"shared/nm-std-aux/unaligned.h" is taken from systemd and frequently
re-imported via the "systemd" branch.
It is not our code, and should not be formatted with our clang-format.
Alpine is especially interesting because it uses musl as libc.
The build does not yet succeed. There are several issues that
need to be fixed.
However, it will be simpler to fix things, if we have tests
in place -- even if at the moment they are known to be broken.
See-also: https://git.alpinelinux.org/aports/tree/community/networkmanager?h=master
With Fedora 33+ and RHEL 9+, the default plugins are
"plugins=keyfile,ifcfg-rh", instead of "plugins=ifcfg-rh,keyfile".
Update our "NetworkManager.conf" file to reflect that.
"build_clean.sh" (and "build.sh") scripts can both create a source
tarball (via `make dist`/`make distcheck`), an SRPM (and a spec file),
or build RPMs from the SRPM.
Note that the generated spec file has various options, like
%bcond_without nmtui
%bcond_without debug
%bcond_without test
When building an RPM from the SRPM, you can specify the "--with" or
"--without" option for rpmbuild. This is also what the "-w" / "-W" options
for "build_clean.sh" do.
However, the SRPM still has the intrinsic defaults, and if you later
build an RPM from it, you would have to pass "--with" / "--without"
to rpmbuild.
Often that is not conveniently possible, for example, when you build the
SRPM in koji.
Extend the scripts so that also the defaults for "-w debug" and "-w
test" can be specified when generating the SRPM. You can do that with
the new options "--default-for-{debug,test}" to "build_clean.sh".
Alternatively, it suffices to specify the previously supported
"-w" / "-W" options. That way, we will pass those options to rpmbuild,
but also set them as defaults in the generate spec file. The new
options "--default-for-{debug,test}" are only needed if you want
the default in the spec file to be different then what you use
when creating the SRPM.
By default, "build_clean.sh" script likes to automatically add "-w test"
-- unless the user specified "-w test" or "-W test" on the command line.
That is mostly fine. However, the spec file has an internal default for the
"test" option. So if you want to use the default that gets determined
by the spec file, then we should suppress that automatism.
We always run the unit tests during package build and also enable all compiler
warnings. However, by default we used to ignore failures. That is, because
rebuilding a package on another, future distro led to frequent, annoying build
failures. Especially compiler warnings appear easily when using a
different compiler version.
The default mostly matters here when you want to build the package in
brew/koji, where you don't have a possibility to explicitly select the
build option.
Note that rpmdiff detects failures in the build log, and thus we usually
would not miss failures for builds we add to errata. Also, all our CI
tests build packages with a manner where they would not allow a failure
of the unit tests. So, we run these unit tests frequently and in a
manner where we notice a failure.
For rhel-9 builds, change the default here and let test failures and
compiler warnings be fatal to the build.
"find-backports" searches commit messages of upstream branches for
"Fixes:" comments. Those will then be highlighted to be backported,
if the script determines that to be necessary.
"find-backports" also honors the "cherry picked from" comments, to detect when
a patch was already backported. That is thus a way to suppress reporting a
commit to be backported.
Add another way to flag commits so they don't need backporting. Via
"Ignore-Backport:" tag.
As "find-backports" also honors "refs/notes/bugs" notes, this can be used
like:
git notes \
--ref refs/notes/bugs \
append \
-m "Ignore-Backport: e""29f00fa0c69 ('NEWS: fix entry that is targeted for 1.30 instead of 1.28')" \
2''3364aa8f3bd6b11e2ac9e30117eaabfe1f3a9f2
The checkpatch test tests the patches on the merg-request, as they
branch off from master (or one of the stable branches).
It thus need the full git history, but the git repository might be a
shallow clone. Fix it.
"debian/REQUIRED_PACKAGES" is used by gitlab-ci to prepare the image. We require
"udev" package, if only to install "/usr/share/pkgconfig/udev.pc" to get the
udev directory.
Otherwise build fails with:
Run-time dependency udev found: NO (tried pkgconfig)
meson.build:371:2: ERROR: Dependency "udev" not found, tried pkgconfig
These packages are also used during CI tests (in the checkpatch
stage). They are also used for formatting C/python code, and thus
useful for developing.
Install them as part of REQUIRED_PACKAGES script.
We already build a large variety of configurations in gitlab-ci,
we don't need yet another configuration to run tests on travis-ci.
Also, because the travis-ci setup is outdated and we don't look
at it. Let's focus on gitlab-ci instead.
We use clang-format to format our code, and the exact format depends on
the clang version. Currently we use clang-11, as packaged in Fedora 33.
Add a script that runs a Fedora 33 container with podman and reformats
the current working directory.
Usage:
./contrib/scripts/nm-code-format-container.sh
Our new format gets enforced by clang-format, and we now only use
four space indentation, instead of tabs.
Adjust the checkpatch script to account for that.
Also, now there are probably no cases left where we want to see any
tabs in our sources. Complain about any tabs we find.
Add a new `main.rc-manager=auto` setting, that favours to use
systemd-resolved (and not touch "/etc/resolv.conf" but configure
it via D-Bus), or falls back to `resolvconf`/`netconfig` binaries
if they are installed and enabled at compile time.
As final fallback use "symlink", like before.
Note that on Fedora there is no "openresolv" package ([1]). Instead, "systemd"
package provides "/usr/sbin/resolvconf" as a wrapper for systemd-resolved's
"resolvectl". On such a system the fallback to resolvconf is always
wrong, because NetworkManager should either talk to systemd-resolved
directly or not but never call "/usr/sbin/resolvconf". So, the special handling
for resolvconf and netconfig is only done if NetworkManager was build with these
applications explicitly enabled.
Note that SUSE builds NetworkManager with
--with-netconfig=yes
--with-config-dns-rc-manager-default=netconfig
and the new option won't be used there either. But of course, netconfig
already does all the right things on SUSE.
[1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=668153
Suggested-by: Jason A. Donenfeld <Jason@zx2c4.com>
With Fedora 33, LTO will be enabled by default via CFLAGS in
redhat-rpm-config ([1]).
That basically sets "CFLAGS=-flto -ffat-lto-objects".
Note that we have our own configure/meson option to enable LTO.
With "--with-lto" we set CFLAGS="-flto -flto-partition=none". This
is necessary due ([2], [3]).
So, disable Fedora's automatism, but turn on the suitable configure
option to get working LTO.
[1] 5baaf4a99c?branch=master
[2] e6cf4213a7 ('build: fix building with LTO')
[3] https://gcc.gnu.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=48200#c28