glib requires G_LOG_DOMAIN defined so that log messages are labeled to belong to NetworkManager or libnm. However, we don't actually want to use glib logging. Our library libnm MUST not log anything, because it spams the user's stdout/stderr. Instead, a library must report notable events via its API. Note that there is also LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG to explicitly enable debug logging, but that doesn't use glib logging either. Also, the daemon does not use glib logging instead it logs to syslog. When run with `--debug`. Hence, it's not useful for us to define different G_LOG_DOMAIN per library/application, because none of our libraries/applications should use glib logging. It also gets slightly confusing, because we have the static library like `src/libnm-core-impl`, which is both linked into `libnm` (the library) and `NetworkManager` (the daemon). Which logging domain should they use? Set the G_LOG_DOMAIN to "nm" everywhere. But no longer do it via `-D` arguments to the compiler. See-also: https://developer.gnome.org/glib/stable/glib-Message-Logging.html#G-LOG-DOMAIN:CAPS |
||
|---|---|---|
| .. | ||
| c-list | ||
| c-rbtree | ||
| c-siphash | ||
| c-stdaux | ||
| n-acd | ||
| n-dhcp4 | ||
| nm-base | ||
| nm-glib-aux | ||
| nm-log-core | ||
| nm-platform | ||
| nm-std-aux | ||
| nm-udev-aux | ||
| nm-utils | ||
| systemd | ||
| meson.build | ||
| nm-test-libnm-utils.h | ||
| nm-test-utils-impl.c | ||
| README.md | ||
The "shared/" Directory
For NetworkManager we place helper/utility code under "shared/" in static libraries. The idea is to avoid code duplication but also provide high quality helper functions that simplify the higher layers. In NetworkManager there are complicated parts, for example "src/nm-manager.c" is huge. On the other hand, this helper code should be simple and easy to understand, so that we can build more complex code on top of it.
As we statically link them into our binaries, they are all inherently internal API, that means they cannot be part of libnm's (libnm-core's) public API. It also means that their API/ABI is not stable.
We don't care these libraries to be minimal and contain only symbols that are
used by all users. Instead, we expect the linker to throw away unused symbols.
We achieve this by having a symbol versioning file to hide internal symbols
(which gives the linker a possibility to remove them if they are unused) and
compiling with LTO or "-Wl,--gc-sections". Let the tool solve this and not
manual organization.
Hence these libraries (and their content) are structured this way to satisfy the following questions:
-
which dependencies (libraries) do they have? That determines which other libraries can use it. For example:
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"shared/nm-std-aux" and "shared/nm-glib-aux" both provide general purpose helpers, the difference is that the former has no dependency on glib2 library. Both these libraries are a basic dependency for many other parts of the code.
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"shared/nm-udev-aux" has a dependency on libudev, it thus cannot be in "shared/nm-glib-aux".
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client code also has a glib2 dependency. That means it can link with "shared/nm-std-aux" and "shared/nm-glib-aux", but must not link with "shared/nm-udev-aux" (as it has no direct udev dependenct -- although clients get it indirectly because libnm already requires it).
-
-
what is their overall purpose? As said, we rely on the linker to prune unused symbols. But in a few cases we avoid to merge different code in the same library. For example:
- "shared/nm-glib-aux" and "shared/nm-base" both only have a glib2 dependency. Hence, they could be merged. However we don't do that because "shared/nm-base" is more about NetworkManager specific code, while "shared/nm-glib-aux" is about general purpose helpers.
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some of these libraries are forked from an upstream. They are kept separate so that we can re-import future upstream versions.
Detail
-
shared/c-list -
shared/c-rbtree -
shared/c-siphash -
shared/c-stdoux -
shared/n-acd -
shared/n-dhcp4These are forked from upstream and imported with git-subtree. They in general only have a libc dependency (or dependencies between each other).
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shared/nm-std-auxThis contains helper code with only a libc dependency. Almost all C code depends on this library.
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shared/nm-glib-auxLike "shared/nm-std-aux" but also has a glib2 dependency. Almost all glib2 code depends on this library.
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shared/nm-udev/auxLike "shared/nm-glib-aux" but also has a libudev dependency. It has code related to libudev.
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shared/systemdThese are forked from upstream systemd and imported with a script. Under "shared/systemd/src" we try to keep the sources as close to the original as possible. There is also some adapter code to make it useable for us. It has a dependency on "shared/nm-glib-aux" and will need a logging implementation for "shared/nm-glib-aux/nm-logging-fwd.h".
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shared/nm-baseDepends on "shared/nm-glib-aux" and glib2 but it provides helper code that more about NetworkManager specifc things.
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shared/nm-log-coreThis is the logging implementation as used by NetworkManager core ("src/"). It is also a dependency for "shared/nm-platform".
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shared/nm-platformPlatform implementation. It depends on "shared/nm-log-core", "shared/nm-base" and "shared/nm-glib-aux".
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Other than that, there are still a few unorganized files/directories here. These should be cleaned up.