
We use clang-format for automatic formatting of our source files. Since clang-format is actively maintained software, the actual formatting depends on the used version of clang-format. That is unfortunate and painful, but really unavoidable unless clang-format would be strictly bug-compatible. So the version that we must use is from the current Fedora release, which is also tested by our gitlab-ci. Previously, we were using Fedora 34 with clang-tools-extra-12.0.1-1.fc34.x86_64. As Fedora 35 comes along, we need to update our formatting as Fedora 35 comes with version "13.0.0~rc1-1.fc35". An alternative would be to freeze on version 12, but that has different problems (like, it's cumbersome to rebuild clang 12 on Fedora 35 and it would be cumbersome for our developers which are on Fedora 35 to use a clang that they cannot easily install). The (differently painful) solution is to reformat from time to time, as we switch to a new Fedora (and thus clang) version. Usually we would expect that such a reformatting brings minor changes. But this time, the changes are huge. That is mentioned in the release notes [1] as Makes PointerAligment: Right working with AlignConsecutiveDeclarations. (Fixes https://llvm.org/PR27353) [1] https://releases.llvm.org/13.0.0/tools/clang/docs/ReleaseNotes.html#clang-format
86 lines
2.5 KiB
C
86 lines
2.5 KiB
C
/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later */
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/*
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* Copyright (C) 2011 Red Hat, Inc.
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*/
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/*
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* The example shows how to list connections. Contrast this example with
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* list-connections-gdbus.c, which is a bit lower level and talks directly to NM
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* using GDBus.
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*
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* Compile with:
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* gcc -Wall list-connections-libnm.c -o list-connections-libnm `pkg-config --cflags --libs libnm`
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*/
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#include <glib.h>
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#include <stdio.h>
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#include <stdlib.h>
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#include <NetworkManager.h>
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/* Print details of connection */
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static void
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show_connection(NMConnection *connection)
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{
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NMSettingConnection *s_con;
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guint64 timestamp;
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char *timestamp_str;
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char timestamp_real_str[64];
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const char *val1, *val2, *val3, *val4, *val5;
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s_con = nm_connection_get_setting_connection(connection);
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if (s_con) {
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struct tm localtime_data;
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/* Get various info from NMSettingConnection and show it */
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timestamp = nm_setting_connection_get_timestamp(s_con);
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timestamp_str = g_strdup_printf("%" G_GUINT64_FORMAT, timestamp);
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strftime(timestamp_real_str,
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sizeof(timestamp_real_str),
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"%c",
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localtime_r((time_t *) ×tamp, &localtime_data));
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val1 = nm_setting_connection_get_id(s_con);
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val2 = nm_setting_connection_get_uuid(s_con);
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val3 = nm_setting_connection_get_connection_type(s_con);
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val4 = nm_connection_get_path(connection);
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val5 = timestamp ? timestamp_real_str : "never";
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printf("%-25s | %s | %-15s | %-43s | %s\n", val1, val2, val3, val4, val5);
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g_free(timestamp_str);
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}
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}
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int
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main(int argc, char *argv[])
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{
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NMClient *client;
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GError *error = NULL;
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const GPtrArray *connections;
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int i;
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if (!(client = nm_client_new(NULL, &error))) {
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g_message("Error: Could not connect to NetworkManager: %s.", error->message);
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g_error_free(error);
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return EXIT_FAILURE;
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}
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if (!nm_client_get_nm_running(client)) {
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g_message("Error: Can't obtain connections: NetworkManager is not running.");
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return EXIT_FAILURE;
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}
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/* Now the connections can be listed. */
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connections = nm_client_get_connections(client);
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printf("Connections:\n===================\n");
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for (i = 0; i < connections->len; i++)
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show_connection(connections->pdata[i]);
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g_object_unref(client);
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return EXIT_SUCCESS;
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}
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