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Thomas Haller 850c977953 device: track system interface state in NMDevice
When deciding whether to touch a device we sometimes look at whether
the active connection is external/assumed. In many cases however,
there is no active connection around (e.g. while moving the device
from state unmanaged to disconnected before assuming).
So in most cases we instead look at the device-state-reason to decide
whether to touch the interface (see nm_device_state_reason_check()).

Often it's desirable to have no state and passing data as function
arguments. However, the state reason has to be passed along several hops
(e.g. a queued state change). Or a change to a master/slave can affect
the slave/master, where we pass on the state reason. Or an intermediate
event might invalidate a previous state reason. Passing the state
whether to touch a device or not as a state-reason is cumbersome
and limited.

Instead, the device should be aware of whats going on. Add a
sys-iface-state with:
  - SYS_IFACE_STATE_EXTERNAL: meaning, NM should not touch it
  - SYS_IFACE_STATE_ASSUME: meaning, NM is gracefully taking over
  - SYS_IFACE_STATE_MANAGED: meaning, the device is managed by NM
  - SYS_IFACE_STATE_REMOVED: the device no longer exists

This replaces most checks of nm_device_state_reason_check() and
nm_active_connection_get_activation_type() by instead looking at
the sys-iface-state of the device.

This patch probably has still issues, but the previous behavior was
not very clear either. We will need to identify those issues in future
tests and tweak the behavior. At least, now there is one flag that
describes how to behave.
2017-03-16 18:27:33 +01:00
clients cli/general: avoid chopping off the last letter of master device name 2017-03-16 17:11:58 +01:00
contrib contrib/rpm: reorder spec file and move bcond definitions together 2017-03-06 20:23:15 +01:00
data build: move policy file from "policy/" to "data/" 2016-11-03 14:18:23 +01:00
dispatcher build: merge "dispatcher/tests/Makefile.am" into toplevel Makefile 2016-10-21 17:37:56 +02:00
docs include: use double-quotes to include our own headers 2017-03-09 14:12:35 +01:00
examples include: use double-quotes to include our own headers 2017-03-09 14:12:35 +01:00
introspection core: add support for dummy devices 2017-02-22 21:05:04 +01:00
libnm all: use nm_clear_g_cancellable() 2017-03-13 12:00:23 +01:00
libnm-core all: use "unsigned" instead of "unsigned int" 2017-03-14 11:26:29 +01:00
libnm-glib include: use double-quotes to include our own headers 2017-03-09 14:12:35 +01:00
libnm-util all: use "unsigned" instead of "unsigned int" 2017-03-14 11:26:29 +01:00
m4 build: test for support of -flto compiler flag 2017-02-10 12:53:32 +01:00
man cli: support dummy connections 2017-02-22 21:05:04 +01:00
po core: add support for dummy devices 2017-02-22 21:05:04 +01:00
shared shared: trigger -Wenum-conversion warning in NM_IN_SET*() macros 2017-03-16 18:27:33 +01:00
src device: track system interface state in NMDevice 2017-03-16 18:27:33 +01:00
tools tests: accept trailing arguments to "tools/run-nm-test.sh" 2017-03-02 16:08:54 +01:00
vapi vapi: add vapi NM-1.0 for libnm 2016-11-03 10:15:42 +01:00
.dir-locals.el misc: add toplevel .dir-locals file that tells Emacs to show trailing whitespace 2013-03-08 15:15:28 +01:00
.gitignore build: rename intermediate doc xmls 2016-11-24 16:54:17 +01:00
.travis.yml travis: build additional settings plugin in travis-ci 2016-10-22 17:15:50 +02:00
AUTHORS misc: update maintainers and authors 2016-04-21 13:39:03 -05:00
autogen.sh build: fix gtk-doc/introspection handling for build 2016-11-28 12:43:51 +01:00
ChangeLog Changelog: remove and replace the changelog by a stub 2017-02-14 17:39:46 +01:00
configure.ac all: use "unsigned" instead of "unsigned int" 2017-03-14 11:26:29 +01:00
CONTRIBUTING doc: update CONTRIBUTING to no longer allow // FIXME comments 2016-02-04 17:59:05 +01:00
COPYING docs: create new master NM documentation module 2011-02-16 16:24:16 -06:00
linker-script-binary.ver iface-helper/build: add linker version script 2016-10-13 21:33:33 +02:00
linker-script-devices.ver devices/build: use one linker-script-devices.ver for all device plugins 2016-10-13 21:36:06 +02:00
linker-script-settings.ver settings/build: add linker version script for settings plugins 2016-10-13 21:33:33 +02:00
MAINTAINERS misc: update maintainers and authors 2016-04-21 13:39:03 -05:00
Makefile.am build: avoid passing enums-to-docbook.pl to itself on its command line 2017-03-16 17:11:29 +01:00
Makefile.examples example: add example configuration snippet '30-anon.conf' 2017-01-09 14:50:33 +01:00
Makefile.glib build: include "config.h" in nm*enum-types.c sources 2015-10-05 15:01:38 +02:00
Makefile.vapigen build: fix make always re-making vapigen target 2016-10-21 18:46:03 +02:00
NetworkManager.pc.in build: update NetworkManager.pc 2013-01-29 16:17:30 -05:00
NEWS NEWS: update 2017-02-14 18:00:18 +01:00
README trivial: typo fixes 2010-09-25 00:34:10 -05:00
TODO TODO: Remove Proxies from the list of TODO 2016-10-04 11:44:44 +02:00
valgrind.suppressions valgrind: two more gdbus suppressions 2016-11-14 20:22:23 +01:00
zanata.xml po: add Zanata configuration 2016-04-05 14:35:53 +02:00

******************
2008-12-11: NetworkManager core daemon has moved to git.freedesktop.org!

git clone git://git.freedesktop.org/git/NetworkManager/NetworkManager.git
******************


Networking that Just Works
--------------------------

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.  NetworkManager is intended to
replace default route, replace other routes, set IP addresses, and in general
configure networking as NM sees fit (with the possibility of manual override as
necessary).  In effect, the goal of NetworkManager is to make networking Just
Work with a minimum of user hassle, but still allow customization and a high
level of manual network control.  If you have special needs, we'd like to hear
about them, but understand that NetworkManager is not intended for every
use-case.

NetworkManager will attempt to keep every network device in the system up and
active, as long as the device is available for use (has a cable plugged in,
the killswitch isn't turned on, etc).  Network connections can be set to
'autoconnect', meaning that NetworkManager will make that connection active
whenever it and the hardware is available.

"Settings services" store lists of user- or administrator-defined "connections",
which contain all the settings and parameters required to connect to a specific
network.  NetworkManager will _never_ activate a connection that is not in this
list, or that the user has not directed NetworkManager to connect to.


How it works:

The NetworkManager daemon runs as a privileged service (since it must access
and control hardware), but provides a D-Bus interface on the system bus to
allow for fine-grained control of networking.  NetworkManager does not store
connections or settings, it is only the mechanism by which those connections
are selected and activated.

To store pre-defined network connections, two separate services, the "system
settings service" and the "user settings service" store connection information
and provide these to NetworkManager, also via D-Bus.  Each settings service
can determine how and where it persistently stores the connection information;
for example, the GNOME applet stores its configuration in GConf, and the system
settings service stores it's config in distro-specific formats, or in a distro-
agnostic format, depending on user/administrator preference.

A variety of other system services are used by NetworkManager to provide
network functionality: wpa_supplicant for wireless connections and 802.1x
wired connections, pppd for PPP and mobile broadband connections, DHCP clients
for dynamic IP addressing, dnsmasq for proxy nameserver and DHCP server
functionality for internet connection sharing, and avahi-autoipd for IPv4
link-local addresses.  Most communication with these daemons occurs, again,
via D-Bus.


Why doesn't my network Just Work?

Driver problems are the #1 cause of why NetworkManager sometimes fails to
connect to wireless networks.  Often, the driver simply doesn't behave in a
consistent manner, or is just plain buggy.  NetworkManager supports _only_
those drivers that are shipped with the upstream Linux kernel, because only
those drivers can be easily fixed and debugged.  ndiswrapper, vendor binary
drivers, or other out-of-tree drivers may or may not work well with
NetworkManager, precisely because they have not been vetted and improved by the
open-source community, and because problems in these drivers usually cannot
be fixed.

Sometimes, command-line tools like 'iwconfig' will work, but NetworkManager will
fail.  This is again often due to buggy drivers, because these drivers simply
aren't expecting the dynamic requests that NetworkManager and wpa_supplicant
make.  Driver bugs should be filed in the bug tracker of the distribution being
run, since often distributions customize their kernel and drivers.

Sometimes, it really is NetworkManager's fault.  If you think that's the case,
please file a bug at http://bugzilla.gnome.org and choose the NetworkManager
component.  Attaching the output of /var/log/messages or /var/log/daemon.log
(wherever your distribution directs syslog's 'daemon' facility output) is often
very helpful, and (if you can get) a working wpa_supplicant config file helps
enormously.