Struct gio::DBusConnection [−][src]
pub struct DBusConnection(_);
Expand description
The DBusConnection
type is used for D-Bus connections to remote
peers such as a message buses. It is a low-level API that offers a
lot of flexibility. For instance, it lets you establish a connection
over any transport that can by represented as a IOStream
.
This class is rarely used directly in D-Bus clients. If you are writing
a D-Bus client, it is often easier to use the g_bus_own_name()
,
g_bus_watch_name()
or DBusProxy::for_bus()
APIs.
As an exception to the usual GLib rule that a particular object must not
be used by two threads at the same time, DBusConnection
’s methods may be
called from any thread. This is so that bus_get()
and bus_get_sync()
can safely return the same DBusConnection
when called from any thread.
Most of the ways to obtain a DBusConnection
automatically initialize it
(i.e. connect to D-Bus): for instance, new()
and
bus_get()
, and the synchronous versions of those methods, give you an
initialized connection. Language bindings for GIO should use
g_initable_new()
or g_async_initable_new_async()
, which also initialize the
connection.
If you construct an uninitialized DBusConnection
, such as via
glib::Object::new()
, you must initialize it via g_initable_init()
or
g_async_initable_init_async()
before using its methods or properties.
Calling methods or accessing properties on a DBusConnection
that has not
completed initialization successfully is considered to be invalid, and leads
to undefined behaviour. In particular, if initialization fails with a
glib::Error
, the only valid thing you can do with that DBusConnection
is to
free it with g_object_unref()
.
An example D-Bus server # {gdbus
-server}
Here is an example for a D-Bus server: gdbus-example-server.c
An example for exporting a subtree # {gdbus
-subtree-server}
Here is an example for exporting a subtree: gdbus-example-subtree.c
An example for file descriptor passing # {gdbus
-unix-fd-client}
Here is an example for passing UNIX file descriptors: gdbus-unix-fd-client.c
An example for exporting a GObject # {gdbus
-export}
Here is an example for exporting a glib::Object
:
gdbus-example-export.c
Implements
Implementations
pub fn register_object<MethodCall, SetProperty, GetProperty>(
&self,
object_path: &str,
interface_info: &DBusInterfaceInfo,
method_call: MethodCall,
get_property: GetProperty,
set_property: SetProperty
) -> Result<RegistrationId, Error> where
MethodCall: Fn(DBusConnection, &str, &str, &str, &str, Variant, DBusMethodInvocation) + Send + Sync + 'static,
GetProperty: Fn(DBusConnection, &str, &str, &str, &str) -> Variant + Send + Sync + 'static,
SetProperty: Fn(DBusConnection, &str, &str, &str, &str, Variant) -> bool + Send + Sync + 'static,
pub fn register_object<MethodCall, SetProperty, GetProperty>(
&self,
object_path: &str,
interface_info: &DBusInterfaceInfo,
method_call: MethodCall,
get_property: GetProperty,
set_property: SetProperty
) -> Result<RegistrationId, Error> where
MethodCall: Fn(DBusConnection, &str, &str, &str, &str, Variant, DBusMethodInvocation) + Send + Sync + 'static,
GetProperty: Fn(DBusConnection, &str, &str, &str, &str) -> Variant + Send + Sync + 'static,
SetProperty: Fn(DBusConnection, &str, &str, &str, &str, Variant) -> bool + Send + Sync + 'static,
Registers callbacks for exported objects at object_path
with the
D-Bus interface that is described in interface_info
.
Calls to functions in vtable
(and user_data_free_func
) will happen
in the
[thread-default main context][g-main-context-push-thread-default]
of the thread you are calling this method from.
Note that all glib::Variant
values passed to functions in vtable
will match
the signature given in interface_info
- if a remote caller passes
incorrect values, the org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.InvalidArgs
is returned to the remote caller.
Additionally, if the remote caller attempts to invoke methods or
access properties not mentioned in interface_info
the
org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.UnknownMethod
resp.
org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.InvalidArgs
errors
are returned to the caller.
It is considered a programming error if the
GDBusInterfaceGetPropertyFunc
function in vtable
returns a
glib::Variant
of incorrect type.
If an existing callback is already registered at object_path
and
interface_name
, then error
is set to IOErrorEnum::Exists
.
GDBus automatically implements the standard D-Bus interfaces org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties, org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable and org.freedesktop.Peer, so you don’t have to implement those for the objects you export. You can implement org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties yourself, e.g. to handle getting and setting of properties asynchronously.
Note that the reference count on interface_info
will be
incremented by 1 (unless allocated statically, e.g. if the
reference count is -1, see g_dbus_interface_info_ref()
) for as long
as the object is exported. Also note that vtable
will be copied.
See this [server][gdbus-server] for an example of how to use this method.
object_path
the object path to register at
interface_info
introspection data for the interface
vtable
a GDBusInterfaceVTable
to call into or None
Returns
0 if error
is set, otherwise a registration id (never 0)
that can be used with unregister_object()
Unregisters an object.
registration_id
a registration id obtained from
g_dbus_connection_register_object()
Returns
pub fn export_action_group<P: IsA<ActionGroup>>(
&self,
object_path: &str,
action_group: &P
) -> Result<ActionGroupExportId, Error>
pub fn export_action_group<P: IsA<ActionGroup>>(
&self,
object_path: &str,
action_group: &P
) -> Result<ActionGroupExportId, Error>
Exports action_group
on self
at object_path
.
The implemented D-Bus API should be considered private. It is subject to change in the future.
A given object path can only have one action group exported on it.
If this constraint is violated, the export will fail and 0 will be
returned (with error
set accordingly).
You can unexport the action group using
unexport_action_group()
with the return value of
this function.
The thread default main context is taken at the time of this call. All incoming action activations and state change requests are reported from this context. Any changes on the action group that cause it to emit signals must also come from this same context. Since incoming action activations and state change requests are rather likely to cause changes on the action group, this effectively limits a given action group to being exported from only one main context.
object_path
a D-Bus object path
action_group
Returns
the ID of the export (never zero), or 0 in case of failure
Reverses the effect of a previous call to
export_action_group()
.
It is an error to call this function with an ID that wasn’t returned
from export_action_group()
or to call it with the
same ID more than once.
export_id
the ID from export_action_group()
Exports menu
on self
at object_path
.
The implemented D-Bus API should be considered private. It is subject to change in the future.
An object path can only have one menu model exported on it. If this
constraint is violated, the export will fail and 0 will be
returned (with error
set accordingly).
You can unexport the menu model using
unexport_menu_model()
with the return value of
this function.
object_path
a D-Bus object path
menu
Returns
the ID of the export (never zero), or 0 in case of failure
Reverses the effect of a previous call to
export_menu_model()
.
It is an error to call this function with an ID that wasn’t returned
from export_menu_model()
or to call it with the
same ID more than once.
export_id
the ID from export_menu_model()
pub fn add_filter<P: Fn(&DBusConnection, &DBusMessage, bool) -> Option<DBusMessage> + 'static>(
&self,
filter_function: P
) -> FilterId
pub fn add_filter<P: Fn(&DBusConnection, &DBusMessage, bool) -> Option<DBusMessage> + 'static>(
&self,
filter_function: P
) -> FilterId
Adds a message filter. Filters are handlers that are run on all incoming and outgoing messages, prior to standard dispatch. Filters are run in the order that they were added. The same handler can be added as a filter more than once, in which case it will be run more than once. Filters added during a filter callback won’t be run on the message being processed. Filter functions are allowed to modify and even drop messages.
Note that filters are run in a dedicated message handling thread so
they can’t block and, generally, can’t do anything but signal a
worker thread. Also note that filters are rarely needed - use API
such as send_message_with_reply()
,
signal_subscribe()
or call()
instead.
If a filter consumes an incoming message the message is not
dispatched anywhere else - not even the standard dispatch machinery
(that API such as signal_subscribe()
and
send_message_with_reply()
relies on) will see the
message. Similarly, if a filter consumes an outgoing message, the
message will not be sent to the other peer.
If user_data_free_func
is non-None
, it will be called (in the
thread-default main context of the thread you are calling this
method from) at some point after user_data
is no longer
needed. (It is not guaranteed to be called synchronously when the
filter is removed, and may be called after self
has been
destroyed.)
filter_function
a filter function
Returns
a filter identifier that can be used with
remove_filter()
Removes a filter.
Note that since filters run in a different thread, there is a race
condition where it is possible that the filter will be running even
after calling remove_filter()
, so you cannot just
free data that the filter might be using. Instead, you should pass
a GDestroyNotify
to add_filter()
, which will be
called when it is guaranteed that the data is no longer needed.
filter_id
an identifier obtained from add_filter()
Subscribes to signals on self
and invokes callback
with a whenever
the signal is received. Note that callback
will be invoked in the
[thread-default main context][g-main-context-push-thread-default]
of the thread you are calling this method from.
If self
is not a message bus connection, sender
must be
None
.
If sender
is a well-known name note that callback
is invoked with
the unique name for the owner of sender
, not the well-known name
as one would expect. This is because the message bus rewrites the
name. As such, to avoid certain race conditions, users should be
tracking the name owner of the well-known name and use that when
processing the received signal.
If one of DBusSignalFlags::MATCH_ARG0_NAMESPACE
or
DBusSignalFlags::MATCH_ARG0_PATH
are given, arg0
is
interpreted as part of a namespace or path. The first argument
of a signal is matched against that part as specified by D-Bus.
If user_data_free_func
is non-None
, it will be called (in the
thread-default main context of the thread you are calling this
method from) at some point after user_data
is no longer
needed. (It is not guaranteed to be called synchronously when the
signal is unsubscribed from, and may be called after self
has been destroyed.)
As callback
is potentially invoked in a different thread from where it’s
emitted, it’s possible for this to happen after
signal_unsubscribe()
has been called in another thread.
Due to this, user_data
should have a strong reference which is freed with
user_data_free_func
, rather than pointing to data whose lifecycle is tied
to the signal subscription. For example, if a glib::Object
is used to store the
subscription ID from signal_subscribe()
, a strong reference
to that glib::Object
must be passed to user_data
, and g_object_unref()
passed to
user_data_free_func
. You are responsible for breaking the resulting
reference count cycle by explicitly unsubscribing from the signal when
dropping the last external reference to the glib::Object
. Alternatively, a weak
reference may be used.
It is guaranteed that if you unsubscribe from a signal using
signal_unsubscribe()
from the same thread which made the
corresponding signal_subscribe()
call, callback
will not
be invoked after signal_unsubscribe()
returns.
The returned subscription identifier is an opaque value which is guaranteed to never be zero.
This function can never fail.
sender
sender name to match on (unique or well-known name)
or None
to listen from all senders
interface_name
D-Bus interface name to match on or None
to
match on all interfaces
member
D-Bus signal name to match on or None
to match on
all signals
object_path
object path to match on or None
to match on
all object paths
arg0
contents of first string argument to match on or None
to match on all kinds of arguments
flags
DBusSignalFlags
describing how arg0 is used in subscribing to the
signal
callback
callback to invoke when there is a signal matching the requested data
Returns
a subscription identifier that can be used with signal_unsubscribe()
Unsubscribes from signals.
Note that there may still be D-Bus traffic to process (relating to this
signal subscription) in the current thread-default glib::MainContext
after this
function has returned. You should continue to iterate the glib::MainContext
until the GDestroyNotify
function passed to
signal_subscribe()
is called, in order to avoid memory
leaks through callbacks queued on the glib::MainContext
after it’s stopped being
iterated.
subscription_id
a subscription id obtained from
signal_subscribe()
pub fn for_address_sync<P: IsA<Cancellable>>(
address: &str,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>,
cancellable: Option<&P>
) -> Result<DBusConnection, Error>
pub fn for_address_sync<P: IsA<Cancellable>>(
address: &str,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>,
cancellable: Option<&P>
) -> Result<DBusConnection, Error>
Synchronously connects and sets up a D-Bus client connection for
exchanging D-Bus messages with an endpoint specified by address
which must be in the
D-Bus address format.
This constructor can only be used to initiate client-side
connections - use new_sync()
if you need to act
as the server. In particular, flags
cannot contain the
DBusConnectionFlags::AUTHENTICATION_SERVER
,
DBusConnectionFlags::AUTHENTICATION_ALLOW_ANONYMOUS
or
G_DBUS_CONNECTION_FLAGS_AUTHENTICATION_REQUIRE_SAME_USER
flags.
This is a synchronous failable constructor. See
for_address()
for the asynchronous version.
If observer
is not None
it may be used to control the
authentication process.
address
a D-Bus address
flags
flags describing how to make the connection
observer
a DBusAuthObserver
or None
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
Returns
a DBusConnection
or None
if error
is set.
Free with g_object_unref()
.
pub fn new_sync<P: IsA<IOStream>, Q: IsA<Cancellable>>(
stream: &P,
guid: Option<&str>,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>,
cancellable: Option<&Q>
) -> Result<DBusConnection, Error>
pub fn new_sync<P: IsA<IOStream>, Q: IsA<Cancellable>>(
stream: &P,
guid: Option<&str>,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>,
cancellable: Option<&Q>
) -> Result<DBusConnection, Error>
Synchronously sets up a D-Bus connection for exchanging D-Bus messages
with the end represented by stream
.
If stream
is a SocketConnection
, then the corresponding Socket
will be put into non-blocking mode.
The D-Bus connection will interact with stream
from a worker thread.
As a result, the caller should not interact with stream
after this
method has been called, except by calling g_object_unref()
on it.
If observer
is not None
it may be used to control the
authentication process.
This is a synchronous failable constructor. See
new()
for the asynchronous version.
stream
a IOStream
guid
the GUID to use if authenticating as a server or None
flags
flags describing how to make the connection
observer
a DBusAuthObserver
or None
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
Returns
a DBusConnection
or None
if error
is set.
Free with g_object_unref()
.
pub fn call<P: IsA<Cancellable>, Q: FnOnce(Result<Variant, Error>) + Send + 'static>(
&self,
bus_name: Option<&str>,
object_path: &str,
interface_name: &str,
method_name: &str,
parameters: Option<&Variant>,
reply_type: Option<&VariantTy>,
flags: DBusCallFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
cancellable: Option<&P>,
callback: Q
)
pub fn call<P: IsA<Cancellable>, Q: FnOnce(Result<Variant, Error>) + Send + 'static>(
&self,
bus_name: Option<&str>,
object_path: &str,
interface_name: &str,
method_name: &str,
parameters: Option<&Variant>,
reply_type: Option<&VariantTy>,
flags: DBusCallFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
cancellable: Option<&P>,
callback: Q
)
Asynchronously invokes the method_name
method on the
interface_name
D-Bus interface on the remote object at
object_path
owned by bus_name
.
If self
is closed then the operation will fail with
IOErrorEnum::Closed
. If cancellable
is canceled, the operation will
fail with IOErrorEnum::Cancelled
. If parameters
contains a value
not compatible with the D-Bus protocol, the operation fails with
IOErrorEnum::InvalidArgument
.
If reply_type
is non-None
then the reply will be checked for having this type and an
error will be raised if it does not match. Said another way, if you give a reply_type
then any non-None
return value will be of this type. Unless it’s
G_VARIANT_TYPE_UNIT
, the reply_type
will be a tuple containing one or more
values.
If the parameters
glib::Variant
is floating, it is consumed. This allows
convenient ‘inline’ use of [glib::Variant::new()
][crate::glib::Variant::new()], e.g.:
⚠️ The following code is in C ⚠️
g_dbus_connection_call (connection,
"org.freedesktop.StringThings",
"/org/freedesktop/StringThings",
"org.freedesktop.StringThings",
"TwoStrings",
g_variant_new ("(ss)",
"Thing One",
"Thing Two"),
NULL,
G_DBUS_CALL_FLAGS_NONE,
-1,
NULL,
(GAsyncReadyCallback) two_strings_done,
NULL);
This is an asynchronous method. When the operation is finished,
callback
will be invoked in the
[thread-default main context][g-main-context-push-thread-default]
of the thread you are calling this method from. You can then call
g_dbus_connection_call_finish()
to get the result of the operation.
See call_sync()
for the synchronous version of this
function.
If callback
is None
then the D-Bus method call message will be sent with
the DBusMessageFlags::NO_REPLY_EXPECTED
flag set.
bus_name
a unique or well-known bus name or None
if
self
is not a message bus connection
object_path
path of remote object
interface_name
D-Bus interface to invoke method on
method_name
the name of the method to invoke
parameters
a glib::Variant
tuple with parameters for the method
or None
if not passing parameters
reply_type
the expected type of the reply (which will be a
tuple), or None
flags
flags from the DBusCallFlags
enumeration
timeout_msec
the timeout in milliseconds, -1 to use the default
timeout or G_MAXINT
for no timeout
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
callback
a GAsyncReadyCallback
to call when the request
is satisfied or None
if you don’t care about the result of the
method invocation
pub fn call_future(
&self,
bus_name: Option<&str>,
object_path: &str,
interface_name: &str,
method_name: &str,
parameters: Option<&Variant>,
reply_type: Option<&VariantTy>,
flags: DBusCallFlags,
timeout_msec: i32
) -> Pin<Box_<dyn Future<Output = Result<Variant, Error>> + 'static>>
Synchronously invokes the method_name
method on the
interface_name
D-Bus interface on the remote object at
object_path
owned by bus_name
.
If self
is closed then the operation will fail with
IOErrorEnum::Closed
. If cancellable
is canceled, the
operation will fail with IOErrorEnum::Cancelled
. If parameters
contains a value not compatible with the D-Bus protocol, the operation
fails with IOErrorEnum::InvalidArgument
.
If reply_type
is non-None
then the reply will be checked for having
this type and an error will be raised if it does not match. Said
another way, if you give a reply_type
then any non-None
return
value will be of this type.
If the parameters
glib::Variant
is floating, it is consumed.
This allows convenient ‘inline’ use of [glib::Variant::new()
][crate::glib::Variant::new()], e.g.:
⚠️ The following code is in C ⚠️
g_dbus_connection_call_sync (connection,
"org.freedesktop.StringThings",
"/org/freedesktop/StringThings",
"org.freedesktop.StringThings",
"TwoStrings",
g_variant_new ("(ss)",
"Thing One",
"Thing Two"),
NULL,
G_DBUS_CALL_FLAGS_NONE,
-1,
NULL,
&error);
The calling thread is blocked until a reply is received. See
call()
for the asynchronous version of
this method.
bus_name
a unique or well-known bus name or None
if
self
is not a message bus connection
object_path
path of remote object
interface_name
D-Bus interface to invoke method on
method_name
the name of the method to invoke
parameters
a glib::Variant
tuple with parameters for the method
or None
if not passing parameters
reply_type
the expected type of the reply, or None
flags
flags from the DBusCallFlags
enumeration
timeout_msec
the timeout in milliseconds, -1 to use the default
timeout or G_MAXINT
for no timeout
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
Returns
None
if error
is set. Otherwise a non-floating
glib::Variant
tuple with return values. Free with g_variant_unref()
.
pub fn call_with_unix_fd_list<P: IsA<UnixFDList>, Q: IsA<Cancellable>, R: FnOnce(Result<(Variant, UnixFDList), Error>) + Send + 'static>(
&self,
bus_name: Option<&str>,
object_path: &str,
interface_name: &str,
method_name: &str,
parameters: Option<&Variant>,
reply_type: Option<&VariantTy>,
flags: DBusCallFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
fd_list: Option<&P>,
cancellable: Option<&Q>,
callback: R
)
This is supported on Unix only.
pub fn call_with_unix_fd_list<P: IsA<UnixFDList>, Q: IsA<Cancellable>, R: FnOnce(Result<(Variant, UnixFDList), Error>) + Send + 'static>(
&self,
bus_name: Option<&str>,
object_path: &str,
interface_name: &str,
method_name: &str,
parameters: Option<&Variant>,
reply_type: Option<&VariantTy>,
flags: DBusCallFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
fd_list: Option<&P>,
cancellable: Option<&Q>,
callback: R
)
Like call()
but also takes a UnixFDList
object.
The file descriptors normally correspond to G_VARIANT_TYPE_HANDLE
values in the body of the message. For example, if a message contains
two file descriptors, fd_list
would have length 2, and
g_variant_new_handle (0)
and g_variant_new_handle (1)
would appear
somewhere in the body of the message (not necessarily in that order!)
to represent the file descriptors at indexes 0 and 1 respectively.
When designing D-Bus APIs that are intended to be interoperable,
please note that non-GDBus implementations of D-Bus can usually only
access file descriptors if they are referenced in this way by a
value of type G_VARIANT_TYPE_HANDLE
in the body of the message.
This method is only available on UNIX.
bus_name
a unique or well-known bus name or None
if
self
is not a message bus connection
object_path
path of remote object
interface_name
D-Bus interface to invoke method on
method_name
the name of the method to invoke
parameters
a glib::Variant
tuple with parameters for the method
or None
if not passing parameters
reply_type
the expected type of the reply, or None
flags
flags from the DBusCallFlags
enumeration
timeout_msec
the timeout in milliseconds, -1 to use the default
timeout or G_MAXINT
for no timeout
fd_list
a UnixFDList
or None
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
callback
a GAsyncReadyCallback
to call when the request is
satisfied or None
if you don’t * care about the result of the
method invocation
pub fn call_with_unix_fd_list_future<P: IsA<UnixFDList> + Clone + 'static>(
&self,
bus_name: Option<&str>,
object_path: &str,
interface_name: &str,
method_name: &str,
parameters: Option<&Variant>,
reply_type: Option<&VariantTy>,
flags: DBusCallFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
fd_list: Option<&P>
) -> Pin<Box_<dyn Future<Output = Result<(Variant, UnixFDList), Error>> + 'static>>
pub fn call_with_unix_fd_list_sync<P: IsA<UnixFDList>, Q: IsA<Cancellable>>(
&self,
bus_name: Option<&str>,
object_path: &str,
interface_name: &str,
method_name: &str,
parameters: Option<&Variant>,
reply_type: Option<&VariantTy>,
flags: DBusCallFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
fd_list: Option<&P>,
cancellable: Option<&Q>
) -> Result<(Variant, UnixFDList), Error>
This is supported on Unix only.
pub fn call_with_unix_fd_list_sync<P: IsA<UnixFDList>, Q: IsA<Cancellable>>(
&self,
bus_name: Option<&str>,
object_path: &str,
interface_name: &str,
method_name: &str,
parameters: Option<&Variant>,
reply_type: Option<&VariantTy>,
flags: DBusCallFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
fd_list: Option<&P>,
cancellable: Option<&Q>
) -> Result<(Variant, UnixFDList), Error>
Like call_sync()
but also takes and returns UnixFDList
objects.
See call_with_unix_fd_list()
and
g_dbus_connection_call_with_unix_fd_list_finish()
for more details.
This method is only available on UNIX.
bus_name
a unique or well-known bus name or None
if self
is not a message bus connection
object_path
path of remote object
interface_name
D-Bus interface to invoke method on
method_name
the name of the method to invoke
parameters
a glib::Variant
tuple with parameters for
the method or None
if not passing parameters
reply_type
the expected type of the reply, or None
flags
flags from the DBusCallFlags
enumeration
timeout_msec
the timeout in milliseconds, -1 to use the default
timeout or G_MAXINT
for no timeout
fd_list
a UnixFDList
or None
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
Returns
None
if error
is set. Otherwise a non-floating
glib::Variant
tuple with return values. Free with g_variant_unref()
.
out_fd_list
return location for a UnixFDList
or None
Closes self
. Note that this never causes the process to
exit (this might only happen if the other end of a shared message
bus connection disconnects, see property::DBusConnection::exit-on-close
).
Once the connection is closed, operations such as sending a message
will return with the error IOErrorEnum::Closed
. Closing a connection
will not automatically flush the connection so queued messages may
be lost. Use flush()
if you need such guarantees.
If self
is already closed, this method fails with
IOErrorEnum::Closed
.
When self
has been closed, the signal::DBusConnection::closed
signal is emitted in the
[thread-default main context][g-main-context-push-thread-default]
of the thread that self
was constructed in.
This is an asynchronous method. When the operation is finished,
callback
will be invoked in the
[thread-default main context][g-main-context-push-thread-default]
of the thread you are calling this method from. You can
then call g_dbus_connection_close_finish()
to get the result of the
operation. See close_sync()
for the synchronous
version.
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
callback
a GAsyncReadyCallback
to call when the request is
satisfied or None
if you don’t care about the result
Synchronously closes self
. The calling thread is blocked
until this is done. See close()
for the
asynchronous version of this method and more details about what it
does.
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
Returns
Emits a signal.
If the parameters GVariant is floating, it is consumed.
This can only fail if parameters
is not compatible with the D-Bus protocol
(IOErrorEnum::InvalidArgument
), or if self
has been closed
(IOErrorEnum::Closed
).
destination_bus_name
the unique bus name for the destination
for the signal or None
to emit to all listeners
object_path
path of remote object
interface_name
D-Bus interface to emit a signal on
signal_name
the name of the signal to emit
parameters
a glib::Variant
tuple with parameters for the signal
or None
if not passing parameters
Returns
true
unless error
is set
Asynchronously flushes self
, that is, writes all queued
outgoing message to the transport and then flushes the transport
(using OutputStreamExt::flush_async()
). This is useful in programs
that wants to emit a D-Bus signal and then exit immediately. Without
flushing the connection, there is no guaranteed that the message has
been sent to the networking buffers in the OS kernel.
This is an asynchronous method. When the operation is finished,
callback
will be invoked in the
[thread-default main context][g-main-context-push-thread-default]
of the thread you are calling this method from. You can
then call g_dbus_connection_flush_finish()
to get the result of the
operation. See flush_sync()
for the synchronous
version.
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
callback
a GAsyncReadyCallback
to call when the
request is satisfied or None
if you don’t care about the result
Synchronously flushes self
. The calling thread is blocked
until this is done. See flush()
for the
asynchronous version of this method and more details about what it
does.
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
Returns
Gets the capabilities negotiated with the remote peer
Returns
zero or more flags from the DBusCapabilityFlags
enumeration
Gets whether the process is terminated when self
is
closed by the remote peer. See
property::DBusConnection::exit-on-close
for more details.
Returns
whether the process is terminated when self
is
closed by the remote peer
This is supported on crate feature v2_60
only.
v2_60
only.Gets the flags used to construct this connection
Returns
zero or more flags from the DBusConnectionFlags
enumeration
The GUID of the peer performing the role of server when
authenticating. See property::DBusConnection::guid
for more details.
Returns
The GUID. Do not free this string, it is owned by
self
.
Retrieves the last serial number assigned to a DBusMessage
on
the current thread. This includes messages sent via both low-level
API such as send_message()
as well as
high-level API such as emit_signal()
,
call()
or DBusProxyExt::call()
.
Returns
the last used serial or zero when no message has been sent within the current thread
Gets the credentials of the authenticated peer. This will always
return None
unless self
acted as a server
(e.g. DBusConnectionFlags::AUTHENTICATION_SERVER
was passed)
when set up and the client passed credentials as part of the
authentication process.
In a message bus setup, the message bus is always the server and
each application is a client. So this method will always return
None
for message bus clients.
Returns
a Credentials
or None
if not
available. Do not free this object, it is owned by self
.
Gets the underlying stream used for IO.
While the DBusConnection
is active, it will interact with this
stream from a worker thread, so it is not safe to interact with
the stream directly.
Returns
the stream used for IO
pub fn send_message(
&self,
message: &DBusMessage,
flags: DBusSendMessageFlags
) -> Result<u32, Error>
pub fn send_message(
&self,
message: &DBusMessage,
flags: DBusSendMessageFlags
) -> Result<u32, Error>
Asynchronously sends message
to the peer represented by self
.
Unless flags
contain the
DBusSendMessageFlags::PRESERVE_SERIAL
flag, the serial number
will be assigned by self
and set on message
via
DBusMessage::set_serial()
. If out_serial
is not None
, then the
serial number used will be written to this location prior to
submitting the message to the underlying transport. While it has a volatile
qualifier, this is a historical artifact and the argument passed to it should
not be volatile
.
If self
is closed then the operation will fail with
IOErrorEnum::Closed
. If message
is not well-formed,
the operation fails with IOErrorEnum::InvalidArgument
.
See this [server][gdbus-server] and [client][gdbus-unix-fd-client] for an example of how to use this low-level API to send and receive UNIX file descriptors.
Note that message
must be unlocked, unless flags
contain the
DBusSendMessageFlags::PRESERVE_SERIAL
flag.
message
flags
flags affecting how the message is sent
Returns
true
if the message was well-formed and queued for
transmission, false
if error
is set
out_serial
return location for serial number assigned
to message
when sending it or None
pub fn send_message_with_reply<P: IsA<Cancellable>, Q: FnOnce(Result<DBusMessage, Error>) + Send + 'static>(
&self,
message: &DBusMessage,
flags: DBusSendMessageFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
cancellable: Option<&P>,
callback: Q
) -> u32
pub fn send_message_with_reply<P: IsA<Cancellable>, Q: FnOnce(Result<DBusMessage, Error>) + Send + 'static>(
&self,
message: &DBusMessage,
flags: DBusSendMessageFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
cancellable: Option<&P>,
callback: Q
) -> u32
Asynchronously sends message
to the peer represented by self
.
Unless flags
contain the
DBusSendMessageFlags::PRESERVE_SERIAL
flag, the serial number
will be assigned by self
and set on message
via
DBusMessage::set_serial()
. If out_serial
is not None
, then the
serial number used will be written to this location prior to
submitting the message to the underlying transport. While it has a volatile
qualifier, this is a historical artifact and the argument passed to it should
not be volatile
.
If self
is closed then the operation will fail with
IOErrorEnum::Closed
. If cancellable
is canceled, the operation will
fail with IOErrorEnum::Cancelled
. If message
is not well-formed,
the operation fails with IOErrorEnum::InvalidArgument
.
This is an asynchronous method. When the operation is finished, callback
will be invoked in the
[thread-default main context][g-main-context-push-thread-default]
of the thread you are calling this method from. You can then call
g_dbus_connection_send_message_with_reply_finish()
to get the result of the operation.
See send_message_with_reply_sync()
for the synchronous version.
Note that message
must be unlocked, unless flags
contain the
DBusSendMessageFlags::PRESERVE_SERIAL
flag.
See this [server][gdbus-server] and [client][gdbus-unix-fd-client] for an example of how to use this low-level API to send and receive UNIX file descriptors.
message
flags
flags affecting how the message is sent
timeout_msec
the timeout in milliseconds, -1 to use the default
timeout or G_MAXINT
for no timeout
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
callback
a GAsyncReadyCallback
to call when the request
is satisfied or None
if you don’t care about the result
Returns
out_serial
return location for serial number assigned
to message
when sending it or None
pub fn send_message_with_reply_future(
&self,
message: &DBusMessage,
flags: DBusSendMessageFlags,
timeout_msec: i32
) -> Pin<Box_<dyn Future<Output = Result<DBusMessage, Error>> + 'static>>
pub fn send_message_with_reply_sync<P: IsA<Cancellable>>(
&self,
message: &DBusMessage,
flags: DBusSendMessageFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
cancellable: Option<&P>
) -> Result<(DBusMessage, u32), Error>
pub fn send_message_with_reply_sync<P: IsA<Cancellable>>(
&self,
message: &DBusMessage,
flags: DBusSendMessageFlags,
timeout_msec: i32,
cancellable: Option<&P>
) -> Result<(DBusMessage, u32), Error>
Synchronously sends message
to the peer represented by self
and blocks the calling thread until a reply is received or the
timeout is reached. See send_message_with_reply()
for the asynchronous version of this method.
Unless flags
contain the
DBusSendMessageFlags::PRESERVE_SERIAL
flag, the serial number
will be assigned by self
and set on message
via
DBusMessage::set_serial()
. If out_serial
is not None
, then the
serial number used will be written to this location prior to
submitting the message to the underlying transport. While it has a volatile
qualifier, this is a historical artifact and the argument passed to it should
not be volatile
.
If self
is closed then the operation will fail with
IOErrorEnum::Closed
. If cancellable
is canceled, the operation will
fail with IOErrorEnum::Cancelled
. If message
is not well-formed,
the operation fails with IOErrorEnum::InvalidArgument
.
Note that error
is only set if a local in-process error
occurred. That is to say that the returned DBusMessage
object may
be of type DBusMessageType::Error
. Use
DBusMessage::to_gerror()
to transcode this to a glib::Error
.
See this [server][gdbus-server] and [client][gdbus-unix-fd-client] for an example of how to use this low-level API to send and receive UNIX file descriptors.
Note that message
must be unlocked, unless flags
contain the
DBusSendMessageFlags::PRESERVE_SERIAL
flag.
message
flags
flags affecting how the message is sent.
timeout_msec
the timeout in milliseconds, -1 to use the default
timeout or G_MAXINT
for no timeout
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
Returns
a locked DBusMessage
that is the reply
to message
or None
if error
is set
out_serial
return location for serial number
assigned to message
when sending it or None
Sets whether the process should be terminated when self
is
closed by the remote peer. See property::DBusConnection::exit-on-close
for
more details.
Note that this function should be used with care. Most modern UNIX
desktops tie the notion of a user session with the session bus, and expect
all of a user’s applications to quit when their bus connection goes away.
If you are setting exit_on_close
to false
for the shared session
bus connection, you should make sure that your application exits
when the user session ends.
exit_on_close
whether the process should be terminated
when self
is closed by the remote peer
If self
was created with
DBusConnectionFlags::DELAY_MESSAGE_PROCESSING
, this method
starts processing messages. Does nothing on if self
wasn’t
created with this flag or if the method has already been called.
Flags from the DBusConnectionFlags
enumeration.
pub fn new<P: IsA<IOStream>, Q: IsA<Cancellable>, R: FnOnce(Result<DBusConnection, Error>) + Send + 'static>(
stream: &P,
guid: Option<&str>,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>,
cancellable: Option<&Q>,
callback: R
)
pub fn new<P: IsA<IOStream>, Q: IsA<Cancellable>, R: FnOnce(Result<DBusConnection, Error>) + Send + 'static>(
stream: &P,
guid: Option<&str>,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>,
cancellable: Option<&Q>,
callback: R
)
Asynchronously sets up a D-Bus connection for exchanging D-Bus messages
with the end represented by stream
.
If stream
is a SocketConnection
, then the corresponding Socket
will be put into non-blocking mode.
The D-Bus connection will interact with stream
from a worker thread.
As a result, the caller should not interact with stream
after this
method has been called, except by calling g_object_unref()
on it.
If observer
is not None
it may be used to control the
authentication process.
When the operation is finished, callback
will be invoked. You can
then call g_dbus_connection_new_finish()
to get the result of the
operation.
This is an asynchronous failable constructor. See
new_sync()
for the synchronous
version.
stream
a IOStream
guid
the GUID to use if authenticating as a server or None
flags
flags describing how to make the connection
observer
a DBusAuthObserver
or None
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
callback
a GAsyncReadyCallback
to call when the request is satisfied
pub fn new_future<P: IsA<IOStream> + Clone + 'static>(
stream: &P,
guid: Option<&str>,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>
) -> Pin<Box_<dyn Future<Output = Result<DBusConnection, Error>> + 'static>>
pub fn for_address<P: IsA<Cancellable>, Q: FnOnce(Result<DBusConnection, Error>) + Send + 'static>(
address: &str,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>,
cancellable: Option<&P>,
callback: Q
)
pub fn for_address<P: IsA<Cancellable>, Q: FnOnce(Result<DBusConnection, Error>) + Send + 'static>(
address: &str,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>,
cancellable: Option<&P>,
callback: Q
)
Asynchronously connects and sets up a D-Bus client connection for
exchanging D-Bus messages with an endpoint specified by address
which must be in the
D-Bus address format.
This constructor can only be used to initiate client-side
connections - use new()
if you need to act as the
server. In particular, flags
cannot contain the
DBusConnectionFlags::AUTHENTICATION_SERVER
,
DBusConnectionFlags::AUTHENTICATION_ALLOW_ANONYMOUS
or
G_DBUS_CONNECTION_FLAGS_AUTHENTICATION_REQUIRE_SAME_USER
flags.
When the operation is finished, callback
will be invoked. You can
then call g_dbus_connection_new_for_address_finish()
to get the result of
the operation.
If observer
is not None
it may be used to control the
authentication process.
This is an asynchronous failable constructor. See
for_address_sync()
for the synchronous
version.
address
a D-Bus address
flags
flags describing how to make the connection
observer
a DBusAuthObserver
or None
cancellable
a Cancellable
or None
callback
a GAsyncReadyCallback
to call when the request is satisfied
pub fn for_address_future(
address: &str,
flags: DBusConnectionFlags,
observer: Option<&DBusAuthObserver>
) -> Pin<Box_<dyn Future<Output = Result<DBusConnection, Error>> + 'static>>
pub fn connect_closed<F: Fn(&Self, bool, Option<&Error>) + Send + Sync + 'static>(
&self,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId
pub fn connect_closed<F: Fn(&Self, bool, Option<&Error>) + Send + Sync + 'static>(
&self,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId
Emitted when the connection is closed.
The cause of this event can be
-
If
close()
is called. In this caseremote_peer_vanished
is set tofalse
anderror
isNone
. -
If the remote peer closes the connection. In this case
remote_peer_vanished
is set totrue
anderror
is set. -
If the remote peer sends invalid or malformed data. In this case
remote_peer_vanished
is set tofalse
anderror
is set.
Upon receiving this signal, you should give up your reference to
connection
. You are guaranteed that this signal is emitted only
once.
remote_peer_vanished
true
if connection
is closed because the
remote peer closed its end of the connection
error
a glib::Error
with more details about the event or None
pub fn connect_capabilities_notify<F: Fn(&Self) + Send + Sync + 'static>(
&self,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId
pub fn connect_closed_notify<F: Fn(&Self) + Send + Sync + 'static>(
&self,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId
pub fn connect_exit_on_close_notify<F: Fn(&Self) + Send + Sync + 'static>(
&self,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId
pub fn connect_unique_name_notify<F: Fn(&Self) + Send + Sync + 'static>(
&self,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId
Trait Implementations
This method returns an ordering between self
and other
values if one exists. Read more
This method tests less than (for self
and other
) and is used by the <
operator. Read more
This method tests less than or equal to (for self
and other
) and is used by the <=
operator. Read more
This method tests greater than (for self
and other
) and is used by the >
operator. Read more
Returns the type identifier of Self
.
Auto Trait Implementations
impl RefUnwindSafe for DBusConnection
impl Unpin for DBusConnection
impl UnwindSafe for DBusConnection
Blanket Implementations
Mutably borrows from an owned value. Read more
Upcasts an object to a superclass or interface T
. Read more
Upcasts an object to a reference of its superclass or interface T
. Read more
Tries to downcast to a subclass or interface implementor T
. Read more
Tries to downcast to a reference of its subclass or interface implementor T
. Read more
Tries to cast to an object of type T
. This handles upcasting, downcasting
and casting between interface and interface implementors. All checks are performed at
runtime, while downcast
and upcast
will do many checks at compile-time already. Read more
Tries to cast to reference to an object of type T
. This handles upcasting, downcasting
and casting between interface and interface implementors. All checks are performed at
runtime, while downcast
and upcast
will do many checks at compile-time already. Read more
Casts to T
unconditionally. Read more
Casts to &T
unconditionally. Read more
Returns true
if the object is an instance of (can be cast to) T
.
pub fn set_properties_from_value(
&self,
property_values: &[(&str, Value)]
) -> Result<(), BoolError>
pub fn set_property<'a, N, V>(
&self,
property_name: N,
value: V
) -> Result<(), BoolError> where
V: ToValue,
N: Into<&'a str>,
pub fn set_property_from_value<'a, N>(
&self,
property_name: N,
value: &Value
) -> Result<(), BoolError> where
N: Into<&'a str>,
Safety Read more
Safety Read more
Safety Read more
Safety Read more
pub fn connect_notify<F>(&self, name: Option<&str>, f: F) -> SignalHandlerId where
F: 'static + Fn(&T, &ParamSpec) + Send + Sync,
pub fn connect_notify_local<F>(
&self,
name: Option<&str>,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId where
F: 'static + Fn(&T, &ParamSpec),
pub unsafe fn connect_notify_unsafe<F>(
&self,
name: Option<&str>,
f: F
) -> SignalHandlerId where
F: Fn(&T, &ParamSpec),
pub fn has_property<'a, N>(&self, property_name: N, type_: Option<Type>) -> bool where
N: Into<&'a str>,
pub fn find_property<'a, N>(&self, property_name: N) -> Option<ParamSpec> where
N: Into<&'a str>,
pub fn connect<'a, N, F>(
&self,
signal_name: N,
after: bool,
callback: F
) -> Result<SignalHandlerId, BoolError> where
F: Fn(&[Value]) -> Option<Value> + Send + Sync + 'static,
N: Into<&'a str>,
Same as connect
but takes a SignalId
instead of a signal name.
pub fn connect_local<'a, N, F>(
&self,
signal_name: N,
after: bool,
callback: F
) -> Result<SignalHandlerId, BoolError> where
F: Fn(&[Value]) -> Option<Value> + 'static,
N: Into<&'a str>,
Same as connect_local
but takes a SignalId
instead of a signal name.
pub unsafe fn connect_unsafe<'a, N, F>(
&self,
signal_name: N,
after: bool,
callback: F
) -> Result<SignalHandlerId, BoolError> where
F: Fn(&[Value]) -> Option<Value>,
N: Into<&'a str>,
Same as connect_unsafe
but takes a SignalId
instead of a signal name.
Emit signal by signal id.
Emit signal with details by signal id.
Emit signal by it’s name.
pub fn bind_property<'a, O, N, M>(
&'a self,
source_property: N,
target: &'a O,
target_property: M
) -> BindingBuilder<'a> where
O: ObjectType,
N: Into<&'a str>,
M: Into<&'a str>,
Same as emit
but takes Value
for the arguments.
Same as emit_by_name
but takes Value
for the arguments.
Returns a SendValue
clone of self
.
impl<'a, T, C> FromValueOptional<'a> for T where
C: ValueTypeChecker<Error = ValueTypeMismatchOrNoneError>,
T: FromValue<'a, Checker = C>,