Commit graph

209 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Thomas Haller
3ebad253e8 device/bluetooth: explicitly ignore return value of ioctl() in nm_bluez5_dun_cleanup()
Coverity doesn't like us not checking the result.

(cherry picked from commit 526601e4f3)
2019-08-02 18:19:49 +02:00
Thomas Haller
22c8721f35 core,libnm: add AddConnection2() D-Bus API to block autoconnect from the start
It should be possible to add a profile with autoconnect blocked form the
start. Update2() has a %NM_SETTINGS_UPDATE2_FLAG_BLOCK_AUTOCONNECT flag to
block autoconnect, and so we need something similar when adding a connection.

As the existing AddConnection() and AddConnectionUnsaved() API is not
extensible, add AddConnection2() that has flags and room for additional
arguments.

Then add and implement the new flag %NM_SETTINGS_ADD_CONNECTION2_FLAG_BLOCK_AUTOCONNECT
for AddConnection2().

Note that libnm's nm_client_add_connection2() API can completely replace
the existing nm_client_add_connection_async() call. In particular, it
will automatically prefer to call the D-Bus methods AddConnection() and
AddConnectionUnsaved(), in order to work with server versions older than
1.20. The purpose of this is that when upgrading the package, the
running NetworkManager might still be older than the installed libnm.
Anyway, so since nm_client_add_connection2_finish() also has a result
output, the caller needs to decide whether he cares about that result.
Hence it has an argument ignore_out_result, which allows to fallback to
the old API. One might argue that a caller who doesn't care about the
output results while still wanting to be backward compatible, should
itself choose to call nm_client_add_connection_async() or
nm_client_add_connection2(). But instead, it's more convenient if the
new function can fully replace the old one, so that the caller does not
need to switch which start/finish method to call.

https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1677068
2019-07-25 15:26:49 +02:00
Thomas Haller
d35d3c468a settings: rework tracking settings connections and settings plugins
Completely rework how settings plugin handle connections and how
NMSettings tracks the list of connections.

Previously, settings plugins would return objects of (a subtype of) type
NMSettingsConnection. The NMSettingsConnection was tightly coupled with
the settings plugin. That has a lot of downsides.

Change that. When changing this basic relation how settings connections
are tracked, everything falls appart. That's why this is a huge change.
Also, since I have to largely rewrite the settings plugins, I also
added support for multiple keyfile directories, handle in-memory
connections only by keyfile plugin and (partly) use copy-on-write NMConnection
instances. I don't want to spend effort rewriting large parts while
preserving the old way, that anyway should change. E.g. while rewriting ifcfg-rh,
I don't want to let it handle in-memory connections because that's not right
long-term.

--

If the settings plugins themself create subtypes of NMSettingsConnection
instances, then a lot of knowledge about tracking connections moves
to the plugins.
Just try to follow the code what happend during nm_settings_add_connection().
Note how the logic is spread out:
 - nm_settings_add_connection() calls plugin's add_connection()
 - add_connection() creates a NMSettingsConnection subtype
 - the plugin has to know that it's called during add-connection and
   not emit NM_SETTINGS_PLUGIN_CONNECTION_ADDED signal
 - NMSettings calls claim_connection() which hocks up the new
   NMSettingsConnection instance and configures the instance
   (like calling nm_settings_connection_added()).
This summary does not sound like a lot, but try to follow that code. The logic
is all over the place.

Instead, settings plugins should have a very simple API for adding, modifying,
deleting, loading and reloading connections. All the plugin does is to return a
NMSettingsStorage handle. The storage instance is a handle to identify a profile
in storage (e.g. a particular file). The settings plugin is free to subtype
NMSettingsStorage, but it's not necessary.
There are no more events raised, and the settings plugin implements the small
API in a straightforward manner.
NMSettings now drives all of this. Even NMSettingsConnection has now
very little concern about how it's tracked and delegates only to NMSettings.

This should make settings plugins simpler. Currently settings plugins
are so cumbersome to implement, that we avoid having them. It should not be
like that and it should be easy, beneficial and lightweight to create a new
settings plugin.

Note also how the settings plugins no longer care about duplicate UUIDs.
Duplicated UUIDs are a fact of life and NMSettings must handle them. No
need to overly concern settings plugins with that.

--

NMSettingsConnection is exposed directly on D-Bus (being a subtype of
NMDBusObject) but it was also a GObject type provided by the settings
plugin. Hence, it was not possible to migrate a profile from one plugin to
another.
However that would be useful when one profile does not support a
connection type (like ifcfg-rh not supporting VPN). Currently such
migration is not implemented except for migrating them to/from keyfile's
run directory. The problem is that migrating profiles in general is
complicated but in some cases it is important to do.

For example checkpoint rollback should recreate the profile in the right
settings plugin, not just add it to persistent storage. This is not yet
properly implemented.

--

Previously, both keyfile and ifcfg-rh plugin implemented in-memory (unsaved)
profiles, while ifupdown plugin cannot handle them. That meant duplication of code
and a ifupdown profile could not be modified or made unsaved.
This is now unified and only keyfile plugin handles in-memory profiles (bgo #744711).
Also, NMSettings is aware of such profiles and treats them specially.
In particular, NMSettings drives the migration between persistent and non-persistent
storage.

Note that a settings plugins may create truly generated, in-memory profiles.
The settings plugin is free to generate and persist the profiles in any way it
wishes. But the concept of "unsaved" profiles is now something explicitly handled
by keyfile plugin. Also, these "unsaved" keyfile profiles are persisted to file system
too, to the /run directory. This is great for two reasons: first of all, all
profiles from keyfile storage in fact have a backing file -- even the
unsaved ones. It also means you can create "unsaved" profiles in /run
and load them with `nmcli connection load`, meaning there is a file
based API for creating unsaved profiles.
The other advantage is that these profiles now survive restarting
NetworkManager. It's paramount that restarting the daemon is as
non-disruptive as possible. Persisting unsaved files to /run improves
here significantly.

--

In the past, NMSettingsConnection also implemented NMConnection interface.
That was already changed a while ago and instead users call now
nm_settings_connection_get_connection() to delegate to a
NMSimpleConnection. What however still happened was that the NMConnection
instance gets never swapped but instead the instance was modified with
nm_connection_replace_settings_from_connection(), clear-secrets, etc.
Change that and treat the NMConnection instance immutable. Instead of modifying
it, reference/clone a new instance. This changes that previously when somebody
wanted to keep a reference to an NMConnection, then the profile would be cloned.
Now, it is supposed to be safe to reference the instance directly and everybody
must ensure not to modify the instance. nmtst_connection_assert_unchanging()
should help with that.
The point is that the settings plugins may keep references to the
NMConnection instance, and so does the NMSettingsConnection. We want
to avoid cloning the instances as long as they are the same.
Likewise, the device's applied connection can now also be referenced
instead of cloning it. This is not yet done, and possibly there are
further improvements possible.

--

Also implement multiple keyfile directores /usr/lib, /etc, /run (rh #1674545,
bgo #772414).

It was always the case that multiple files could provide the same UUID
(both in case of keyfile and ifcfg-rh). For keyfile plugin, if a profile in
read-only storage in /usr/lib gets modified, then it gets actually stored in
/etc (or /run, if the profile is unsaved).

--

While at it, make /etc/network/interfaces profiles for ifupdown plugin reloadable.

--

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=772414
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=744711
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1674545
2019-07-16 19:09:08 +02:00
Thomas Haller
c0e075c902 all: drop emacs file variables from source files
We no longer add these. If you use Emacs, configure it yourself.

Also, due to our "smart-tab" usage the editor anyway does a subpar
job handling our tabs. However, on the upside every user can choose
whatever tab-width he/she prefers. If "smart-tabs" are used properly
(like we do), every tab-width will work.

No manual changes, just ran commands:

    F=($(git grep -l -e '-\*-'))
    sed '1 { /\/\* *-\*-  *[mM]ode.*\*\/$/d }'     -i "${F[@]}"
    sed '1,4 { /^\(#\|--\|dnl\) *-\*- [mM]ode/d }' -i "${F[@]}"

Check remaining lines with:

    git grep -e '-\*-'

The ultimate purpose of this is to cleanup our files and eventually use
SPDX license identifiers. For that, first get rid of the boilerplate lines.
2019-06-11 10:04:00 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
28a39eda44 utils: add ifname argument to nm_utils_complete_generic()
It's a common thing to complete a connection with an interface name;
adding it to the common path is goint to save as a few tens of lines
later on.
2019-05-28 15:03:20 +02:00
Thomas Haller
87f7e6844d shared: move "nm-dbus-compat.h" header to "nm-std-aux/nm-dbus-compat.h"
(cherry picked from commit 8183335878)
2019-04-18 20:03:54 +02:00
Thomas Haller
97da3149f7 device: merge stage3 and stage4 ip-config function for IPv4 and IPv6
(cherry picked from commit 5e71f01605)
2019-03-05 12:23:59 +01:00
Thomas Haller
af195e1178 device: unify IPv4 and IPv6 device methods for IP configs
It is preferable to treat IPv4 and IPv6 in a similar manner.
This moves the places where we differ down the call-stack.

It also make it clearer how IPv6 behaves differently. I think this
is a bug, but leave it for now.

+         /* If IP had previously failed, move it back to IP_CONF since we
+          * clearly now have configuration.
+          */
+         if (priv->ip6_state == IP_FAIL)
+              _set_ip_state (self, AF_INET6, IP_CONF);

(cherry picked from commit 1585eaf473)
2019-03-05 12:23:59 +01:00
Thomas Haller
9beed4f661 all: replace strerror() calls with nm_strerror_native() 2019-02-12 08:50:28 +01:00
Thomas Haller
047998f80a all: cache errno in local variable before using it 2019-02-12 08:50:28 +01:00
Thomas Haller
a3370af3a8 all: drop unnecessary includes of <errno.h> and <string.h>
"nm-macros-interal.h" already includes <errno.h> and <string.h>.
No need to include it everywhere else too.
2019-02-12 08:50:28 +01:00
Iñigo Martínez
35171b3c3f build: meson: Add trailing commas
Add missing trailing commas that avoids getting noise when another
file/parameter is added and eases reviewing changes[0].

[0] https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/dconf/merge_requests/11#note_291585
2018-12-20 13:50:34 +01:00
Aleksander Morgado
6ed21e8342 settings,gsm: deprecate and stop using 'number' property
The 'number' property in GSM settings is a legacy thing that comes
from when ModemManager used user-provided numbers, if any, to connect
3GPP modems.

Since ModemManager 1.0, this property is completely unused for 3GPP
modems, and so it doesn't make sense to use it in the NetworkManager
settings. Ofono does not use it either.

For AT+PPP-based 3GPP modems, the 'number' to call to establish the
data connection is decided by ModemManager itself, e.g. for standard
GSM/UMTS/LTE modems it will connect a given predefined PDP context,
and for other modems like Iridium it will have the number to call
hardcoded in the plugin itself.

https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/261
2018-12-19 08:54:50 +01:00
Aleksander Morgado
87bed48974 devices,bluetooth: fix default CDMA number setting
https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/260

Fixes: 215306f5a1
2018-12-13 16:58:05 +01:00
Taegil Bae
82b8ef2252 meson: set RPATH for libnm_device_plugin_bluetooth.so
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/merge_requests/26
2018-10-24 09:56:43 +02:00
Thomas Haller
fadcc16b26 bluez: make connect operation (partially) cancellable and drop GAsyncResult pattern
All operations must be cancellable in a timely manner, otherwise, the objects
hang during shutdown.

Also, get rid of the GAsyncResult pattern. It is more cumbersome than
helpful.

There are still several issues, marked by FIXME comments.
2018-10-17 13:03:50 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
89d1c9fb30 devices: make sure the generated connections are normalized
Using these unormalized was wrong all along, but by chance didn't hit
paths that needed normalized connections. This may change if we
actually write in memory connections to /run with the keyfile plugin,
because that one wants them normalized.

This also saves some work, because normalization does boring things for
us, such as adding default ipv4/ipv6/proxy settings everywhere.
2018-09-18 17:40:47 +02:00
Thomas Haller
38273a8871 settings: use delegation instead of inheritance for NMSettingsConnection and NMConnection
NMConnection is an interface, which is implemented by the types
NMSimpleConnection (libnm-core), NMSettingsConnection (src) and
NMRemoteConnection (libnm).

NMSettingsConnection does a lot of things already:

  1) it "is-a" NMDBusObject and exports the API of a connection profile
     on D-Bus
  2) it interacts with NMSettings and contains functionality
     for tracking the profiles.
  3) it is the base-class of types like NMSKeyfileConnection and
     NMIfcfgConnection. These handle how the profile is persisted
     on disk.
  4) it implements NMConnection interface, to itself track the
     settings of the profile.

3) and 4) would be better implemented via delegation than inheritance.

Address 4) and don't let NMSettingsConnection implemente the NMConnection
interface. Instead, a settings-connection references now a NMSimpleConnection
instance, to which it delegates for keeping the actual profiles.

Advantages:

  - by delegating, there is a clearer separation of what
    NMSettingsConnection does. For example, in C we often required
    casts from NMSettingsConnection to NMConnection. NMConnection
    is a very trivial object with very little logic. When we have
    a NMConnection instance at hand, it's good to know that it is
    *only* that simple instead of also being an entire
    NMSettingsConnection instance.

    The main purpose of this patch is to simplify the code by separating
    the NMConnection from the NMSettingsConnection. We should generally
    be aware whether we handle a NMSettingsConnection or a trivial
    NMConnection instance. Now, because NMSettingsConnection no longer
    "is-a" NMConnection, this distinction is apparent.

  - NMConnection is implemented as an interface and we create
    NMSimpleConnection instances whenever we need a real instance.
    In GLib, interfaces have a performance overhead, that we needlessly
    pay all the time. With this change, we no longer require
    NMConnection to be an interface. Thus, in the future we could compile
    a version of libnm-core for the daemon, where NMConnection is not an
    interface but a GObject implementation akin to NMSimpleConnection.

  - In the previous implementation, we cannot treat NMConnection immutable
    and copy-on-write.
    For example, when NMDevice needs a snapshot of the activated
    profile as applied-connection, all it can do is clone the entire
    NMSettingsConnection as a NMSimpleConnection.
    Likewise, when we get a NMConnection instance and want to keep
    a reference to it, we cannot do that, because we never know
    who also references and modifies the instance.
    By separating NMSettingsConnection we could in the future have
    NMConnection immutable and copy-on-write, to avoid all unnecessary
    clones.
2018-08-28 22:27:55 +02:00
Thomas Haller
33a88ca566 core: give better error reason why device is incompatible with profile
Note the special error codes  NM_UTILS_ERROR_CONNECTION_AVAILABLE_*.
This will be used to determine, whether the profile is fundamentally
incompatible with the device, or whether just some other properties
mismatch. That information will be importand during a plain `nmcli
connection up`, where NetworkManager searches all devices for a device
to activate. If no device is found (and multiple errors happened),
we want to show the error that is most likely relevant for the user.

Also note, how NMDevice's check_connection_compatible() uses the new
class field "device_class->connection_type_check_compatible" to simplify
checks for compatible profiles.

The error reason is still unused.
2018-07-24 09:39:09 +02:00
Thomas Haller
570e1fa75b core: give better error reason why device is unavailable
The error reason is still unused.
2018-07-24 09:39:09 +02:00
Thomas Haller
e1c7a2b5d0 all: don't use gchar/gshort/gint/glong but C types
We commonly don't use the glib typedefs for char/short/int/long,
but their C types directly.

    $ git grep '\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>' | wc -l
    587
    $ git grep '\<\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>' | wc -l
    21114

One could argue that using the glib typedefs is preferable in
public API (of our glib based libnm library) or where it clearly
is related to glib, like during

  g_object_set (obj, PROPERTY, (gint) value, NULL);

However, that argument does not seem strong, because in practice we don't
follow that argument today, and seldomly use the glib typedefs.
Also, the style guide for this would be hard to formalize, because
"using them where clearly related to a glib" is a very loose suggestion.

Also note that glib typedefs will always just be typedefs of the
underlying C types. There is no danger of glib changing the meaning
of these typedefs (because that would be a major API break of glib).

A simple style guide is instead: don't use these typedefs.

No manual actions, I only ran the bash script:

  FILES=($(git ls-files '*.[hc]'))
  sed -i \
      -e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>\( [^ ]\)/\1\2/g' \
      -e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>  /\1   /g' \
      -e 's/\<g\(char\|short\|int\|long\|float\|double\)\>/\1/g' \
      "${FILES[@]}"
2018-07-11 12:02:06 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
1491efa5d8 meson: run the check-export.sh in test phase
Targets not depended on by anything are not useful and likely never get run.
2018-06-28 20:38:52 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
650b5fd99e wwan: ensure the route parameters are set on IPv6 only configuration 2018-06-13 16:56:51 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
e69d386975 all: use the elvis operator wherever possible
Coccinelle:

  @@
  expression a, b;
  @@
  -a ? a : b
  +a ?: b

Applied with:

  spatch --sp-file ternary.cocci --in-place --smpl-spacing --dir .

With some manual adjustments on spots that Cocci didn't catch for
reasons unknown.

Thanks to the marvelous effort of the GNU compiler developer we can now
spare a couple of bits that could be used for more important things,
like this commit message. Standards commitees yet have to catch up.
2018-05-10 14:36:58 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel
6aac441f1c meson: distinguish arch specific and arch neutral lib dir
Plugins go to the arch specific place while conf.d/ and VPN/ are in
lib/. Use the same naming as is used with autoconf.
2018-05-09 12:59:39 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani
1b5925ce88 all: remove consecutive empty lines
Normalize coding style by removing consecutive empty lines from C
sources and headers.

https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/108
2018-04-30 16:24:52 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani
19876b4cfe shared: drop duplicate c-list.h header
Use the one from the project just imported.
2018-04-18 15:22:14 +02:00
Thomas Haller
417c7ebe4a core/trivial: rename "NMSettingsConnectionFlags" to "NMSettingsConnectionIntFlags"
"NMSettingsConnectionFlags" was an internal enum. Soon, we will add such
a type in libnm. Avoid the naming conflict by renaming. The "Int" stands
for "internal".
2018-04-16 15:30:07 +02:00
Thomas Haller
e17cd1d742 core: avoid clone of all-connections list for nm_utils_complete_generic()
NMSettings exposes a cached list of all connection. We don't need
to clone it. Note that this is not save against concurrent modification,
meaning, add/remove of connections in NMSettings will invalidate the
list.

However, it wasn't save against that previously either, because
altough we cloned the container (GSList), we didn't take an additional
reference to the elements.

This is purely a performance optimization, we don't need to clone the
list. Also, since the original list is of type "NMConnection *const*",
use that type insistently, instead of dependent API requiring GSList.

IMO, GSList is anyway not a very nice API for many use cases because
it requires an additional slice allocation for each element. It's
slower, and often less convenient to use.
2018-03-20 15:08:18 +01:00
Thomas Haller
297d4985ab core/dbus: rework D-Bus implementation to use lower layer GDBusConnection API
Previously, we used the generated GDBusInterfaceSkeleton types and glued
them via the NMExportedObject base class to our NM types. We also used
GDBusObjectManagerServer.

Don't do that anymore. The resulting code was more complicated despite (or
because?) using generated classes. It was hard to understand, complex, had
ordering-issues, and had a runtime and memory overhead.

This patch refactors this entirely and uses the lower layer API GDBusConnection
directly. It replaces the generated code, GDBusInterfaceSkeleton, and
GDBusObjectManagerServer. All this is now done by NMDbusObject and NMDBusManager
and static descriptor instances of type GDBusInterfaceInfo.

This adds a net plus of more then 1300 lines of hand written code. I claim
that this implementation is easier to understand. Note that previously we
also required extensive and complex glue code to bind our objects to the
generated skeleton objects. Instead, now glue our objects directly to
GDBusConnection. The result is more immediate and gets rid of layers of
code in between.
Now that the D-Bus glue us more under our control, we can address issus and
bottlenecks better, instead of adding code to bend the generated skeletons
to our needs.

Note that the current implementation now only supports one D-Bus connection.
That was effectively the case already, although there were places (and still are)
where the code pretends it could also support connections from a private socket.
We dropped private socket support mainly because it was unused, untested and
buggy, but also because GDBusObjectManagerServer could not export the same
objects on multiple connections. Now, it would be rather straight forward to
fix that and re-introduce ObjectManager on each private connection. But this
commit doesn't do that yet, and the new code intentionally supports only one
D-Bus connection.
Also, the D-Bus startup was simplified. There is no retry, either nm_dbus_manager_start()
succeeds, or it detects the initrd case. In the initrd case, bus manager never tries to
connect to D-Bus. Since the initrd scenario is not yet used/tested, this is good enough
for the moment. It could be easily extended later, for example with polling whether the
system bus appears (like was done previously). Also, restart of D-Bus daemon isn't
supported either -- just like before.

Note how NMDBusManager now implements the ObjectManager D-Bus interface
directly.

Also, this fixes race issues in the server, by no longer delaying
PropertiesChanged signals. NMExportedObject would collect changed
properties and send the signal out in idle_emit_properties_changed()
on idle. This messes up the ordering of change events w.r.t. other
signals and events on the bus. Note that not only NMExportedObject
messed up the ordering. Also the generated code would hook into
notify() and process change events in and idle handle, exhibiting the
same ordering issue too.
No longer do that. PropertiesChanged signals will be sent right away
by hooking into dispatch_properties_changed(). This means, changing
a property in quick succession will no longer be combined and is
guaranteed to emit signals for each individual state. Quite possibly
we emit now more PropertiesChanged signals then before.
However, we are now able to group a set of changes by using standard
g_object_freeze_notify()/g_object_thaw_notify(). We probably should
make more use of that.

Also, now that our signals are all handled in the right order, we
might find places where we still emit them in the wrong order. But that
is then due to the order in which our GObjects emit signals, not due
to an ill behavior of the D-Bus glue. Possibly we need to identify
such ordering issues and fix them.

Numbers (for contrib/rpm --without debug on x86_64):

- the patch changes the code size of NetworkManager by
  - 2809360 bytes
  + 2537528 bytes (-9.7%)

- Runtime measurements are harder because there is a large variance
  during testing. In other words, the numbers are not reproducible.
  Currently, the implementation performs no caching of GVariants at all,
  but it would be rather simple to add it, if that turns out to be
  useful.
  Anyway, without strong claim, it seems that the new form tends to
  perform slightly better. That would be no surprise.

  $ time (for i in {1..1000}; do nmcli >/dev/null || break; echo -n .;  done)
  - real    1m39.355s
  + real    1m37.432s

  $ time (for i in {1..2000}; do busctl call org.freedesktop.NetworkManager /org/freedesktop org.freedesktop.DBus.ObjectManager GetManagedObjects > /dev/null || break; echo -n .; done)
  - real    0m26.843s
  + real    0m25.281s

- Regarding RSS size, just looking at the processes in similar
  conditions, doesn't give a large difference. On my system they
  consume about 19MB RSS. It seems that the new version has a
  slightly smaller RSS size.
  - 19356 RSS
  + 18660 RSS
2018-03-12 18:37:08 +01:00
Thomas Haller
de16ef91cf wwan: drop nm_modem_get_data_port() function
It was only used by bluetooth's component_added()
check. It should compare rfcomm_iface only against
the control-port, not the data-port.
2018-02-21 20:28:46 +01:00
Thomas Haller
c7b3586b9d wwan: rework setting modem's data-port
Depending on the bearer's configuration method, the data-port is
either a networking interface, or an tty for ppp.

Let's treat them strictily separate.

Also, rework how NM_MODEM_DATA_PORT was used in both contexts.
Instead, use the that we actually care about.

Also, when nm_device_set_ip_ifindex() fails, fail activation
right away.

Also, we early try to resolve the network interface's name to
an ifindex. If that fails, the device is already gone and we
fail early.
2018-02-21 20:28:46 +01:00
Thomas Haller
2ea8e1029f bluetooth: fail activation when setting unknown ip-iface 2018-02-21 20:28:46 +01:00
Thomas Haller
34cb6f9877 build/meson: use variables for ldflags and linker-script 2018-01-11 12:46:01 +01:00
Thomas Haller
349861ceec build/meson: unconditionally use linker version scripts
We also unconditionally use them with autotools.
Also, the detection for have_version_script does
not seem correct to me. At least, it didn't work
with clang.
2018-01-10 12:31:44 +01:00
Iñigo Martínez
5e16bcf268 meson: Improve dependency system
Some targets are missing dependencies on some generated sources in
the meson port. These makes the build to fail due to missing source
files on a highly parallelized build.

These dependencies have been resolved by taking advantage of meson's
internal dependencies which can be used to pass source files,
include directories, libraries and compiler flags.

One of such internal dependencies called `core_dep` was already in
use. However, in order to avoid any confusion with another new
internal dependency called `nm_core_dep`, which is used to include
directories and source files from the `libnm-core` directory, the
`core_dep` dependency has been renamed to `nm_dep`.

These changes have allowed minimizing the build details which are
inherited by using those dependencies. The parallelized build has
also been improved.
2018-01-10 12:20:17 +01:00
Iñigo Martínez
03637ad8b5 build: add initial support for meson build system
meson is a build system focused on speed an ease of use, which
helps speeding up the software development. This patch adds meson
support along autotools.

[thaller@redhat.com: rebased patch and adjusted for iwd support]

https://mail.gnome.org/archives/networkmanager-list/2017-December/msg00022.html
2017-12-13 15:48:50 +01:00
Thomas Haller
545e3111c8 settings: remove accessor functions to connection flags
The accessor functions just look whether a certain flag is set. As these
functions have a different name then the flags, this is more confusing
then helpful. For example, if you want to know where the NM_GENERATED
flag matters, you had to know to grep for nm_settings_connection_get_nm_generated()
in addition to NM_SETTINGS_CONNECTION_FLAGS_NM_GENERATED.

The accessor function hid that the property was implemented as
a connection flag. For example, it was not immediately obvious
that nm_settings_connection_get_nm_generated() is the same
as having the NM_SETTINGS_CONNECTION_FLAGS_NM_GENERATED flag
set.

Drop them.
2017-12-05 19:57:25 +01:00
Thomas Haller
b6efac9ec2 c-list: re-import latest version of c-list.h from upstream
Most notably, it renames
  c_list_unlink_init() -> c_list_unlink()
  c_list_unlink() -> c_list_unlink_stale()

  $ sed -e 's/\<c_list_unlink\>/c_list_unlink_old/g' \
        -e 's/\<c_list_unlink_init\>/c_list_unlink/g' \
        -e 's/\<c_list_unlink_old\>/c_list_unlink_stale/g' \
        $(git grep -l c_list_unlink -- ':(exclude)shared/nm-utils/c-list.h') \
        -i
2017-11-28 11:26:39 +01:00
Thomas Haller
3ee8de20c4 all: include "nm-utils/nm-hash-utils.h" by default
Next we will use siphash24() instead of the glib version g_direct_hash() or
g_str_hash(). Hence, the "nm-utils/nm-hash-utils.h" header becomes very
fundamental and will be needed basically everywhere.

Instead of requiring the users to include them, let it be included via
"nm-default.h" header.
2017-11-16 11:49:51 +01:00
Thomas Haller
186d9de66a device: improve tracking autoconnect-blocked flags of NMDevice
- split NM_DEVICE_AUTOCONNECT_BLOCKED_INTERN in two parts:
  "wrong-pin" and "manual-disconnect". Setting/unsetting them
  should be tracked differently, as their reason differs.

- no longer initialize/clear the autoconnect-blocked reasons
  during realize/unrealize of the device. Instead, initialize
  it once when the object gets created (nm_device_init()), and
  keep the settings beyond unrealize/realize cycles. This only
  matters for software devices, as regular devices get deleted
  after unrealizing once. But for software devices it is essential,
  because we don't want to forget the autoconnect settings of
  the device instance.

- drop verbose logging about blocking autoconnect due to failed
  pin. We already log changes to autoconnect-blocked flags with
  TRACE level. An additional message about this particular issue
  seems not necessary at INFO level.

- in NMManager's do_sleep_wake(), no longer block autoconnect
  for devices during sleep. We already unmanage the device, which
  is a far more effective measure to prevent activation. We should
  not also block autoconnect.

(cherry picked from commit 3c2b9485a7)
2017-11-08 12:35:10 +01:00
Thomas Haller
f0731dc716 device: refactor autoconnect blocking by introducing NMDeviceAutoconnectBlockedFlags enum
The flags allow for more then two reasons. Currently the only reasons
for allowing or disallowing autoconnect are "user" and "intern".

It's a bit odd, that NMDeviceAutoconnectBlockedFlags has a negative
meaning. So
  nm_device_set_autoconnect_intern (device, FALSE);
gets replaced by
  nm_device_set_autoconnect_blocked_set (device, NM_DEVICE_AUTOCONNECT_BLOCKED_INTERN);
and so on.

However, it's chosen this way, because autoconnect shall be allowed,
unless any blocked-reason is set. That is, to check whether autoconnect
is allowed, we do
  if (!nm_device_get_autoconnect_blocked (device, NM_DEVICE_AUTOCONNECT_BLOCKED_ALL))
The alternative check would be
  if (nm_device_get_autoconnect_allowed (device, NM_DEVICE_AUTOCONNECT_ALLOWED_ALL) == NM_DEVICE_AUTOCONNECT_ALLOWED_ALL)
which seems odd too.

So, add the inverse flags to block autoconnect.

Beside refactoring and inverting the meaning of the autoconnect
settings, there is no change in behavior.

(cherry picked from commit 5279ab5be6)
2017-11-08 12:35:10 +01:00
Thomas Haller
4a8a5495a9 all: avoid coverity warnings about "Wrong Check of Return Value"
30. NetworkManager-1.9.2/src/settings/plugins/keyfile/nms-keyfile-writer.c:218:
check_return: Calling "g_mkdir_with_parents" without checking return
value (as is done elsewhere 4 out of 5
 times).

25. NetworkManager-1.9.2/src/platform/nm-linux-platform.c:3969:
check_return: Calling "_nl_send_nlmsg" without checking return value (as
is done elsewhere 4 out of 5 times).

34. NetworkManager-1.9.2/src/nm-core-utils.c:2843:
negative_returns: "fd2" is passed to a parameter that cannot be negative.

26. NetworkManager-1.9.2/src/devices/wwan/nm-modem-broadband.c:897:
check_return: Calling "nm_utils_parse_inaddr_bin" without checking
return value (as is done elsewhere 4 out of 5 times).

3. NetworkManager-1.9.2/src/devices/bluetooth/nm-bluez5-manager.c:386:
check_return: Calling "g_variant_lookup" without checking return value
(as is done elsewhere 79 out of 83 times).

16. NetworkManager-1.9.2/libnm-util/nm-setting.c:405:
check_return: Calling "nm_g_object_set_property" without checking return
value (as is done elsewhere 4 out of 5 times).
2017-10-30 14:10:56 +01:00
Thomas Haller
3ecb57fdc4 settings: get rid of callback arguments for nm_settings_connection_delete() 2017-10-25 14:04:36 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani
d29115c138 core: use nm_close()
Use nm_close() in the core to catch any improper use of close().
2017-10-19 15:49:58 +02:00
Thomas Haller
3434261811 core,clients: use our own string hashing function nm_str_hash()
Replace the usage of g_str_hash() with our own nm_str_hash().

GLib's g_str_hash() uses djb2 hashing function, just like we
do at the moment. The only difference is, that we use a diffrent
seed value.

Note, that we initialize the hash seed with random data (by calling
getrandom() or reading /dev/urandom). That is a change compared to
before.

This change of the hashing function and accessing the random pool
might be undesired for libnm/libnm-core. Hence, the change is not
done there as it possibly changes behavior for public API. Maybe
we should do that later though.

At this point, there isn't much of a change. This patch becomes
interesting, if we decide to use a different hashing algorithm.
2017-10-18 13:05:00 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani
3be7910520 bluetooth: drop unused function declaration 2017-09-18 18:56:50 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani
87e17d96df bluetooth: generate connections only for paired devices
It makes little sense to have a connection while the device is not
paired.

https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=787440
2017-09-18 18:50:08 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani
239c59a627 src/devices: use macros for property and signal names 2017-09-18 15:40:31 +02:00
Thomas Haller
a7aca2ab08 core: fix crash with bluetooth device factory wrongly claiming NAP connection
The bluetooth device *never* manages NAP connection. Hence, checking for
nm_bt_vtable_network_server in "nm-bluez-manager.c" is wrong.
Especially, because nm_bt_vtable_network_server is only initialized
much later, so during initial start, the bluetooth factory would wronly
claim to support it. This leads to a crash when having a NAP connection.

Also, the bridge factory requires the bluetooth plugin. It should only
claim to support NAP when the bluetooth plugin is present. That
way, we get a proper "missing plugin" error message, instead of failing
later during activation.

It seems to me, distributing the logic to various match_connection()
functions makes it more complicated, because the implementation is
spread out and interact in complicated ways. Anyway.

Fixes: 8665cdfeff
2017-08-06 07:50:48 +02:00