The NmCli structure is passed around everywhere and contains all
the state of the program. It is very hard to follow which parts
are used where.
Split out more configuration options to a NmcConfig field. This field
is mostly immutable, and modified at particular places that now can be
easily found.
nmc contains all options and collects output data. It is very hard to
understand what it does. Start splitting it up, and pass arguments along
-- as needed.
These functions are only used by nm-meta-setting-desc.c. Make them internal.
Unfortunately, they are part of "common.h" which cannot be used without
the rest of nmcli. Still todo.
They will be moved out of nmcli as they are generally useful.
Even if they happen to be used only inside nmcli, there should
be a better separation between logic (nmcli) and setting decriptions.
Add an improved way of tracking meta data about settings.
E.g. it is wrong to generate for each property a nmc_property_*_get_*()
function. Instead, there should be a meta data about the property
itself, and a mechanism to retrieve the property.
For now, only do this for NMSettingConnection and keep all the existing
infrastructure in place. Later on all settings shall be moved.
Especially to accomodate NmcOutputField mangles the concept of
setting-meta data, formatting options, and collecting output results.
It's a total hack, that will be need fixing later.
Shift argc and argc manually between argument ant its value and use
next_arg() between arguments everywhere. Whill be useful to parse global
arguments.
Also, be a bit more careful about the layers of errors. Just don't do this:
(process:236): nmcli-CRITICAL **: Error: Could not create NMClient object:
Permissions request failed: Authorization check failed:
The name org.freedesktop.PolicyKit1 was not provided by any .service files.
Currently the editor runs in a dedicated thread so that the blocking
call to readline() doesn't stop the processing of D-Bus events in the
main loop. The editor thread can access objects concurrently with the
main thread and this can cause races and crashes.
Remove the editor thread and use the non-blocking readline API.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=732097https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1368353
- don't include "nm-default.h" in header files. Every source file must
include as first header "nm-default.h", thus our headers get the
default include already implicitly.
- we don't support compiling NetworkManager itself with a C++ compiler. Remove
G_BEGIN_DECLS/G_END_DECLS from internal headers. We do however support
users of libnm to use C++, thus they stay in public headers.
(cherry picked from commit f19aff8909)
Complete the property as we parse the list of properties. This makes it
possible to actually complete an unfinished property. E.g:
$ nmcli --complete c modify enp0s25 +ipv6.addr
+ipv6.addresses +ipv6.addr-gen-mode
nmcli bash autocompletion leveraged on "nmcli connection edit", "print"
to retrieve the specific properties of a connection. Anyway, the
interactive editor is smart and just prints the used components, so in a
connection where 802.1x is not enabled we had no autocompletion.
Solved adding an "hidden" command "nmcli --complete connection modify"
as suggested in bgo #724860 in order to retrieve ALL the available
properties for use in autocompletion.
Here patch from L.Rintel has been merged to make che --complete option
global to nmcli (first version was local to "connection modify").
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=724860https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1301226
When performing NM package upgrade the new version of nmcli will be immediately
available while NM daemon will not, as it would not restart in order to avoid
to disrupt connectivity. This could create issues with tools leveraging
on nmcli output (till reboot). As apart from this case it is very unlikely
that a user can have this nmcli / NM daemon version mismatch situation,
the check could cause more harm than benefit in real user case
scenarios.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1291785