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Rework DBus manager signal handling to be more flexible. Previously, only one signal handler could be registered for a particular interface. The DBus manager now reference counts DBus bus matches and allows multiple clients to register signal handlers for the same interface and sender. * src/NetworkManager.c - (main): track NMI signal handler ID and remove it when we quit * src/NetworkManagerMain.h - Keep track of NMI signal handler ID * src/nm-dbus-manager.c src/nm-dbus-manager.h - rework signal handling; each signal handler references one signal match, but a signal match may be referenced by one or more signal handlers. Matches are refcounted and are destroyed when the last signal handler that references the match is removed. This is necessary because two signal handlers may end up requiring the same dbus bus match, so the match must live until the last signal handler is destroyed (for example, with the wpa_supplicant network interface dbus interface). * src/dhcp-manager/nm-dhcp-manager.c - (nm_dhcp_manager_new): track DHCP signal handler id - (nm_dhcp_manager_dispose): remove DHCP signal handler * src/vpn-manager/nm-vpn-service.c - (nm_vpn_service_add_watch): track VPN service signal handler id - (nm_vpn_service_remove_watch): remove VPN service signal handler git-svn-id: http://svn-archive.gnome.org/svn/NetworkManager/trunk@2124 4912f4e0-d625-0410-9fb7-b9a5a253dbdc |
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| CONTRIBUTING | ||
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| NetworkManager.pc.in | ||
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| README | ||
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THEORY OF OPERATION: NetworkManager attempts to keep an active network connection available at all times. The point of NetworkManager is to make networking configuration and setup as painless and automatic as possible. If using DHCP, NetworkManager is _intended_ to replace default routes, obtain IP addresses from a DHCP server, and change nameservers whenever it sees fit. In effect, the goal of NetworkManager is to make networking Just Work. If you have special needs, we'd like to hear about them, but understand that NetworkManager is not intended to serve the needs of all users. From a list of all adapters currently installed on the system, NetworkManager will first try a wired and then a wireless adapter. Wireless adapters that support wireless scanning are preferred over ones that cannot. NetworkManager does not try to keep a connection up as long as possible, meaning that plugging into a wired network will switch the connection to the wired network away from the wireless one. For wireless networking support, NetworkManager keeps a list of wireless networks, the preferred list. Preferred Networks are wireless networks that the user has explicitly made NetworkManager associate with at some previous time. So if the user walks into a Starbucks and explicitly asks NetworkManager to associate with that Starbucks network, NetworkManager will remember the Starbucks network information from that point on. Upon returning to that Starbucks, NetworkManager will attempt to associate _automatically_ with the Starbucks network since it is now in the Preferred Networks list. The point of this is to ensure that only the user can determine which wireless networks to associate with, and that the user is aware which networks are security risks and which are not. STRUCTURE: NetworkManager runs as a root-user system level daemon, since it must manipulate hardware directly. It communicates over DBUS with a desktop-level per-user process, nm-applet. Since Preferred Networks are user-specific, there must be some mechanism of getting this information per-user. NetworkManager cannot store that information as it is user-specific, and therefore communicates over DBUS to the user daemon which provides those lists. NetworkManager also provides an API over DBUS for any DBUS-aware application to determine the current state of the network, including available wireless networks the computer is aware of and specific details about those networks. This API also provides the means for forcing NetworkManager to associate with a specific wireless network. Use of DBUS allows separation of NetworkManager, which requires no user-interface, and the parts of the user interface which might be desktop environment specific. The nm-applet provides a DBUS service called NetworkManagerInfo, which should provide to NetworkManager the Preferred Networks lists upon request. It also should be able to display a dialog to retrieve a WEP/WPA key or passphrase from the user when NetworkManager requests it. The GNOME version of NetworkManagerInfo, for example, stores Preferred Networks in GConf and WEP/WPA keys in gnome-keyring, and proxies that information to NetworkManager upon request.