No more ugly symlink creation at VM startup, nautilus-actions have system-wide
dir (in opposite to nautilus-scripts).
Currently old symlinks are not cleaned up. Maybe it should, but leaving them
have one advantage: will not break existing users behavior.
This will ensure that /rw/config/rc.local is called after applying default
iptables rules, so it can safely modify it without the risk to be overridden
later by default ones.
When /rw/home/user/.qubes-dispvm-customized is present use /rw/home/user
instead of default /etc/dispvm-dotfiles.tbz. Also make sure that /rw will not
remain mounted during DispVM creation.
The simplest way is just add proxy=... entry to /etc/yum.conf, but sometimes it
is reasonable to bypass the proxy. Some examples:
- usage of non-standard repos with some exotic file layout, which will be
blocked by the proxy
- usage of repos not-accessible via proxy (eg only via VPN stared in VpnVM)
This commit introduces 'yum-proxy-setup' pseudo-service, which can be
controlled via standard qvm-service or qubes-manager. When enabled - yum will
be configured at VM startup to use qubes proxy, otherwise - to connect directly
(proxy setting will be cleared).
On FC>=15 /var/run is on tmpfs, so /var/run/tinyproxy from rpm don't survive
reboot. This is bug in Fedora package (should include config file for tmpfiles
service). For now create dir just before starting service.
Introduce proxy service, which allow only http(s) traffic to yum repos. The
filter rules are based on URL regexp, so it isn't full-featured content
inspection and can be easy bypassed, but should be enough to prevent some
erroneus user actions (like clicking on invalid link).
It is set up to intercept connections to 10.137.255.254:8082, so VM can connect
to this IP regardless of VM in which proxy is running. By default it is
started in every NetVM, but this can be changed using qvm-service or
qubes-manager (as always).
In FC15, NetworkManager by default uses global connections ("Available to all users"). Save them in /rw instead of /etc, to preserve them across reboots.