NAME
Protocol::DBus::Peer - base class for a D-Bus peer
SYNOPSIS
$dbus->send_call(
interface => 'org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties',
member => 'GetAll',
signature => 's',
path => '/org/freedesktop/DBus',
destination => 'org.freedesktop.DBus',
body => [ 'org.freedesktop.DBus' ],
)->then( sub { .. } );
my $msg = $dbus->get_message();
# Same pattern as the IO::Handle method.
$dbus->blocking(0);
my $fileno = $dbus->fileno();
$dbus->flush_write_queue() if $dbus->pending_send();
# I’m not sure why you’d want to do this, but …
$dbus->big_endian();
DESCRIPTION
This class contains D-Bus logic that is useful in both client and server contexts. (Currently this distribution does not include a server implementation.)
METHODS
$msg = OBJ->get_message()
This returns a single instace of Protocol::DBus::Message, or undef if no message is available. It will also fire the appropriate “on_return” method on METHOD_RETURN or ERROR messages.
The backend I/O logic reads data in chunks; thus, if there is a message already available in the read buffer, no I/O is done. If you’re doing non-blocking I/O then it is thus vital that, every time the DBus socket is readable, you call this function until undef is returned.
OBJ->flush_write_queue()
Same as IO::Framed::Write’s method of the same name.
OBJ->send_call( %OPTS )
Send a METHOD_CALL message.
%OPTS are path
, interface
, member
, destination
, signature
, and body
. These do as you’d expect, but note that body
, if given, must be an array reference.
The return value is an instance of Promise::ES6 that will resolve when a METHOD_RETURN arrives in response, or reject when an ERROR arrives. The promise both resolves and rejects with a Protocol::DBus::Message instance that represents the response.
Note that exceptions can still happen (outside of the promise), e.g., if your input is invalid or if there’s a socket I/O error.
OBJ->send_return( $ORIG_MSG, %OPTS )
Send a METHOD_RETURN message.
Arguments are similar to send_call()
except for the header differences that the D-Bus specification describes. Also, destination
is not given directly but is instead inferred from the $ORIG_MSG. (Behavior is undefined if this parameter is given directly.)
OBJ->send_error( $ORIG_MSG, %OPTS )
Like send_return()
, but sends an error instead. The error_name
parameter is required.
OBJ->send_signal( %OPTS )
Like send_call()
but sends a signal rather than a method call, and a promise is not returned.
OBJ->big_endian()
Same interface as blocking()
, but this sets/gets/toggles whether to send big-endian messages instead of little-endian.
By default this library uses the system’s native byte order, so you probably have little need for this function.
OBJ->preserve_variant_signatures()
Same interface as blocking()
, but when this is enabled variants are given as two-member array references ([ signature => value ]), blessed as Protocol::DBus::Type::Variant
instances.
For most Perl applications this is probably counterproductive.
OBJ->blocking()
Same interface as IO::Handle’s method of the same name.
OBJ->fileno()
Returns the connection socket’s file descriptor.
OBJ->pending_send()
Returns a boolean that indicates whether there is data queued up to send to the server.