Commit graph

243 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yuri Chornoivan 4e33f8cd89
all: fix minor typos
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/565
2020-07-07 11:33:46 +02:00
Thomas Haller d2f8d5a4fa
docs: move "nm-settings-docs-{dbus,nmcli}.xml" from "libnm/" to "man/"
"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.
2020-06-11 10:53:50 +02:00
Thomas Haller caa70a50d7
all: move "shared/nm-libnm-aux" to "libnm/nm-libnm-aux"
Like the previous commit. Move code that depends on libnm out
of shared to avoid circular dependency.

Also add a readme file explaining the reason for existence of
the helper library.
2020-06-11 10:53:50 +02:00
Thomas Haller a9408e3497
all: move "shared/nm-libnm-core-aux" to "libnm-core/nm-libnm-core-aux"
Like the previous commit. Move code that depends on libnm-core out
of shared to avoid circular dependency.

Also add a readme file explaining the reason for existence of
the helper libraries nm-libnm-core-intern and nm-libnm-core-aux.
2020-06-11 10:53:50 +02:00
Thomas Haller e17a067e68
all: move "shared/nm-libnm-core-intern" to "libnm-core/nm-libnm-core-intern"
The "shared" directory is used by libnm-core, it should thus only depend on
code that is in the "shared" directory. Otherwise there is a circular
dependency, and meson's subdir() does not work nicely.

Also, libnm-core is really part of (and also an extension of) libnm-core,
so it belongs there.

I guess, the original idea was that this is also an extension for libnm,
so another project could take these utility functions (by copying them
into their source tree) and use them. That is still possible, it's
just that the sources are no longer under the shared directory.

Also add a readme to explain the non-obvious meaning of these files.
2020-06-11 10:53:50 +02:00
Thomas Haller b760dee8c8
all: move "shared/nm-keyfile" to "libnm-core/nm-keyfile"
Originally, these files were part of libnm-core and linked together.
However, that is a licensing violation, because the code is GPL-2.0+
licensed, while libnm-core also gets linked with libnm (it must thus
be LGPL-2.1+). The original intent behind moving the code to "shared/"
was to avoid the licensing issue, but also to prepare when we would add
a separate, GPL licensed libnm-keyfile. However, currently we hope to
be able to relicense the code, so that it actually could be exposed as
part of libnm. This is work in progress at ([1]).

[1] https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/-/merge_requests/ ## 517

Anyway, the current directory layout is problematic. libnm-keyfile
depends on libnm-core, while libnm-core depends on code under shared.
That means, there is a circular dependency and meson's subdir() does
not work well.

Move the code.
2020-06-11 10:53:50 +02:00
Thomas Haller 47d39a7fb7
docs: add more nm-settings manpages (dbus,nmcli,keyfile,ifcfg-rh)
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.
2020-06-11 10:53:49 +02:00
Thomas Haller d8992ce931
docs: rename "nm-settings-docs.xml" to "nm-settings-docs-dbus.xml"
"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.
2020-06-11 10:53:49 +02:00
Thomas Haller 7682e76de5
docs: fix dependency of "nm-settings*xml" to "common.ent"
"man/nm-settings%.xml" really should depend on "common.ent".
The reason is that XSL files like "man/nm-settings.xsl" include
"common.ent".
The previous code already tried to express that, but for some
reasons this dependency was not honored. Fix that.

However, that uncovers another problem with gtk-doc.make. If we do
that without the workaround for "docs/api/Makefile.am", then

  $ ./autogen.sh && make V=1 SHELL='sh -x' distcheck

breaks.

The reason is not clear to me. The new dependency leads to rebuild
"man/nm-settings-keyfile.xml". But that is worse, somehow the file
"$(top_srcdir)/man/nm-settings-keyfile.xml" ends up being read-only.
Afterwards, gtk-doc.make does

    setup-build.stamp:
        -$(GTK_DOC_V_SETUP)if test "$(abs_srcdir)" != "$(abs_builddir)" ;
        then \
          files=`echo $(SETUP_FILES) $(DOC_MODULE).types`; \
          if test "x$$files" != "x" ; then \
            for file in $$files ; do \
              destdir=`dirname $(abs_builddir)/$$file`; \
              test -d "$$destdir" || mkdir -p "$$destdir"; \
              test -f $(abs_srcdir)/$$file && \
                cp -pf $(abs_srcdir)/$$file $(abs_builddir)/$$file || true;
                \
            done; \
          fi; \
        fi
        $(AM_V_at)touch setup-build.stamp

so that the files in build dir are also read-only. Then, make distcheck
goes ahead and builds the files once again, which fails.

You are welcome to understand why this workaround is necessary. Please
then create a better fix.
2020-06-11 10:53:49 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez 648155e4a1 license: Add license using SPDX identifiers to meson build files
License is missing in meson build files. This has been added using
SPDX identifiers and licensed under LGPL-2.1+.
2020-02-17 13:16:57 +01:00
Beniamino Galvani 667568d1b2 core,libnm: add VRF support
Add VRF support to the daemon. When the device we are activating is a
VRF or a VRF's slave, put routes in the table specified by the VRF
connection.

Also, introduce a VRF device type in libnm.
2020-01-14 09:51:56 +01:00
Beniamino Galvani f4ced16791 libnm-core,cli: add VRF setting
Add new VRF setting and connection types to libnm-core and support
them in nmcli.
2020-01-14 09:49:01 +01:00
Thomas Haller ce0e898fb4 libnm: refactor caching of D-Bus objects in NMClient
No longer use GDBusObjectMangaerClient and gdbus-codegen generated classes
for the NMClient cache. Instead, use GDBusConnection directly and a
custom implementation (NMLDBusObject) for caching D-Bus' ObjectManager
data.

CHANGES
-------

- This is a complete rework. I think the previous implementation was
difficult to understand. There were unfixed bugs and nobody understood
the code well enough to fix them. Maybe somebody out there understood the
code, but I certainly did not. At least nobody provided patches to fix those
issues. I do believe that this implementation is more straightforward and
easier to understand. It removes a lot of layers of code. Whether this claim
of simplicity is true, each reader must decide for himself/herself. Note
that it is still fairly complex.

- There was a lingering performance issue with large number of D-Bus
objects. The patch tries hard that the implementation scales well. Of
course, when we cache N objects that have N-to-M references to other,
we still are fundamentally O(N*M) for runtime and memory consumption (with
M being the number of references between objects). But each part should behave
efficiently and well.

- Play well with GMainContext. libnm code (NMClient) is generally not
thread safe. However, it should work to use multiple instances in
parallel, as long as each access to a NMClient is through the caller's
GMainContext. This follows glib's style and effectively allows to use NMClient
in a multi threaded scenario. This implies to stick to a main context
upon construction and ensure that callbacks are only invoked when
iterating that context. Also, NMClient itself shall never iterate the
caller's context. This also means, libnm must never use g_idle_add() or
g_timeout_add(), as those enqueue sources in the g_main_context_default()
context.

- Get ordering of messages right. All events are consistently enqueued
in a GMainContext and processed strictly in order. For example,
previously "nm-object.c" tried to combine signals and emit them on an
idle handler. That is wrong, signals must be emitted in the right order
and when they happen. Note that when using GInitable's synchronous initialization
to initialize the NMClient instance, NMClient internally still operates fully
asynchronously. In that case NMClient has an internal main context.

- NMClient takes over most of the functionality. When using D-Bus'
ObjectManager interface, one needs to handle basically the entire state
of the D-Bus interface. That cannot be separated well into distinct
parts, and even if you try, you just end up having closely related code
in different source files. Spreading related code does not make it
easier to understand, on the contrary. That means, NMClient is
inherently complex as it contains most of the logic. I think that is
not avoidable, but it's not as bad as it sounds.

- NMClient processes D-Bus messages and state changes in separate steps.
First NMClient unpacks the message (e.g. _dbus_handle_properties_changed()) and
keeps track of the changed data. Then we update the GObject instances
(_dbus_handle_obj_changed_dbus()) without emitting any signals yet. Finally,
we emit all signals and notifications that were collected
(_dbus_handle_changes_commit()). Note that for example during the initial
GetManagedObjects() reply, NMClient receive a large amount of state at once.
But we first apply all the changes to our GObject instances before
emitting any signals. The result is that signals are always emitted in a moment
when the cache is consistent. The unavoidable downside is that when you receive
a property changed signal, possibly many other properties changed
already and more signals are about to be emitted.

- NMDeviceWifi no longer modifies the content of the cache from client side
during poke_wireless_devices_with_rf_status(). The content of the cache
should be determined by D-Bus alone and follow what NetworkManager
service exposes. Local modifications should be avoided.

- This aims to bring no API/ABI change, though it does of course bring
various subtle changes in behavior. Those should be all for the better, but the
goal is not to break any existing clients. This does change internal
(albeit externally visible) API, like dropping NM_OBJECT_DBUS_OBJECT_MANAGER
property and NMObject no longer implementing GInitableIface and GAsyncInitableIface.

- Some uses of gdbus-codegen classes remain in NMVpnPluginOld, NMVpnServicePlugin
and NMSecretAgentOld. These are independent of NMClient/NMObject and
should be reworked separately.

- While we no longer use generated classes from gdbus-codegen, we don't
need more glue code than before. Also before we constructed NMPropertiesInfo and
a had large amount of code to propagate properties from NMDBus* to NMObject.
That got completely reworked, but did not fundamentally change. You still need
about the same effort to create the NMLDBusMetaIface. Not using
generated bindings did not make anything worse (which tells about the
usefulness of generated code, at least in the way it was used).

- NMLDBusMetaIface and other meta data is static and immutable. This
avoids copying them around. Also, macros like NML_DBUS_META_PROPERTY_INIT_U()
have compile time checks to ensure the property types matches. It's pretty hard
to misuse them because it won't compile.

- The meta data now explicitly encodes the expected D-Bus types and
makes sure never to accept wrong data. That would only matter when the
server (accidentally or intentionally) exposes unexpected types on
D-Bus. I don't think that was previously ensured in all cases.
For example, demarshal_generic() only cared about the GObject property
type, it didn't know the expected D-Bus type.

- Previously GDBusObjectManager would sometimes emit warnings (g_log()). Those
probably indicated real bugs. In any case, it prevented us from running CI
with G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings, because there would be just too many
unrelated crashes. Now we log debug messages that can be enabled with
"LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG=trace". Some of these messages can also be turned
into g_warning()/g_critical() by setting LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG=warning,error.
Together with G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings, this turns them into assertions.
Note that such "assertion failures" might also happen because of a server
bug (or change). Thus these are not common assertions that indicate a bug
in libnm and are thus not armed unless explicitly requested. In our CI we
should now always run with LIBNM_CLIENT_DEBUG=warning,error and
G_DEBUG=fatal-warnings and to catch bugs. Note that currently
NetworkManager has bugs in this regard, so enabling this will result in
assertion failures. That should be fixed first.

- Note that this changes the order in which we emit "notify:devices" and
"device-added" signals. I think it makes the most sense to emit first
"device-removed", then "notify:devices", and finally "device-added"
signals.
This changes behavior for commit 52ae28f6e5 ('libnm: queue
added/removed signals and suppress uninitialized notifications'),
but I don't think that users should actually rely on the order. Still,
the new order makes the most sense to me.

- In NetworkManager, profiles can be invisible to the user by setting
"connection.permissions". Such profiles would be hidden by NMClient's
nm_client_get_connections() and their "connection-added"/"connection-removed"
signals.
Note that NMActiveConnection's nm_active_connection_get_connection()
and NMDevice's nm_device_get_available_connections() still exposes such
hidden NMRemoteConnection instances. This behavior was preserved.

NUMBERS
-------

I compared 3 versions of libnm.

  [1] 962297f908, current tip of nm-1-20 branch
  [2] 4fad8c7c64, current master, immediate parent of this patch
  [3] this patch

All tests were done on Fedora 31, x86_64, gcc 9.2.1-1.fc31.
The libraries were build with

  $ ./contrib/fedora/rpm/build_clean.sh -g -w test -W debug

Note that RPM build already stripped the library.

---

N1) File size of libnm.so.0.1.0 in bytes. There currently seems to be a issue
  on Fedora 31 generating wrong ELF notes. Usually, libnm is smaller but
  in these tests it had large (and bogus) ELF notes. Anyway, the point
  is to show the relative sizes, so it doesn't matter).

  [1] 4075552 (102.7%)
  [2] 3969624 (100.0%)
  [3] 3705208 ( 93.3%)

---

N2) `size /usr/lib64/libnm.so.0.1.0`:

          text             data              bss                dec               hex   filename
  [1]  1314569 (102.0%)   69980 ( 94.8%)   10632 ( 80.4%)   1395181 (101.4%)   1549ed   /usr/lib64/libnm.so.0.1.0
  [2]  1288410 (100.0%)   73796 (100.0%)   13224 (100.0%)   1375430 (100.0%)   14fcc6   /usr/lib64/libnm.so.0.1.0
  [3]  1229066 ( 95.4%)   65248 ( 88.4%)   13400 (101.3%)   1307714 ( 95.1%)   13f442   /usr/lib64/libnm.so.0.1.0

---

N3) Performance test with test-client.py. With checkout of [2], run

```
prepare_checkout() {
    rm -rf /tmp/nm-test && \
    git checkout -B test 4fad8c7c64 && \
    git clean -fdx && \
    ./autogen.sh --prefix=/tmp/nm-test && \
    make -j 5 install && \
    make -j 5 check-local-clients-tests-test-client
}
prepare_test() {
    NM_TEST_REGENERATE=1 NM_TEST_CLIENT_BUILDDIR="/data/src/NetworkManager" NM_TEST_CLIENT_NMCLI_PATH=/usr/bin/nmcli python3 ./clients/tests/test-client.py -v
}
do_test() {
  for i in {1..10}; do
      NM_TEST_CLIENT_BUILDDIR="/data/src/NetworkManager" NM_TEST_CLIENT_NMCLI_PATH=/usr/bin/nmcli python3 ./clients/tests/test-client.py -v || return -1
  done
  echo "done!"
}
prepare_checkout
prepare_test
time do_test
```

  [1]  real 2m14.497s (101.3%)     user 5m26.651s (100.3%)     sys  1m40.453s (101.4%)
  [2]  real 2m12.800s (100.0%)     user 5m25.619s (100.0%)     sys  1m39.065s (100.0%)
  [3]  real 1m54.915s ( 86.5%)     user 4m18.585s ( 79.4%)     sys  1m32.066s ( 92.9%)

---

N4) Performance. Run NetworkManager from build [2] and setup a large number
of profiles (551 profiles and 515 devices, mostly unrealized). This
setup is already at the edge of what NetworkManager currently can
handle. Of course, that is a different issue. Here we just check how
long plain `nmcli` takes on the system.

```
do_cleanup() {
    for UUID in $(nmcli -g NAME,UUID connection show | sed -n 's/^xx-c-.*:\([^:]\+\)$/\1/p'); do
        nmcli connection delete uuid "$UUID"
    done
    for DEVICE in $(nmcli -g DEVICE device status | grep '^xx-i-'); do
        nmcli device delete "$DEVICE"
    done
}

do_setup() {
    do_cleanup
    for i in {1..30}; do
        nmcli connection add type bond autoconnect no con-name xx-c-bond-$i ifname xx-i-bond-$i ipv4.method disabled ipv6.method ignore
        for j in $(seq $i 30); do
            nmcli connection add type vlan autoconnect no con-name xx-c-vlan-$i-$j vlan.id $j ifname xx-i-vlan-$i-$j vlan.parent xx-i-bond-$i  ipv4.method disabled ipv6.method ignore
        done
    done
    systemctl restart NetworkManager.service
    sleep 5
}

do_test() {
    perf stat -r 50 -B nmcli 1>/dev/null
}

do_test
```

  [1]

   Performance counter stats for 'nmcli' (50 runs):

              456.33 msec task-clock:u              #    1.093 CPUs utilized            ( +-  0.44% )
                   0      context-switches:u        #    0.000 K/sec
                   0      cpu-migrations:u          #    0.000 K/sec
               5,900      page-faults:u             #    0.013 M/sec                    ( +-  0.02% )
       1,408,675,453      cycles:u                  #    3.087 GHz                      ( +-  0.48% )
       1,594,741,060      instructions:u            #    1.13  insn per cycle           ( +-  0.02% )
         368,744,018      branches:u                #  808.061 M/sec                    ( +-  0.02% )
           4,566,058      branch-misses:u           #    1.24% of all branches          ( +-  0.76% )

             0.41761 +- 0.00282 seconds time elapsed  ( +-  0.68% )

  [2]

   Performance counter stats for 'nmcli' (50 runs):

              477.99 msec task-clock:u              #    1.088 CPUs utilized            ( +-  0.36% )
                   0      context-switches:u        #    0.000 K/sec
                   0      cpu-migrations:u          #    0.000 K/sec
               5,948      page-faults:u             #    0.012 M/sec                    ( +-  0.03% )
       1,471,133,482      cycles:u                  #    3.078 GHz                      ( +-  0.36% )
       1,655,275,369      instructions:u            #    1.13  insn per cycle           ( +-  0.02% )
         382,595,152      branches:u                #  800.433 M/sec                    ( +-  0.02% )
           4,746,070      branch-misses:u           #    1.24% of all branches          ( +-  0.49% )

             0.43923 +- 0.00242 seconds time elapsed  ( +-  0.55% )

  [3]

   Performance counter stats for 'nmcli' (50 runs):

              352.36 msec task-clock:u              #    1.027 CPUs utilized            ( +-  0.32% )
                   0      context-switches:u        #    0.000 K/sec
                   0      cpu-migrations:u          #    0.000 K/sec
               4,790      page-faults:u             #    0.014 M/sec                    ( +-  0.26% )
       1,092,341,186      cycles:u                  #    3.100 GHz                      ( +-  0.26% )
       1,209,045,283      instructions:u            #    1.11  insn per cycle           ( +-  0.02% )
         281,708,462      branches:u                #  799.499 M/sec                    ( +-  0.01% )
           3,101,031      branch-misses:u           #    1.10% of all branches          ( +-  0.61% )

             0.34296 +- 0.00120 seconds time elapsed  ( +-  0.35% )

---

N5) same setup as N4), but run `PAGER= /bin/time -v nmcli`:

  [1]

        Command being timed: "nmcli"
        User time (seconds): 0.42
        System time (seconds): 0.04
        Percent of CPU this job got: 107%
        Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 0:00.43
        Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
        Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
        Average stack size (kbytes): 0
        Average total size (kbytes): 0
        Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 34456
        Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
        Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 0
        Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 6128
        Voluntary context switches: 1298
        Involuntary context switches: 1106
        Swaps: 0
        File system inputs: 0
        File system outputs: 0
        Socket messages sent: 0
        Socket messages received: 0
        Signals delivered: 0
        Page size (bytes): 4096
        Exit status: 0

  [2]
        Command being timed: "nmcli"
        User time (seconds): 0.44
        System time (seconds): 0.04
        Percent of CPU this job got: 108%
        Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 0:00.44
        Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
        Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
        Average stack size (kbytes): 0
        Average total size (kbytes): 0
        Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 34452
        Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
        Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 0
        Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 6169
        Voluntary context switches: 1849
        Involuntary context switches: 142
        Swaps: 0
        File system inputs: 0
        File system outputs: 0
        Socket messages sent: 0
        Socket messages received: 0
        Signals delivered: 0
        Page size (bytes): 4096
        Exit status: 0

  [3]

        Command being timed: "nmcli"
        User time (seconds): 0.32
        System time (seconds): 0.02
        Percent of CPU this job got: 102%
        Elapsed (wall clock) time (h:mm:ss or m:ss): 0:00.34
        Average shared text size (kbytes): 0
        Average unshared data size (kbytes): 0
        Average stack size (kbytes): 0
        Average total size (kbytes): 0
        Maximum resident set size (kbytes): 29196
        Average resident set size (kbytes): 0
        Major (requiring I/O) page faults: 0
        Minor (reclaiming a frame) page faults: 5059
        Voluntary context switches: 919
        Involuntary context switches: 685
        Swaps: 0
        File system inputs: 0
        File system outputs: 0
        Socket messages sent: 0
        Socket messages received: 0
        Signals delivered: 0
        Page size (bytes): 4096
        Exit status: 0

---

N6) same setup as N4), but run `nmcli monitor` and look at `ps aux` for
  the RSS size.

      USER       PID %CPU %MEM    VSZ   RSS TTY      STAT START   TIME COMMAND
  [1] me     1492900 21.0  0.2 461348 33248 pts/10   Sl+  15:02   0:00 nmcli monitor
  [2] me     1490721  5.0  0.2 461496 33548 pts/10   Sl+  15:00   0:00 nmcli monitor
  [3] me     1495801 16.5  0.1 459476 28692 pts/10   Sl+  15:04   0:00 nmcli monitor
2019-11-25 15:08:00 +01:00
Thomas Haller 6d7270e222 build/meson: cleanup configuration_data() for paths
We don't need such data duplicated. The build setup should
have only one configuration_data() for patching such values.

Now we only have one global, immutable data_conf dictionary with
configuration values. Note that none of the users of data_conf uses all
entries, but as the entries are basically only dependent on the
meson/configure option and valid for the entire project, this simplifies
to handling.
2019-11-22 15:59:31 +01:00
Thomas Haller e90684a169 libnm: deprecate synchronous/blocking API in libnm
Note that D-Bus is fundamentally asynchronous. Doing blocking calls
on top of D-Bus is odd, especially for libnm's NMClient. That is because
NMClient essentially is a client-side cache of the objects from the D-Bus
interface. This cache should be filled exclusively by (asynchronous) D-Bus
events (PropertiesChanged). So, making a blocking D-Bus call means to wait
for a response and return it, while queuing all messages that are received
in the meantime.
Basically there are three ways how a synchronous API on NMClient could behave:

 1) the call just calls g_dbus_connection_call_sync(). This means
    that libnm sends a D-Bus request via GDBusConnection, and blockingly
    waits for the response. All D-Bus messages that get received in the
    meantime are queued in the GMainContext that belongs to NMClient.
    That means, none of these D-Bus events are processed until we
    iterate the GMainContext after the call returns. The effect is,
    that NMClient (and all cached objects in there) are unaffected by
    the D-Bus request.
    Most of the synchronous API calls in libnm are of this kind.
    The problem is that the strict ordering of D-Bus events gets
    violated.
    For some API this is not an immediate problem. Take for example
    nm_device_wifi_request_scan(). The call merely blockingly tells
    NetworkManager to start scanning, but since NetworkManager's D-Bus
    API does not directly expose any state that tells whether we are
    currently scanning, this out of order processing of the D-Bus
    request is a small issue.
    The problem is more obvious for nm_client_networking_set_enabled().
    After calling it, NM_CLIENT_NETWORKING_ENABLED is still unaffected
    and unchanged, because the PropertiesChanged signal from D-Bus
    is not yet processed.
    This means, while you make such a blocking call, NMClient's state
    does not change. But usually you perform the synchronous call
    to change some state. In this form, the blocking call is not useful,
    because NMClient only changes the state after iterating the GMainContext,
    and not after the blocking call returns.

 2) like 1), but after making the blocking g_dbus_connection_call_sync(),
    update the NMClient cache artificially. This is what
    nm_manager_check_connectivity() does, to "fix" bgo#784629.
    This also has the problem of out-of-order events, but it kinda
    solves the problem of not changing the state during the blocking
    call. But it does so by hacking the state of the cache. I think
    this is really wrong because the state should only be updated from
    the ordered stream of D-Bus messages (PropertiesChanged signal and
    similar). When libnm decides to modify the state, there may be already
    D-Bus messages queued that affect this very state.

 3) instead of calling g_dbus_connection_call_sync(), use the
    asynchronous g_dbus_connection_call(). If we would use a sepaate
    GMainContext for all D-Bus related calls, we could ensure that
    while we block for the response, we iterate that internal main context.
    This might be nice, because all events are processed in order and
    after the blocking call returns, the NMClient state is up to date.
    The are problems however: current blocking API does not do this,
    so it's a significant change in behavior. Also, it might be
    unexpected to the user that during the blocking call the entire
    content of NMClient's cache might change and all pointers to the
    cache might be invalidated. Also, of course NMClient would invoke
    signals for all the changes that happen.
    Another problem is that this would be more effort to implement
    and it involves a small performance overhead for all D-Bus related
    calls (because we have to serialize all events in an internal
    GMainContext first and then invoke them on the caller's context).
    Also, if the users wants this behavior, they could implement it themself
    by running libnm in their own GMainContext. Note that libnm might
    have bugs to make that really working, but that should be fixed
    instead of adding such synchrnous API behavior.

Read also [1], for why blocking calls are wrong.

[1] https://smcv.pseudorandom.co.uk/2008/11/nonblocking/

So, all possible behaviors for synchronous API have severe behavioural
issues.  Mark all this API as deprecated. Also, this serves the purpose of
identifying blocking D-Bus calls in libnm.

Note that "deprecated" here does not really mean that the API is going
to be removed. We don't break API. The user may:

  - continue to use this API. It's deprecated, awkward and discouraged,
    but if it works, by all means use it.

  - use asynchronous API. That's the only sensible way to use D-Bus.
    If libnm lacks a certain asynchronous counterpart, it should be
    added.

  - use GDBusConnection directly. There really isn't anything wrong
    with D-Bus or GDBusConnection. This deprecated API is just a wrapper
    around g_dbus_connection_call_sync(). You may call it directly
    without feeling dirty.

---

The only other remainging API is the synchronous GInitable call for
NMClient. That is an entirely separate beast and not particularly
wrong (from an API point of view).

Note that synchronous API in NMSecretAgentOld, NMVpnPluginOld and
NMVpnServicePlugin as not deprecated here. These types are not part
of the D-Bus cache and while they have similar issues, it's less severe
because they have less state.
2019-10-03 10:39:48 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez f0b7041063 meson: Improve api documentation build file
the `doc_module` variable has been removed. It was created because
its used in the autotools build file but actually `nm_name` variable
can be used easily.

Different objects used in the documentation target have been grouped
together.

The content file `version.xml`, and different build files are now
added properly.
2019-10-01 09:49:33 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez 9d4e1ad5e3 meson: Improve libnm documentation build file
the `doc_module` variable has been removed. It was created because
its used in the autotools build file but actually `libnm_name`
variable can be used easily.

Different objects used in the documentation target have been grouped
together.

The content file `version.xml` is now added properly.
2019-10-01 09:49:33 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez 82e79e40a5 meson: Avoid the use of source_root and build_root methods
The way some directory paths are defined has also been changed to
avoid the use of the `source_root` and `build_root` functions
because they are discouraged[0]

[0] https://wiki.gnome.org/Initiatives/GnomeGoals/MesonPorting
2019-10-01 09:49:33 +02:00
Iñigo Martínez bfbcf8f3fe meson: Use generators placeholders
Functions derived from generators as `configure_file`,
`custom_target` and `i18n.merge_file` can use placeholders like
`@BASENAME@` that removes the extension from the input filename
string.

The output string has been replaced by this placeholder that
allows in some cases the use of less variables.
2019-10-01 09:49:33 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel 66f75ce34d docs: include the license boilerplate instead of full GPL text
What's actually needed here is an explaination of how the license
applies along with the explanation where to find the full text.

Also, the libnm documentation was lacking the licensing information
altogether. Fix fixes it too.
2019-09-10 11:10:52 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani 11cf082a62 build: use regexp in gtkdoc --ignore-decorators option
gtkdoc-scan supports regular expressions in the --ignore-decorators
command-line option. Since it is easier to use a regexp than grepping
macros from a source file, revert the ugly solution from commit
2d941dc95a ('build: fix errors when building with gtk-doc 1.32').
2019-09-06 14:18:24 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani 2d941dc95a build: fix errors when building with gtk-doc 1.32
gtkdoc-scan 1.32 performs stricter checks on structures definitions
and so it complains on:

 /build/networkmanager/src/NetworkManager/libnm/./nm-vpn-plugin-old.h:0: warning: partial declaration (struct) : typedef struct {
 	NM_DEPRECATED_IN_1_2
 	GObject parent;
 } NMVpnPluginOld NM_DEPRECATED_IN_1_2;

because of the unrecognized token 'NM_DEPRECATED_IN_1_2'.

Pass all allowed macros to gtkdoc-scan through the --ignore-decorators
argument.

https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk-doc/issues/98
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/issues/238
2019-09-05 11:17:54 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel a26abc797c libnm-core: add ovs-dpdk setting 2019-06-14 12:10:20 +02:00
Thomas Haller ad9e5995e1 build/meson: fix location of introspection files
With glib < 2.51.3, gdbus-codegen does not understand "--output-directory" [1].
Hence, the generated files are like

    "build/dbus-org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.Device.WifiP2P.xml"

instead of

    "build/introspection/dbus-org.freedesktop.NetworkManager.Device.WifiP2P.xml"

But gnome.gdbus_codegen() returns a path as if it would be inside
"build/introspection". Hack around that, by patching the correct path
otherwise. This is still ugly, because repeated "ninja -C build" calls
will always try to rebuild this target (because the wrong file name
is considered).

See also [2].

[1] ee09bb704f
[2] 2e93ed58c3/mesonbuild/modules/gnome.py (L1170)
2019-04-18 20:18:17 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel 5801f89f4d all: goodbye libnm-glib
This removes libnm-glib, libnm-glib-vpn, and libnm-util for good.
The it has been replaced with libnm since NetworkManager 1.0, disabled
by default since 1.12 and no up-to-date distributions ship it for years
now.

Removing the libraries allows us to:

* Remove the horrible hacks that were in place to deal with accidental use
  of both the new and old library in a single process.
* Relief the translators of maintenance burden of similar yet different
  strings.
* Get rid of known bad code without chances of ever getting fixed
  (libnm-glib/nm-object.c and libnm-glib/nm-object-cache.c)
* Generally lower the footprint of the releases and our workspace

If there are some really really legacy users; they can just build
libnm-glib and friends from the NetworkManager-1.16 distribution. The
D-Bus API is stable and old libnm-glib will keep working forever.

https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/308
2019-04-16 15:52:27 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel b027723e00 Revert "all: goodbye libnm-glib"
We need this for a little little longer :(

This reverts commit 1de8383ad9.
2019-04-03 08:52:38 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel 1de8383ad9 all: goodbye libnm-glib
This removes libnm-glib, libnm-glib-vpn, and libnm-util for good.
The it has been replaced with libnm since NetworkManager 1.0, disabled
by default since 1.12 and no up-to-date distributions ship it for years
now.

Removing the libraries allows us to:

* Remove the horrible hacks that were in place to deal with accidental use
  of both the new and old library in a single process.
* Relief the translators of maintenance burden of similar yet different
  strings.
* Get rid of known bad code without chances of ever getting fixed
  (libnm-glib/nm-object.c and libnm-glib/nm-object-cache.c)
* Generally lower the footprint of the releases and our workspace

If there are some really really legacy users; they can just build
libnm-glib and friends from the NetworkManager-1.16 distribution. The
D-Bus API is stable and old libnm-glib will keep working forever.

https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/308
2019-03-19 17:15:15 +01:00
Thomas Haller b521f426ab libnm,cli: add NMSettingWireGuard
For now only add the core settings, no peers' data.

To support peers and the allowed-ips of the peers is more complicated
and will be done later. It's more complicated because these are nested
lists (allowed-ips) inside a list (peers). That is quite unusual and to
conveniently support that in D-Bus API, in keyfile format, in libnm,
and nmcli, is a effort.
Also, it's further complicated by the fact that each peer has a secret (the
preshared-key). Thus we probably need secret flags for each peer, which
is a novelty as well (until now we require a fixed set of secrets per
profile that is well known).
2019-02-22 11:00:10 +01:00
Thomas Haller 09090f2669 wifi-p2p: rename Wi-Fi P2P
After renaming the files, also rename all the content
to follow the "Wi-Fi P2P" naming scheme.
2019-02-01 17:02:57 +01:00
Thomas Haller 0420fa1f2c wifi-p2p: rename files for consistent Wi-Fi P2P naming
We named the types inconsistently:

  - "p2p-wireless" ("libnm-core/nm-setting-p2p-wireless.h")

  - "p2p" ("libnm/nm-p2p-peer.h")

  - "p2p-wifi" ("src/devices/wifi/nm-device-p2p-wifi.h")

It seems to me, "libnm/nm-p2p-peer.h" should be qualified with a "Wi-Fi"
specific name. It's not just peer-to-peer, it's Wi-Fi P2P.
Yes, there is an inconsistency now, because there is already
"libnm/nm-access-point.h".

It seems to me (from looking at the internet), that the name "Wi-Fi P2P"
is more common than "P2P Wi-Fi" -- although both are used. There is also
the name "Wi-Fi Direct". But it's not clear which name should be
preferred here, so stick to "Wi-Fi P2P".

In this first commit only rename the files. The following commit will
rename the content.
2019-02-01 17:02:57 +01:00
Benjamin Berg 6420a2c1fd libnm: Add NMDeviceP2PWifi 2019-01-27 23:45:12 +01:00
Benjamin Berg adb8338408 libnm: Add class to handle P2P peers
This adds the introspection data and P2P peer handling to libnm. To be
usable the P2P device handling is also needed.
2019-01-27 23:45:12 +01:00
Benjamin Berg 00e64d1332 core/devices: Add P2P Wifi device and peer tracking
This only adds the new device type and simple peer list handling.
2019-01-27 23:45:12 +01:00
Benjamin Berg 42e60e327f core: Add basic P2P Wi-Fi Settings
The support is rather basic and only allows connecting to a specific
peer. However, this is actually already enough for many usecases.
2019-01-27 23:45:11 +01:00
Iñigo Martínez 35171b3c3f build: meson: Add trailing commas
Add missing trailing commas that avoids getting noise when another
file/parameter is added and eases reviewing changes[0].

[0] https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/dconf/merge_requests/11#note_291585
2018-12-20 13:50:34 +01:00
Thomas Haller 168e8b9b6f build: fix check-docs.sh for out-of-tree builds
Fixes: 7a59cd2744
2018-10-25 11:08:39 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani dcfddeef7a build: meson: fix generation of api docs
We need to copy all introspection files to the same directory when
building the documentation.

Note that we only require Meson 0.44, but for the documentation at
least 0.46 is needed because of a new functionality of
gnome.gdbus_codegen(). In this way we can still build on Travis CI
(without documentation).
2018-09-28 17:25:46 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani 6da369252a docs: include openvswitch(7) man page only when ovs is enabled 2018-09-19 16:03:32 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel 9f9609555d initrd: add configuration generator
nm-initrd-generator scans the command line for options relevant to network
configuration and creates configuration files for an early instance of
NetworkManager run from the initial ramdisk during early boot.
2018-09-18 17:40:47 +02:00
luz.paz 58510ed566 docs: misc. typos pt2
Remainder of typos found using `codespell -q 3 --skip="./shared,./src/systemd,*.po" -I ../NetworkManager-word-whitelist.txt` whereby whitelist consists of:
 ```
ans
busses
cace
cna
conexant
crasher
iff
liftime
creat
nd
sav
technik
uint
```

https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/205
2018-09-17 11:26:13 +02:00
Thomas Haller d29f6e03c8 docs/test: add check that gtk-doc contains patch to generate proper documentation
In libnm, we prefer opaque typedefs. gtk-doc needs to be patched to properly
generate documentation. Add a check for that.

Add a test. By default, this does not fail but just prints a warning. The test
can be made failing by setting NMTST_CHECK_GTK_DOC=1.

See-also: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gtk-doc/merge_requests/2
(cherry picked from commit 02464c052e)
2018-09-14 09:04:23 +02:00
Thomas Haller 6435040881 libnm/crypto: add header "nm-crypto-impl.h" for crypto implementation
There are two aspects: the public crypto API that is provided by
"nm-crypto.h" header, and the internal header which crypto backends
need to implement. Split them.
2018-09-04 07:38:30 +02:00
Thomas Haller 4106f2968d libnm/crypto: rename libnm's crypto files
"crypto.h" did not follow our common NM style naming. Rename
the files.
2018-09-04 07:38:30 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel d70185ddf1 all: point git references to the GitLab instance
https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/merge_requests/2
2018-08-27 11:36:56 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani 9b9dce9486 all: add 'match' setting
Add a new 'match' setting containing properties to match a connection
to devices. At the moment only the interface-name property is present
and, contrary to connection.interface-name, it allows the use of
wildcards.
2018-08-11 09:41:07 +02:00
Thomas Haller df30651b89 libnm, cli, ifcfg-rh: add NMSettingEthtool setting
Note that in NetworkManager API (D-Bus, libnm, and nmcli),
the features are called "feature-xyz". The "feature-" prefix
is used, because NMSettingEthtool possibly will gain support
for options that are not only -K|--offload|--features, for
example -C|--coalesce.

The "xzy" suffix is either how ethtool utility calls the feature
("tso", "rx"). Or, if ethtool utility specifies no alias for that
feature, it's the name from kernel's ETH_SS_FEATURES ("tx-tcp6-segmentation").
If possible, we prefer ethtool utility's naming.

Also note, how the features "feature-sg", "feature-tso", and
"feature-tx" actually refer to multiple underlying kernel features
at once. This too follows what ethtool utility does.

The functionality is not yet implemented server-side.
2018-08-10 10:38:19 +02:00
Javier Arteaga 1427719116 libnm: introduce NMDeviceWireGuard 2018-08-06 08:34:27 +02:00
Javier Arteaga 54df43ed52 core: introduce NMDeviceWireGuard
For now, the device only exposes partial link status (not including
peers). It cannot create new links.
2018-08-06 08:34:27 +02:00
Beniamino Galvani a9b4532fa7 libnm-core: add SR-IOV setting
Add a setting containing SR-IOV parameters.
2018-07-11 16:16:22 +02:00
Lubomir Rintel e53a7365ca docs: provide soft descriptions for NM{Simple,Remote}Connection
...and order them on more logical places in the libnm manual.
2018-06-28 20:38:52 +02:00