When the dialog is closed using ESC key, the "close-request" signal is
emitted in addition to the "response" signal. When the "close-request"
is handled, it frees the memory to which info points. In the "response"
signal handler, the memory of info pointer is accessed again, leading
to a segmentation fault.
Fix this by removing the "close-request" function callback, which shares
the same behaviour as the "response" callback function.
Fixes: https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-control-center/-/issues/2320
Previously, when a list of VPN plugins was loaded once, it will not load
again the next time you try to add a VPN connnection. This causes an
issue that if you keep gnome-control-center open and install a new VPN
plugin, the new VPN plugin won't show up in the VPN plugin list.
Fix that by always load all avilable VPN plugins when showing the
"Add VPN" dialog.
Boy this was hard.
To ease the pain of porting wireless-security to GTK4, add
a new WsFileChooserButton class that mimics the behavior of
a button that triggers a filechooser, as per the migration
guide suggests.
There were lots of GtkGrids, so the diff is particularly
horrendous. Sorry.
This needs serious testing before landing.
We also remove support for WiMAX (now unsupported by NetworkManager),
and InfiniBand (Enterprise feature), and the use of
the deprecated NM_SETTING_WIRELESS_SEC property.
With help from network-manager-applet patches by Jiří Klimeš and
Dan Winship.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=765910
Since LIBDIR of gnome-control-center and the VPN plugins aren't
necessarily the same, use the paths as specified by the VPN plugins and
only reconstruct the path if it is not absolute or we fail to load the
plugin.
Patch from Debian package, by Michael Biebl <biebl@debian.org>
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=764509
Unfortunately, the VPN plugins provide their own .ui files for their
editor pages, so we can't make them look competely GNOME-3-ish. But
the code does try to fix them up a little bit by realigning the
labels.
vpn-helpers.[ch] is nearly identical to network-manager-applet's,
but eventually this code will move into libnm-gtk.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=691285