Since gcc-7 `Wimplicit-fallthrough` is activated by using `-Wextra`.
This leads to the following problem when compiling `gnrc_networking`:
```
RIOT/sys/net/gnrc/network_layer/ndp/internal/gnrc_ndp_internal.c: In function ‘gnrc_ndp_internal_set_state’:
RIOT/sys/net/gnrc/network_layer/ndp/internal/gnrc_ndp_internal.c:106:15: error: this statement may fall through [-Werror=implicit-fallthrough=]
t = ipv6_iface->reach_time;
~~^~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
RIOT/sys/net/gnrc/network_layer/ndp/internal/gnrc_ndp_internal.c:109:9: note: here
case GNRC_IPV6_NC_STATE_DELAY:
^~~~
```
The fall-through in this code is intentional. There are several ways to
warn the comiler about such intentional fall-throughs, which include
e.g. attributed empty statements (`__attribute__ ((fallthrough));`).
I don't like tis approach however. The best way would probably be to
remove this fall-through from the code. However, to keep the diff
minimal, and since ndp will change in the future, I went for warning
the compiler using comments.
The compiler checks comments for several *fall through* regexs to
decide whether a fallthrough was intentional or not.
You can read more about this gcc option in [1]. A note about
fallthrough comment regexs is at the bottom of this article.
[1] https://developers.redhat.com/blog/2017/03/10/wimplicit-fallthrough-in-gcc-7/
Summary:
Even ehen COMP is cleared, the algorithm always elides part of the address when a matching
context is found.
This behviour occurs because in the line
if ((src_ctx != NULL) || ipv6_addr_is_link_local(&(ipv6_hdr->src)))
the COMP bit is not tested.
This patch fixes the problem by setting [src|dst]_ctx to NULL if the
context must not be used.
Upper layers might want to utilize the flags (e.g. to tell 6LoWPAN to elide
UDP checksums). This change allows for this by copying non-addressing related
flags to the address resolution generated netif header from the user generated
netif header.
This is a temporary quick-fix for #5122 to not have GUAs removed on an
interface.
It solves the issue by both not letting the registration run out on the router
and by not letting the lifetime of an auto-configured address expire.