[yocto] replace udhcpc

Neuer User auslands-kv at gmx.de
Fri May 9 09:57:08 PDT 2014


Seems, I am not the only one wondering why connman phones home:

https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=181038

The address is 87.106.208.187, which is the IP of
"senator.holtmann.net". The author of the connman package seems to be
Marcel Holtmann <marcel AT holtmann.org>.

Honestly, without a reasonable explanation why this package adds this
route, I wouldn't use this package on my systems.

Am 09.05.2014 18:51, schrieb Neuer User:
> Hi Andrea
> 
> I'd like the idea of a somewhat smarter network daemon, but connman
> slowly becomes a bit suspicious to me.
> 
> First, it is very bad documented and difficult to understand what it
> does. Second, it needs iptables to work. Why? Third, it adds strange
> static routes to my routing table and deletes them later
> (87.106.208.187). What is it doing there? Sending pings to this server?
> 
> Hmm, anybody knows a reasonable alternative? Maybe I just start a
> dhclient on my LAN interface and see if it stays in the background, when
> disconnected.
> 
> Michael
> 
> Am 09.05.2014 17:27, schrieb Andrea Galbusera:
>> Michael,
>>
>> On Fri, May 9, 2014 at 3:21 PM, Auslands-KV <auslands-kv at gmx.de> wrote:
>>> Thanks a lot. I will look through these links and hope I will understand
>>> better then :-)
>>>
>>> I hope it works nicely with a read-only rootfs. It seems to write to its
>>> own config data (which is a strange behaviour).
>>
>> One of the reasons I started looking at connman was the hope to find a
>> solution to the hell that comes with runtime configuration of network
>> connections in embedded systems. What I had to address many and many
>> time in the past was designing the glue logic sitting between the
>> application specific way of saying "I want eth1 to have this address"
>> instead of "add this DNS server" and the backend required to "deploy"
>> such a new configuration. This usually involved poking with some
>> configuration file and restarting/signaling a service to pickup the
>> new configuration.
>>
>> If I understand it correctly, one of the main goals of connman's
>> design is to provide a backend functionality for handling
>> configurations and deploying them all in a standard and well defined
>> way. This is accomplished by implementing appropriate interfaces
>> exposed over d-bus. It turns out to allows client application, either
>> the provided connmanctl client or your application specific
>> configuration frontend, to interact with the low-level configuration
>> engine, connman daemon, which support plugins for different connection
>> technologies specific needs.
>>
>> So, yes, in my understanding, connman manages its own configuration
>> files. You're supposed to interact with it at an higher level, through
>> methods calls over d-bus: this allows, amongst other things, multiple
>> applications to interact with connman in a safe and controlled way. I
>> guess the design got highly inspired by network configuration tools
>> included in modern Linux distros and the way they work, GNOME's
>> networkmanager being probably one of them. Connman brings all this to
>> the embedded by making it a little bit more lightweight and modular.
>> Anyway, quite far from classic "write myriads of format-heterogeneous
>> config files and fire up some hacked script for reconfiguration".
>>
>> Read-only filesystem shouldn't be a problem itself. I guess you can
>> configure connman to have its own configuration files placed on a
>> tmpfs or similar. Of course, if you need to change configurations at
>> runtime and persistency is required, you probably still need some
>> writable filesystem. But this would be so, even without connman!
>>
>>> Do you by chance know, why it depends on the xuser-account package? I
>>> don't want any additional user accounts on my system. If it is not
>>> essential I would remove it.
>>
>> I'd guess depending on xuser-account grants providing the correct
>> d-bus permissions for interacting with connman to processes which run
>> under a GUI session (non-root). IMHO this RDEPEND should be somewhat
>> conditional to X being enabled on your distro/image. I couldn't find
>> any explicit reference to xuser in connman source code... Maybe
>> someone more expert than me on the list can give a better explanation.
>>
>>>
>>> Thanks
>>>
>>> Michael
>>>
>>> Am 09.05.2014 15:06, schrieb Andrea Galbusera:
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>> On Fri, May 9, 2014 at 12:28 PM, Neuer User <auslands-kv at gmx.de> wrote:
>>>>> Connman is really a problem without documentation. :-(
>>>>>
>>>>> I tried it out and first I noticed that it depends on the creation of an
>>>>> xuser account. It also needs iptables, so probably can configure these, too.
>>>>>
>>>>> I also found that it does not correctly configure the dns entries:
>>>>>
>>>>> cat /etc/resolv.conf:
>>>>> # Generated by Connection Manager
>>>>> nameserver 127.0.0.1
>>>>> nameserver ::1
>>>> This is in fact a working configuration for the DNS proxy feature that
>>>> connman offers built-in. See [1].
>>>> I personally went through your same frustration when trying to
>>>> understand how connman is supposed to work in order to evaluate its
>>>> maturity. Not yet an expert at all, but [2] and [3] gave me a
>>>> reasonable bootstrap into connman's main logic. Beside this, "git
>>>> grepping" the source tree is your best friend.
>>>> Angstrom distribution, i.e. available on the beaglebone boards is also
>>>> a good example of a real connman based system.
>>>>
>>>>> I really would like to understand what it does with these and how I can
>>>>> change or modify it's behaviour.
>>>>>
>>>>> It's definitely not just "when ethernet cable inserted, bring up the
>>>>> interface using DHCP".
>>>>>
>>>>> I even can't find a config file for connman. Is there one?
>>>> Yes, there usually is one for each service handled by connman. See [4]
>>>> for details on configuration file format and their default location.
>>>> As you can see from previously suggested references, you'll usually
>>>> modify configurations by using the connmanctl client tool instead of
>>>> editing those files by hand.
>>>>
>>>> [1] http://git.kernel.org/cgit/network/connman/connman.git/tree/README
>>>> [2] http://derekmolloy.ie/set-ip-address-to-be-static-on-the-beaglebone-black/
>>>> [3] http://www.ptrackapp.com/apclassys-notes/embedded-linux-using-connma/
>>>> [4] http://git.kernel.org/cgit/network/connman/connman.git/tree/doc/config-format.txt
>>>>
>>>>> Thanks
>>>>>
>>>>> Michael
>>>>>
>>>>> Am 08.05.2014 12:27, schrieb Burton, Ross:
>>>>>> On 8 May 2014 04:58, Neuer User <auslands-kv at gmx.de> wrote:
>>>>>>> I had a brief look at connman half a year ago, but that time I was
>>>>>>> unable to find a good documentation about it. Do you have by chance a
>>>>>>> link to some tutorial or at least man entry for the configuration?
>>>>>> What do you need to configure?  For "when ethernet cable inserted,
>>>>>> bring up the interface using DHCP" this is default behaviour and won't
>>>>>> need any configuring.  connman is sadly under-documented but the IRC
>>>>>> channel is fairly responsive.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Ross
>>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> --
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> yocto mailing list
>>>>> yocto at yoctoproject.org
>>>>> https://lists.yoctoproject.org/listinfo/yocto
>>>
>>>
> 
> 





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