Otherwise, invoking other panel (eg. through shell search, or CLI) and
closing the dialog will result in a crash, as the NetDeviceEthernet
object does no longer exist.
This means NetObject is now obsolete and can be removed.
There was a GtkSizeGroup that the mobile settings used, but it isn't clear if
this is still relevant. It should be added back later if found to be (this code
is likely to be removed to make way for a dedicated mobile panel).
This factorizes the row creation a bit and normalizes the margins and
spacing, reducing the required width. This also makes labels like row
titles and descriptions ellipsizable so the rows can reach narrower
widths.
This one did not require any specific changes beyond moving
the struct definition to the .c file, and removing the old
style GObject boilerplate. Remarkably easy.
When a device is removed the callback handler could still be called
because it was connected using g_signal_connect rather than
g_signal_connect_object. This fixes crashes in the UI after a device has
been removed again.
The current "Wired" section UI is still optimized for
the old, multi-page panel layout. Recent work [1],
however, suggest that this should change and the standard
widgets be rearranged.
This commit, then, implements this new UI for the wired
devices UI by using a listbox row when there's only one
profile (ditching out the old info labels), and moving
and deleting the bottom action buttons.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=785581
The Network panel uses a GtkNotebook internally to manage
the different setup pages of the network devices. While it
does the job, we now have a modern widget for that: GtkStack.
With GtkStack, managing the pages becomes a lot easier and
we gain almost for free the nice transition between pages,
besides of course being a widget that consumes slightly less
resources.
Besides all these gains, using a GtkStack will allow us to
implement the new Wi-Fi panel in a more cohesive manner,
sharing large portions of code and avoiding copy pasta.
This commit then turns the GtkNotebook into a GtkStack, and
renames and adapts the code to reflect that. Fortunately,
the code got actually simpler with the move.
https://bugzilla.gnome.org/show_bug.cgi?id=784818
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