but not (yet) activated device.
Fixes: 850c977953
(cherry picked from commit acf1067a45)
When a DHCP connection is active and the DHCP server is temporarily
unreachable, we restart DHCP for some times before failing the
connection. From the user point of view, restarting NM (and thus
assuming the existing connection) should not change this behavior.
However, if NM is restarted while the server is temporarily down, at
the moment we immediately fail because we consider the DHCP
transaction our first try. Fix this by restoring the multiple tries
when we detect that DHCP was active before because the connection is
assumed.
(cherry picked from commit e3113fdc4b)
If we don't have connection checking functionality just avoid adding
a penalty to the defaut route of newly activated connections.
(cherry picked from commit 2524a6f852)
We call nm_device_activate_stage3_ipX_start() in various places,
e.g. after a carrier change or when a master enslaves a new device to
configure IP for the device. If the device is a slave in state
IP_CONFIG, this makes it transition to IP_CHECK, while it should stay
in IP_CONFIG until the master becomes ready. When the master is ready,
it will move slaves directly to SECONDARIES, skipping IP configuration
entirely.
(cherry picked from commit 41f6540afd)
When the operation is cancelled, we must not touch user_data. Note that
NM_POLICY_GET_PRIVATE() theoretically doesn't dereference the pointer
(does it?) but doing pointer arithmetic on a dangling pointer is a very
ugly thing to do.
And of course, the memleak.
Fixes: 5c716c8af8
Fixes: a2cdf63204
(cherry picked from commit 3215508293)
The default timeout in dhclient is 60 seconds; if a lease can't be
obtained during such interval, dhclient sends to NM a FAIL event and
then the IP method fails.
Thus, even if user specified a greater dhcp-timeout, NM terminated
DHCP after 60 seconds. Fix this by passing an explicit timeout to
dhclient.
(cherry picked from commit 82ef497cc9)
py-kickstart writes this out and there apparently are users using this.
Let them have one less problem.
Co-Authored-By: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1445414
(cherry picked from commit dbe0659ba419a77ad5ff2340bfc93c71a1bec61a)
py-kickstart writes this out. Okay -- we don't care on read and it makes
sense when there actually are addresses.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1445414
(cherry picked from commit aa50dfc236b3806c6d7161cdea450655a1268f0d)
For example, if you want to test whether a value is present and
reset it to a different value (only if it is present), it would
be reasonable to do
if (svGetValue (s, key, &tmp)) {
svSetValue (s, key, "new-value");
g_free (tmp);
}
Without this patch, you could not be sure that key is not
set to some inparsable value, which svWriteFile() would then
write out as empty string.
Have invalid values returned by svGetValue() as empty string.
That is how svWriteFile() treats them.
(cherry picked from commit 6470bed5f1ad25e20df14b333f1b083c9b390ece)
The dad_counter is hashed into the resulting address. Since we
want the hashing to be independent of the architecture, we always
hash 32 bit of dad_counter. Make the dad_counter argument of
type guint32 for consistency.
In practice this has no effect because:
- for all our (current!) architectues, guint is the same as
guint32.
- all callers of nm_utils_ipv6_addr_set_stable_privacy() keep
their dad-counter argument as guint8, so they never even pass
numbers larger then 255.
- nm_utils_ipv6_addr_set_stable_privacy() limits dad_counter
further against RFC7217_IDGEN_RETRIES.
(cherry picked from commit 951e5f5bf8)
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7217 says:
The resulting Interface Identifier SHOULD be compared against the
reserved IPv6 Interface Identifiers [RFC5453] [IANA-RESERVED-IID]
and against those Interface Identifiers already employed in an
address of the same network interface and the same network
prefix. In the event that an unacceptable identifier has been
generated, this situation SHOULD be handled in the same way as
the case of duplicate addresses (see Section 6).
In case of conflict, this suggests to create a new address incrementing
the DAD counter, etc. Don't do that. If we generate an address of the
reserved region, just rehash it right away. Note that the actual address
anyway appears random, so this re-hashing is just as good as incrementing
the DAD counter and going through the entire process again.
Note that now we no longer generate certain addresses like we did
previously. But realize that we now merely reject (1 + 16777216 + 128)
addresses out of 2^64. So, the likelyhood of of a user accidentally
generating an address that is suddenly rejected is in the order of
10e-13 (1 / 1,099,503,173,697). Which is not astronomically, but still
extreeeemely unlikely.
Also, the whole process is anyway build on the idea that somebody else
might generate conflicting addresses (DAD). It means, there was always
the extremely tiny chance that the address you generated last time is
suddenly taken by somebody else. So, this change appears to a user
like these reserved addresses are now claimed by another (non existing)
host and a different address gets generated -- business as usual, as
far as SLAAC is concerned.
(cherry picked from commit f15c4961ad)
Fixes a crash where the default DNS domain to be announced together with the
prefixes to be delegated is updated at the same time the device is being
unrealized.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1425818
(cherry picked from commit 3e076cf8b1)
NMDeviceGeneric:check_connection_compatible() doesn't check for a
matching interface name. It relies on the parent implementation to
do that.
The parent implementation calls nm_manager_get_connection_iface().
That fails for NM_SETTING_GENERIC_SETTING_NAME, because that one has
no factory. Maybe this imbalance of having no factory for the Generic device
is wrong, but usually factories only match a distinct set of device
types, while the generic factory would handle them all (as last resort).
Without this, activating a generic connection might activate the
wrong interface.
(cherry picked from commit 3876b10a47)
We have unit tests for writing and re-reading ifcfg file. Those
tests compare whether a file can be successfully read and is
semantically identical.
However, there were no tests that a certain output is written in
a stable format. We aim not to change the output of what we write.
For that, add tests to not only check the semantic of the written
ifcfg file, but their bits and bytes.
Some future changes may well intentionally change the current
output. That will require to update the expected result files
and can be done via
NMTST_IFCFG_RH_UPDATE_EXPECTED=yes src/settings/plugins/ifcfg-rh/tests/test-ifcfg-rh
Note that alias, route, and key files are not checked.
Related: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1445414
(cherry picked from commit f04bf45e84)
As NMDevice now creates the NMPacrunnerManager instance
as needed, it is even more likely that the initial call
to nm_pacrunner_manager_send() will only queue (but not yet
send) the new config.
Later, when the D-Bus proxy is created, we will not get a
name-owner changed signal. We instead have to push the configuration
right away.
(cherry picked from commit 019b9fbfc0)
nm_pacrunner_manager_remove() required a "tag" argument. It was a
bug for callers trying to remove a configuration for a non-existing
tag.
That effectively means, the caller must keep track of whether a certain
"tag" is pending. The caller also must remember the tag -- a tag that he
must choose uniquely in the first place.
Turn that around and have nm_pacrunner_manager_send() return a (non
NULL) call-id. This call-id may later be used to remove the
configuration.
Apparently, previously the tracking of the "tag" was not always correct
and we hit the assertion in nm_pacrunner_manager_remove().
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1444374
(cherry picked from commit b04a9c90eb)
Usually, this "<allow send_destination="..."/>" part is shipped
by firewalld's D-Bus policy. However, if firewalld is initially
not installed with NetworkManager already running, dbus-daemon
seems to cache the missing permission for the D-Bus connection.
As a result, when installing and starting firewalld, NetworkManager
requests fail until restart:
firewall: [0x7f4b83643890,change:"eth1"]: complete: request failed (Rejected send message, 1 matched rules; type="method_call", sender=":1.3" (uid=0 pid=715 comm="/usr/sbin/NetworkManager --no-daemon ") interface="org.fedoraproject.FirewallD1.zone" member="changeZone" error name="(unset)" requested_reply="0" destination=":1.25" (uid=0 pid=1243 comm="/usr/bin/python -Es /usr/sbin/firewalld --nofork -"))
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1436770
(cherry picked from commit cc1d409ba8)
We want to ignore certain errors from firewalld. In the past,
the error message contained only the error code.
Since recently ([1], [2]), the error message contains a longer text:
NetworkManager[647]: <debug> [1492768494.7475] device[0x7f7f21e78f50] (eth0): Activation: setting firewall zone 'default'
NetworkManager[647]: <debug> [1492768494.7475] firewall: [0x7f7f21ed8900,change:"eth0"]: firewall zone change eth0:default
...
firewalld[2342]: ERROR: UNKNOWN_INTERFACE: 'eth0' is not in any zone
NetworkManager[647]: <warn> [1492768494.7832] firewall: [0x7f7f0400c780,remove:"eth0"]: complete: request failed (UNKNOWN_INTERFACE: 'eth0' is not in any zone)
[1] c77156d7f6
[2] 7c6ab456c5
(cherry picked from commit 2ad8bb0ce3)
We now initialize the NMFirewallManager asynchronously. That means, at
first firewalld appears as "not running", for which we usually would
fake-success right away.
It would be complex for callers to wait for firewall-manager to be
ready. So instead, have the asynchronous requests be queued and
complete them once the D-Bus proxy is initialized.
(cherry picked from commit fb7815df6e)
Next we will get another mode, so an is-idle doesn't cut it.
It can be confusing where the mode is set and where it is only
accessed read-only. For that, add mode_mutable.
(cherry picked from commit 04f4e327a9)
Creating it asynchronously changes that on the first call to
nm_firewall_manager_get() the instance is not yet running.
Note that NMPolicy already connects to the "STARTED" signal and
reapplies the zones when firewalld appears. So, this delayed
change of the running state is handled mostly fine already.
One part is still missing, it's to queue add_or_change/remove calls
while the firewall manager is initializing. That follows next.
(cherry picked from commit 753f39fa82)
Since commit 2d1b85f (th/assume-vs-unmanaged-bgo746440), we clearly
distinguish between two modes when encountering devices with external
IP configuration:
a) external devices. For those devices we generate a volatile in-memory
connection and pretend it's active. However, the device must not be
touched by NetworkManager in any way.
b) assume, seamless take over. Mostly for restart of NetworkManager,
we activate a connection gracefully without going through an down-up
cycle. After the device reaches activated state, the device is
considered fully managed. For this only an existing, non volatile
connection can be used.
Before 'th/assume-vs-unmanaged-bgo746440', the behaviors were not
clearly separated.
Since then, we only choose to assume a connection (b) when the state
file indicates a matching connection. Now, extend this to also assume
connections when:
- during first-start (not after a restart) when there is no
state file yet.
- and, if we have an existing, non volatile, connection which
matches the device's configuration.
This patch lets NetworkManager assume connection also on first start.
That is for example useful when handing over network configuration from
initrd.
This only applies to existing, permanent, matching(!) connections, so it is a
good guess that the user wants NM to take over this interface. This brings us
closer to the previous behavior before 'th/assume-vs-unmanaged-bgo746440'.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1439220
(cherry picked from commit 27b2477cb7)
nm_config_device_state_*() always access the file system directly,
they don't cache data in NMConfig. Hence, they don't use the
@self argument.
Maybe those functions don't belong to nm-config.h, anyway. For lack
of a better place they are there.
(cherry picked from commit 1940be410c)