Add Router Advertisement DNS Search List option as specified
in RFC 8106. The search list option uses and identical option
header as the RDNSS option and therefore the option header
structure can be reused.
If systemd is compiled with IDNA support, internationalization
of the provided search domain is applied, after which the search
list is written in wire format into the DNSSL option.
An infiniband hardware address is 20 bytes, but sockaddr_ll.sll_addr is only 8
bytes. Explicitly ensure that sockaddr_union has enough space for infiniband
addresses, even if they run over sockaddr_ll and add a macro to compute the
proper size to pass to kernel.
As a follow-up for db3f45e2d2 let's do the
same for all other cases where we create a FILE* with local scope and
know that no other threads hence can have access to it.
For most cases this shouldn't change much really, but this should speed
dbus introspection and calender time formatting up a bit.
In normal operation this would trigger an assertion
when a DHCP server is configured every time the link goes up.
This change makes sd_dhcp_server_configure_pool idempotent
and stops the DHCP server when the link loses carrier.
In addition to this stopping the assertion being triggered,
this has the useful side-effect of allowing the link to be taken down
and then brought back up as a way to have it use DNS from an "upstream"
interface that got its DNS configuration via DHCP
after the downstream link was configured.
Test ICMPv6 Router Solicitation exponential backoff timer by
computing the minimum and maximum values according to RFC 7559,
Section 2 and the algorithm itself described in RFC 3315, Section
14. Reset the sd_ndisc timer to trigger after a zero second delay,
which causes the ndisc timeout to be triggered immediately once
the caller of the "sending" function returns to the main loop.
Move ICMPv6 Router Solicitation sending after timer computation so
that timers are already set up when the packet is being sent. This
makes it possible to create a test that inspects Router
Solicitation timer values when the Router Solicitation is sent out
on the network.
Instead of sending a fixed amount of Router Solicitiations, implement
the backoff algorithm proposed in RFC 7559. The backoff algorithm is
the same as used by DHCPv6.
Time out after 12s as specified in RFC 4861 in order not to delay
setting up a link for too long while sending Router Solicitations
in the background. Notice that after this change the callback will
receive a SD_NDISC_EVENT_TIMEOUT timeout event, and at a later point
when a router appears, a received Router Advertisment will cause the
callback to be called again with the SD_NDISC_EVENT_ROUTER event.
Let's downgrade the warning introduced by
955d99edc7 to debug, as we really
shouldn't log at more than debug level from library code.
(And while we are at it, print the MTU as the right (unsigned) type in
the format string.)
All those uses were correct, but I think it's better to be explicit.
Using implicit errno is too error prone, and with this change we can require
(in the sense of a style guideline) that the code is always specified.
Helpful query: git grep -n -P 'log_[^s][a-z]+\(.*%m'
Add tests for prefix creation, router variable setting and finally
verify that a Router Advertisement is properly formatted when sending.
Also check that there is a Router Advertisment with zero lifetime
when Router Advertisement sending is stopped.
Receive Router Solicitations and send a unicast Router Advertisment
in response. Refactor ICMPv6 packet handling code so that the common
ICMPv6 validation parts are reused between the existing router
discovery and the new functionality adding reception of Router
Solicitation messages.
Create and remove the ICMPv6 Router Advertisement socket file
descriptor and implement Router Advertisment sending. As not
all options are mandatory, use IO vectors to point to the included
options and the prefix information.
Reuse and refactor the functionality already present for Router
Solicitations in order to create a socket for sending Router
Advertisements. Anticipate reception of incoming Router
Solicitations by setting the ICMPv6 filter accordingly. Also set
the unicast hop limit to 255 for ICMPv6 sockets as unicast Router
Advertisments are to be sent in response to Router Solicitations.
Update the Router Solicitation test case code with a function
definition in order to keep the test case working.
Router Advertisements are sent uniformly distributed between a
minimum and maximum time according to RFC 4861, Section 6.2.4.
Default values from RFC 4861 are for now used as minimum and
maximum Router Advertisement timeouts.
When stopping, a Router Advertisement with a router lifetime set
to zero is sent in order to inform any nodes that the interface
on this host no longer is a router.
Define Router Advertisement prefix structure. Add the Prefix
Information ICMPv6 option defined in RFC 4861 to the prefix
information structure, as it will simplify sending a Prefix
Information option later on. In order to handle endianness
correctly, the structure is redefined here instead of using
the one in netinet/icmp6.h.
Add functions to create and modify prefix information and set
default values as defined in RFC 4861, Section 6.2.1.
This adds a modified version of dhcp6_option_parse_domainname() that is
able to parse compressed domain names, borrowing the idea from
dns_packet_read_name(). It also adds pieces in networkd-link and
networkd-manager to properly save/load the added option field.
Resolves#2710.
Reset also the counter for number of Router Solicitations sent when
the associated file descriptor is closed and the event source
unreferenced. With this change the router discovery can now be
stopped and restarted arbitrary many times.
The indentation for emacs'es meson-mode is added .dir-locals.
All files are reindented automatically, using the lasest meson-mode from git.
Indentation should now be fairly consistent.
It's crucial that we can build systemd using VS2010!
... er, wait, no, that's not the official reason. We need to shed old systems
by requring python 3! Oh, no, it's something else. Maybe we need to throw out
345 years of knowlege accumulated in autotools? Whatever, this new thing is
cool and shiny, let's use it.
This is not complete, I'm throwing it out here for your amusement and critique.
- rules for sd-boot are missing. Those might be quite complicated.
- rules for tests are missing too. Those are probably quite simple and
repetitive, but there's lots of them.
- it's likely that I didn't get all the conditions right, I only tested "full"
compilation where most deps are provided and nothing is disabled.
- busname.target and all .busname units are skipped on purpose.
Otherwise, installation into $DESTDIR has the same list of files and the
autoconf install, except for .la files.
It'd be great if people had a careful look at all the library linking options.
I added stuff until things compiled, and in the end there's much less linking
then in the old system. But it seems that there's still a lot of unnecessary
deps.
meson has a `shared_module` statement, which sounds like something appropriate
for our nss and pam modules. Unfortunately, I couldn't get it to work. For the
nss modules, we need an .so version of '2', but `shared_module` disallows the
version argument. For the pam module, it also didn't work, I forgot the reason.
The handling of .m4 and .in and .m4.in files is rather awkward. It's likely
that this could be simplified. If make support is ever dropped, I think it'd
make sense to switch to a different templating system so that two different
languages and not required, which would make everything simpler yet.
v2:
- use get_pkgconfig_variable
- use sh not bash
- use add_project_arguments
v3:
- drop required:true and fix progs/prog typo
v4:
- use find_library('bz2')
- add TTY_GID definition
- define __SANE_USERSPACE_TYPES__
- use join_paths(prefix, ...) is used on all paths to make them all absolute
v5:
- replace all declare_dependency's with []
- add more conf.get guards around optional components
v6:
- drop -pipe, -Wall which are the default in meson
- use compiler.has_function() and compiler.has_header_symbol instead of the
hand-rolled checks.
- fix duplication in 'liblibsystemd' library name
- use the right .sym file for pam_systemd
- rename 'compiler' to 'cc': shorter, and more idiomatic.
v7:
- use ENABLE_ENVIRONMENT_D not HAVE_ENVIRONMENT_D
- rename prefix to prefixdir, rootprefix to rootprefixdir
("prefix" is too common of a name and too easy to overwrite by mistake)
- wrap more stuff with conf.get('ENABLE...') == 1
- use rootprefix=='/' and rootbindir as install_dir, to fix paths under
split-usr==true.
v8:
- use .split() also for src/coredump. Now everything is consistent ;)
- add rootlibdir option and use it on the libraries that require it
v9:
- indentation
v10:
- fix check for qrencode and libaudit
v11:
- unify handling of executable paths, provide options for all progs
This makes the meson build behave slightly differently than the
autoconf-based one, because we always first try to find the executable in the
filesystem, and fall back to the default. I think different handling of
loadkeys, setfont, and telinit was just a historical accident.
In addition to checking in $PATH, also check /usr/sbin/, /sbin for programs.
In Fedora $PATH includes /usr/sbin, (and /sbin is is a symlink to /usr/sbin),
but in Debian, those directories are not included in the path.
C.f. https://github.com/mesonbuild/meson/issues/1576.
- call all the options 'xxx-path' for clarity.
- sort man/rules/meson.build properly so it's stable
After an ipv4ll claimed address conflict occurs a new address needs
to be chosen and then the acquisition state machine needs to be
restarted.
This commit adds a function (sd_ipv4ll_restart) that clears the
previously acquired address (ll->address) and then calls the existing
sd_ipv4ll_start function to choose the new address and start the
acquisition.
Signed-off-by: Jason Reeder <jasonreeder@gmail.com>
A bug exists where the conflict counter is cleared
regardless of whether or not the next probe attempt leads to
a successful address acquisition. This causes 'bursts' of
MAX_CONFLICTS probes followed by a delay of
RATE_LIMIT_INTERVAL instead of a single probe each
RATE_LIMIT_INTERVAL when beyond MAX_CONFLICTS.
The conflict counter should only be cleared after an
address is successfully acquired. This commit achieves that
goal.
From RFC3927:
A host should maintain a counter of the number of address
conflicts it has experienced in the process of trying to
acquire an address, and if the number of conflicts exceeds
MAX_CONFLICTS then the host MUST limit the rate at which it
probes for new addresses to no more than one new address per
RATE_LIMIT_INTERVAL. This is to prevent catastrophic ARP
storms in pathological failure cases, such as a rogue host
that answers all ARP probes, causing legitimate hosts to go
into an infinite loop attempting to select a usable address.
Signed-off-by: Jason Reeder <jasonreeder@gmail.com>
gcc 7 adds -Wimplicit-fallthrough=3 to -Wextra. There are a few ways
we could deal with that. After we take into account the need to stay compatible
with older versions of the compiler (and other compilers), I don't think adding
__attribute__((fallthrough)), even as a macro, is worth the trouble. It sticks
out too much, a comment is just as good. But gcc has some very specific
requiremnts how the comment should look. Adjust it the specific form that it
likes. I don't think the extra stuff we had in those comments was adding much
value.
(Note: the documentation seems to be wrong, and seems to describe a different
pattern from the one that is actually used. I guess either the docs or the code
will have to change before gcc 7 is finalized.)
- linux does not accept prefixes for SLAAC unequal to 64 bits: http://lxr.free-electrons.com/source/net/ipv6/addrconf.c#L2741
- when networkd tries export such a route to the kernel it will get -EINVAL and
set the whole device into a failed state.
- this patch will make networkd ignore such prefixes for SLAAC,
but process other informations which may contain other prefixes.
- Note that rfc4862 does not forbid prefix length != 64 bit
This changes the return value a bit: 1 will be returned if the value is
changed. But the return value was not documented, and the change should
be for the good anyway. Current callers don't care.
This adds in4_addr_is_localhost() and in4_addr_is_link_local() that only take
an IPv4 "struct in_addr", to match in_addr_is_localhost() and
in_addr_is_link_local() that that a "union in_addr_union".
This matches the existing in4_addr_is_null() call that already exists.
For IPv6 glibc already exports a set of macros, hence we don't add similar
functions in6_addr_is_localhost(). We also drop in6_addr_is_null() as
IN6_IS_ADDR_UNSPECIFIED() already provides that.
* networkd: condition_test() can return a negative error, handle that
If a condition check fails with an error we should not consider the check
successful. Fix that.
We should probably also improve logging in this case, but for now, let's just
unbreak this breakage.
Fixes: #3236
* condition: handle unrecognized architectures nicer
When we encounter a check for an architecture we don't know we should not
let the condition check fail with an error code, but instead simply return
false. After all the architecture might just be newer than the ones we know, in
which case it's certainly not our local one.
Fixes: #3236
Apparently newer gcc versions are a bit more forgiving when assigning an
"unsigned char*" pointer to something of a different type. Let's add the
missing cast so that old gcc versions are fine, too.
This reworks sd-ndisc and networkd substantially to support IPv6 RA much more
comprehensively. Since the API is extended quite a bit networkd has been ported
over too, and the patch is not as straight-forward as one could wish. The
rework includes:
- Support for DNSSL, RDNSS and RA routing options in sd-ndisc and networkd. Two
new configuration options have been added to networkd to make this
configurable.
- sd-ndisc now exposes an sd_ndisc_router object that encapsulates a full RA
message, and has direct, friendly acessor functions for the singleton RA
properties, as well as an iterative interface to iterate through known and
unsupported options. The router object may either be retrieved from the wire,
or generated from raw data. In many ways the sd-ndisc API now matches the
sd-lldp API, except that no implicit database of seen data is kept. (Note
that sd-ndisc actually had a half-written, but unused implementaiton of such
a store, which is removed now.)
- sd-ndisc will now collect the reception timestamps of RA, which is useful to
make sd_ndisc_router fully descriptive of what it covers.
Fixes: #1079
It might very well return EAGAIN in case of packet checksum problems and
suchlike, hence let's better handle this nicely, the same way as we do it in
the other sd-network libraries for incoming datagrams.
Let's make sure the inline functions for retrieving TLV data actually carry TLV
in the name, so that we don#t assume they retrieve the whole, raw packet data.
Let's make sd-lldp a bit more like sd-ndisc ant the other APIs, and add proper
ref counting and a separate call for setting the ifindex.
This also adds a new lldp_reset() call we can use at various places to close
all fds. This is also similar to how sd-ndisc already does it.
It's a good idea to store away the recption time of LLDP packets in the
neighbor object, simply because the LLDP data only has a validity of a certain
amount of time.
Hence, let's record the timestamp when we receive the datagram and expose an
API for it. Also, automatically expire LLDP neighbors based on this new
timestamp.
Let's better check the size before we subtract. Also, let's change the size
argument to size_t, as it cannot be signed anyway.
Finally, use EBADMSG for indicating invalid packets, like we do everywhere
else.
There's no "client" object, in both cases. There's only "nd".
This wasn't noticed before, as the context object is currently not actually
used by the log macros.
Let's make the seed actually work as stable seed, and use siphash24 to generate
the series of addresses, instead of the opaque libc random_r().
This not only makes the seed truly work as stable, portable seed, but also
makes the code quite a bit shorter, and removes a couple of memory allocations.
We try to stick to usec_t for encoding time information, do that here too. In
particular, get rid of "int" second specifications, since signed timespans are
a weird thing.
This state is active immediately after the state engine was started, but before
the first timer hits.
This way multiple _start() invocations on the same object are always detected
correctly.
This is much less confusing, since there's also sd_ipv4acd_stop(), which was
idfferent from ipv4acd_stop().
After renaming it, let's also use the funciton when destroying ipv4acd objects,
as the code is pretty much the same for that.
They are counters after all, and can never go below zero, hence don't pretend
with the chose type that they could.
Also, prefix their name with "n_", to indicate that they are counters.
These objects are only useful when multiple threads are involved, as they
operate with atomic operations. Given that our libraries are explicitly not
thread-safe don't make use of RefCnt here, and make things a bit simpler.
assert_return() should only be used to validate user-facing parameters and
state, assert() should be used for checking our own internal state and
parameters.
After all, it's actually used for resetting the state, not only for the initial
initialization.
While we are at it, also simplify the error path for
sd_ndisc_discovery_start().
A field "index" is not particularly precise and also might conflict with libc's
index() function definition. Also, pretty much everywhere else we call this
concept "ifindex", including in networkd, the primary user of these libraries.
Hence, let's fix this up and call this "ifindex" everywhere here too.
From the issue #2004 we are receiving packet even if this
packet is not intended for this interface.
This can be reproduced.
lp3s0: Updating address: 2001:db8:1:0:7e7a:91ff:fe6d:ffe2/64 (valid for 1d)
wlp3s0: Updating address: fe80::7e7a:91ff:fe6d:ffe2/64 (valid forever)
NDisc CLIENT: Received RA from non-link-local address ::. Ignoring.
NDisc CLIENT: Received RA on wrong interface: 2 != 6. Ignoring.
NDisc CLIENT: Received RA on wrong interface: 2 != 3. Ignoring.
enp0s25: Updating address: 2001:db8:1:0:2ad2:44ff:fe6a:ae07/64 (valid for 1d)
enp0s25: Updating address: fe80::2ad2:44ff:fe6a:ae07/64 (valid forever)
NDisc CLIENT: Sent Router Solicitation
NDisc CLIENT: Sent Router Solicitation
NDisc CLIENT: Sent Router Solicitation
NDisc CLIENT: Received RA on wrong interface: 3 != 2. Ignoring.
NDisc CLIENT: Received RA on wrong interface: 3 != 6. Ignoring.
NDisc CLIENT: Received RA from non-link-local address ::. Ignoring.
NDisc CLIENT: Received RA on wrong interface: 2 != 6. Ignoring.
NDisc CLIENT: Received RA on wrong interface: 2 != 3. Ignoring.
enp0s25: Updating address: 2001:db8:1:0:2ad2:44ff:fe6a:ae07/64 (valid for 1d)
enp0s25: Updating address: fe80::2ad2:44ff:fe6a:ae07/64 (valid forever)
Add SO_BINDTODEVICE to socket
fixes#2004
This is a follow-up to cf447cb62d.
Let's generally follow the rule to not use read() on SOCK_DGRAM sockets, let's
always use recv() on that.
Also, don't abort IPV4ACD logic in case we read a short packet. Simply log and
ignore.
According to recv(2) these should be the same, but that is not true.
Passing a buffer of length 0 to read is defined to be a noop according
to read(2), but passing a buffer of length 0 to recv will discard the
pending pacet.
We can easily hit this as we allocate our buffer size depending on
the size of the incoming packet (using FIONREAD). As pointed out in
issue #3299 simply sending an empty UDP packet to the DHCP client
port will trigger a busy loop in networkd as we are polling on the
socket but never discarding the empty packet.
This reverts ad5ae47a0d but fixes the
same issue.
Add an option to disable appending DHCP option 3 (Router) to the DHCP
OFFER and ACK packets.
This commit adds the boolean option EmitRouter= for the [DHCPServer]
section in .network files.
Rationale: On embedded devices, it is very useful to have a DHCP server
running on an USB OTG ethernet gadget interface to avoid manual setup on
the client PCs, but it should only serve IP addresses, no route(r)s.
Otherwise, Windows clients experience network connectivity issues, due
to them using the address set in DHCP option 3 as default gateway.
Signed-off-by: Clemens Gruber <clemens.gruber@pqgruber.com>
Both versions of the code are changed to allow the caller to override
DUID using simple rules: duid type and value may be specified, in
which case the caller is responsible to providing the contents,
or just duid type may be specified as DUID_TYPE_EN, in which case we
we fill in the values. In the future more support for other types may
be added, e.g. DUID_TYPE_LLT.
There still remains and ugly discrepancy between dhcp4 and dhcp6 code:
dhcp6 has sd_dhcp6_client_set_duid and sd_dhcp6_client_set_iaid and
requires client->state to be DHCP6_STATE_STOPPED, while dhcp4 has
sd_dhcp_client_set_iaid_duid and will reconfigure the client if it
is not stopped. This commit doesn't touch that part.
This addresses #3127 § 2.
After all it is used in more than one place and is not that short.
Also tweak the test a bit:
- do not check that duid_len > 0, because we want to allow unknown
duid types, and there might be some which are fine with 0 length data,
(also assert should not be called from library code),
- always check that duid_len <= MAX_DUID_LEN, because we could overwrite
available buffer space otherwise.
1. Replace strtol with unhexchar, verified with valid and invalid DUID strings.
2. Fix logging to use log_syntax instead of log_error.
3. On error reading DUID, ignore read and preserve previous state.
4. Fix man-pages to use markup, remove options not yet implemented.
5. Remove spurious header line in new files.
Callers of dhcp_validate_duid_len() know that they must not pass
a zero duid_len. Thus asserting against that is appropriate.
On the other hand, they are not aware of the maximum allowed length
of a duid, as that is the reason why they call dhcp_validate_duid_len()
in the first place. So dhcp_validate_duid_len() should just signal a
regular error.
Thereby, change assert_return() to an assert() as this is an internal
function.
lldp.h contains definitions of LLDP types, subtypes and capabilities which
should be exposed in public headers. Get rid of the file and move those
definitions to sd-lldp.h with the SD_ prefix.
lldp_start_timer() was only called during sd_lldp_get_neighbors().
Ensure that the timer is (re-)started when a new neighbor appears.
Otherwise, the timer is not started when relying on the events alone.
Fixes: 34437b4f9c
Initialize auto variables with cleanup attribute, otherwise we
get a compiler warning with -fexceptions.
./configure CFLAGS='-Wmaybe-uninitialized -fexceptions -O2'
RFC 2131 Section 4.1 says that
"If the ’giaddr’ field in a DHCP message from a client is non-zero,
the server sends any return messages to the ’DHCP server’ port on the
BOOTP relay agent whose address appears in ’giaddr’."
Fix this by adding a destination port when sending unicast UDP packets
and provide the server port when a BOOTP relay agent is being used.
Throughout the tree there's spurious use of spaces separating ++ and --
operators from their respective operands. Make ++ and -- operator
consistent with the majority of existing uses; discard the spaces.
Instead of just notifying about the fact that something changed in the
database, actually inform the callback what precisely changed. This is useful,
so that the LLDP tx logic can be put into "fast" mode as soon as a previously
unknown peer appears, as suggested by the LLDP spec.
This reworks the sd-lldp substantially, simplifying things on one hand, and
extending the logic a bit on the other.
Specifically:
- Besides the sd_lldp object only one other object is maintained now,
sd_lldp_neighbor. It's used both as storage for literal LLDP packets, and for
maintainging info about peers in the database. Separation between packet, TLV
and chassis data is not maintained anymore. This should be a major
simplification.
- The sd-lldp API has been extended so that a couple of per-neighbor fields may
be queried directly, without iterating through the object. Other fields that
may appear multiple times, OTOH have to be iterated through.
- The maximum number of entries in the neighbor database is now configurable
during runtime.
- The generation of callbacks from sd_lldp objects is more restricted:
callbacks are only invoked when actual data changed.
- The TTL information is now hooked with a timer event, so that removals from
the neighbor database due to TTLs now result in a callback event.
- Querying LLDP neighbor database will now return a strictly ordered array, to
guarantee stability.
- A "capabilities" mask may now be configured, that selects what type of LLDP
neighbor data is collected. This may be used to restrict collection of LLDP
info about routers instead of all neighbors. This is now exposed via
networkd's LLDP= setting.
- sd-lldp's API to serialize the collected data to text files has been removed.
Instead, there's now an API to extract the raw binary data from LLDP neighbor
objects, as well as one to convert this raw binary data back to an LLDP
neighbor object. networkd will save this raw binary data to /run now, and the
client side can simply parse the information.
- support for parsing the more exotic TLVs has been removed, since we are not
using that. Instead there are now APIs to extract the raw data from TLVs.
Given how easy it is to parse the TLVs clients should do so now directly
instead of relying on our APIs for that.
- A lot of the APIs that parse out LLDP strings have been simplified so that
they actually return strings, instead of char arrays with a length. To deal
with possibly dangerous characters the strings are escaped if needed.
- APIs to extract and format the chassis and port IDs as strings has been
added.
- lldp.h has been simplified a lot. The enums are anonymous now, since they
were never used as enums, but simply as constants. Most definitions we don't
actually use ourselves have eben removed.
Usually, we place the #pragma once before the copyright blurb in header files,
but in a few cases we didn't. Move those around, so that we do the same thing
everywhere.
Let's just keep the few parts we actually need of it in the main sd_lldp
object, so that we can simplify things quite a bit.
While we are at it, remove ifname and mac fields which we make no use of
whatsoever.
There's really no point in maintaining a state, the state machine is trivial,
and we actually never look at the state anyway, we just keep updating it.
ISO/IEC 9899:1999 §7.21.1/2 says:
Where an argument declared as size_t n specifies the length of the array
for a function, n can have the value zero on a call to that
function. Unless explicitly stated otherwise in the description of a
particular function in this subclause, pointer arguments on such a call
shall still have valid values, as described in 7.1.4.
In base64_append_width memcpy was called as memcpy(x, NULL, 0). GCC 4.9
started making use of this and assumes This worked fine under -O0, but
does something strange under -O3.
This patch fixes a bug in base64_append_width(), fixes a possible bug in
journal_file_append_entry_internal(), and makes use of the new function
to simplify the code in other places.
The server might answer to a DHCPREQUEST with a NAK and currently the
client restarts the configuration process immediately. It was
observed that this can easily generate loops in which the network is
flooded with DISCOVER,OFFER,REQUEST,NAK sequences.
RFC 2131 only states that "if the client receives a DHCPNAK message,
the client restarts the configuration process" without further
details.
Add a delay with exponential backoff between retries after NAKs to
limit the number of requests and cap the delay to 30 minutes.
libsystemd-network provides the public function
sd_dhcp6_client_set_request_option() to enable the request of a given
DHCP option. However the enum defining such options is defined in the
internal header dhcp6-protocol.h. Move the enum definition to the
public header sd-dhcp6-client.h and properly namespace values.
libsystemd-network provides the public function
sd_dhcp_client_set_request_option() to enable the request of a given
DHCP option. However the enum defining such options is defined in the
internal header dhcp-protocol.h. Move the enum definition to the
public header sd-dhcp-client.h and properly namespace values.
At the moment sd_dhcp_lease_get_routes() returns an array of structs
which are not defined in public headers. Instead, change the function
to return an array of pointers to opaque sd_dhcp_route objects.
Merge separate two error handling statements into two nested ifs.
This looks cleaner, and avoids a gcc warning about *prefix being
uninitialized.
While at it, fix identation of logging statements elsewhere in the
file.
GLIB has recently started to officially support the gcc cleanup
attribute in its public API, hence let's do the same for our APIs.
With this patch we'll define an xyz_unrefp() call for each public
xyz_unref() call, to make it easy to use inside a
__attribute__((cleanup())) expression. Then, all code is ported over to
make use of this.
The new calls are also documented in the man pages, with examples how to
use them (well, I only added docs where the _unref() call itself already
had docs, and the examples, only cover sd_bus_unrefp() and
sd_event_unrefp()).
This also renames sd_lldp_free() to sd_lldp_unref(), since that's how we
tend to call our destructors these days.
Note that this defines no public macro that wraps gcc's attribute and
makes it easier to use. While I think it's our duty in the library to
make our stuff easy to use, I figure it's not our duty to make gcc's own
features easy to use on its own. Most likely, client code which wants to
make use of this should define its own:
#define _cleanup_(function) __attribute__((cleanup(function)))
Or similar, to make the gcc feature easier to use.
Making this logic public has the benefit that we can remove three header
files whose only purpose was to define these functions internally.
See #2008.
The new dns_label_escape() call now operates on a buffer passed in,
similar to dns_label_unescape(). This should make decoding a bit faster,
and nicer.
Let's change the return value to bool. If we encounter an error while
parsing, return "false" instead of the actual parsing error, after all
the specified hostname does not qualify for what the function is
supposed to test.
Dealing with the additional error codes was always cumbersome, and
easily misused, like for example in the DHCP code.
Let's also rename the functions from dns_name_root() to
dns_name_is_root(), to indicate that this function checks something and
returns a bool. Similar for dns_name_is_signal_label().
If a client sends a DECLINE or a server sends a NAK, they can include
a string with a message to explain the error. Parse this and print it
at debug level.
See https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4861#section-4.2. Some routers (dnsmasq) will send packets
from global addresses, which would break the default route setup, so ignore those.
This is also what the kernel does.