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It's useful when trying to see what the tests are doing.
I hardcoded '-efile' as the option to strace, but in the future
it might be useful to make this configurable.
RHEL explicitly disables IFLA_BRPORT_PROXYARP by renaming the enum value.
In order to support unpatched builds, we have two options:
a) redefine the enum value through missing.h and ignore the fact that it
is really unsupported, or
b) omit that enum value on rtnl_prot_info_bridge_port_types[]
As we are not actually using this netlink type anywhere, and because it
is only hooked up for the sake of completeness, this patch opts for the
former.
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.
Let's add some minimalistic LLDP sender support. The idea is that this is
either on or off, and all fields determined automatically rather than
configured explicitly.
Being on the link-layer LLDP is nothing we should turn on only when there's a
link beat. Instead, turn it on, whenever the iface is UP regardless if there's
a link beat or not. This closes the race between a link beat being available
and us subscribing to LLDP as a result.
After all, if we know that an interface exists but networkd did not store any
info about it, then it's definitely unmanaged by it.
(Note that we add this fix-up to networkctl, and not to sd-network, simply
because a missing file might also be result of the interface not existing.)
This way "networkctl status" becomes a bit more useful by default, as router
information is just visible, without any further configuration.
LLDP reception is fully passive and relatively low simple and low traffic,
hence this should be safe to enable by default.
This adds a small and useful field to the "systemctl status" output: the
router(s) the interface is connected to as reported via LLDP. Example output:
● 2: enp0s25
Link File: /usr/lib/systemd/network/99-default.link
Type: ether
State: degraded (configured)
Path: pci-0000:00:19.0
Driver: e1000e
Connected To: GS1900 on port 2 (foobar)
i.e. the last line is the relevant one.
Let's always use the same calls to acquire interface data. Specifically port
"networkctl status" to use acquire_link_info_strv() and acquire_link_info_all()
like the other calls.