Recent gettext version can extract and merge back strings from and to
various file formats, no need for intltool anymore.
https://wiki.gnome.org/Initiatives/GnomeGoals/GettextMigrationhttps://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/issues/133https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/303https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/96
Clarification about the use of AM_GNU_GETTEXT_REQUIRE_VERSION:
In configure.ac, specify the minimum gettext version we require, rather
than the exact one. This fixes a situation where the autoconf macros
used for gettext will be the latest available on the system (for
example, 0.20); but the copied-in Makefile.in.in will be for the exact
version specified in configure.ac (in this case, 0.19).
In that situation, the gettext build rules will error out at `make` time
with the message:
*** error: gettext infrastructure mismatch: using a Makefile.in.in
from gettext version 0.19 but the autoconf macros are from gettext
version 0.20
Avoid that by specifying a minimum version dependency rather than an
exact one. This should not cause problems as we haven’t committed any
generated or external gettext files into git, so each developer will end
up regenerating the build system for their system’s version of gettext,
as expected.
See the subsection of
https://www.gnu.org/software/gettext/manual/html_node/Version-Control-Issues.html
for more information.
Note that autoreconf currently doesn’t recognise
AM_GNU_GETTEXT_REQUIRE_VERSION, so we must continue also using
AM_GNU_GETTEXT_VERSION. autopoint will ignore the latter if the former
is present. See
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/autoconf-patches/2015-10/msg00000.html.
[lkundrak@v3.sk: Fixed the meson build, adjusted autogen.sh:
droped "|| exit 1", dropped call to aclocal,
dropped --copy from gtkdocize.]
"-" is not allowed as D-Bus path and interface name, and discouraged as
bus name. This cause nm-priv-helper to crash, because GDBus asserts the
the object path is valid.
Replace the '-' with '_'. This way, it's consistent with
"nm_dispatcher".
Fixes: d68ab6b8f0 ('nm-sudo: rename to nm-priv-helper')
(cherry picked from commit 16a45d07ed)
Completely rework IP configuration in the daemon. Use NML3Cfg as layer 3
manager for the IP configuration of an interface. Use NML3ConfigData as
pieces of configuration that the various components collect and
configure. NMDevice is managing most of the IP configuration at a higher
level, that is, it starts DHCP and other IP methods. Rework the state
handling there.
This is a huge rework of how NetworkManager daemon handles IP
configuration. Some fallout is to be expected.
It appears the patch deletes many lines of code. That is not accurate, because
you also have to count the files `src/core/nm-l3*`, which were unused previously.
Co-authored-by: Beniamino Galvani <bgalvani@redhat.com>
NetworkManager runs as root and has lots of capabilities.
We want to reduce the attach surface by dropping capabilities,
but there is a genuine need to do certain things.
For example, we currently require dac_override capability, to open
the unix socket of ovsdb. Most users wouldn't use OVS, so we should
find a way to not require that dac_override capability. The solution
is to have a separate, D-Bus activate service (nm-sudo), which
has the capability to open and provide the file descriptor.
For authentication, we only rely on D-Bus. We watch the name owner
of NetworkManager, and only accept requests from that service. We trust
D-Bus to get it right a request from that name owner is really coming
from NetworkManager. If we couldn't trust that, how could PolicyKit
or any authentication via D-Bus work? For testing, the user can set
NM_SUDO_NO_AUTH_FOR_TESTING=1.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1921826
"libnm-core/" is rather complicated. It provides a static library that
is linked into libnm.so and NetworkManager. It also contains public
headers (like "nm-setting.h") which are part of public libnm API.
Then we have helper libraries ("libnm-core/nm-libnm-core-*/") which
only rely on public API of libnm-core, but are themself static
libraries that can be used by anybody who uses libnm-core. And
"libnm-core/nm-libnm-core-intern" is used by libnm-core itself.
Move "libnm-core/" to "src/". But also split it in different
directories so that they have a clearer purpose.
The goal is to have a flat directory hierarchy. The "src/libnm-core*/"
directories correspond to the different modules (static libraries and set
of headers that we have). We have different kinds of such modules because
of how we combine various code together. The directory layout now reflects
this.
"nm-version-macros.h" is used directly by libnm-core and indirectly by
libnm and core.
Let's not have it randomly under shared/. Move it closer to where it's
used.
Currently "src/" mostly contains the source code of the daemon.
I say mostly, because that is not true, there are also the device,
settings, wwan, ppp plugins, the initrd generator, the pppd and dhcp
helper, and probably more.
Also we have source code under libnm-core/, libnm/, clients/, and
shared/ directories. That is all confusing.
We should have one "src" directory, that contains subdirectories. Those
subdirectories should contain individual parts (libraries or
applications), that possibly have dependencies on other subdirectories.
There should be a flat hierarchy of directories under src/, which
contains individual modules.
As the name "src/" is already taken, that prevents any sensible
restructuring of the code.
As a first step, move "src/" to "src/core/". This gives space to
reorganize the code better by moving individual components into "src/".
For inspiration, look at systemd's "src/" directory.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/743
NetworkManager core is huge. We should try to split out
parts that are independent.
Platform code is already mostly independent. But due to having it
under "src/", there is no strict separation/layering which determines
the parts that can work independently. So, while the code is mostly
independent (in practice), that is not obvious from looking at the
source tree. It thus still contributes to cognitive load.
Add a shared library "shared/nm-platform", which should have no
dependencies on libnm-core or NetworkManager core.
In a first step, move the netlink code there. More should follow.
We use a linker version script "NetworkManager.ver", to hide
symbols from NetworkManager that are not used. That is important
due to our habit of using internal helper libraries that we link
statically everywhere, without handpicking the symbols we actually
need. We want the tooling to get rid of unnecessary symbols.
However, NetworkManager loads shared libraries for settings and device
plugins. These libraries require symbols from the NetworkManager binary,
but which one depends on build options. Hence, we also generate
"NetworkManager.ver" by the "tools/create-exports-NetworkManager.sh"
script.
For that the script uses "nm" to find symbols that are undefined in the
plugin libraries but defined in NetworkManager. With autotools the
script looked at "./src/.libs/libNetworkManager.a" to find the present
symbols. Note that for meson that already didn't work, and we build
instead an intermediate NetworkManager binary first (with all symbols
exposed). With LTO, "nm" doesn't find all symbols in
"./src/.libs/libNetworkManager.a", and consequently they are not
exported and dropped/hidden.
This also causes unit tests to fail with LTO, because our test script
"tools/check-exports.sh" catches such bugs.
Fix that by also with autotools generate a complete "NetworkManager-all-sym"
binary that is used to generate "NetworkManager.ver", before rebuilding
"NetworkManager" again.
Our "nm-json-aux.h" redefines various things from <jansson.h> header.
Add a unit test that checks that what we redefine exactly matches what
libjansson would provide, so that they are compatible.
We have the correct meta-data of supported properties for nmcli. It is
in clients/common. Use that for generating the manual page instead of
the properties that are part of libnm (some properties may be in libnm
but not supported by nmcli, or some properties may not be GObject
properties, and not detected as by GObject introspection).
"nm-settings-docs-nmcli.xml" will be generated by a tool that depends on
"clients/common/". The file should thus not be in libnm directory, otherwise
there is a circular dependency.
Move the file to "man/" directory.
For consistency, also move "nm-settings-docs-dbus.xml". Note that we
cannot move "nm-settings-docs-gir.xml" to "man/", because that one is
needed for building clients.
A significant part of NetworkManager's API are the connection profiles, documented
in `man nm-settings*`. But there are different aspects about profiles, depending
on what you are interested. There is the D-Bus API, nmcli options, keyfile format,
and ifcfg-rh format. Additionally, there is also libnm API.
Add distinct manual pages for the four aspects. Currently the two new manual
pages "nm-settings-dbus" and "nm-settings-nmcli" are still identical to the
former "nm-settings.5" manual. In the future, they will diverge to
account for the differences.
There are the following aspects:
- "dbus"
- "keyfile"
- "ifcfg-rh"
- "nmcli"
For "libnm" we don't generate a separate "nm-settings-libnm" manual
page. That is instead documented via gtk-doc.
Currently the keyfile and ifcfg-rh manual pages only detail settings
which differ. But later I think also these manual pages should contain
all settings that apply.
"nm-settings-docs-dbus.xml" is "nm-settings-docs-gir.xml" merged with
"nm-property-infos-dbus.xml". The name should reflect that, also because
we will get more files with this naming scheme.
The name is bad. For one, we will have more files of the same format
("nm-settings-docs-nmcli.xml").
Also, "libnm/nm-settings-docs.xml" and "libnm/nm-property-docs.xml" had
basically the same file format. Their name should be similar.
Also the tool to generate the file should have a name that reminds to
the file that it creates.
The naming was inconsistent. Rename.
- all the property infos of this kind a now consistently called
"libnm/nm-property-infos-$TAG.xml".
- the script to generate files "libnm/nm-property-infos-$TAG.xml" is
now called "libnm/generate-docs-nm-property-infos.pl".
"shared/nm-utils" got long renamed and split into separate parts. The remaining
tests are really to test nm-std-aux and nm-glib-aux (no libnm dependencies). Move
the tests to the appropriate place.
This adds capability to hand over the network configuration from
OpenFirmware (and potentially other boot loaders with openfirmware
support such as U-Boot) to NetworkManager.
It's done analogously to ACPI/iBFT. In fact, the same ip=ibft command
line option is used, adding a more general ip=fw alias. This probably
deserves some documentation, but I'm not adding any at this time.
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/merge_requests/257
The functionality of the ibft settings plugin is now handled by
nm-initrd-generator. There is no need for it anymore, drop it.
Note that ibft called iscsiadm, which requires CAP_SYS_ADMIN to work
([1]). We really want to drop this capability, so the current solution
of a settings plugin (as it is implemented) is wrong. The solution
instead is nm-initrd-generator.
Also, on Fedora the ibft was disabled and probably on most other
distributions as well. This was only used on RHEL.
[1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1371201#c7
For the most part, we only have one main .gitignore file.
There were a few nested files, merge them into the main file.
I find it better to have only one gitignore file, otherwise the
list of ignored files is spread out through the working directory.