Kernel recently got support for exposing TUN/TAP information on netlink
[1], [2], [3]. Add support for it to the platform cache.
The advantage of using netlink is that querying sysctl bypasses the
order of events of the netlink socket. It is out of sync and racy. For
example, platform cache might still think that a tun device exists, but
a subsequent lookup at sysfs might fail because the device was deleted
in the meantime. Another point is, that we don't get change
notifications via sysctl and that it requires various extra syscalls
to read the device information. If the tun information is present on
netlink, put it into the cache. This bypasses checking sysctl while
we keep looking at sysctl for backward compatibility until we require
support from kernel.
Notes:
- we had two link types NM_LINK_TYPE_TAP and NM_LINK_TYPE_TUN. This
deviates from the model of how kernel treats TUN/TAP devices, which
makes it more complicated. The link type of a NMPlatformLink instance
should match what kernel thinks about the device. Point in case,
when parsing RTM_NETLINK messages, we very early need to determine
the link type (_linktype_get_type()). However, to determine the
type of a TUN/TAP at that point, we need to look into nested
netlink attributes which in turn depend on the type (IFLA_INFO_KIND
and IFLA_INFO_DATA), or even worse, we would need to look into
sysctl for older kernel vesions. Now, the TUN/TAP type is a property
of the link type NM_LINK_TYPE_TUN, instead of determining two
different link types.
- various parts of the API (both kernel's sysctl vs. netlink) and
NMDeviceTun vs. NMSettingTun disagree whether the PI is positive
(NM_SETTING_TUN_PI, IFLA_TUN_PI, NMPlatformLnkTun.pi) or inverted
(NM_DEVICE_TUN_NO_PI, IFF_NO_PI). There is no consistent way,
but prefer the positive form for internal API at NMPlatformLnkTun.pi.
- previously NMDeviceTun.mode could not change after initializing
the object. Allow for that to happen, because forcing some properties
that are reported by kernel to not change is wrong, in case they
might change. Of course, in practice kernel doesn't allow the device
to ever change its type, but the type property of the NMDeviceTun
should not make that assumption, because, if it actually changes, what
would it mean?
- note that as of now, new netlink API is not yet merged to mainline Linus
tree. Shortcut _parse_lnk_tun() to not accidentally use unstable API
for now.
[1] https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1277457
[2] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/davem/net-next.git/commit/?id=1ec010e705934c8acbe7dbf31afc81e60e3d828b
[3] https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/network/iproute2/iproute2-next.git/commit/?id=118eda77d6602616bc523a17ee45171e879d1818https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1547213https://github.com/NetworkManager/NetworkManager/pull/77
- All internal source files (except "examples", which are not internal)
should include "config.h" first. As also all internal source
files should include "nm-default.h", let "config.h" be included
by "nm-default.h" and include "nm-default.h" as first in every
source file.
We already wanted to include "nm-default.h" before other headers
because it might contains some fixes (like "nm-glib.h" compatibility)
that is required first.
- After including "nm-default.h", we optinally allow for including the
corresponding header file for the source file at hand. The idea
is to ensure that each header file is self contained.
- Don't include "config.h" or "nm-default.h" in any header file
(except "nm-sd-adapt.h"). Public headers anyway must not include
these headers, and internal headers are never included after
"nm-default.h", as of the first previous point.
- Include all internal headers with quotes instead of angle brackets.
In practice it doesn't matter, because in our public headers we must
include other headers with angle brackets. As we use our public
headers also to compile our interal source files, effectively the
result must be the same. Still do it for consistency.
- Except for <config.h> itself. Include it with angle brackets as suggested by
https://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/manual/autoconf.html#Configuration-Headers