At various places we get the (string) keys of a GHashTable.
Add a helper function that does that, including an argument
for optional sorting.
The helper function is there to get reduce code duplication.
NMUtilsNamedValue's purpose is precisely to create
a list and sort by entires.
Add nm_utils_named_values_from_str_dict() as helper
function to do that.
"nm-utils/nm-shared-utils.h" shall contain utility function without other
dependencies. It is intended to be used by other projects as-is.
nm_utils_random_bytes() requires getrandom() and a HAVE_GETRANDOM configure
check. That makes it more cumbersome to re-use "nm-shared-utils.h", in
cases where you don't care about nm_utils_random_bytes().
Split nm_utils_random_bytes() out to a separate file.
Same for hash utils, which depend on nm_utils_random_bytes(). Also, hash
utils will eventually be extended to use siphash24.
This makes hashing non-deterministic with the aim to
make it harder to exploit hash collisions.
Non-deterministic also means that for unit testing
we will get different values on each run. But since we
shall never assign any meaning to these hash values
nor rely on them being stable between restarts (or
upgrades), that doesn't hurt.
Add a new function nm_utils_random_bytes().
This function now preferably uses getrandom() syscall if it is
available.
As fallback, it always tries to fill the buffer from /dev/urandom.
If it cannot, as last fallback it uses GRand, which cannot fail.
Hence, the function always sets some (pseudo) random bytes.
It also returns FALSE if the obtained bytes are possibly not good
randomness.
Fixes the following:
shared/nm-utils/nm-shared-utils.c:136: Warning: NetworkManager: GTK-Doc comment block end token "*/" should not be preceded by comment text:
* Returns: the input buffer with the quoted string. */
We already have nm_strquote_a(). That is useful, but uses alloca(), hence it
is ill suited to be called from a macro, inside a loop, or from a function
that should be inlined.
Instead, add nm_strquote() that has the same purpose but writes to a provided
string buffer.
A replacement for g_strsplit_set(). While g_strsplit_set()
does (n+1) malloc and n slice allocations, this needs
roughtly (O(log(n))) mallocs.
Another difference from g_strsplit_set() is that this function
treats multiple delimiters as one (and thus never returns empty
words). While I can see that sometimes you may want to keep empty
words (like parsing a CSV file and preserve empty cells), we usually
use this function for splitting user input. In such case, we want
to treat multiple delimiters as one.
And relax the type for nm_auto_unref_gtypeclass macro. Like
g_type_class_unref() itself, you usually don't use it with a GTypeClass
base class, but some subtype like GObjectClass.
For RFC1918 private IPv4addresses, guess a better prefix length for
addresses and routes.
nmtui is an interactive program. It makes sense to be a bit smarter
about what the user probably meant.
It would be nice if nmtui would update the entry field immediately when
the cursor leaves the field, to show the guessed prefix length. However,
that is not easily possible, so lets to that another time.
For IPv6 addresses, default to /64 instead of /128.
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1474295
Use C-style backslash escaping to sanitize non-UTF-8 strings.
The functions are compatible with glib's g_strcompress() and
g_strescape().
The difference is only that g_strescape() escapes all non-printable,
non ASCII character as well, while nm_utils_str_utf8safe_escape()
-- depending on the flags -- preserves valid UTF-8 sequence except
backslash.
The flags allow to optionally escape ASCII control characters and
all non-ASCII (valid UTF-8) characters. But the option to preserve
valid UTF-8 (non-ASCII) characters verbatim, is what distinguishes
from g_strescape().
I think NM_CACHED_QUARK_FCN() is better because:
- the implementation is in our hand, meaning it is clear that
putting a "static" before NM_CACHED_QUARK_FCN() is guaranteed to
work -- without relying on G_DEFINE_QUARK() to be defined in a way
that this works (in fact, we currently never do that and instead
make all functions non-static).
- it does not construct function names by appending "_quark".
Thus you can grep for the entire function name and finding
the place where it is implemented.
- same with the stings, where the new macro doesn't stringify the
argument, which is less surpising. Again, now you can grep
for the string including the double quoting.
(yes, I really use grep to understand the source-code)
The "shared" directory contains files that are possibly used by all components
of NetworkManager repository.
Some of these files are even copied as-is to other projects (VPN plugins, nm-applet)
and used there without modification. Move those files to a separate directory.
By moving them to a common directory, it is clearer that they belong
together. Also, you can easier compare the copied versions to their
original via
$ diff -r ./shared/nm-utils/ /path/to/nm-vpn-plugin/shared/nm-utils/