Use two common defines NM_BUILD_SRCDIR and NM_BUILD_BUILDDIR
for specifying the location of srcdir and builddir.
Note that this is only relevant for tests, as they expect
a certain layout of the directories, to find files that concern
them.
There are multiple tests with the same in different directories; add a
unique prefix to test names so that it is clear from the output which
one is running.
Some targets are missing dependencies on some generated sources in
the meson port. These makes the build to fail due to missing source
files on a highly parallelized build.
These dependencies have been resolved by taking advantage of meson's
internal dependencies which can be used to pass source files,
include directories, libraries and compiler flags.
One of such internal dependencies called `core_dep` was already in
use. However, in order to avoid any confusion with another new
internal dependency called `nm_core_dep`, which is used to include
directories and source files from the `libnm-core` directory, the
`core_dep` dependency has been renamed to `nm_dep`.
These changes have allowed minimizing the build details which are
inherited by using those dependencies. The parallelized build has
also been improved.
Tests are commonly created via copy&paste. Hence, it's
better to express a certain concept explicitly via a function
or macro. This way, the implementation of the concept can be
adjusted at one place, without requiring to change all the callers.
Also, the macro is shorter, and brevity is better for tests
so it's easier to understand what the test does. Without being
bothered by noise from the redundant information.
Also, the macro knows better which message to expect. For example,
messages inside "src" are prepended by nm-logging.c with a level
and a timestamp. The expect macro is aware of that and tests for it
#define NMTST_EXPECT_NM_ERROR(msg) NMTST_EXPECT_NM (G_LOG_LEVEL_MESSAGE, "*<error> [*] "msg)
This again allows the caller to ignore this prefix, but still assert
more strictly.
Note that:
- we compile some source files multiple times. Most notably those
under "shared/".
- we include a default header "shared/nm-default.h" in every source
file. This header is supposed to setup a common environment by defining
and including parts that are commonly used. As we always include the
same header, the header must behave differently depending
one whether the compilation is for libnm-core, NetworkManager or
libnm-glib. E.g. it must include <glib/gi18n.h> or <glib/gi18n-lib.h>
depending on whether we compile a library or an application.
For that, the source files need the NETWORKMANAGER_COMPILATION #define
to behave accordingly.
Extend the define to be composed of flags. These flags are all named
NM_NETWORKMANAGER_COMPILATION_WITH_*, they indicate which part of the
build are available. E.g. when building libnm-core.la itself, then
WITH_LIBNM_CORE, WITH_LIBNM_CORE_INTERNAL, and WITH_LIBNM_CORE_PRIVATE
are available. When building NetworkManager, WITH_LIBNM_CORE_PRIVATE
is not available but the internal parts are still accessible. When
building nmcli, only WITH_LIBNM_CORE (the public part) is available.
This granularily controls the build.
Source files for enum types are generated by passing segments of the
source code of the files to the `glib-mkenums` command.
This patch removes those parameters where source code is used from
meson build files by moving those segmeents to template files.
https://mail.gnome.org/archives/networkmanager-list/2017-December/msg00057.html
binary-search can find an index of a matching entry in a sorted
list. However, if the list contains multiple entries that compare
equal, it can be interesting to find the first/last entry. For example,
if you want to append new items after the last.
Extend binary search to optionally continue the binary search
to determine the range that compares equal.
There are some tests located in different directories which are
using the same name. To avoid any confussion a prefix was used to
name the test and the target.
This patch uses the prefix just for the target, to avoid any
collision that may happen, and uses the `test-` pattern as the
name.
https://mail.gnome.org/archives/networkmanager-list/2017-December/msg00051.html
I don't think we should do this.
- renamining/dropping configure options is still an annoyance,
because it requires to different ./configure options depending
on the version. The rename from --enable-teamctl to --enable-team
might be theoretically nice, but more annoying then helpful.
- There is no strict dependency between --enable-team and
--enable-json-validation. At most, one could argue that
when enabling the team plugin (--enable-teamctl), then
libnm must also be build with --enable-json-validation.
But in fact, the team plugin will happily work with a
libnm that doesn't link against libjansson.
That is --enable-teamctl --disable-json-validation will work
in practice just fine.
On the other hand, libnm is a client library to create connection
profiles, fully supporting team profiles also makes sense if the
actual plugin is not installed (or build). Thus, --disable-teamctl
--enable-json-validation certainly makes sense.
At this point, one might ask whether libnm is even still complete without
libjansson. Maybe libnm should *require* --enable-json-validation.
But that is not what the patch was doing, and it would also need
some careful consideration before doing so.
This reverts commit 9d5cd7eae8.
Rename the team functionality enablement from 'teamdctl' to 'team'.
Force jansson lib requirement for team functionality: NetworkManager
requires the teamd daemon to manage team. As teamd depends upon jansson
lib, adding jansson requirement for teaming support in NetworkManager
seems reasonable.
Remove the jansson_validation flag, as the only generic json function in
nmcli (not related to team) was the one to check if a string was in json
format. Anyway, that function is used for team checks only. So, move
also json validation functions under the WITH_TEAM flag.
Matters when backslash escaping ascii charaters <= 0xF, to
produce "\\XX" instead of "\\ X". For example tabulator is "\\09".
This also can trigger an nm_assert() failure, when building with
--with-more-asserts=5 (or higher).
We also do this for libnm and libnm-core, where it causes visible changes
in behavior. But if somebody would rely on the hashing implementation
for hash tables, it would be seriously flawed.
Next we will use siphash24() instead of the glib version g_direct_hash() or
g_str_hash(). Hence, the "nm-utils/nm-hash-utils.h" header becomes very
fundamental and will be needed basically everywhere.
Instead of requiring the users to include them, let it be included via
"nm-default.h" header.
siphash24() mixes the bits much better then our naive xor.
Don't bypass siphash24(). We supposedly use it for the
better hashing properties, so use it also for pointers.
When using siphash24(), the hash value depends on the hashed input
and the key from _get_hash_key(). If the input is static, so is also
the result of siphash24(), albeit the bits are scrabbled more.
Add a nm_hash_static() to get such a static key, but without actually
doing siphash24(). The static key is also xored with a static_seed.
For that, also mangle the first byte of the hash key using siphash24()
itself. That is, because nm_hash_static() only uses the first guint of the
random key. Hence, we want that this first guint has all the entropy
of the entire key. We use siphash24() itself, to mangle all bits
of the 16 byte key into the first guint.
Currently there are multiple features that require Jansson support,
but WITH_JANSSON=1 is set only when configuring with
--enable-json-validation. Therefore a build with
"--disable-json-validation --enable-ovs" fails.
The availability of Jansson (WITH_JANSSON) should only be used:
- to check if dependent features can be enabled
- to determine compiler and linker flags in the Makefile
- in nm-jansson.h to define compatibility functions if needed
Everything else must be controlled by a configure switch.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=790233
The number of authentication retires is useful also for passwords aside
802-1x settings. For example, src/devices/wifi/nm-device-wifi.c also has
a retry counter and uses a hard-coded value of 3.
Move the setting, so that it can be used in general. Although it is still
not implemented for other settings.
This is an API and ABI break.
Normalizing can be complicated, as settings depend on each other and possibly
conflict.
That is, because verify() must exactly anticipate whether normalization will
succeed and how the result will look like. That is because we only want to
modify the connection, if we are sure that the result will verify.
Hence, verify() and normalize() are strongly related. The implementation
should not be spread out between NMSettingOvsInterface:verify(),
NMSettingOvsPatch:verify() and _normalize_ovs_interface_type().
Also, add some unit-tests.
teamd adds the "tx_hash" property for "lacp" and "loadbalance" runners
when not present. Do the same so that our original configuration
matches with the one reported by teamd.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1497333
We often want to cascade hashing, meaning, to combine the
outcome of various hash functions in a larger hash.
Instead of having each hash function return a guint hash value,
accept a hash state argument. This saves the overhead of initializing
and completing the intermediate hash states.
It also avoids loosing entropy when we reduce the larger hash state
into the intermediate guint hash value.
By using a macro, we don't cast all the types to guint. Instead,
we use their native types directly. Hence, we don't need
nm_hash_update_uint64() nor nm_hash_update_ptr().
Also, for types smaller then guint like char, we save hashing
the all zero bytes.
siphash24() is wildly used by projects nowadays.
It's certainly slower then our djb hashing that we used before.
But quite likely it's fast enough for us, given how wildly it is
used. I think it would be hard to profile NetworkManager to show
that the performance of hash tables is the issue, be it with
djb or siphash24.
Certainly with siphash24() it's much harder to exploit the hashing
algorithm to cause worst case hash operations (provided that the
seed is kept private). Does this better resistance against a denial
of service matter for us? Probably not, but let's better be safe then
sorry.
Note that systemd's implementation uses a different seed for each hash
table (at least, after the hash table grows to a certain size).
We don't do that and use only one global seed.
The privious NM_HASH_* macros directly operated on a guint value
and were thus close to the actual implementation.
Replace them by adding a NMHashState struct and accessors to
update the hash state. This hides the implementation better
and would allow us to carry more state. For example, we could
switch to siphash24() transparently.
For now, we still do a form basically djb2 hashing, albeit with
differing start seed.
Also add nm_hash_str() and nm_str_hash():
- nm_hash_str() is our own string hashing implementation
- nm_str_hash() is our own string implementation, but with a
GHashFunc signature, suitable to pass it to g_hash_table_new().
Also, it has this name in order to remind you of g_str_hash(),
which it is replacing.
We added "ipv4.route-table-sync" and "ipv6.route-table-sync" to not change
behavior for users that configured policy routing outside of NetworkManager,
for example, via a dispatcher script. Users had to explicitly opt-in
for NetworkManager to fully manage all routing tables.
These settings were awkward. Replace them with new settings "ipv4.route-table"
and "ipv6.route-table". Note that this commit breaks API/ABI on the unstable
development branch by removing recently added API.
As before, a connection will have no route-table set by default. This
has the meaning that policy-routing is not enabled and only the main table
will be fully synced. Once the user sets a table, we recognize that and
NetworkManager manages all routing tables.
The new route-table setting has other important uses: analog to
"ipv4.route-metric", it is the default that applies to all routes.
Currently it only works for static routes, not DHCP, SLAAC,
default-route, etc. That will be implemented later.
For static routes, each route still can explicitly set a table, and
overwrite the per-connection setting in "ipv4.route-table" and
"ipv6.route-table".