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read-only mirror of https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager
Note that the only DNS plugin that actually emits the FAILED signal was NMDnsDnsmasq. Let's not handle restart, retry and rate-limiting by NMDnsManager but by NMDnsDnsmasq itself. There are three goals here: (1) we want that when dnsmasq (infrequently) crashes, that we always keep retrying. A random crash should be automatically resolved and eventually dnsmasq should be working again. Note that we anyway cannot fully detect whether something is wrong. OK, we detect crashes, but if dnsmasq just gets catatonic, it's just as broken. Point being: our ability to detect non-working dnsmasq is limited. (2) when dnsmasq keeps crashing all the time, then rate limit the retry. Of course, at this point there is already something seriously wrong, but we shouldn't kill the system by respawning the process without rate limiting. (3) previously, when NMDnsManager noticed that the pluging was broken (and rate-limiting kicked in), it would temporarily disable the plugin. Basically, that meant to write the real name servers to /etc/resolv.conf directly, instead of setting localhost. This partly conflicts with (1), because we want to retry and recover automatically. So what good is it to notice a problem, resort to plain /etc/resolv.conf for a short time, and then run into the issues again? If something is really broken, there is no way but to involve the user to investigate and fix the issue. Hence, we don't need to concern NMDnsManager with this either. The only thing that the manager notices is when the dnsmasq binary is not available. In that case, update() fails right away, and the manager falls back to configure the name servers in /etc/resolv.conf directly. Also, change the backoff time from 5 minutes to 1 minute (twice the burst interval). There is not particularly strong reason for either choice, I think that if the ratelimit kicks in, then something is already so wrong that it doesn't matter either way. Anyway, also 60 seconds is long enough to not kill the machine otherwise. |
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| NetworkManager.pc.in | ||
| NEWS | ||
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****************** NetworkManager core daemon has moved to gitlab.freedesktop.org! git clone https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/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 its 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: https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/issues Attaching NetworkManager debug logs from the journal (or wherever your distribution directs syslog's 'daemon' facility output, as /var/log/messages or /var/log/daemon.log) is often very helpful, and (if you can get) a working wpa_supplicant config file helps enormously. See the logging section of file contrib/fedora/rpm/NetworkManager.conf for how to enable debug logging in NetworkManager.