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Net::DBus(3) |
User Contributed Perl Documentation |
Net::DBus(3) |
Net::DBus - Perl extension for the DBus message system
####### Attaching to the bus ###########
use Net::DBus;
# Find the most appropriate bus
my $bus = Net::DBus->find;
# ... or explicitly go for the session bus
my $bus = Net::DBus->session;
# .... or explicitly go for the system bus
my $bus = Net::DBus->system
######## Accessing remote services #########
# Get a handle to the HAL service
my $hal = $bus->get_service("org.freedesktop.Hal");
# Get the device manager
my $manager = $hal->get_object("/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager",
"org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager");
# List devices
foreach my $dev (@{$manager->GetAllDevices}) {
print $dev, "\n";
}
######### Providing services ##############
# Register a service known as 'org.example.Jukebox'
my $service = $bus->export_service("org.example.Jukebox");
Net::DBus provides a Perl API for the DBus message system. The DBus Perl
interface is currently operating against the 0.32 development version of DBus,
but should work with later versions too, providing the API changes have not
been too drastic.
Users of this package are either typically, service providers in
which case the Net::DBus::Service and Net::DBus::Object modules are of most
relevance, or are client consumers, in which case Net::DBus::RemoteService
and Net::DBus::RemoteObject are of most relevance.
- my $bus = Net::DBus->find(%params);
- Search for the most appropriate bus to connect to and return a connection
to it. The heuristic used for the search is
- If DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is set to 'session' attach
to the session bus
- Else If DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE is set to 'system' attach
to the system bus
- Else If DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is set attach to the
session bus
- Else attach to the system bus
The optional "params" hash
can contain be used to specify connection options. The only support
option at this time is "nomainloop"
which prevents the bus from being automatically attached to the main
Net::DBus::Reactor event loop.
- my $bus = Net::DBus->system(%params);
- Return a handle for the system message bus. Note that the system message
bus is locked down by default, so unless appropriate access control rules
are added in /etc/dbus/system.d/, an application may access services, but
won't be able to export services.
The optional "params" hash
can be used to specify the following options:
- nomainloop
- If true, prevents the bus from being automatically attached to the main
Net::DBus::Reactor event loop.
- private
- If true, the socket opened is private; any existing socket will be ignored
and any future attempts to open the same bus will return a different
existing socket or open a fresh one.
- my $bus = Net::DBus->session(%params);
- Return a handle for the session message bus.
The optional "params" hash
can be used to specify the following options:
- nomainloop
- If true, prevents the bus from being automatically attached to the main
Net::DBus::Reactor event loop.
- private
- If true, the socket opened is private; any existing socket will be ignored
and any future attempts to open the same bus will return a different
existing socket or open a fresh one.
- my $bus = Net::DBus->test(%params);
- Returns a handle for a virtual bus for use in unit tests. This bus does
not make any network connections, but rather has an in-memory message
pipeline. Consult Net::DBus::Test::MockConnection for further details of
how to use this special bus.
- my $bus = Net::DBus->new($address, %params);
- Return a connection to a specific message bus. The
$address parameter must contain the address of the
message bus to connect to. An example address for a session bus might look
like
"unix:abstract=/tmp/dbus-PBFyyuUiVb,guid=191e0a43c3efc222e0818be556d67500",
while one for a system bus would look like
"unix:/var/run/dbus/system_bus_socket".
The optional "params" hash can contain
be used to specify connection options. The only support option at this
time is "nomainloop" which prevents the
bus from being automatically attached to the main Net::DBus::Reactor event
loop.
- my $connection = $bus->get_connection;
- Return a handle to the underlying, low level connection object associated
with this bus. The returned object will be an instance of the
Net::DBus::Binding::Bus class. This method is not intended for use by
(most!) application developers, so if you don't understand what this is
for, then you don't need to be calling it!
- my $service = $bus->get_service($name);
- Retrieves a handle for the remote service identified by the service name
$name. The returned object will be an instance of
the Net::DBus::RemoteService class.
- my $service = $bus->export_service($name);
- Registers a service with the bus, returning a handle to the service. The
returned object is an instance of the Net::DBus::Service class.
When $name is not specified or is
"undef" then returned handle to the
service is identified only by the unique name of client's connection to
the bus.
- my $object = $bus->get_bus_object;
- Retrieves a handle to the bus object,
"/org/freedesktop/DBus", provided by the
service "org.freedesktop.DBus". The
returned object is an instance of Net::DBus::RemoteObject
- my $name = $bus->get_unique_name;
- Retrieves the unique name of this client's connection to the bus.
- my $name = $bus->get_service_owner($service);
- Retrieves the unique name of the client on the bus owning the service
named by the $service parameter.
- my $timeout = $bus->timeout(60 * 1000);
- Sets or retrieves the timeout value which will be used for DBus requests
belongs to this bus connection. The timeout should be specified in
milliseconds, with the default value being 60 seconds.
These methods are not usually used, since most services provide introspection
data to inform clients of their data typing requirements. If introspection
data is incomplete, however, it may be necessary for a client to mark values
with specific data types. In such a case, the following methods can be used.
They are not, however, exported by default so must be requested at import time
by specifying 'use Net::DBus qw(:typing)'
- $typed_value = dbus_int16($value);
- Mark a value as being a signed, 16-bit integer.
- $typed_value = dbus_uint16($value);
- Mark a value as being an unsigned, 16-bit integer.
- $typed_value = dbus_int32($value);
- Mark a value as being a signed, 32-bit integer.
- $typed_value = dbus_uint32($value);
- Mark a value as being an unsigned, 32-bit integer.
- $typed_value = dbus_int64($value);
- Mark a value as being an unsigned, 64-bit integer.
- $typed_value = dbus_uint64($value);
- Mark a value as being an unsigned, 64-bit integer.
- $typed_value = dbus_double($value);
- Mark a value as being a double precision IEEE floating point.
- $typed_value = dbus_byte($value);
- Mark a value as being an unsigned, byte.
- $typed_value = dbus_string($value);
- Mark a value as being a UTF-8 string. This is not usually required since
'string' is the default data type for any Perl scalar value.
- $typed_value = dbus_signature($value);
- Mark a value as being a UTF-8 string, whose contents is a valid type
signature
- $typed_value = dbus_object_path($value);
- Mark a value as being a UTF-8 string, whose contents is a valid object
path.
- $typed_value = dbus_boolean($value);
- Mark a value as being an boolean
- $typed_value = dbus_array($value);
- Mark a value as being an array
- $typed_value = dbus_struct($value);
- Mark a value as being a structure
- $typed_value = dbus_dict($value);
- Mark a value as being a dictionary
- $typed_value = dbus_variant($value);
- Mark a value as being a variant
- $typed_value = dbus_unix_fd($value);
- Mark a value as being a unix file descriptor
Net::DBus, Net::DBus::RemoteService, Net::DBus::Service,
Net::DBus::RemoteObject, Net::DBus::Object, Net::DBus::Exporter,
Net::DBus::Dumper, Net::DBus::Reactor,
"dbus-monitor(1)",
"dbus-daemon-1(1)",
"dbus-send(1)",
<http://dbus.freedesktop.org>,
Daniel Berrange <dan@berrange.com>
Copyright 2004-2011 by Daniel Berrange
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