D-Bus Tutorial
    Version 0.5.0
    20 August 2006
    
      
	Havoc
	Pennington
	
	  Red Hat, Inc.
	  hp@pobox.com
	
      
      
	David
	Wheeler
      
      
	John
	Palmieri
	
	  Red Hat, Inc.
	  johnp@redhat.com
	
      
      
	Colin
	Walters
	
	  Red Hat, Inc.
	  walters@redhat.com
	
      
    
  
  
    Tutorial Work In Progress
    
    
      This tutorial is not complete; it probably contains some useful information, but 
      also has plenty of gaps. Right now, you'll also need to refer to the D-Bus specification,
      Doxygen reference documentation, and look at some examples of how other apps use D-Bus.
    
    
      Enhancing the tutorial is definitely encouraged - send your patches or suggestions to the
      mailing list. If you create a D-Bus binding, please add a section to the tutorial for your 
      binding, if only a short section with a couple of examples.
    
  
  
    What is D-Bus?
    
      D-Bus is a system for interprocess communication
      (IPC). Architecturally, it has several layers:
      
        
          
            A library, libdbus, that allows two
            applications to connect to each other and exchange messages.
          
        
        
          
            A message bus daemon executable, built on
            libdbus, that multiple applications can connect to. The daemon can
            route messages from one application to zero or more other
            applications.
          
        
        
          
            Wrapper libraries or bindings 
            based on particular application frameworks.  For example, libdbus-glib and
            libdbus-qt. There are also bindings to languages such as
            Python. These wrapper libraries are the API most people should use,
            as they simplify the details of D-Bus programming. libdbus is 
            intended to be a low-level backend for the higher level bindings.
            Much of the libdbus API is only useful for binding implementation.
          
        
      
    
    
      libdbus only supports one-to-one connections, just like a raw network
      socket. However, rather than sending byte streams over the connection, you
      send messages. Messages have a header identifying
      the kind of message, and a body containing a data payload. libdbus also
      abstracts the exact transport used (sockets vs. whatever else), and
      handles details such as authentication.
    
    
      The message bus daemon forms the hub of a wheel. Each spoke of the wheel
      is a one-to-one connection to an application using libdbus.  An
      application sends a message to the bus daemon over its spoke, and the bus
      daemon forwards the message to other connected applications as
      appropriate. Think of the daemon as a router.
    
    
      The bus daemon has multiple instances on a typical computer.  The
      first instance is a machine-global singleton, that is, a system daemon
      similar to sendmail or Apache. This instance has heavy security
      restrictions on what messages it will accept, and is used for systemwide
      communication. The other instances are created one per user login session.
      These instances allow applications in the user's session to communicate 
      with one another.
    
    
      The systemwide and per-user daemons are separate.  Normal within-session
      IPC does not involve the systemwide message bus process and vice versa.
    
    
      D-Bus applications
      
        There are many, many technologies in the world that have "Inter-process
        communication" or "networking" in their stated purpose: CORBA, DCE, DCOM, DCOP, XML-RPC, SOAP, MBUS, Internet Communications Engine (ICE),
        and probably hundreds more.
        Each of these is tailored for particular kinds of application.
        D-Bus is designed for two specific cases:
        
          
            
              Communication between desktop applications in the same desktop
              session; to allow integration of the desktop session as a whole,
              and address issues of process lifecycle (when do desktop components 
              start and stop running).
            
          
          
            
              Communication between the desktop session and the operating system, 
              where the operating system would typically include the kernel 
              and any system daemons or processes.
            
          
        
      
      
        For the within-desktop-session use case, the GNOME and KDE desktops 
        have significant previous experience with different IPC solutions
        such as CORBA and DCOP. D-Bus is built on that experience and 
        carefully tailored to meet the needs of these desktop projects 
        in particular. D-Bus may or may not be appropriate for other 
        applications; the FAQ has some comparisons to other IPC systems.
      
      
        The problem solved by the systemwide or communication-with-the-OS case 
        is explained well by the following text from the Linux Hotplug project:
        
          
           A gap in current Linux support is that policies with any sort of
           dynamic "interact with user" component aren't currently
           supported. For example, that's often needed the first time a network
           adapter or printer is connected, and to determine appropriate places
           to mount disk drives. It would seem that such actions could be
           supported for any case where a responsible human can be identified:
           single user workstations, or any system which is remotely
           administered.
          
          
            This is a classic "remote sysadmin" problem, where in this case
            hotplugging needs to deliver an event from one security domain
            (operating system kernel, in this case) to another (desktop for
            logged-in user, or remote sysadmin). Any effective response must go
            the other way: the remote domain taking some action that lets the
            kernel expose the desired device capabilities. (The action can often
            be taken asynchronously, for example letting new hardware be idle
            until a meeting finishes.) At this writing, Linux doesn't have
            widely adopted solutions to such problems. However, the new D-Bus
            work may begin to solve that problem.
          
        
      
      
        D-Bus may happen to be useful for purposes other than the one it was
        designed for. Its general properties that distinguish it from 
        other forms of IPC are:
        
          
            
              Binary protocol designed to be used asynchronously 
              (similar in spirit to the X Window System protocol).
            
          
          
            
              Stateful, reliable connections held open over time.
            
          
          
            
              The message bus is a daemon, not a "swarm" or 
              distributed architecture.
            
          
          
            
              Many implementation and deployment issues are specified rather
              than left ambiguous/configurable/pluggable.
            
          
          
            
              Semantics are similar to the existing DCOP system, allowing 
              KDE to adopt it more easily.
            
          
          
            
              Security features to support the systemwide mode of the 
              message bus.
            
          
        
      
    
  
  
    Concepts
    
      Some basic concepts apply no matter what application framework you're
      using to write a D-Bus application. The exact code you write will be
      different for GLib vs. Qt vs. Python applications, however.
    
    
    
      Here is a diagram (png svg) that may help you visualize the concepts
      that follow.
    
    
      Native Objects and Object Paths
      
        Your programming framework probably defines what an "object" is like;
        usually with a base class. For example: java.lang.Object, GObject, QObject,
        python's base Object, or whatever. Let's call this a native object.
      
      
        The low-level D-Bus protocol, and corresponding libdbus API, does not care about native objects. 
        However, it provides a concept called an 
        object path. The idea of an object path is that 
        higher-level bindings can name native object instances, and allow remote applications 
        to refer to them.
      
      
        The object path
        looks like a filesystem path, for example an object could be 
        named /org/kde/kspread/sheets/3/cells/4/5. 
        Human-readable paths are nice, but you are free to create an 
        object named /com/mycompany/c5yo817y0c1y1c5b 
        if it makes sense for your application.
      
      
        Namespacing object paths is smart, by starting them with the components
        of a domain name you own (e.g. /org/kde). This 
        keeps different code modules in the same process from stepping 
        on one another's toes.
      
        
    
      Methods and Signals
      
        Each object has members; the two kinds of member
        are methods and
        signals. Methods are operations that can be
        invoked on an object, with optional input (aka arguments or "in
        parameters") and output (aka return values or "out parameters").
        Signals are broadcasts from the object to any interested observers 
        of the object; signals may contain a data payload.
      
      
        Both methods and signals are referred to by name, such as 
        "Frobate" or "OnClicked".
      
    
    
      Interfaces
      
        Each object supports one or more interfaces.
        Think of an interface as a named group of methods and signals, 
        just as it is in GLib or Qt or Java. Interfaces define the 
        type of an object instance.
      
      
        DBus identifies interfaces with a simple namespaced string,
        something like org.freedesktop.Introspectable.
        Most bindings will map these interface names directly to 
        the appropriate programming language construct, for example 
        to Java interfaces or C++ pure virtual classes.
      
    
    
      Proxies
      
        A proxy object is a convenient native object created to 
        represent a remote object in another process. The low-level DBus API involves manually creating 
        a method call message, sending it, then manually receiving and processing 
        the method reply message. Higher-level bindings provide proxies as an alternative.
        Proxies look like a normal native object; but when you invoke a method on the proxy 
        object, the binding converts it into a DBus method call message, waits for the reply 
        message, unpacks the return value, and returns it from the native method..
      
      
        In pseudocode, programming without proxies might look like this:
        
          Message message = new Message("/remote/object/path", "MethodName", arg1, arg2);
          Connection connection = getBusConnection();
          connection.send(message);
          Message reply = connection.waitForReply(message);
          if (reply.isError()) {
             
          } else {
             Object returnValue = reply.getReturnValue();
          }
        
      
      
        Programming with proxies might look like this:
        
          Proxy proxy = new Proxy(getBusConnection(), "/remote/object/path");
          Object returnValue = proxy.MethodName(arg1, arg2);
        
      
    
    
      Bus Names
      
        When each application connects to the bus daemon, the daemon immediately
        assigns it a name, called the unique connection name.
        A unique name begins with a ':' (colon) character. These names are never 
        reused during the lifetime of the bus daemon - that is, you know 
        a given name will always refer to the same application.
        An example of a unique name might be
        :34-907. The numbers after the colon have 
        no meaning other than their uniqueness.
      
      
        When a name is mapped 
        to a particular application's connection, that application is said to 
        own that name.
      
      
        Applications may ask to own additional well-known
        names. For example, you could write a specification to
        define a name called com.mycompany.TextEditor.
        Your definition could specify that to own this name, an application
        should have an object at the path
        /com/mycompany/TextFileManager supporting the
        interface org.freedesktop.FileHandler.
      
      
      
        Applications could then send messages to this bus name, 
        object, and interface to execute method calls.
      
      
        You could think of the unique names as IP addresses, and the
        well-known names as domain names. So
        com.mycompany.TextEditor might map to something like
        :34-907 just as mycompany.com maps
        to something like 192.168.0.5.
      
      
      
        Names have a second important use, other than routing messages.  They
        are used to track lifecycle. When an application exits (or crashes), its
        connection to the message bus will be closed by the operating system
        kernel. The message bus then sends out notification messages telling
        remaining applications that the application's names have lost their
        owner. By tracking these notifications, your application can reliably
        monitor the lifetime of other applications.
      
      
        Bus names can also be used to coordinate single-instance applications.
        If you want to be sure only one
        com.mycompany.TextEditor application is running for
        example, have the text editor application exit if the bus name already
        has an owner.
      
    
    
      Addresses
      
        Applications using D-Bus are either servers or clients.  A server
        listens for incoming connections; a client connects to a server. Once
        the connection is established, it is a symmetric flow of messages; the
        client-server distinction only matters when setting up the 
        connection.
      
      
        If you're using the bus daemon, as you probably are, your application 
        will be a client of the bus daemon. That is, the bus daemon listens 
        for connections and your application initiates a connection to the bus 
        daemon.
      
      
        A D-Bus address specifies where a server will
        listen, and where a client will connect.  For example, the address
        unix:path=/tmp/abcdef specifies that the server will
        listen on a UNIX domain socket at the path
        /tmp/abcdef and the client will connect to that
        socket. An address can also specify TCP/IP sockets, or any other
        transport defined in future iterations of the D-Bus specification.
      
      
        When using D-Bus with a message bus daemon,
        libdbus automatically discovers the address of the per-session bus 
        daemon by reading an environment variable. It discovers the 
        systemwide bus daemon by checking a well-known UNIX domain socket path
        (though you can override this address with an environment variable).
      
      
        If you're using D-Bus without a bus daemon, it's up to you to 
        define which application will be the server and which will be 
        the client, and specify a mechanism for them to agree on 
        the server's address. This is an unusual case.
      
    
    
      Big Conceptual Picture
      
        Pulling all these concepts together, to specify a particular 
        method call on a particular object instance, a number of 
        nested components have to be named:
        
          Address -> [Bus Name] -> Path -> Interface -> Method
        
        The bus name is in brackets to indicate that it's optional -- you only
        provide a name to route the method call to the right application
        when using the bus daemon. If you have a direct connection to another
        application, bus names aren't used; there's no bus daemon.
      
      
        The interface is also optional, primarily for historical 
        reasons; DCOP does not require specifying the interface, 
        instead simply forbidding duplicate method names 
        on the same object instance. D-Bus will thus let you 
        omit the interface, but if your method name is ambiguous 
        it is undefined which method will be invoked.
      
    
    
      Messages - Behind the Scenes
      
        D-Bus works by sending messages between processes. If you're using 
        a sufficiently high-level binding, you may never work with messages directly.
      
      
        There are 4 message types:
        
          
            
              Method call messages ask to invoke a method 
              on an object.
            
          
          
            
              Method return messages return the results 
              of invoking a method.
            
          
          
            
              Error messages return an exception caused by 
              invoking a method.
            
          
          
            
              Signal messages are notifications that a given signal 
              has been emitted (that an event has occurred). 
              You could also think of these as "event" messages.
            
          
        
      
      
        A method call maps very simply to messages: you send a method call
        message, and receive either a method return message or an error message
        in reply.
      
      
        Each message has a header, including fields, 
        and a body, including arguments. You can think 
        of the header as the routing information for the message, and the body as the payload.
        Header fields might include the sender bus name, destination bus name, method or signal name, 
        and so forth. One of the header fields is a type signature describing the 
        values found in the body. For example, the letter "i" means "32-bit integer" so the signature 
        "ii" means the payload has two 32-bit integers.
      
    
    
      Calling a Method - Behind the Scenes
      
        A method call in DBus consists of two messages; a method call message sent from process A to process B, 
        and a matching method reply message sent from process B to process A. Both the call and the reply messages
        are routed through the bus daemon. The caller includes a different serial number in each call message, and the
        reply message includes this number to allow the caller to match replies to calls.
      
      
        The call message will contain any arguments to the method.
        The reply message may indicate an error, or may contain data returned by the method.
      
      
        A method invocation in DBus happens as follows:
        
          
            
              The language binding may provide a proxy, such that invoking a method on 
              an in-process object invokes a method on a remote object in another process. If so, the 
              application calls a method on the proxy, and the proxy
              constructs a method call message to send to the remote process.
            
          
          
            
              For more low-level APIs, the application may construct a method call message itself, without
              using a proxy.
            
          
          
            
              In either case, the method call message contains: a bus name belonging to the remote process; the name of the method; 
              the arguments to the method; an object path inside the remote process; and optionally the name of the 
              interface that specifies the method.
            
          
          
            
              The method call message is sent to the bus daemon.
            
          
          
            
              The bus daemon looks at the destination bus name. If a process owns that name, 
              the bus daemon forwards the method call to that process. Otherwise, the bus daemon
              creates an error message and sends it back as the reply to the method call message.
            
          
          
            
              The receiving process unpacks the method call message. In a simple low-level API situation, it 
              may immediately run the method and send a method reply message to the bus daemon.
              When using a high-level binding API, the binding might examine the object path, interface,
              and method name, and convert the method call message into an invocation of a method on 
              a native object (GObject, java.lang.Object, QObject, etc.), then convert the return 
              value from the native method into a method reply message.
            
          
          
            
              The bus daemon receives the method reply message and sends it to the process that 
              made the method call.
            
          
          
            
              The process that made the method call looks at the method reply and makes use of any 
              return values included in the reply. The reply may also indicate that an error occurred.
              When using a binding, the method reply message may be converted into the return value of 
              of a proxy method, or into an exception.
            
          
        
      
      
        The bus daemon never reorders messages. That is, if you send two method call messages to the same recipient, 
        they will be received in the order they were sent. The recipient is not required to reply to the calls
        in order, however; for example, it may process each method call in a separate thread, and return reply messages
        in an undefined order depending on when the threads complete. Method calls have a unique serial 
        number used by the method caller to match reply messages to call messages.
      
    
    
      Emitting a Signal - Behind the Scenes
      
        A signal in DBus consists of a single message, sent by one process to any number of other processes. 
        That is, a signal is a unidirectional broadcast. The signal may contain arguments (a data payload), but 
        because it is a broadcast, it never has a "return value." Contrast this with a method call 
        (see ) where the method call message has a matching method reply message.
      
      
        The emitter (aka sender) of a signal has no knowledge of the signal recipients. Recipients register
        with the bus daemon to receive signals based on "match rules" - these rules would typically include the sender and 
        the signal name. The bus daemon sends each signal only to recipients who have expressed interest in that 
        signal.
      
      
        A signal in DBus happens as follows:
        
          
            
              A signal message is created and sent to the bus daemon. When using the low-level API this may be 
              done manually, with certain bindings it may be done for you by the binding when a native object
              emits a native signal or event.
            
          
          
            
              The signal message contains the name of the interface that specifies the signal;
              the name of the signal; the bus name of the process sending the signal; and 
              any arguments 
            
          
          
            
              Any process on the message bus can register "match rules" indicating which signals it 
              is interested in. The bus has a list of registered match rules.
            
          
          
            
              The bus daemon examines the signal and determines which processes are interested in it.
              It sends the signal message to these processes.
            
          
          
            
              Each process receiving the signal decides what to do with it; if using a binding, 
              the binding may choose to emit a native signal on a proxy object. If using the 
              low-level API, the process may just look at the signal sender and name and decide
              what to do based on that.
            
          
        
      
    
    
      Introspection
      
        D-Bus objects may support the interface org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable.
        This interface has one method Introspect which takes no arguments and returns
        an XML string. The XML string describes the interfaces, methods, and signals of the object.
        See the D-Bus specification for more details on this introspection format.
      
    
  
  
    GLib API: Using Remote Objects
    
      The GLib binding is defined in the header file
      <dbus/dbus-glib.h>.
    
    
      D-Bus - GLib type mappings
      
	The heart of the GLib bindings for D-Bus is the mapping it
	provides between D-Bus "type signatures" and GLib types
	(GType). The D-Bus type system is composed of
	a number of "basic" types, along with several "container" types.
      
      
	Basic type mappings
	
	  Below is a list of the basic types, along with their associated
	  mapping to a GType.
	  
	    
	      
		
		  D-Bus basic type
		  GType
		  Free function
		  Notes
		
	      
	      
		
		  BYTE
		  G_TYPE_UCHAR
		  
		  
		  
		  BOOLEAN
		  G_TYPE_BOOLEAN
		  
		  
		  
		  INT16
		  G_TYPE_INT
		  
		  Will be changed to a G_TYPE_INT16 once GLib has it
		  
		  UINT16
		  G_TYPE_UINT
		  
		  Will be changed to a G_TYPE_UINT16 once GLib has it
		  
		  INT32
		  G_TYPE_INT
		  
		  Will be changed to a G_TYPE_INT32 once GLib has it
		  
		  UINT32
		  G_TYPE_UINT
		  
		  Will be changed to a G_TYPE_UINT32 once GLib has it
		  
		  INT64
		  G_TYPE_GINT64
		  
		  
		  
		  UINT64
		  G_TYPE_GUINT64
		  
		  
		  
		  DOUBLE
		  G_TYPE_DOUBLE
		  
		  
		  
		  STRING
		  G_TYPE_STRING
		  g_free
		  
		  
		  OBJECT_PATH
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_PROXY
		  g_object_unref
		  The returned proxy does not have an interface set; use dbus_g_proxy_set_interface to invoke methods
		
	      
	    
	  
	  As you can see, the basic mapping is fairly straightforward.
	
      
      
	Container type mappings
	
	  The D-Bus type system also has a number of "container"
	  types, such as DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY and
	  DBUS_TYPE_STRUCT.  The D-Bus type system
	  is fully recursive, so one can for example have an array of
	  array of strings (i.e. type signature
	  aas).
	
	
	  However, not all of these types are in common use; for
	  example, at the time of this writing the author knows of no
	  one using DBUS_TYPE_STRUCT, or a
	  DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY containing any non-basic
	  type.  The approach the GLib bindings take is pragmatic; try
	  to map the most common types in the most obvious way, and
	  let using less common and more complex types be less
	  "natural".
	
	
	  First, D-Bus type signatures which have an "obvious"
	  corresponding built-in GLib type are mapped using that type:
	  
	    
	      
		
		  D-Bus type signature
		  Description
		  GType
		  C typedef
		  Free function
		  Notes
		
	      
	      
		
		  as
		  Array of strings
		  G_TYPE_STRV
		  char **
		  g_strfreev
		  
		  
		  v
		  Generic value container
		  G_TYPE_VALUE
		  GValue *
		  g_value_unset
		  The calling conventions for values expect that method callers have allocated return values; see below.
		
	      
	    
	  
	
	
	  The next most common recursive type signatures are arrays of
	  basic values.  The most obvious mapping for arrays of basic
	  types is a GArray.  Now, GLib does not
	  provide a builtin GType for
	  GArray.  However, we actually need more than
	  that - we need a "parameterized" type which includes the
	  contained type.  Why we need this we will see below.
	
	
	  The approach taken is to create these types in the D-Bus GLib
	  bindings; however, there is nothing D-Bus specific about them.
	  In the future, we hope to include such "fundamental" types in GLib
	  itself.
	  
	    
	      
		
		  D-Bus type signature
		  Description
		  GType
		  C typedef
		  Free function
		  Notes
		
	      
	      
		
		  ay
		  Array of bytes
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_BYTE_ARRAY
		  GArray *
		  g_array_free
		  
		
		
		  au
		  Array of uint
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_UINT_ARRAY
		  GArray *
		  g_array_free
		  
		
		
		  ai
		  Array of int
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_INT_ARRAY
		  GArray *
		  g_array_free
		  
		
		
		  ax
		  Array of int64
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_INT64_ARRAY
		  GArray *
		  g_array_free
		  
		
		
		  at
		  Array of uint64
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_UINT64_ARRAY
		  GArray *
		  g_array_free
		  
		
		
		  ad
		  Array of double
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_DOUBLE_ARRAY
		  GArray *
		  g_array_free
		  
		
		
		  ab
		  Array of boolean
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_BOOLEAN_ARRAY
		  GArray *
		  g_array_free
		  
		
	      
	    
	  
	
	
	  D-Bus also includes a special type DBUS_TYPE_DICT_ENTRY which
	  is only valid in arrays.  It's intended to be mapped to a "dictionary"
	  type by bindings.  The obvious GLib mapping here is GHashTable.  Again,
	  however, there is no builtin GType for a GHashTable.
	  Moreover, just like for arrays, we need a parameterized type so that
	  the bindings can communiate which types are contained in the hash table.
	
	
	  At present, only strings are supported.  Work is in progress to
	  include more types.
	  
	    
	      
		
		  D-Bus type signature
		  Description
		  GType
		  C typedef
		  Free function
		  Notes
		
	      
	      
		
		  a{ss}
		  Dictionary mapping strings to strings
		  DBUS_TYPE_G_STRING_STRING_HASHTABLE
		  GHashTable *
		  g_hash_table_destroy
		  
		
	      
	    
	  
	
      
      
	Arbitrarily recursive type mappings
	
	  Finally, it is possible users will want to write or invoke D-Bus
	  methods which have arbitrarily complex type signatures not
	  directly supported by these bindings.  For this case, we have a
	  DBusGValue which acts as a kind of special
	  variant value which may be iterated over manually.  The
	  GType associated is
	  DBUS_TYPE_G_VALUE.
	
	
	  TODO insert usage of DBUS_TYPE_G_VALUE here.
	
      
    
    
      A sample program
      Here is a D-Bus program using the GLib bindings.
      
int
main (int argc, char **argv)
{
  DBusGConnection *connection;
  GError *error;
  DBusGProxy *proxy;
  char **name_list;
  char **name_list_ptr;
  
  g_type_init ();
  error = NULL;
  connection = dbus_g_bus_get (DBUS_BUS_SESSION,
                               &error);
  if (connection == NULL)
    {
      g_printerr ("Failed to open connection to bus: %s\n",
                  error->message);
      g_error_free (error);
      exit (1);
    }
  /* Create a proxy object for the "bus driver" (name "org.freedesktop.DBus") */
  
  proxy = dbus_g_proxy_new_for_name (connection,
                                     DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
                                     DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
                                     DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS);
  /* Call ListNames method, wait for reply */
  error = NULL;
  if (!dbus_g_proxy_call (proxy, "ListNames", &error, G_TYPE_INVALID,
                          G_TYPE_STRV, &name_list, G_TYPE_INVALID))
    {
      /* Just do demonstrate remote exceptions versus regular GError */
      if (error->domain == DBUS_GERROR && error->code == DBUS_GERROR_REMOTE_EXCEPTION)
        g_printerr ("Caught remote method exception %s: %s",
	            dbus_g_error_get_name (error),
	            error->message);
      else
        g_printerr ("Error: %s\n", error->message);
      g_error_free (error);
      exit (1);
    }
  /* Print the results */
 
  g_print ("Names on the message bus:\n");
  
  for (name_list_ptr = name_list; *name_list_ptr; name_list_ptr++)
    {
      g_print ("  %s\n", *name_list_ptr);
    }
  g_strfreev (name_list);
  g_object_unref (proxy);
  return 0;
}
    
    
    
      Program initalization
      
	A connection to the bus is acquired using
	dbus_g_bus_get.  Next, a proxy
	is created for the object "/org/freedesktop/DBus" with
	interface org.freedesktop.DBus
	on the service org.freedesktop.DBus.
	This is a proxy for the message bus itself.
      
    
    
      Understanding method invocation
      
	You have a number of choices for method invocation.  First, as
	used above, dbus_g_proxy_call sends a
	method call to the remote object, and blocks until a reply is
	recieved.  The outgoing arguments are specified in the varargs
	array, terminated with G_TYPE_INVALID.
	Next, pointers to return values are specified, followed again
	by G_TYPE_INVALID.
      
      
	To invoke a method asynchronously, use
	dbus_g_proxy_begin_call.  This returns a
	DBusGPendingCall object; you may then set a
	notification function using
	dbus_g_pending_call_set_notify.
      
    
    
      Connecting to object signals
      
	You may connect to signals using
	dbus_g_proxy_add_signal and
	dbus_g_proxy_connect_signal.  You must
	invoke dbus_g_proxy_add_signal to specify
	the signature of your signal handlers; you may then invoke
	dbus_g_proxy_connect_signal multiple times.
      
      
	Note that it will often be the case that there is no builtin
	marshaller for the type signature of a remote signal.  In that
	case, you must generate a marshaller yourself by using
	glib-genmarshal, and then register
	it using dbus_g_object_register_marshaller.
      
    
    
      Error handling and remote exceptions
      
	All of the GLib binding methods such as
	dbus_g_proxy_end_call return a
	GError.  This GError can
	represent two different things:
      
	
	  
	    An internal D-Bus error, such as an out-of-memory
	    condition, an I/O error, or a network timeout.  Errors
	    generated by the D-Bus library itself have the domain
	    DBUS_GERROR, and a corresponding code
	    such as DBUS_GERROR_NO_MEMORY.  It will
	    not be typical for applications to handle these errors
	    specifically.
	  
	
	
	  
	    A remote D-Bus exception, thrown by the peer, bus, or
	    service.  D-Bus remote exceptions have both a textual
	    "name" and a "message".  The GLib bindings store this
	    information in the GError, but some
	    special rules apply.
	  
	  
	    The set error will have the domain
	    DBUS_GERROR as above, and will also
	    have the code
	    DBUS_GERROR_REMOTE_EXCEPTION.  In order
	    to access the remote exception name, you must use a
	    special accessor, such as
	    dbus_g_error_has_name or
	    dbus_g_error_get_name.  The remote
	    exception detailed message is accessible via the regular
	    GError message member.
	  
	
      
      
    
    
      More examples of method invocation
      
	Sending an integer and string, receiving an array of bytes
	
  GArray *arr;
  
  error = NULL;
  if (!dbus_g_proxy_call (proxy, "Foobar", &error,
                          G_TYPE_INT, 42, G_TYPE_STRING, "hello",
			  G_TYPE_INVALID,
			  DBUS_TYPE_G_UCHAR_ARRAY, &arr, G_TYPE_INVALID))
    {
      /* Handle error */
    }
   g_assert (arr != NULL);
   printf ("got back %u values", arr->len);
	
      
      
	Sending a GHashTable
	
  GHashTable *hash = g_hash_table_new (g_str_hash, g_str_equal);
  guint32 ret;
  
  g_hash_table_insert (hash, "foo", "bar");
  g_hash_table_insert (hash, "baz", "whee");
  error = NULL;
  if (!dbus_g_proxy_call (proxy, "HashSize", &error,
                          DBUS_TYPE_G_STRING_STRING_HASH, hash, G_TYPE_INVALID,
			  G_TYPE_UINT, &ret, G_TYPE_INVALID))
    {
      /* Handle error */
    }
  g_assert (ret == 2);
  g_hash_table_destroy (hash);
	
      
      
	Receiving a boolean and a string
	
  gboolean boolret;
  char *strret;
  
  error = NULL;
  if (!dbus_g_proxy_call (proxy, "GetStuff", &error,
			  G_TYPE_INVALID,
                          G_TYPE_BOOLEAN, &boolret,
                          G_TYPE_STRING, &strret,
			  G_TYPE_INVALID))
    {
      /* Handle error */
    }
  printf ("%s %s", boolret ? "TRUE" : "FALSE", strret);
  g_free (strret);
	
      
      
	Sending two arrays of strings
	
  /* NULL terminate */
  char *strs_static[] = {"foo", "bar", "baz", NULL};
  /* Take pointer to array; cannot pass array directly */
  char **strs_static_p = strs_static;
  char **strs_dynamic;
  strs_dynamic = g_new (char *, 4);
  strs_dynamic[0] = g_strdup ("hello");
  strs_dynamic[1] = g_strdup ("world");
  strs_dynamic[2] = g_strdup ("!");
  /* NULL terminate */
  strs_dynamic[3] = NULL;
  
  error = NULL;
  if (!dbus_g_proxy_call (proxy, "TwoStrArrays", &error,
                          G_TYPE_STRV, strs_static_p,
                          G_TYPE_STRV, strs_dynamic,
			  G_TYPE_INVALID,
			  G_TYPE_INVALID))
    {
      /* Handle error */
    }
   g_strfreev (strs_dynamic);
	
      
      
	Sending a boolean, receiving an array of strings
	
  char **strs;
  char **strs_p;
  gboolean blah;
  error = NULL;
  blah = TRUE;
  if (!dbus_g_proxy_call (proxy, "GetStrs", &error,
                          G_TYPE_BOOLEAN, blah,
			  G_TYPE_INVALID,
                          G_TYPE_STRV, &strs,
			  G_TYPE_INVALID))
    {
      /* Handle error */
    }
   for (strs_p = strs; *strs_p; strs_p++)
     printf ("got string: \"%s\"", *strs_p);
   g_strfreev (strs);
	
      
      
	Sending a variant
	
  GValue val = {0, };
  g_value_init (&val, G_TYPE_STRING);
  g_value_set_string (&val, "hello world");
  
  error = NULL;
  if (!dbus_g_proxy_call (proxy, "SendVariant", &error,
                          G_TYPE_VALUE, &val, G_TYPE_INVALID,
			  G_TYPE_INVALID))
    {
      /* Handle error */
    }
  g_assert (ret == 2);
  g_value_unset (&val);
	
      
      
	Receiving a variant
	
  GValue val = {0, };
  error = NULL;
  if (!dbus_g_proxy_call (proxy, "GetVariant", &error, G_TYPE_INVALID,
                          G_TYPE_VALUE, &val, G_TYPE_INVALID))
    {
      /* Handle error */
    }
  if (G_VALUE_TYPE (&val) == G_TYPE_STRING)
    printf ("%s\n", g_value_get_string (&val));
  else if (G_VALUE_TYPE (&val) == G_TYPE_INT)
    printf ("%d\n", g_value_get_int (&val));
  else
    ...
  g_value_unset (&val);
	
      
    
    
      Generated Bindings
      
        By using the Introspection XML files, convenient client-side bindings
        can be automatically created to ease the use of a remote DBus object.
      
      
        Here is a sample XML file which describes an object that exposes
        one method, named ManyArgs.
        
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<node name="/com/example/MyObject">
  <interface name="com.example.MyObject">
    <method name="ManyArgs">
      <arg type="u" name="x" direction="in" />
      <arg type="s" name="str" direction="in" />
      <arg type="d" name="trouble" direction="in" />
      <arg type="d" name="d_ret" direction="out" />
      <arg type="s" name="str_ret" direction="out" />
    </method>
  </interface>
</node>
      
      
        Run dbus-binding-tool --mode=glib-client
          FILENAME >
          HEADER_NAME to generate the header
        file.  For example: dbus-binding-tool --mode=glib-client
          my-object.xml > my-object-bindings.h.  This will generate
        inline functions with the following prototypes:
        
/* This is a blocking call */
gboolean
com_example_MyObject_many_args (DBusGProxy *proxy, const guint IN_x,
                                const char * IN_str, const gdouble IN_trouble,
                                gdouble* OUT_d_ret, char ** OUT_str_ret,
                                GError **error);
/* This is a non-blocking call */
DBusGProxyCall*
com_example_MyObject_many_args_async (DBusGProxy *proxy, const guint IN_x,
                                      const char * IN_str, const gdouble IN_trouble,
                                      com_example_MyObject_many_args_reply callback,
                                      gpointer userdata);
/* This is the typedef for the non-blocking callback */
typedef void
(*com_example_MyObject_many_args_reply)
(DBusGProxy *proxy, gdouble OUT_d_ret, char * OUT_str_ret,
 GError *error, gpointer userdata);
        The first argument in all functions is a DBusGProxy
        *, which you should create with the usual
        dbus_g_proxy_new_* functions.  Following that are the
        "in" arguments, and then either the "out" arguments and a
        GError * for the synchronous (blocking) function, or
        callback and user data arguments for the asynchronous (non-blocking)
        function.  The callback in the asynchronous function passes the
        DBusGProxy *, the returned "out" arguments, an
        GError * which is set if there was an error otherwise
        NULL, and the user data.
      
      
        As with the server-side bindings support (see ), the exact behaviour of the client-side
        bindings can be manipulated using "annotations".  Currently the only
        annotation used by the client bindings is
        org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.NoReply, which sets the
        flag indicating that the client isn't expecting a reply to the method
        call, so a reply shouldn't be sent.  This is often used to speed up
        rapid method calls where there are no "out" arguments, and not knowing
        if the method succeeded is an acceptable compromise to half the traffic
        on the bus.
      
    
  
  
    GLib API: Implementing Objects
    
      At the moment, to expose a GObject via D-Bus, you must
      write XML by hand which describes the methods exported
      by the object.  In the future, this manual step will
      be obviated by the upcoming GLib introspection support.
    
    
      Here is a sample XML file which describes an object that exposes
      one method, named ManyArgs.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
<node name="/com/example/MyObject">
  <interface name="com.example.MyObject">
    <annotation name="org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.CSymbol" value="my_object"/>
    <method name="ManyArgs">
      <!-- This is optional, and in this case is redunundant -->
      <annotation name="org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.CSymbol" value="my_object_many_args"/>
      <arg type="u" name="x" direction="in" />
      <arg type="s" name="str" direction="in" />
      <arg type="d" name="trouble" direction="in" />
      <arg type="d" name="d_ret" direction="out" />
      <arg type="s" name="str_ret" direction="out" />
    </method>
  </interface>
</node>
    
    
      This XML is in the same format as the D-Bus introspection XML
      format. Except we must include an "annotation" which give the C
      symbols corresponding to the object implementation prefix
      (my_object).  In addition, if particular
      methods symbol names deviate from C convention
      (i.e. ManyArgs ->
      many_args), you may specify an annotation
      giving the C symbol.
    
    
      Once you have written this XML, run dbus-binding-tool --mode=glib-server FILENAME > HEADER_NAME. to
      generate a header file.  For example: dbus-binding-tool --mode=glib-server my-object.xml > my-object-glue.h.
    
    
      Next, include the generated header in your program, and invoke
      dbus_g_object_class_install_info in the class
      initializer, passing the object class and "object info" included in the
      header.  For example:
      
	dbus_g_object_type_install_info (COM_FOO_TYPE_MY_OBJECT, &com_foo_my_object_info);
      
      This should be done exactly once per object class.
    
    
      To actually implement the method, just define a C function named e.g.
      my_object_many_args in the same file as the info
      header is included.  At the moment, it is required that this function
      conform to the following rules:
      
	
	  
	    The function must return a value of type gboolean;
	    TRUE on success, and FALSE
	    otherwise.
	  
	
	
	  
	    The first parameter is a pointer to an instance of the object.
	  
	
	
	  
	    Following the object instance pointer are the method
	    input values.
	  
	
	
	  
	    Following the input values are pointers to return values.
	  
	
	
	  
	    The final parameter must be a GError **.
	    If the function returns FALSE for an
	    error, the error parameter must be initalized with
	    g_set_error.
	  
	
      
    
    
      Finally, you can export an object using dbus_g_connection_register_g_object.  For example:
      
	  dbus_g_connection_register_g_object (connection,
                                               "/com/foo/MyObject",
                                               obj);
      
    
    
      Server-side Annotations
      
        There are several annotations that are used when generating the
        server-side bindings.  The most common annotation is
        org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.CSymbol but there are other
        annotations which are often useful.
        
          
            org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.CSymbol
            
              
                This annotation is used to specify the C symbol names for
                the various types (interface, method, etc), if it differs from the
                name DBus generates.
              
            
          
          
            org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.Async
            
              
                This annotation marks the method implementation as an
                asynchronous function, which doesn't return a response straight
                away but will send the response at some later point to complete
                the call.  This is used to implement non-blocking services where
                method calls can take time.
              
              
                When a method is asynchronous, the function prototype is
                different. It is required that the function conform to the
                following rules:
                
                  
                    
                      The function must return a value of type gboolean;
                      TRUE on success, and FALSE
                      otherwise. TODO: the return value is currently ignored.
                    
                  
                  
                    
                      The first parameter is a pointer to an instance of the object.
                    
                  
                  
                    
                      Following the object instance pointer are the method
                      input values.
                    
                  
                  
                    
                      The final parameter must be a
                      DBusGMethodInvocation *.  This is used
                      when sending the response message back to the client, by
                      calling dbus_g_method_return or
                      dbus_g_method_return_error.
                    
                  
                
              
            
          
          
            org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.Const
            
              This attribute can only be applied to "out"
              <arg> nodes, and specifies that the
              parameter isn't being copied when returned.  For example, this
              turns a 's' argument from a char ** to a
              const char **, and results in the argument not
              being freed by DBus after the message is sent.
              
            
          
          
            org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.ReturnVal
            
              
                This attribute can only be applied to "out"
                <arg> nodes, and alters the expected
                function signature.  It currently can be set to two values:
                "" or "error".  The
                argument marked with this attribute is not returned via a
                pointer argument, but by the function's return value.  If the
                attribute's value is the empty string, the GError
                * argument is also omitted so there is no standard way
                to return an error value.  This is very useful for interfacing
                with existing code, as it is possible to match existing APIs.
                If the attribute's value is "error", then the
                final argument is a GError * as usual.
              
              
                Some examples to demonstrate the usage. This introspection XML:
                
<method name="Increment">
  <arg type="u" name="x" />
  <arg type="u" direction="out" />
</method>
                
                Expects the following function declaration:
                
gboolean
my_object_increment (MyObject *obj, gint32 x, gint32 *ret, GError **error);
                
              
              
                This introspection XML:
                
<method name="IncrementRetval">
  <arg type="u" name="x" />
  <arg type="u" direction="out" >
    <annotation name="org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.ReturnVal" value=""/>
  </arg>
</method>
                
                Expects the following function declaration:
                
gint32
my_object_increment_retval (MyObject *obj, gint32 x)
                
              
              
                This introspection XML:
                
<method name="IncrementRetvalError">
  <arg type="u" name="x" />
  <arg type="u" direction="out" >
    <annotation name="org.freedesktop.DBus.GLib.ReturnVal" value="error"/>
  </arg>
</method>
                
                Expects the following function declaration:
                
gint32
my_object_increment_retval_error (MyObject *obj, gint32 x, GError **error)
                
              
            
          
        
      
    
  
  
    Python API: Using Remote Objects
    
      The Python bindings provide a simple to use interface for talking over D-Bus.
      Where possible much of the inner-workings of D-Bus are hidden behind what looks
      like normal Python objects.
    
    
      D-Bus - Python type mappings
      
        While python itself is a largely untyped language D-Bus provides a simple type system
        for talking with other languages which may be strongly typed.  Python for the most part
        tries automatically map python objects to types on the bus.  It is none the less good to 
        know what the type mappings are so one can better utilize services over the bus.
      
      
        Basic type mappings
	
	  Below is a list of the basic types, along with their associated
	  mapping to a Python object.
	  
	    
	      
		
		  D-Bus basic type
		  Python wrapper
		  Notes
		
	      
	      
		
		  BYTE
		  dbus.Byte
		  
		  
		  BOOLEAN
		  dbus.Boolean
		  Any variable assigned a True or False boolean value will automatically be converted into a BOOLEAN over the bus
		  
		  INT16
		  dbus.Int16
		  
		  
		  UINT16
		  dbus.UInt16
		  
		  
		  INT32
		  dbus.Int32
		  This is the default mapping for Python integers
		  
		  UINT32
		  dbus.UInt32
		  
		  
		  INT64
		  dbus.Int64
		  
		  
		  UINT64
		  dbus.UInt64
		  
		  
		  DOUBLE
		  dbus.Double
		  Any variable assigned a floating point number will automatically be converted into a DOUBLE over the bus
		  
		  STRING
		  dbus.String
		  Any variable assigned a quoted string will automatically be converted into a STRING over the bus
		  
		  OBJECT_PATH
		  dbus.ObjectPath
		  
		
	      
	    
	  
	
      
      
	Container type mappings
	
	  The D-Bus type system also has a number of "container"
	  types, such as DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY and
	  DBUS_TYPE_STRUCT.  The D-Bus type system
	  is fully recursive, so one can for example have an array of
	  array of strings (i.e. type signature
	  aas).
	
	
	  D-Bus container types have native corresponding built-in Python types
	  so it is easy to use them.
	  
	    
	      
		
		  D-Bus type
		  Python type
                  Python wrapper
		  Notes
		
	      
	      
		
		  ARRAY
		  Python lists
                  dbus.Array
		  Python lists, denoted by square brackets [], are converted into arrays and visa versa.
		  The one restriction is that when sending a Python list each element of the list must be of the same
		  type.  This is because D-Bus arrays can contain only one element type.  Use Python tuples for mixed types.
                  
                  When using the wrapper you may also specify a type or signature of the elements contained in the Array.
                  This is manditory when passing an empty Array to a method on the bus because Python can not guess at the 
                  contents of an empty array.  For example if a method is expecting an Array of int32's and you need to pass
                  it an empty Array you would do it as such:
                  
                  emptyint32array = dbus.Array([], type=dbus.Int32)
                  or
                  emptyint32array = dbus.Array([], signature="i")
                  Note that dbus.Array derives from list so it acts just like a python list.
                  
		  
		
		  STRUCT
		  Python tuple
                  dbus.Struct
		  Python tuples, denoted by parentheses (,), are converted into structs and visa versa.
		  Tuples can have mixed types.
		
		
		  DICTIONARY
		  Python dictionary
                  dbus.Dictionary
		  D-Bus doesn't have an explicit dictionary type.  Instead it uses LISTS of DICT_ENTRIES to
		  represent a dictionary.  A DICT_ENTRY is simply a two element struct containing a key/value pair.
		  Python dictionaries are automatically converted to a LIST of DICT_ENTRIES and visa versa.
                  
                  Since dictonaries are described as lists of dict_entries we also need the signature in order
                  to pass empty dictionaries.  The wrapper provides a way of specifying this through the key_type/value_type
                  type parameters or the signature parameters.  To send an empty Dictionary where the key is a string
                  and the value is a string you would do it as such:
                  
                  emptystringstringdict = dbus.Dictionary({}, key_type=dbus.String, value_type=dbus.Value)
                  or
                  emptystringstringdict = dbus.Dictionary({}, signature="ss")
        
                  Note that dbus.Dictionary derives from dict so it acts just like a python dictionary.
                  
		
		
		  VARIANT
		  any type
                  dbus.Variant
		  A variant is a container for any type.  Python exports its methods to accept only variants 
		   since we are an untyped language and can demarshal into any Python type.
                   
                   To send a variant you must first wrap it in adbus.Variant.  If no type or signiture is 
                   given to the variant the marshaler will get the type from the contents.
		
	      
	    
	  
	
      
    
    
      Invoking Methods
      Here is a D-Bus program using the Python bindings to get a listing of all names on the session bus.
      
import dbus
bus = dbus.SessionBus()
proxy_obj = bus.bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.DBus', '/org/freedesktop/DBus')
dbus_iface = dbus.Interface(proxy_obj, 'org.freedesktop.DBus')
print dbus_iface.ListNames()
      
      
        Notice I get an interface on the proxy object and use that to make the call.  While the specifications
	state that you do not need to specify an interface if the call is unambiguous (i.e. only one method implements
	that name) due to a bug on the bus that drops messages which don't have an interface field you need to specify
	interfaces at this time.  In any event it is always good practice to specify the interface of the method you 
	wish to call to avoid any side effects should a method of the same name be implemented on another interface.
      
      
        You can specify the interface for a single call using the dbus_interface keyword.
proxy_obj.ListNames(dbus_interface = 'org.freedesktop.DBus')
      
      
        This is all fine and good if all you want to do is call methods on the bus and then exit.  In order to 
        do more complex things such as use a GUI or make asynchronous calls you will need a mainloop.  You would use
	asynchronous calls because in GUI applications it is very bad to block for any long period of time.  This cause
	the GUI to seem to freeze.  Since replies to D-Bus messages can take an indeterminate amount of time using async 
	calls allows you to return control to the GUI while you wait for the reply.  This is exceedingly easy to do in
	Python.  Here is an example using the GLib/GTK+ mainloop.
import gobject 
import dbus
if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
    import dbus.glib
def print_list_names_reply(list):
    print str(list) 
def print_error(e):
    print str(e)
    
bus = dbus.SessionBus()
proxy_obj = bus.bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.DBus', '/org/freedesktop/DBus')
dbus_iface = dbus.Interface(proxy_obj, 'org.freedesktop.DBus')
dbus_iface.ListNames(reply_handler=print_list_names_reply, error_handler=print_error)
mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
mainloop.run()
      
      
        In the above listing you will notice the reply_handler and error_handler keywords.  These tell the method that
	it should be called async and to call print_list_names_reply or print_error depending if you get a reply or an error.
	The signature for replys depends on the number of arguments being sent back.  Error handlers always take one parameter
	which is the error object returned.
      
      
        You will also notice that I check the version of the dbus bindings before importing dbus.glib.  In older versions
	glib was the only available mainloop.  As of version 0.41.0 we split out the glib dependency to allow for other mainloops
	to be implemented.  Notice also the python binding version does not match up with the D-Bus version.  Once we reach 1.0
	this should change with Python changes simply tracking the D-Bus changes.
        While the glib mainloop is the only mainloop currently implemented, integrating other mainloops should
	be very easy to do.  There are plans for creating a a generic mainloop to be the default for non gui programs.
      
    
    
      Listening for Signals
      
        Signals are emitted by objects on the bus to notify listening programs that an event has occurred.  There are a couple of ways
        to register a signal handler on the bus.  One way is to attach to an already created proxy using the connect_to_signal method
	which takes a signal name and handler as arguments.  Let us look at an example of connecting to the HAL service to receive
	signals when devices are added and removed and when devices register a capability.  This example assumes you have HAL already running.
import gobject 
import dbus
if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
    import dbus.glib
def device_added_callback(udi):
    print 'Device with udi %s was added' % (udi)
def device_removed_callback(udi):
    print 'Device with udi %s was added' % (udi)
def device_capability_callback(udi, capability):
    print 'Device with udi %s added capability %s' % (udi, capability)
bus = dbus.SystemBus()
hal_manager_obj = bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.Hal', 
                                 '/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager')
hal_manager = dbus.Interface(hal_manager_obj,
                             'org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager')
hal_manager.connect_to_signal('DeviceAdded', device_added_callback)
hal_manager.connect_to_signal('DeviceRemoved', device_removed_callback)
hal_manager.connect_to_signal('NewCapability', device_capability_callback)
mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
mainloop.run()
      
      
        The drawback of using this method is that the service that you are connecting to has to be around when you register
	your signal handler.  While HAL is guaranteed to be around on systems that use it this is not always the case for every
	service on the bus.  Say our program started up before HAL, we could connect to the signal by adding a signal receiver
	directly to the bus.
bus.add_signal_receiver(device_added_callback,
                        'DeviceAdded',
                        'org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager',
                        'org.freedesktop.Hal',
                        '/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager')
bus.add_signal_receiver(device_removed_callback,
                        'DeviceRemoved',
                        'org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager',
                        'org.freedesktop.Hal',
                        '/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager')
bus.add_signal_receiver(device_capability_callback,
                        'DeviceAdded',
                        'org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager',
                        'org.freedesktop.Hal',
                        '/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager')
      
      
        All this can be done without creating the proxy object if one wanted to but in most cases you would want to have 
	a reference to the object so once a signal was received operations could be executed on the object.
      
      
        Signal matching on arguments
        
          Starting with D-Bus 0.36 and the (0, 43, 0) version of the python 
          bindings you can now add a match on arguments being sent in a signal.
          This is useful for instance for only getting NameOwnerChanged
          signals for your service.  Lets say we create a name on the bus called
          'org.foo.MyName' we could also add a match to just get 
          NameOwnerChanges for that name as such:
bus.add_signal_receiver(myname_changed,
                        'NameOwnerChanged',
                        'org.freedesktop.DBus',
                        'org.freedesktop.DBus',
                        '/org/freedesktop/DBus',
                        arg0='org.foo.MyName')
          It is as simple as that.  To match the second arg you would use arg1=,
          the third arg2=, etc.
        
      
      
        Cost of Creating a Proxy Object
	
	  Note that creating proxy objects can have an associated processing cost.  When introspection is implemented
	  a proxy may wait for introspection data before processing any requests.  It is generally good practice to
	  create proxies once and reuse the proxy when calling into the object.  Constantly creating the same proxy 
	  over and over again can become a bottleneck for your program.
	
      
      
        TODO: example of getting information about devices from HAL
      
    
  
  
    Python API: Implementing Objects
    
      Implementing object on the bus is just as easy as invoking methods or listening for signals on the bus.
    
    
      Version Alert
      
        The Python D-Bus bindings require version 2.4 or greater of Python when creating D-Bus objects.
      
    
    
      Inheriting From dbus.service.Object
      
        In order to export a Python object over the bus one must first get a bus name and then create
        a Python object that inherits from dbus.service.Object.  The following is the start of an example
	HelloWorld object that we want to export over the session bus.
import gobject 
import dbus
import dbus.service
if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
    import dbus.glib
class HelloWorldObject(dbus.service.Object):
    def __init__(self, bus_name, object_path='/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldObject'):
        dbus.service.Object.__init__(self, bus_name, object_path)
session_bus = dbus.SessionBus()
bus_name = dbus.service.BusName('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', bus=session_bus)
object = HelloWorldObject(bus_name)
mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
mainloop.run()
      
      
        Here we got the session bus, then created a BusName object which requests a name on the bus.
	We pass that bus name to the HelloWorldObject object which inherits from dbus.service.Object.
	We now have an object on the bus but it is pretty useless.
      
    
    
      Exporting Methods Over The Bus
      
        Let's make this object do something and export a method over the bus.
import gobject
import dbus
import dbus.service
if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
    import dbus.glib
class HelloWorldObject(dbus.service.Object):
    def __init__(self, bus_name, object_path='/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldObject'):
        dbus.service.Object.__init__(self, bus_name, object_path)
    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
    def hello(self):
        return 'Hello from the HelloWorldObject'
      
session_bus = dbus.SessionBus()
bus_name = dbus.service.BusName('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', bus=session_bus)
object = HelloWorldObject(bus_name)
mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
mainloop.run()
      
      
        Python Decorators
	
	  Notice the @ symbol on the line before the hello method.  This is a new directive introduced in
	  Python 2.4.  It is called a decorator and it "decorates" methods.  All you have to know is that
	  it provides metadata that can then be used to alter the behavior of the method being decorated.
	  In this case we are telling the bindings that the hello method should be exported as a D-Bus method
	  over the bus.
	
      
      
        As you can see we exported the hello method as part of the org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace interface.
	It takes no arguments and returns a string to the calling program. Let's create a proxy and invoke this
	method.
      
import dbus
bus = dbus.SessionBus()
proxy_obj = bus.bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', '/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldObject')
iface = dbus.Interface(proxy_obj, 'org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
print iface.hello()
      
      
        When invoking methods exported over the bus the bindings automatically know how many parameters
	the method exports.  You can even make a method that exports an arbitrary number of parameters.
	Also, whatever you return will automatically be transfered as a reply over the bus. Some examples.
    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
    def one_arg(self, first_arg):
        return 'I got arg %s' % first_arg
      
    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
    def two_args(self, first_arg, second_arg):
        return ('I got 2 args', first_arg, second_arg)
    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
    def return_list(self):
        return [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
    
    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
    def return_dict(self):
        return {one: '1ne', two: '2wo', three: '3ree'}
      
    
    
      Emitting Signals
      
        Setting up signals to emit is just as easy as exporting methods.  It uses the same syntax as methods.
import gobject
import dbus
import dbus.service
if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
    import dbus.glib
class HelloWorldObject(dbus.service.Object):
    def __init__(self, bus_name, object_path='/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldObject'):
        dbus.service.Object.__init__(self, bus_name, object_path)
    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
    def hello(self):
        return 'Hello from the HelloWorldObject'
      
    @dbus.service.signal('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
    def hello_signal(self, message):
        pass
	
session_bus = dbus.SessionBus()
bus_name = dbus.service.BusName('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', bus=session_bus)
object = HelloWorldObject(bus_name)
object.hello_signal('I sent a hello signal')
mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
mainloop.run()
      
      
        Adding a @dbus.service.signal decorator to a method turns it into a signal emitter.  You can put code
	in this method to do things like keep track of how many times you call the emitter or to print out debug
	messages but for the most part a pass noop will do.  Whenever you call the emitter a signal will be emitted
	with the parameters you passed in as arguments.  In the above example we send the message 'I sent a hello signal'
	with the signal.
      
    
    
      Inheriting from HelloWorldObject
      
        One of the cool things you can do in Python is inherit from another D-Bus object.  We use this trick in
	the bindings to provide a default implementation for the org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable interface.
	Let's inherit from the HelloWorldObject example above and overide the hello method to say goodbye.
class HelloWorldGoodbyeObject(HelloWorldObject):
    def __init__(self, bus_name, object_path='/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldGoodbyeObject'):
        HelloWorldObject.__init__(self, bus_name, object_path)
    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldGoodbyeIFace')
    def hello(self):
        return 'Goodbye'
goodbye_object = HelloWorldGoodbyeObject(bus_name)
      
       
       Let's now call both methods with a little help from interfaces.
      
import dbus
bus = dbus.SessionBus()
proxy_obj = bus.bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', '/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldGoodbyeObject')
print proxy_obj.hello(dbus_interface='org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
print proxy_obj.hello(dbus_interface='org.freedesktop.HelloWorldGoodbyeIFace')
      
      
        This should print out 'Hello from the HelloWorldObject' followed by a 'Goodbye'.
      
    
    
      Conclusion
      
        As you can see, using D-Bus from Python is an extremely easy proposition.  Hopefully
	the tutorial has been helpful in getting you started.  If you need anymore help please
	feel free to post on the mailing list.
	The Python bindings are still in a state of flux and there may be API changes in the future.
	This tutorial will be updated if such changes occur.
      
    
  
  
    Qt API: Using Remote Objects
    
      
      The Qt bindings are not yet documented.
    
  
  
    Qt API: Implementing Objects
    
      The Qt bindings are not yet documented.