1/* -*- mode: C; c-file-style: "gnu" -*- */
2/* dbus-bus.c  Convenience functions for communicating with the bus.
3 *
4 * Copyright (C) 2003  CodeFactory AB
5 * Copyright (C) 2003  Red Hat, Inc.
6 *
7 * Licensed under the Academic Free License version 2.1
8 *
9 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
12 * (at your option) any later version.
13 *
14 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the
17 * GNU General Public License for more details.
18 *
19 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
21 * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA  02111-1307  USA
22 *
23 */
24
25#include "dbus-bus.h"
26#include "dbus-protocol.h"
27#include "dbus-internals.h"
28#include "dbus-message.h"
29#include "dbus-marshal-validate.h"
30#include "dbus-threads-internal.h"
31#include "dbus-connection-internal.h"
32#include <string.h>
33
34/**
35 * @defgroup DBusBus Message bus APIs
36 * @ingroup DBus
37 * @brief Functions for communicating with the message bus
38 *
39 * dbus_bus_get() allows all modules and libraries in a given
40 * process to share the same connection to the bus daemon by storing
41 * the connection globally.
42 *
43 * All other functions in this module are just convenience functions;
44 * most of them invoke methods on the bus daemon, by sending method
45 * call messages to #DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS. These convenience functions
46 * often make blocking method calls. If you don't want to block,
47 * you can send the method call messages manually in the same way
48 * you would any other method call message.
49 *
50 * This module is the only one in libdbus that's specific to
51 * communicating with the message bus daemon. The rest of the API can
52 * also be used for connecting to another application directly.
53 *
54 * @todo right now the default address of the system bus is hardcoded,
55 * so if you change it in the global config file suddenly you have to
56 * set DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS env variable.  Might be nice if the
57 * client lib somehow read the config file, or if the bus on startup
58 * somehow wrote out its address to a well-known spot, but might also
59 * not be worth it.
60 */
61
62/**
63 * @defgroup DBusBusInternals Message bus APIs internals
64 * @ingroup DBusInternals
65 * @brief Internals of functions for communicating with the message bus
66 *
67 * @{
68 */
69
70/**
71 * Block of message-bus-related data we attach to each
72 * #DBusConnection used with these convenience functions.
73 *
74 */
75typedef struct
76{
77  DBusConnection *connection; /**< Connection we're associated with */
78  char *unique_name; /**< Unique name of this connection */
79
80  unsigned int is_well_known : 1; /**< Is one of the well-known connections in our global array */
81} BusData;
82
83/** The slot we have reserved to store BusData.
84 */
85static dbus_int32_t bus_data_slot = -1;
86
87/** Number of bus types */
88#define N_BUS_TYPES 3
89
90static DBusConnection *bus_connections[N_BUS_TYPES];
91static char *bus_connection_addresses[N_BUS_TYPES] = { NULL, NULL, NULL };
92
93static DBusBusType activation_bus_type = DBUS_BUS_STARTER;
94
95static dbus_bool_t initialized = FALSE;
96
97/**
98 * Lock for globals in this file
99 */
100_DBUS_DEFINE_GLOBAL_LOCK (bus);
101
102/**
103 * Global lock covering all BusData on any connection. The bet is
104 * that some lock contention is better than more memory
105 * for a per-connection lock, but it's tough to imagine it mattering
106 * either way.
107 */
108_DBUS_DEFINE_GLOBAL_LOCK (bus_datas);
109
110static void
111addresses_shutdown_func (void *data)
112{
113  int i;
114
115  i = 0;
116  while (i < N_BUS_TYPES)
117    {
118      if (bus_connections[i] != NULL)
119        _dbus_warn_check_failed ("dbus_shutdown() called but connections were still live. This probably means the application did not drop all its references to bus connections.\n");
120
121      dbus_free (bus_connection_addresses[i]);
122      bus_connection_addresses[i] = NULL;
123      ++i;
124    }
125
126  activation_bus_type = DBUS_BUS_STARTER;
127}
128
129static dbus_bool_t
130get_from_env (char           **connection_p,
131              const char      *env_var)
132{
133  const char *s;
134
135  _dbus_assert (*connection_p == NULL);
136
137  s = _dbus_getenv (env_var);
138  if (s == NULL || *s == '\0')
139    return TRUE; /* successfully didn't use the env var */
140  else
141    {
142      *connection_p = _dbus_strdup (s);
143      return *connection_p != NULL;
144    }
145}
146
147static dbus_bool_t
148init_connections_unlocked (void)
149{
150  if (!initialized)
151    {
152      const char *s;
153      int i;
154
155      i = 0;
156      while (i < N_BUS_TYPES)
157        {
158          bus_connections[i] = NULL;
159          ++i;
160        }
161
162      /* Don't init these twice, we may run this code twice if
163       * init_connections_unlocked() fails midway through.
164       * In practice, each block below should contain only one
165       * "return FALSE" or running through twice may not
166       * work right.
167       */
168
169       if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM] == NULL)
170         {
171           _dbus_verbose ("Filling in system bus address...\n");
172
173           if (!get_from_env (&bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM],
174                              "DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_ADDRESS"))
175             return FALSE;
176         }
177
178
179       if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM] == NULL)
180         {
181           /* Use default system bus address if none set in environment */
182           bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM] =
183             _dbus_strdup (DBUS_SYSTEM_BUS_DEFAULT_ADDRESS);
184
185           if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM] == NULL)
186             return FALSE;
187
188           _dbus_verbose ("  used default system bus \"%s\"\n",
189                          bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM]);
190         }
191       else
192         _dbus_verbose ("  used env var system bus \"%s\"\n",
193                        bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM]);
194
195      if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION] == NULL)
196        {
197          _dbus_verbose ("Filling in session bus address...\n");
198
199          if (!get_from_env (&bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION],
200                             "DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS"))
201            return FALSE;
202
203	  if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION] == NULL)
204	    bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION] =
205	      _dbus_strdup (DBUS_SESSION_BUS_DEFAULT_ADDRESS);
206
207          if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION] == NULL)
208             return FALSE;
209
210          _dbus_verbose ("  \"%s\"\n", bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION] ?
211                         bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION] : "none set");
212        }
213
214      if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_STARTER] == NULL)
215        {
216          _dbus_verbose ("Filling in activation bus address...\n");
217
218          if (!get_from_env (&bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_STARTER],
219                             "DBUS_STARTER_ADDRESS"))
220            return FALSE;
221
222          _dbus_verbose ("  \"%s\"\n", bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_STARTER] ?
223                         bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_STARTER] : "none set");
224        }
225
226
227      if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_STARTER] != NULL)
228        {
229          s = _dbus_getenv ("DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE");
230
231          if (s != NULL)
232            {
233              _dbus_verbose ("Bus activation type was set to \"%s\"\n", s);
234
235              if (strcmp (s, "system") == 0)
236                activation_bus_type = DBUS_BUS_SYSTEM;
237              else if (strcmp (s, "session") == 0)
238                activation_bus_type = DBUS_BUS_SESSION;
239            }
240        }
241      else
242        {
243          /* Default to the session bus instead if available */
244          if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION] != NULL)
245            {
246              bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_STARTER] =
247                _dbus_strdup (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_SESSION]);
248              if (bus_connection_addresses[DBUS_BUS_STARTER] == NULL)
249                return FALSE;
250            }
251        }
252
253      /* If we return FALSE we have to be sure that restarting
254       * the above code will work right
255       */
256
257      if (!_dbus_setenv ("DBUS_ACTIVATION_ADDRESS", NULL))
258        return FALSE;
259
260      if (!_dbus_setenv ("DBUS_ACTIVATION_BUS_TYPE", NULL))
261        return FALSE;
262
263      if (!_dbus_register_shutdown_func (addresses_shutdown_func,
264                                         NULL))
265        return FALSE;
266
267      initialized = TRUE;
268    }
269
270  return initialized;
271}
272
273static void
274bus_data_free (void *data)
275{
276  BusData *bd = data;
277
278  if (bd->is_well_known)
279    {
280      int i;
281      _DBUS_LOCK (bus);
282      /* We may be stored in more than one slot */
283      /* This should now be impossible - these slots are supposed to
284       * be cleared on disconnect, so should not need to be cleared on
285       * finalize
286       */
287      i = 0;
288      while (i < N_BUS_TYPES)
289        {
290          if (bus_connections[i] == bd->connection)
291            bus_connections[i] = NULL;
292
293          ++i;
294        }
295      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus);
296    }
297
298  dbus_free (bd->unique_name);
299  dbus_free (bd);
300
301  dbus_connection_free_data_slot (&bus_data_slot);
302}
303
304static BusData*
305ensure_bus_data (DBusConnection *connection)
306{
307  BusData *bd;
308
309  if (!dbus_connection_allocate_data_slot (&bus_data_slot))
310    return NULL;
311
312  bd = dbus_connection_get_data (connection, bus_data_slot);
313  if (bd == NULL)
314    {
315      bd = dbus_new0 (BusData, 1);
316      if (bd == NULL)
317        {
318          dbus_connection_free_data_slot (&bus_data_slot);
319          return NULL;
320        }
321
322      bd->connection = connection;
323
324      if (!dbus_connection_set_data (connection, bus_data_slot, bd,
325                                     bus_data_free))
326        {
327          dbus_free (bd);
328          dbus_connection_free_data_slot (&bus_data_slot);
329          return NULL;
330        }
331
332      /* Data slot refcount now held by the BusData */
333    }
334  else
335    {
336      dbus_connection_free_data_slot (&bus_data_slot);
337    }
338
339  return bd;
340}
341
342/**
343 * Internal function that checks to see if this
344 * is a shared connection owned by the bus and if it is unref it.
345 *
346 * @param connection a connection that has been disconnected.
347 */
348void
349_dbus_bus_notify_shared_connection_disconnected_unlocked (DBusConnection *connection)
350{
351  int i;
352
353  _DBUS_LOCK (bus);
354
355  /* We are expecting to have the connection saved in only one of these
356   * slots, but someone could in a pathological case set system and session
357   * bus to the same bus or something. Or set one of them to the starter
358   * bus without setting the starter bus type in the env variable.
359   * So we don't break the loop as soon as we find a match.
360   */
361  for (i = 0; i < N_BUS_TYPES; ++i)
362    {
363      if (bus_connections[i] == connection)
364        {
365          bus_connections[i] = NULL;
366        }
367    }
368
369  _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus);
370}
371
372static DBusConnection *
373internal_bus_get (DBusBusType  type,
374                  dbus_bool_t  private,
375                  DBusError   *error)
376{
377  const char *address;
378  DBusConnection *connection;
379  BusData *bd;
380  DBusBusType address_type;
381
382  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (type >= 0 && type < N_BUS_TYPES, NULL);
383  _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, NULL);
384
385  _DBUS_LOCK (bus);
386
387  if (!init_connections_unlocked ())
388    {
389      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus);
390      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
391      return NULL;
392    }
393
394  /* We want to use the activation address even if the
395   * activating bus is the session or system bus,
396   * per the spec.
397   */
398  address_type = type;
399
400  /* Use the real type of the activation bus for getting its
401   * connection, but only if the real type's address is available. (If
402   * the activating bus isn't a well-known bus then
403   * activation_bus_type == DBUS_BUS_STARTER)
404   */
405  if (type == DBUS_BUS_STARTER &&
406      bus_connection_addresses[activation_bus_type] != NULL)
407    type = activation_bus_type;
408
409  if (!private && bus_connections[type] != NULL)
410    {
411      connection = bus_connections[type];
412      dbus_connection_ref (connection);
413
414      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus);
415      return connection;
416    }
417
418  address = bus_connection_addresses[address_type];
419  if (address == NULL)
420    {
421      dbus_set_error (error, DBUS_ERROR_FAILED,
422                      "Unable to determine the address of the message bus (try 'man dbus-launch' and 'man dbus-daemon' for help)");
423      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus);
424      return NULL;
425    }
426
427  if (private)
428    connection = dbus_connection_open_private (address, error);
429  else
430    connection = dbus_connection_open (address, error);
431
432  if (!connection)
433    {
434      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
435      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus);
436      return NULL;
437    }
438
439  /* By default we're bound to the lifecycle of
440   * the message bus.
441   */
442  dbus_connection_set_exit_on_disconnect (connection,
443                                          TRUE);
444
445  if (!dbus_bus_register (connection, error))
446    {
447      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
448      _dbus_connection_close_possibly_shared (connection);
449      dbus_connection_unref (connection);
450
451      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus);
452      return NULL;
453    }
454
455  if (!private)
456    {
457      /* store a weak ref to the connection (dbus-connection.c is
458       * supposed to have a strong ref that it drops on disconnect,
459       * since this is a shared connection)
460       */
461      bus_connections[type] = connection;
462    }
463
464  _DBUS_LOCK (bus_datas);
465  bd = ensure_bus_data (connection);
466  _dbus_assert (bd != NULL); /* it should have been created on
467                                register, so OOM not possible */
468  bd->is_well_known = TRUE;
469  _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus_datas);
470
471
472  _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus);
473
474  /* Return a reference to the caller */
475  return connection;
476}
477
478
479/** @} */ /* end of implementation details docs */
480
481/**
482 * @addtogroup DBusBus
483 * @{
484 */
485
486/**
487 * Connects to a bus daemon and registers the client with it.  If a
488 * connection to the bus already exists, then that connection is
489 * returned.  The caller of this function owns a reference to the bus.
490 *
491 * The caller may NOT call dbus_connection_close() on this connection;
492 * see dbus_connection_open() and dbus_connection_close() for details
493 * on that.
494 *
495 * If this function obtains a new connection object never before
496 * returned from dbus_bus_get(), it will call
497 * dbus_connection_set_exit_on_disconnect(), so the application
498 * will exit if the connection closes. You can undo this
499 * by calling dbus_connection_set_exit_on_disconnect() yourself
500 * after you get the connection.
501 *
502 * dbus_bus_get() calls dbus_bus_register() for you.
503 *
504 * If returning a newly-created connection, this function will block
505 * until authentication and bus registration are complete.
506 *
507 * @param type bus type
508 * @param error address where an error can be returned.
509 * @returns a #DBusConnection with new ref
510 */
511DBusConnection *
512dbus_bus_get (DBusBusType  type,
513	      DBusError   *error)
514{
515  return internal_bus_get (type, FALSE, error);
516}
517
518/**
519 * Connects to a bus daemon and registers the client with it as with
520 * dbus_bus_register().  Unlike dbus_bus_get(), always creates a new
521 * connection. This connection will not be saved or recycled by
522 * libdbus. Caller owns a reference to the bus and must either close
523 * it or know it to be closed prior to releasing this reference.
524 *
525 * See dbus_connection_open_private() for more details on when to
526 * close and unref this connection.
527 *
528 * This function calls
529 * dbus_connection_set_exit_on_disconnect() on the new connection, so the application
530 * will exit if the connection closes. You can undo this
531 * by calling dbus_connection_set_exit_on_disconnect() yourself
532 * after you get the connection.
533 *
534 * dbus_bus_get_private() calls dbus_bus_register() for you.
535 *
536 * This function will block until authentication and bus registration
537 * are complete.
538 *
539 * @param type bus type
540 * @param error address where an error can be returned.
541 * @returns a DBusConnection with new ref
542 */
543DBusConnection *
544dbus_bus_get_private (DBusBusType  type,
545                      DBusError   *error)
546{
547  return internal_bus_get (type, TRUE, error);
548}
549
550/**
551 * Registers a connection with the bus. This must be the first
552 * thing an application does when connecting to the message bus.
553 * If registration succeeds, the unique name will be set,
554 * and can be obtained using dbus_bus_get_unique_name().
555 *
556 * This function will block until registration is complete.
557 *
558 * If the connection has already registered with the bus
559 * (determined by checking whether dbus_bus_get_unique_name()
560 * returns a non-#NULL value), then this function does nothing.
561 *
562 * If you use dbus_bus_get() or dbus_bus_get_private() this
563 * function will be called for you.
564 *
565 * @note Just use dbus_bus_get() or dbus_bus_get_private() instead of
566 * dbus_bus_register() and save yourself some pain. Using
567 * dbus_bus_register() manually is only useful if you have your
568 * own custom message bus not found in #DBusBusType.
569 *
570 * If you open a bus connection with dbus_connection_open() or
571 * dbus_connection_open_private() you will have to dbus_bus_register()
572 * yourself, or make the appropriate registration method calls
573 * yourself. If you send the method calls yourself, call
574 * dbus_bus_set_unique_name() with the unique bus name you get from
575 * the bus.
576 *
577 * For shared connections (created with dbus_connection_open()) in a
578 * multithreaded application, you can't really make the registration
579 * calls yourself, because you don't know whether some other thread is
580 * also registering, and the bus will kick you off if you send two
581 * registration messages.
582 *
583 * If you use dbus_bus_register() however, there is a lock that
584 * keeps both apps from registering at the same time.
585 *
586 * The rule in a multithreaded app, then, is that dbus_bus_register()
587 * must be used to register, or you need to have your own locks that
588 * all threads in the app will respect.
589 *
590 * In a single-threaded application you can register by hand instead
591 * of using dbus_bus_register(), as long as you check
592 * dbus_bus_get_unique_name() to see if a unique name has already been
593 * stored by another thread before you send the registration messages.
594 *
595 * @param connection the connection
596 * @param error place to store errors
597 * @returns #TRUE on success
598 */
599dbus_bool_t
600dbus_bus_register (DBusConnection *connection,
601                   DBusError      *error)
602{
603  DBusMessage *message, *reply;
604  char *name;
605  BusData *bd;
606  dbus_bool_t retval;
607
608  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, FALSE);
609  _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, FALSE);
610
611  retval = FALSE;
612
613  _DBUS_LOCK (bus_datas);
614
615  bd = ensure_bus_data (connection);
616  if (bd == NULL)
617    {
618      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
619      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus_datas);
620      return FALSE;
621    }
622
623  if (bd->unique_name != NULL)
624    {
625      _dbus_verbose ("Ignoring attempt to register the same DBusConnection %s with the message bus a second time.\n",
626                     bd->unique_name);
627      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus_datas);
628
629      /* Success! */
630      return TRUE;
631    }
632
633  message = dbus_message_new_method_call (DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
634                                          DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
635                                          DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS,
636                                          "Hello");
637
638  if (!message)
639    {
640      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
641
642      _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus_datas);
643      return FALSE;
644    }
645
646  reply = dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block (connection, message, -1, error);
647
648  dbus_message_unref (message);
649
650  if (reply == NULL)
651    goto out;
652  else if (dbus_set_error_from_message (error, reply))
653    goto out;
654  else if (!dbus_message_get_args (reply, error,
655                                   DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &name,
656                                   DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
657    goto out;
658
659  bd->unique_name = _dbus_strdup (name);
660  if (bd->unique_name == NULL)
661    {
662      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
663      goto out;
664    }
665
666  retval = TRUE;
667
668 out:
669  if (reply)
670    dbus_message_unref (reply);
671
672  if (!retval)
673    _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
674
675  _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus_datas);
676
677  return retval;
678}
679
680
681/**
682 * Sets the unique name of the connection, as assigned by the message
683 * bus.  Can only be used if you registered with the bus manually
684 * (i.e. if you did not call dbus_bus_register()). Can only be called
685 * once per connection.  After the unique name is set, you can get it
686 * with dbus_bus_get_unique_name().
687 *
688 * The only reason to use this function is to re-implement the
689 * equivalent of dbus_bus_register() yourself. One (probably unusual)
690 * reason to do that might be to do the bus registration call
691 * asynchronously instead of synchronously.
692 *
693 * @note Just use dbus_bus_get() or dbus_bus_get_private(), or worst
694 * case dbus_bus_register(), instead of messing with this
695 * function. There's really no point creating pain for yourself by
696 * doing things manually.
697 *
698 * It's hard to use this function safely on shared connections
699 * (created by dbus_connection_open()) in a multithreaded application,
700 * because only one registration attempt can be sent to the bus. If
701 * two threads are both sending the registration message, there is no
702 * mechanism in libdbus itself to avoid sending it twice.
703 *
704 * Thus, you need a way to coordinate which thread sends the
705 * registration attempt; which also means you know which thread
706 * will call dbus_bus_set_unique_name(). If you don't know
707 * about all threads in the app (for example, if some libraries
708 * you're using might start libdbus-using threads), then you
709 * need to avoid using this function on shared connections.
710 *
711 * @param connection the connection
712 * @param unique_name the unique name
713 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
714 */
715dbus_bool_t
716dbus_bus_set_unique_name (DBusConnection *connection,
717                          const char     *unique_name)
718{
719  BusData *bd;
720  dbus_bool_t success;
721
722  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, FALSE);
723  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (unique_name != NULL, FALSE);
724
725  _DBUS_LOCK (bus_datas);
726
727  bd = ensure_bus_data (connection);
728  if (bd == NULL)
729    return FALSE;
730
731  _dbus_assert (bd->unique_name == NULL);
732
733  bd->unique_name = _dbus_strdup (unique_name);
734  success = bd->unique_name != NULL;
735
736  _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus_datas);
737
738  return success;
739}
740
741/**
742 * Gets the unique name of the connection as assigned by the message
743 * bus. Only possible after the connection has been registered with
744 * the message bus. All connections returned by dbus_bus_get() or
745 * dbus_bus_get_private() have been successfully registered.
746 *
747 * The name remains valid until the connection is freed, and
748 * should not be freed by the caller.
749 *
750 * Other than dbus_bus_get(), there are two ways to set the unique
751 * name; one is dbus_bus_register(), the other is
752 * dbus_bus_set_unique_name().  You are responsible for calling
753 * dbus_bus_set_unique_name() if you register by hand instead of using
754 * dbus_bus_register().
755 *
756 * @param connection the connection
757 * @returns the unique name or #NULL on error
758 */
759const char*
760dbus_bus_get_unique_name (DBusConnection *connection)
761{
762  BusData *bd;
763  const char *unique_name;
764
765  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, NULL);
766
767  _DBUS_LOCK (bus_datas);
768
769  bd = ensure_bus_data (connection);
770  if (bd == NULL)
771    return NULL;
772
773  unique_name = bd->unique_name;
774
775  _DBUS_UNLOCK (bus_datas);
776
777  return unique_name;
778}
779
780/**
781 * Asks the bus to return the UID the named connection authenticated
782 * as, if any.  Only works on UNIX; only works for connections on the
783 * same machine as the bus. If you are not on the same machine as the
784 * bus, then calling this is probably a bad idea, since the UID will
785 * mean little to your application.
786 *
787 * For the system message bus you're guaranteed to be on the same
788 * machine since it only listens on a UNIX domain socket (at least,
789 * as shipped by default).
790 *
791 * This function only works for connections that authenticated as
792 * a UNIX user, right now that includes all bus connections, but
793 * it's very possible to have connections with no associated UID.
794 * So check for errors and do something sensible if they happen.
795 *
796 * This function will always return an error on Windows.
797 *
798 * @param connection the connection
799 * @param name a name owned by the connection
800 * @param error location to store the error
801 * @returns the unix user id, or ((unsigned)-1) if error is set
802 */
803unsigned long
804dbus_bus_get_unix_user (DBusConnection *connection,
805                        const char     *name,
806                        DBusError      *error)
807{
808  DBusMessage *message, *reply;
809  dbus_uint32_t uid;
810
811  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, DBUS_UID_UNSET);
812  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (name != NULL, DBUS_UID_UNSET);
813  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_bus_name (name), DBUS_UID_UNSET);
814  _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, DBUS_UID_UNSET);
815
816  message = dbus_message_new_method_call (DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
817                                          DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
818                                          DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS,
819                                          "GetConnectionUnixUser");
820
821  if (message == NULL)
822    {
823      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
824      return DBUS_UID_UNSET;
825    }
826
827  if (!dbus_message_append_args (message,
828				 DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &name,
829				 DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
830    {
831      dbus_message_unref (message);
832      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
833      return DBUS_UID_UNSET;
834    }
835
836  reply = dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block (connection, message, -1,
837                                                     error);
838
839  dbus_message_unref (message);
840
841  if (reply == NULL)
842    {
843      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
844      return DBUS_UID_UNSET;
845    }
846
847  if (dbus_set_error_from_message (error, reply))
848    {
849      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
850      dbus_message_unref (reply);
851      return DBUS_UID_UNSET;
852    }
853
854  if (!dbus_message_get_args (reply, error,
855                              DBUS_TYPE_UINT32, &uid,
856                              DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
857    {
858      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
859      dbus_message_unref (reply);
860      return DBUS_UID_UNSET;
861    }
862
863  dbus_message_unref (reply);
864
865  return (unsigned long) uid;
866}
867
868
869/**
870 * Asks the bus to assign the given name to this connection by invoking
871 * the RequestName method on the bus. This method is fully documented
872 * in the D-Bus specification. For quick reference, the flags and
873 * result codes are discussed here, but the specification is the
874 * canonical version of this information.
875 *
876 * First you should know that for each bus name, the bus stores
877 * a queue of connections that would like to own it. Only
878 * one owns it at a time - called the primary owner. If the primary
879 * owner releases the name or disconnects, then the next owner in the
880 * queue atomically takes over.
881 *
882 * So for example if you have an application org.freedesktop.TextEditor
883 * and multiple instances of it can be run, you can have all of them
884 * sitting in the queue. The first one to start up will receive messages
885 * sent to org.freedesktop.TextEditor, but if that one exits another
886 * will become the primary owner and receive messages.
887 *
888 * The queue means you don't need to manually watch for the current owner to
889 * disappear and then request the name again.
890 *
891 * When requesting a name, you can specify several flags.
892 *
893 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT and #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_DO_NOT_QUEUE
894 * are properties stored by the bus for this connection with respect to
895 * each requested bus name. These properties are stored even if the
896 * connection is queued and does not become the primary owner.
897 * You can update these flags by calling RequestName again (even if
898 * you already own the name).
899 *
900 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT means that another requestor of the
901 * name can take it away from you by specifying #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING.
902 *
903 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_DO_NOT_QUEUE means that if you aren't the primary owner,
904 * you don't want to be queued up - you only care about being the
905 * primary owner.
906 *
907 * Unlike the other two flags, #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING is a property
908 * of the individual RequestName call, i.e. the bus does not persistently
909 * associate it with the connection-name pair. If a RequestName call includes
910 * the #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING flag, and the current primary
911 * owner has #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT set, then the current primary
912 * owner will be kicked off.
913 *
914 * If no flags are given, an application will receive the requested
915 * name only if the name is currently unowned; and it will NOT give
916 * up the name if another application asks to take it over using
917 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING.
918 *
919 * This function returns a result code. The possible result codes
920 * are as follows.
921 *
922 * #DBUS_REQUEST_NAME_REPLY_PRIMARY_OWNER means that the name had no
923 * existing owner, and the caller is now the primary owner; or that
924 * the name had an owner, and the caller specified
925 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING, and the current owner
926 * specified #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT.
927 *
928 * #DBUS_REQUEST_NAME_REPLY_IN_QUEUE happens only if the caller does NOT
929 * specify #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_DO_NOT_QUEUE and either the current owner
930 * did NOT specify #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT or the caller did NOT
931 * specify #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING. In this case the caller ends up
932 * in a queue to own the name after the current owner gives it up.
933 *
934 * #DBUS_REQUEST_NAME_REPLY_EXISTS happens if the name has an owner
935 * already and the caller specifies #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_DO_NOT_QUEUE
936 * and either the current owner has NOT specified
937 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT or the caller did NOT specify
938 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING.
939 *
940 * #DBUS_REQUEST_NAME_REPLY_ALREADY_OWNER happens if an application
941 * requests a name it already owns. (Re-requesting a name is useful if
942 * you want to change the #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT or
943 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_DO_NOT_QUEUE settings.)
944 *
945 * When a service represents an application, say "text editor," then
946 * it should specify #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT if it wants
947 * the last editor started to be the user's editor vs. the first one
948 * started.  Then any editor that can be the user's editor should
949 * specify #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING to either take over
950 * (last-started-wins) or be queued up (first-started-wins) according
951 * to whether #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT was given.
952 *
953 * Conventionally, single-instance applications often offer a command
954 * line option called --replace which means to replace the current
955 * instance.  To implement this, always set
956 * #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT when you request your
957 * application's bus name.  When you lose ownership of your bus name,
958 * you need to exit.  Look for the signal "NameLost" from
959 * #DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS and #DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS (the signal's first
960 * argument is the bus name that was lost).  If starting up without
961 * --replace, do not specify #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING, and
962 * exit if you fail to become the bus name owner. If --replace is
963 * given, ask to replace the old owner.
964 *
965 * @param connection the connection
966 * @param name the name to request
967 * @param flags flags
968 * @param error location to store the error
969 * @returns a result code, -1 if error is set
970 */
971int
972dbus_bus_request_name (DBusConnection *connection,
973                       const char     *name,
974                       unsigned int    flags,
975                       DBusError      *error)
976{
977  DBusMessage *message, *reply;
978  dbus_uint32_t result;
979
980  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, 0);
981  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (name != NULL, 0);
982  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_bus_name (name), 0);
983  _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, 0);
984
985  message = dbus_message_new_method_call (DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
986                                          DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
987                                          DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS,
988                                          "RequestName");
989
990  if (message == NULL)
991    {
992      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
993      return -1;
994    }
995
996  if (!dbus_message_append_args (message,
997				 DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &name,
998				 DBUS_TYPE_UINT32, &flags,
999				 DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1000    {
1001      dbus_message_unref (message);
1002      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1003      return -1;
1004    }
1005
1006  reply = dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block (connection, message, -1,
1007                                                     error);
1008
1009  dbus_message_unref (message);
1010
1011  if (reply == NULL)
1012    {
1013      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1014      return -1;
1015    }
1016
1017  if (dbus_set_error_from_message (error, reply))
1018    {
1019      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1020      dbus_message_unref (reply);
1021      return -1;
1022    }
1023
1024  if (!dbus_message_get_args (reply, error,
1025                              DBUS_TYPE_UINT32, &result,
1026                              DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1027    {
1028      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1029      dbus_message_unref (reply);
1030      return -1;
1031    }
1032
1033  dbus_message_unref (reply);
1034
1035  return result;
1036}
1037
1038
1039/**
1040 * Asks the bus to unassign the given name from this connection by
1041 * invoking the ReleaseName method on the bus. The "ReleaseName"
1042 * method is canonically documented in the D-Bus specification.
1043 *
1044 * Possible results are: #DBUS_RELEASE_NAME_REPLY_RELEASED
1045 * which means you owned the name or were in the queue to own it,
1046 * and and now you don't own it and aren't in the queue.
1047 * #DBUS_RELEASE_NAME_REPLY_NOT_OWNER which means someone else
1048 * owns the name so you can't release it.
1049 * #DBUS_RELEASE_NAME_REPLY_NON_EXISTENT
1050 * which means nobody owned the name.
1051 *
1052 * @param connection the connection
1053 * @param name the name to remove
1054 * @param error location to store the error
1055 * @returns a result code, -1 if error is set
1056 */
1057int
1058dbus_bus_release_name (DBusConnection *connection,
1059                       const char     *name,
1060                       DBusError      *error)
1061{
1062  DBusMessage *message, *reply;
1063  dbus_uint32_t result;
1064
1065  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, 0);
1066  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (name != NULL, 0);
1067  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_bus_name (name), 0);
1068  _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, 0);
1069
1070  message = dbus_message_new_method_call (DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
1071                                          DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
1072                                          DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS,
1073                                          "ReleaseName");
1074
1075  if (message == NULL)
1076    {
1077      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1078      return -1;
1079    }
1080
1081  if (!dbus_message_append_args (message,
1082                                 DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &name,
1083                                 DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1084    {
1085      dbus_message_unref (message);
1086      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1087      return -1;
1088    }
1089
1090  reply = dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block (connection, message, -1,
1091                                                     error);
1092
1093  dbus_message_unref (message);
1094
1095  if (reply == NULL)
1096    {
1097      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1098      return -1;
1099    }
1100
1101  if (dbus_set_error_from_message (error, reply))
1102    {
1103      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1104      dbus_message_unref (reply);
1105      return -1;
1106    }
1107
1108  if (!dbus_message_get_args (reply, error,
1109                              DBUS_TYPE_UINT32, &result,
1110                              DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1111    {
1112      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1113      dbus_message_unref (reply);
1114      return -1;
1115    }
1116
1117  dbus_message_unref (reply);
1118
1119  return result;
1120}
1121
1122/**
1123 * Asks the bus whether a certain name has an owner.
1124 *
1125 * Using this can easily result in a race condition,
1126 * since an owner can appear or disappear after you
1127 * call this.
1128 *
1129 * If you want to request a name, just request it;
1130 * if you want to avoid replacing a current owner,
1131 * don't specify #DBUS_NAME_FLAG_REPLACE_EXISTING and
1132 * you will get an error if there's already an owner.
1133 *
1134 * @param connection the connection
1135 * @param name the name
1136 * @param error location to store any errors
1137 * @returns #TRUE if the name exists, #FALSE if not or on error
1138 */
1139dbus_bool_t
1140dbus_bus_name_has_owner (DBusConnection *connection,
1141			 const char     *name,
1142                         DBusError      *error)
1143{
1144  DBusMessage *message, *reply;
1145  dbus_bool_t exists;
1146
1147  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, FALSE);
1148  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (name != NULL, FALSE);
1149  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_bus_name (name), FALSE);
1150  _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, FALSE);
1151
1152  message = dbus_message_new_method_call (DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
1153                                          DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
1154                                          DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS,
1155                                          "NameHasOwner");
1156  if (message == NULL)
1157    {
1158      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1159      return FALSE;
1160    }
1161
1162  if (!dbus_message_append_args (message,
1163				 DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &name,
1164				 DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1165    {
1166      dbus_message_unref (message);
1167      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1168      return FALSE;
1169    }
1170
1171  reply = dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block (connection, message, -1, error);
1172  dbus_message_unref (message);
1173
1174  if (reply == NULL)
1175    {
1176      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1177      return FALSE;
1178    }
1179
1180  if (!dbus_message_get_args (reply, error,
1181                              DBUS_TYPE_BOOLEAN, &exists,
1182                              DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1183    {
1184      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1185      dbus_message_unref (reply);
1186      return FALSE;
1187    }
1188
1189  dbus_message_unref (reply);
1190  return exists;
1191}
1192
1193/**
1194 * Starts a service that will request ownership of the given name.
1195 * The returned result will be one of be one of
1196 * #DBUS_START_REPLY_SUCCESS or #DBUS_START_REPLY_ALREADY_RUNNING if
1197 * successful.  Pass #NULL if you don't care about the result.
1198 *
1199 * The flags parameter is for future expansion, currently you should
1200 * specify 0.
1201 *
1202 * It's often easier to avoid explicitly starting services, and
1203 * just send a method call to the service's bus name instead.
1204 * Method calls start a service to handle them by default
1205 * unless you call dbus_message_set_auto_start() to disable this
1206 * behavior.
1207 *
1208 * @param connection the connection
1209 * @param name the name we want the new service to request
1210 * @param flags the flags (should always be 0 for now)
1211 * @param result a place to store the result or #NULL
1212 * @param error location to store any errors
1213 * @returns #TRUE if the activation succeeded, #FALSE if not
1214 */
1215dbus_bool_t
1216dbus_bus_start_service_by_name (DBusConnection *connection,
1217                                const char     *name,
1218                                dbus_uint32_t   flags,
1219                                dbus_uint32_t  *result,
1220                                DBusError      *error)
1221{
1222  DBusMessage *msg;
1223  DBusMessage *reply;
1224
1225  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (connection != NULL, FALSE);
1226  _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_bus_name (name), FALSE);
1227
1228  msg = dbus_message_new_method_call (DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
1229                                      DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
1230                                      DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS,
1231                                      "StartServiceByName");
1232
1233  if (!dbus_message_append_args (msg, DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &name,
1234			  	 DBUS_TYPE_UINT32, &flags, DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1235    {
1236      dbus_message_unref (msg);
1237      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1238      return FALSE;
1239    }
1240
1241  reply = dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block (connection, msg,
1242                                                     -1, error);
1243  dbus_message_unref (msg);
1244
1245  if (reply == NULL)
1246    {
1247      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1248      return FALSE;
1249    }
1250
1251  if (dbus_set_error_from_message (error, reply))
1252    {
1253      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1254      dbus_message_unref (reply);
1255      return FALSE;
1256    }
1257
1258  if (result != NULL &&
1259      !dbus_message_get_args (reply, error, DBUS_TYPE_UINT32,
1260	      		      result, DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1261    {
1262      _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1263      dbus_message_unref (reply);
1264      return FALSE;
1265    }
1266
1267  dbus_message_unref (reply);
1268  return TRUE;
1269}
1270
1271static void
1272send_no_return_values (DBusConnection *connection,
1273                       DBusMessage    *msg,
1274                       DBusError      *error)
1275{
1276  if (error)
1277    {
1278      /* Block to check success codepath */
1279      DBusMessage *reply;
1280
1281      reply = dbus_connection_send_with_reply_and_block (connection, msg,
1282                                                         -1, error);
1283
1284      if (reply == NULL)
1285        _DBUS_ASSERT_ERROR_IS_SET (error);
1286      else
1287        dbus_message_unref (reply);
1288    }
1289  else
1290    {
1291      /* Silently-fail nonblocking codepath */
1292      dbus_message_set_no_reply (msg, TRUE);
1293      dbus_connection_send (connection, msg, NULL);
1294    }
1295}
1296
1297/**
1298 * Adds a match rule to match messages going through the message bus.
1299 * The "rule" argument is the string form of a match rule.
1300 *
1301 * If you pass #NULL for the error, this function will not
1302 * block; the match thus won't be added until you flush the
1303 * connection, and if there's an error adding the match
1304 * (only possible error is lack of resources in the bus),
1305 * you won't find out about it.
1306 *
1307 * If you pass non-#NULL for the error this function will
1308 * block until it gets a reply.
1309 *
1310 * Normal API conventions would have the function return
1311 * a boolean value indicating whether the error was set,
1312 * but that would require blocking always to determine
1313 * the return value.
1314 *
1315 * The AddMatch method is fully documented in the D-Bus
1316 * specification. For quick reference, the format of the
1317 * match rules is discussed here, but the specification
1318 * is the canonical version of this information.
1319 *
1320 * Rules are specified as a string of comma separated
1321 * key/value pairs. An example is
1322 * "type='signal',sender='org.freedesktop.DBus',
1323 * interface='org.freedesktop.DBus',member='Foo',
1324 * path='/bar/foo',destination=':452345.34'"
1325 *
1326 * Possible keys you can match on are type, sender,
1327 * interface, member, path, destination and numbered
1328 * keys to match message args (keys are 'arg0', 'arg1', etc.).
1329 * Omitting a key from the rule indicates
1330 * a wildcard match.  For instance omitting
1331 * the member from a match rule but adding a sender would
1332 * let all messages from that sender through regardless of
1333 * the member.
1334 *
1335 * Matches are inclusive not exclusive so as long as one
1336 * rule matches the message will get through.  It is important
1337 * to note this because every time a message is received the
1338 * application will be paged into memory to process it.  This
1339 * can cause performance problems such as draining batteries
1340 * on embedded platforms.
1341 *
1342 * If you match message args ('arg0', 'arg1', and so forth)
1343 * only string arguments will match. That is, arg0='5' means
1344 * match the string "5" not the integer 5.
1345 *
1346 * Currently there is no way to match against non-string arguments.
1347 *
1348 * Matching on interface is tricky because method call
1349 * messages only optionally specify the interface.
1350 * If a message omits the interface, then it will NOT match
1351 * if the rule specifies an interface name. This means match
1352 * rules on method calls should not usually give an interface.
1353 *
1354 * However, signal messages are required to include the interface
1355 * so when matching signals usually you should specify the interface
1356 * in the match rule.
1357 *
1358 * For security reasons, you can match arguments only up to
1359 * #DBUS_MAXIMUM_MATCH_RULE_ARG_NUMBER.
1360 *
1361 * Match rules have a maximum length of #DBUS_MAXIMUM_MATCH_RULE_LENGTH
1362 * bytes.
1363 *
1364 * Both of these maximums are much higher than you're likely to need,
1365 * they only exist because the D-Bus bus daemon has fixed limits on
1366 * all resource usage.
1367 *
1368 * @param connection connection to the message bus
1369 * @param rule textual form of match rule
1370 * @param error location to store any errors
1371 */
1372void
1373dbus_bus_add_match (DBusConnection *connection,
1374                    const char     *rule,
1375                    DBusError      *error)
1376{
1377  DBusMessage *msg;
1378
1379  _dbus_return_if_fail (rule != NULL);
1380
1381  msg = dbus_message_new_method_call (DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
1382                                      DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
1383                                      DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS,
1384                                      "AddMatch");
1385
1386  if (msg == NULL)
1387    {
1388      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1389      return;
1390    }
1391
1392  if (!dbus_message_append_args (msg, DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &rule,
1393                                 DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1394    {
1395      dbus_message_unref (msg);
1396      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1397      return;
1398    }
1399
1400  send_no_return_values (connection, msg, error);
1401
1402  dbus_message_unref (msg);
1403}
1404
1405/**
1406 * Removes a previously-added match rule "by value" (the most
1407 * recently-added identical rule gets removed).  The "rule" argument
1408 * is the string form of a match rule.
1409 *
1410 * The bus compares match rules semantically, not textually, so
1411 * whitespace and ordering don't have to be identical to
1412 * the rule you passed to dbus_bus_add_match().
1413 *
1414 * If you pass #NULL for the error, this function will not
1415 * block; otherwise it will. See detailed explanation in
1416 * docs for dbus_bus_add_match().
1417 *
1418 * @param connection connection to the message bus
1419 * @param rule textual form of match rule
1420 * @param error location to store any errors
1421 */
1422void
1423dbus_bus_remove_match (DBusConnection *connection,
1424                       const char     *rule,
1425                       DBusError      *error)
1426{
1427  DBusMessage *msg;
1428
1429  _dbus_return_if_fail (rule != NULL);
1430
1431  msg = dbus_message_new_method_call (DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS,
1432                                      DBUS_PATH_DBUS,
1433                                      DBUS_INTERFACE_DBUS,
1434                                      "RemoveMatch");
1435
1436  if (!dbus_message_append_args (msg, DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &rule,
1437                                 DBUS_TYPE_INVALID))
1438    {
1439      dbus_message_unref (msg);
1440      _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
1441      return;
1442    }
1443
1444  send_no_return_values (connection, msg, error);
1445
1446  dbus_message_unref (msg);
1447}
1448
1449/** @} */
1450