Remove _nm_object_ensure_inited(), etc; objects that implement
GInitable are now mandatory-to-init().
Remove constructor() implementations that sometimes return NULL; do
all the relevant checking in init() instead.
Make nm_client_new() and nm_remote_settings_new() take a GCancellable
and a GError**.
Since the API has not changed at this point, this is mostly just a
matter of updating Makefiles, and changing references to the library
name in comments.
NetworkManager cannot link to libnm due to the duplicated type/symbol
names. So it links to libnm-core.la directly, which means that
NetworkManager gets a separate copy of that code from libnm.so.
Everything else links to libnm.
There where cases, where TAB was mixed with SPACES. Replace TAB with SPACES.
Additionally, make the script nm-state.py executable
Signed-off-by: Thomas Haller <thaller@redhat.com>
The various need_secrets() implementation do allocate a fresh GPtrArray, but
add static strings to them without dup'ing. Thus callers must _not_ free the
array elements, only the array itself. Adjust documentation and annotations
accordingly.
Also adjust the corresponding comment in the goi-list-connections.py example.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=698175
Unfortunately since libnm-glib/libnm-util make heavy use of
GHashTable and GValue, functions that deal with these types
can't be used from Python when using GObject Introspection,
since pygobject can't handle conversion between python types
and GValue/GHashTable very well. You'll likely encounter
assertions like:
ERROR:pygi-argument.c:1755:_pygi_argument_to_object: assertion failed: (g_type_info_get_tag (key_type_info) != GI_TYPE_TAG_VOID)
Aborted
Just for consistency, make settings related stuff live under the
org.freedesktop.NetworkManager namespace, rather than its own
org.freedesktop.NetworkManagerSettings namespace. Renames are done for
DBus interface names, DBus object paths, and polkit actions.
Remove the org.freedesktop.NetworkManagerSystemSettings bus name and
have everybody talk to org.freedesktop.NetworkManager. Now that we have
a single settings service that's embedded in the main daemon, we don't
need separate names anymore.