dbus/glib/dbus-gproxy.c
Havoc Pennington a683a80c40 2003-09-21 Havoc Pennington <hp@pobox.com>
Get matching rules mostly working in the bus; only actually
	parsing the rule text remains. However, the client side of
	"signal connections" hasn't been started, this patch is only the
	bus side.

	* dbus/dispatch.c: fix for the matching rules changes

	* bus/driver.c (bus_driver_handle_remove_match)
	(bus_driver_handle_add_match): send an ack reply from these
	method calls

	* glib/dbus-gproxy.c (dbus_gproxy_begin_call): fix order of
	arguments, reported by Seth Nickell

	* bus/config-parser.c (append_rule_from_element): support
	eavesdrop=true|false attribute on policies so match rules
	can be prevented from snooping on the system bus.

	* bus/dbus-daemon-1.1.in: consistently use terminology "sender"
	and "destination" in attribute names; fix some docs bugs;
	add eavesdrop=true|false attribute

	* bus/driver.c (bus_driver_handle_add_match)
	(bus_driver_handle_remove_match): handle AddMatch, RemoveMatch
	messages

	* dbus/dbus-protocol.h (DBUS_SERVICE_ORG_FREEDESKTOP_BROADCAST): get
	rid of broadcast service concept, signals are just always broadcast

	* bus/signals.c, bus/dispatch.c, bus/connection.c, bus/bus.c:
	mostly implement matching rules stuff (currently only exposed as signal
	connections)
2003-09-21 19:53:56 +00:00

352 lines
9.8 KiB
C

/* -*- mode: C; c-file-style: "gnu" -*- */
/* dbus-gcall.c convenience routines for calling methods, etc.
*
* Copyright (C) 2003 Red Hat, Inc.
*
* Licensed under the Academic Free License version 1.2
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
* the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
* (at your option) any later version.
*
* This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
* GNU General Public License for more details.
*
* You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
* along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
* Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
*
*/
#include "dbus-glib.h"
/**
* @addtogroup DBusGLibInternals
*
* @{
*/
/**
* Internals of DBusGProxy
*/
struct DBusGProxy
{
GStaticMutex lock; /**< Thread lock */
int refcount; /**< Reference count */
DBusConnection *connection; /**< Connection to communicate over */
char *service; /**< Service messages go to or NULL */
char *interface; /**< Interface messages go to or NULL */
char *path; /**< Path messages go to or NULL */
};
/** Lock the DBusGProxy */
#define LOCK_PROXY(proxy) (g_static_mutex_lock (&(proxy)->lock))
/** Unlock the DBusGProxy */
#define UNLOCK_PROXY(proxy) (g_static_mutex_unlock (&(proxy)->lock))
static DBusGProxy*
_dbus_gproxy_new (DBusConnection *connection)
{
DBusGProxy *proxy;
proxy = g_new0 (DBusGProxy, 1);
proxy->refcount = 1;
proxy->connection = connection;
dbus_connection_ref (connection);
g_static_mutex_init (&proxy->lock);
return proxy;
}
/** @} End of DBusGLibInternals */
/** @addtogroup DBusGLib
* @{
*/
/**
* Creates a new proxy for a remote interface. Method calls and signal
* connections over this proxy will go to the service owner; the
* service owner is expected to support the given interface name. THE
* SERVICE OWNER MAY CHANGE OVER TIME, for example between two
* different method calls. If you need a fixed owner, you need to
* request the current owner and bind a proxy to that rather than to
* the generic service name; see dbus_gproxy_new_for_service_owner().
*
* A service-associated proxy only makes sense with a message bus,
* not for app-to-app direct dbus connections.
*
* @param connection the connection to the remote bus or app
* @param service_name name of the service on the message bus
* @param interface_name name of the interface to call methods on
* @returns new proxy object
*/
DBusGProxy*
dbus_gproxy_new_for_service (DBusConnection *connection,
const char *service_name,
const char *interface_name)
{
DBusGProxy *proxy;
g_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (service_name != NULL, NULL);
g_return_val_if_fail (interface_name != NULL, NULL);
proxy = _dbus_gproxy_new (connection);
proxy->service = g_strdup (service_name);
proxy->interface = g_strdup (interface_name);
return proxy;
}
/**
* Increment reference count on proxy object.
*
* @todo use GAtomic to avoid locking
*
* @param proxy the proxy
*/
void
dbus_gproxy_ref (DBusGProxy *proxy)
{
g_return_if_fail (proxy != NULL);
LOCK_PROXY (proxy);
proxy->refcount += 1;
UNLOCK_PROXY (proxy);
}
/**
* Decrement reference count on proxy object.
*
* @todo use GAtomic to avoid locking
*
* @param proxy the proxy
*/
void
dbus_gproxy_unref (DBusGProxy *proxy)
{
g_return_if_fail (proxy != NULL);
LOCK_PROXY (proxy);
proxy->refcount -= 1;
if (proxy->refcount == 0)
{
UNLOCK_PROXY (proxy);
dbus_connection_unref (proxy->connection);
g_free (proxy->interface);
g_free (proxy->service);
g_static_mutex_free (&proxy->lock);
g_free (proxy);
}
else
{
UNLOCK_PROXY (proxy);
}
}
/**
* Invokes a method on a remote interface. This function does not
* block; instead it returns an opaque #DBusPendingCall object that
* tracks the pending call. The method call will not be sent over the
* wire until the application returns to the main loop, or blocks in
* dbus_connection_flush() to write out pending data. The call will
* be completed after a timeout, or when a reply is received.
* To collect the results of the call (which may be an error,
* or a reply), use dbus_gproxy_end_call().
*
* @todo this particular function shouldn't die on out of memory,
* since you should be able to do a call with large arguments.
*
* @param proxy a proxy for a remote interface
* @param method the name of the method to invoke
* @param first_arg_type type of the first argument
*
* @returns opaque pending call object
* */
DBusPendingCall*
dbus_gproxy_begin_call (DBusGProxy *proxy,
const char *method,
int first_arg_type,
...)
{
DBusPendingCall *pending;
DBusMessage *message;
va_list args;
g_return_val_if_fail (proxy != NULL, NULL);
LOCK_PROXY (proxy);
message = dbus_message_new_method_call (proxy->service,
proxy->path,
proxy->interface,
method);
if (message == NULL)
goto oom;
va_start (args, first_arg_type);
if (!dbus_message_append_args_valist (message, first_arg_type,
args))
goto oom;
va_end (args);
if (!dbus_connection_send_with_reply (proxy->connection,
message,
&pending,
-1))
goto oom;
UNLOCK_PROXY (proxy);
return pending;
oom:
/* FIXME we should create a pending call that's
* immediately completed with an error status without
* ever going on the wire.
*/
g_error ("Out of memory");
return NULL;
}
/**
* Collects the results of a method call. The method call was normally
* initiated with dbus_gproxy_end_call(). This function will block if
* the results haven't yet been received; use
* dbus_pending_call_set_notify() to be notified asynchronously that a
* pending call has been completed. Use
* dbus_pending_call_get_completed() to check whether a call has been
* completed. If it's completed, it will not block.
*
* If the call results in an error, the error is set as normal for
* GError and the function returns #FALSE.
*
* Otherwise, the "out" parameters and return value of the
* method are stored in the provided varargs list.
* The list should be terminated with DBUS_TYPE_INVALID.
*
* This function doesn't affect the reference count of the
* #DBusPendingCall, the caller of dbus_gproxy_begin_call() still owns
* a reference.
*
* @param proxy a proxy for a remote interface
* @param pending the pending call from dbus_gproxy_begin_call()
* @param error return location for an error
* @param first_arg_type type of first "out" argument
* @returns #FALSE if an error is set */
gboolean
dbus_gproxy_end_call (DBusGProxy *proxy,
DBusPendingCall *pending,
GError **error,
int first_arg_type,
...)
{
DBusMessage *message;
va_list args;
DBusError derror;
g_return_val_if_fail (proxy != NULL, FALSE);
g_return_val_if_fail (pending != NULL, FALSE);
LOCK_PROXY (proxy);
dbus_pending_call_block (pending);
message = dbus_pending_call_get_reply (pending);
g_assert (message != NULL);
dbus_error_init (&derror);
va_start (args, first_arg_type);
if (!dbus_message_get_args_valist (message, &derror, first_arg_type, args))
{
va_end (args);
goto error;
}
va_end (args);
UNLOCK_PROXY (proxy);
return TRUE;
error:
dbus_set_g_error (error, &derror);
dbus_error_free (&derror);
return FALSE;
}
/**
* Sends a message to the interface we're proxying for. Does not
* block or wait for a reply. The message is only actually written out
* when you return to the main loop or block in
* dbus_connection_flush().
*
* The message is modified to be addressed to the target interface.
* That is, a destination service field or whatever is needed will be
* added to the message. The basic point of this function is to add
* the necessary header fields, otherwise it's equivalent to
* dbus_connection_send().
*
* This function adds a reference to the message, so the caller
* still owns its original reference.
*
* @param proxy a proxy for a remote interface
* @param message the message to address and send
* @param client_serial return location for message's serial, or #NULL */
void
dbus_gproxy_send (DBusGProxy *proxy,
DBusMessage *message,
dbus_uint32_t *client_serial)
{
g_return_if_fail (proxy != NULL);
LOCK_PROXY (proxy);
if (proxy->service)
{
if (!dbus_message_set_destination (message, proxy->service))
g_error ("Out of memory");
}
if (proxy->interface)
{
if (!dbus_message_set_interface (message, proxy->interface))
g_error ("Out of memory");
}
if (proxy->path)
{
if (!dbus_message_set_path (message, proxy->path))
g_error ("Out of memory");
}
if (!dbus_connection_send (proxy->connection, message, client_serial))
g_error ("Out of memory\n");
UNLOCK_PROXY (proxy);
}
/** @} End of DBusGLib public */
#ifdef DBUS_BUILD_TESTS
/**
* @ingroup DBusGLibInternals
* Unit test for GLib proxy functions
* @returns #TRUE on success.
*/
dbus_bool_t
_dbus_gproxy_test (void)
{
return TRUE;
}
#endif /* DBUS_BUILD_TESTS */