- Remove list of authors from files that had them; these serve no
purpose except to quickly get out of date (and were only used in
libnm-util and not libnm-glib anyway).
- Just say "Copyright", not "(C) Copyright" or "Copyright (C)"
- Put copyright statement after the license, not before
- Remove "NetworkManager - Network link manager" from the few files
that contained it, and "libnm_glib -- Access network status &
information from glib applications" from the many files that
contained it.
- Remove vim modeline from nm-device-olpc-mesh.[ch], add emacs modeline
to files that were missing it.
Add versioned NM_DEPRECATED_IN_* and NM_AVAILABLE_IN_* macros, and tag
new/deprecated functions accordingly. (All currently-deprecated
functions are assumed to have been deprecated in 0.9.10.)
Add NM_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED and NM_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED macros which
can be set to determine which versions will cause warnings.
With the current settings, external consumers of the
libnm-util/libnm-glib APIs will have MIN_REQUIRED and MAX_ALLOWED both
set to NM_VERSION_0_9_8 by default, meaning they will get warnings
about functions added in 0.9.10. NM internally sets
NM_VERSION_MAX_ALLOWED to NM_VERSION_NEXT_STABLE to ensure that it is
always allowed to use all APIs.
When requesting connections to ModemManager, NetworkManager shouldn't try to
request specific bands or network types to use. Leave those requests to other
system configuration tools talking directly to ModemManager.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=701504
and use it in 'allowed-bands' property installation.
The macro NM_SETTING_GSM_BANDS_MAX also allows libnm-util users to check
if bands are valid (before setting them).
When NM was registering all of its enum types by hand, it was using
NamesLikeThis rather than the default names-like-this for the "nick"
values. When we switched to using glib-mkenums, this resulted in
dbus-glib using different strings for the D-Bus error names, causing
compatibility problems.
Fix this by using glib-mkenums annotations to manually fix all the
enum values back to what they were before. (This can't be done in a
more automated way, because the old names aren't 100% consistent. Eg,
"UNKNOWN" frequently becomes "UnknownError" rather than just
"Unknown".)
Rather than generating enum classes by hand (and complaining in each
file that "this should really be standard"), use glib-mkenums.
Unfortunately, we need a very new version of glib-mkenums in order to
deal with NM's naming conventions and to fix a few other bugs, so just
import that into the source tree temporarily.
Also, to simplify the use of glib-mkenums, import Makefile.glib from
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/654395.
To avoid having to run glib-mkenums for every subdirectory of src/,
add a new "generated" directory, and put the generated enums files
there.
Finally, use Makefile.glib for marshallers too, and generate separate
ones for libnm-glib and NetworkManager.
This allows the necessary flexibility when handling secrets; otherwise
it wouldn't be known when NM should save secrets returned from agents
to backing storage, or when the agents should store the secrets. We
can't simply use lack of a secret in persistent storage as the indicator
of this, as (for example) when creating a new connection without
secrets the storage method would be abmiguous.
At the same time, fold in "always ask" functionality for OTP tokens
so user agents don't have to store that attribute themselves out-of-band.
NM didn't pass it to MM anyway, so it was mainly unused, but the band settings
were still wrong. Fix that (and still preserve ABI) by adding a new property
for allowed bands that can actually hold all the bands instead of limiting
to 16-bits. Clean up some of the deprecation stuff at the same time to make
it clearer what's deprecated and what to do about it.
Add a GError argument to nm_connection_verify() and nm_setting_verify(),
and add error enums to each NMSetting subclass. Each NMSetting subclass now
returns a descriptive GError when verification fails.
git-svn-id: http://svn-archive.gnome.org/svn/NetworkManager/trunk@3751 4912f4e0-d625-0410-9fb7-b9a5a253dbdc