Franco Fichtner 4080345a59 interfaces: include VIPS for primary IPv4 detection #5742
This was surfaced in 22.1.1 when CARP was treated as an alias as well
leaving setups with "none" IPv4 configuration stranded when calling
get_interface_ip() if the service does not support any explicit listening
on a CARP address (which the function actually does support).  Caveats
apply as to which VIP will win as with the code before.  Best used with
just one CARP address.  IP alias doesn't as much sense since that would
be a static IPv4 configuration.

The latter is the reason why we cannot make a similar change to IPv6
where the primary concept is not equal to "first address in ifconfig"
for (sad) reasons.
2022-04-27 14:13:49 +02:00
2019-11-07 17:08:41 +01:00
2022-04-06 09:23:00 +02:00
2022-04-20 10:13:46 +02:00

OPNsense GUI and system management

The OPNsense project invites developers to start contributing to the code base. For your own purposes or even better to join us in creating the best open source firewall available.

The build process has been designed to make it easy for anyone to build and write code. The main outline of the new codebase is available at:

https://docs.opnsense.org/development/architecture.html

Our aim is to gradually evolve to a new codebase instead of using a big bang approach into something new.

Build tools

To create working software like OPNsense you need the sources and the tools to build it. The build tools for OPNsense are freely available.

Notes on how to build OPNsense can be found in the tools repository:

https://github.com/opnsense/tools

Contribute

You can contribute to the project in many ways, e.g. testing functionality, sending in bug reports or creating pull requests directly via GitHub. Any help is always very welcome!

License

OPNsense is and will always be available under the 2-Clause BSD license:

https://opensource.org/licenses/BSD-2-Clause

Every contribution made to the project must be licensed under the same conditions in order to keep OPNsense truly free and accessible for everybody.

Makefile targets

The repository offers a couple of targets that either tie into tools.git build processes or are aimed at fast development.

make package

A package of the current state of the repository can be created using this target. It may require several packages to be installed. The target will try to assist in case of failure, e.g. when a missing file needs to be fetched from an external location.

Several OPTIONS exist to customise the package, e.g.:

  • CORE_DEPENDS: a list of required dependencies for the package
  • CORE_DEPENDS_ARCH: a list of special -required packages
  • CORE_ORIGIN: sets a FreeBSD compatible package/ports origin
  • CORE_FLAVOUR: can be set to "OpenSSL" or "LibreSSL"
  • CORE_COMMENT: a short description of the package
  • CORE_MAINTAINER: email of the package maintainer
  • CORE_WWW: web url of the package
  • CORE_NAME: sets a package name

Options are passed in the following form:

# make package CORE_NAME=my_new_name

In general, options are either set to sane defaults or automatically detected at runtime.

make update

Update will pull the latest commits from the current branch from the upstream repository.

make upgrade

Upgrade will run the package build and replace the currently installed package in the system.

make collect

Fetch changes from the running system for all known files.

make lint

Run serveral syntax checks on the repository. This is recommended before issuing a pull request on GitHub.

make style

Run the PSR2 and PEP8 style checks on MVC PHP code and Python, respectively.

make sweep

Run Linux Kernel cleanfile whitespace sanitiser on all files.

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