It only remained on FwupdResult because I couldn't make up my mind about whether
it was a property of the device, or the firmware release. It's more logically
the latter, as you could have a .cab file with multiple versions of the
firmware and only the first being signed.
This was only ever added for gnome-software, and is too inflexible for anything
else. It turns out we don't even need it in GNOME, as we can construct a
suitable ID ourselves using the existing values.
It was also ambiguous whether the unique ID was in reference to the device
or release -- and for gnome-software we need both.
It only remained on FwupdResult because I couldn't make up my mind about whether
it was a property of the device, or the firmware release. It's more logically
the former, and that's how plugins are using it.
This allows us to show the devices in a GUI with a nice icon. Some of the icon
mappings are not perfect and I'll be asking the GNOME designers for some
additions to the icon specification.
Custom vendor icons can also be specified, and /usr/share/fwupd/icons would be
a good place to put them. If vendor icons are used they should show a physical
device with the branding, rather than just the vendor logo.
This does two things:
* Allows new users of the library to see only the supported symbols
* Allows us to ensure we're not using deprecated API internally
I can also use this in gnome-software in CI to make sure we're not using
deprecated API too. I don't think we're ready for a soname bump so we have to
hang on to the deprecated code for now.
Over the months the original meaning of ALLOW_OFFLINE and ALLOW_ONLINE have be
lost, and there is now a confusing mixture of uses in the source tree. With this
commit we make it clear the UPDATABLE flag is used to specify when the device is
updatable (e.g. from the desktop live session, or from the systemd offline
updates mode, or both) and the NEEDS_REBOOT flag lets us know when the update
is actually going to be done.
For instance, a UEFI UpdateCapsule can be *scheduled* from either the desktop
or from the update mode (but the latter would be a bit weird), but does require
a reboot. Some devices might only be updatable outside the live session, for
instance a hard drive update or a GPU update -- there's just too much going on
with a live session and we want to tightly control what's running during the
firmware flash.
This also means we don't have to "retry" the update when scheduling an update
that really can be scheduled whenever, but just requires a reboot to apply.
This could be used, for instance, to set a property on ThunderBolt controllers
inside Dell computers saying that they support forcing the power level during
coldplug. It could also be used to set the dock type for the synapticsmst hub.
Adding this level of complexity allows us to avoid the creep of HAVE_DELL and
HAVE_LENOVO into seemingly unrelated plugins, and also allows us to have
multiple vendor plugins providing the same end result with two different
vendor-specific mechanisms.
We can use this as an alternative for GPG. No PKCS7 certificates are currently
installed by fwupd and it's expected that the LVFS will still only provide GPG
detached signatures.
If an OEM distributor wants to sign firmware with a PKCS7 and the corresponding
certificate is provided then the firmware will be marked as valid.
Only firmware shipping with a .p7b file will use the PKCS7 functionality,
similarly remote metadata validation will default to GPG unless Keyring=pkcs7
is specified in the config file.
In this mode, both the metadata and firmware is stored on the local filesystem
and distributed using a distribution system like OSTree.
Fixes https://github.com/hughsie/fwupd/issues/162
Calling g-ir-scanner when cross-compiling with bitbake/OpenEmbedded
fails because it calls the wrong ld (the one from the host). More work
will be needed in meson.bbclass and/or gobject-introspection.bbclass
to make it work.
In the meantime, having an option to turn of introspection is useful
perhaps also in other cases where the extra work is not needed. For
example, fwupd works fine also when it is off.
The name of the new meson option matches the --disable-introspection
that is used by some autotools-based projects.
Signed-off-by: Patrick Ohly <patrick.ohly@intel.com>