Note
This version of the book is based on zbus 2.0 API, which is currently in beta stages. For using the sample code in this book, you’ll need to explicitly depend on the latest beta.
The 1.0 version of this book is available here.
Writing a client proxy
In this chapter, we are going to see how to make low-level D-Bus method calls. Then we are going to dive in, and derive from a trait to make a convenient Rust binding. Finally, we will learn about xmlgen, a tool to help us generate a boilerplate trait from the XML of an introspected service.
To make this learning “hands-on”, we are going to call and bind the cross-desktop notification service (please refer to this reference document for further details on this API).
Let’s start by playing with the service from the shell, and notify the desktop with busctl
1:
busctl --user call \
org.freedesktop.Notifications \
/org/freedesktop/Notifications \
org.freedesktop.Notifications \
Notify \
susssasa\{sv\}i \
"my-app" 0 "dialog-information" "A summary" "Some body" 0 0 5000
Note: busctl
has very good auto-completion support in bash or zsh.
Running this command should pop-up a notification dialog on your desktop. If it does not, your desktop does not support the notification service, and this example will be less interactive. Nonetheless you can use a similar approach for other services.
This command shows us several aspects of the D-Bus communication:
-
--user
: Connect to and use the user/session bus. -
call
: Send a method call message. (D-Bus also supports signals, error messages, and method replies) -
destination: The name of the service (
org.freedesktop.Notifications
). -
object path: Object/interface path (
/org/freedesktop/Notifications
). -
interface: The interface name (methods are organized in interfaces, here
org.freedesktop.Notifications
, same name as the service). -
method: The name of the method to call,
Notify
. -
signature: That
susssasa{sv}i
means the method takes 8 arguments of various types. ‘s’, for example, is for a string. ‘as’ is for array of strings. -
The method arguments.
See busctl
man page for more details.
Low-level call from a zbus::Connection
zbus Connection
has a call_method()
method, which you can use directly:
use std::collections::HashMap; use std::error::Error; use zbus::Connection; use zvariant::Value; // Although we use `async-std` here, you can use any async runtime of choice. #[async_std::main] async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn Error>> { let connection = Connection::session().await?; let m = connection.call_method( Some("org.freedesktop.Notifications"), "/org/freedesktop/Notifications", Some("org.freedesktop.Notifications"), "Notify", &("my-app", 0u32, "dialog-information", "A summary", "Some body", vec![""; 0], HashMap::<&str, &Value>::new(), 5000), ).await?; let reply: u32 = m.body().unwrap(); dbg!(reply); Ok(()) }
Although this is already quite flexible, and handles various details for you (such as the message
signature), it is also somewhat inconvenient and error-prone: you can easily miss arguments, or give
arguments with the wrong type or other kind of errors (what would happen if you typed 0
, instead
of 0u32
?).
Instead, we want to wrap this Notify
D-Bus method in a Rust function. Let’s see how next.
Trait-derived proxy call
A trait declaration T
with a dbus_proxy
attribute will have a derived TProxy
and
TProxyBlocking
(see chapter on “blocking” for more information on that) implemented thanks
to procedural macros. The trait methods will have respective impl
methods wrapping the D-Bus
calls:
use std::collections::HashMap; use std::error::Error; use zbus::{Connection, dbus_proxy}; use zvariant::Value; #[dbus_proxy] trait Notifications { /// Call the org.freedesktop.Notifications.Notify D-Bus method fn notify(&self, app_name: &str, replaces_id: u32, app_icon: &str, summary: &str, body: &str, actions: &[&str], hints: HashMap<&str, &Value<'_>>, expire_timeout: i32) -> zbus::Result<u32>; } // Although we use `async-std` here, you can use any async runtime of choice. #[async_std::main] async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn Error>> { let connection = Connection::session().await?; let proxy = NotificationsProxy::new(&connection).await?; let reply = proxy.notify( "my-app", 0, "dialog-information", "A summary", "Some body", &[], HashMap::new(), 5000, ).await?; dbg!(reply); Ok(()) }
A TProxy
and TProxyBlocking
has a few associated methods, such as new(connection)
, using the
default associated service name and object path, and an associated builder if you need to specify
something different.
This should help to avoid the kind of mistakes we saw earlier. It’s also a bit easier to use, thanks to Rust type inference. This makes it also possible to have higher-level types, they fit more naturally with the rest of the code. You can further document the D-Bus API or provide additional helpers.
Note
For simple transient cases like the one above, you may find the blocking API very convenient to use.
Signals
Signals are like methods, except they don’t expect a reply. They are typically emitted by services
to notify interested peers of any changes to the state of the service. zbus provides you a
Stream
-based API for receiving signals.
Let’s look at this API in action, with an example where we get our location from Geoclue:
use zbus::{Connection, dbus_proxy, Result}; use zvariant::ObjectPath; use futures_util::stream::StreamExt; #[dbus_proxy( default_service = "org.freedesktop.GeoClue2", interface = "org.freedesktop.GeoClue2.Manager", default_path = "/org/freedesktop/GeoClue2/Manager" )] trait Manager { #[dbus_proxy(object = "Client")] fn get_client(&self); } #[dbus_proxy( default_service = "org.freedesktop.GeoClue2", interface = "org.freedesktop.GeoClue2.Client" )] trait Client { fn start(&self) -> Result<()>; fn stop(&self) -> Result<()>; #[dbus_proxy(property)] fn set_desktop_id(&mut self, id: &str) -> Result<()>; #[dbus_proxy(signal)] fn location_updated(&self, old: ObjectPath<'_>, new: ObjectPath<'_>) -> Result<()>; } #[dbus_proxy( default_service = "org.freedesktop.GeoClue2", interface = "org.freedesktop.GeoClue2.Location" )] trait Location { #[dbus_proxy(property)] fn latitude(&self) -> Result<f64>; #[dbus_proxy(property)] fn longitude(&self) -> Result<f64>; } // Although we use `async-std` here, you can use any async runtime of choice. #[async_std::main] async fn main() -> Result<()> { let conn = Connection::system().await?; let manager = ManagerProxy::new(&conn).await?; let mut client = manager.get_client().await?; // Gotta do this, sorry! client.set_desktop_id("org.freedesktop.zbus").await?; let props = zbus::fdo::PropertiesProxy::builder(&conn) .destination("org.freedesktop.GeoClue2")? .path(client.path())? .build() .await?; let mut props_changed = props.receive_properties_changed().await?; let mut location_updated = client.receive_location_updated().await?; client.start().await?; futures_util::try_join!( async { while let Some(signal) = props_changed.next().await { let args = signal.args()?; for (name, value) in args.changed_properties().iter() { println!("{}.{} changed to `{:?}`", args.interface_name(), name, value); } } Ok::<(), zbus::Error>(()) }, async { while let Some(signal) = location_updated.next().await { let args = signal.args()?; let location = LocationProxy::builder(&conn) .path(args.new())? .build() .await?; println!( "Latitude: {}\nLongitude: {}", location.latitude().await?, location.longitude().await?, ); } // No need to specify type of Result each time Ok(()) } )?; Ok(()) }
While the Geoclue’s D-Bus API is a bit involved, we still ended-up with a not-so-complicated (~100 LOC) code for getting our location.
Properties
Interfaces can have associated properties, which can be read or set with the
org.freedesktop.DBus.Properties
interface. Here again, the #[dbus_proxy]
attribute comes to the
rescue to help you. You can annotate a trait method to be a getter:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { use zbus::{dbus_proxy, Result}; #[dbus_proxy] trait MyInterface { #[dbus_proxy(property)] fn state(&self) -> Result<String>; } }
The state()
method will translate to a "State"
property Get
call.
To set the property, prefix the name of the property with set_
.
For a more real world example, let’s try and read two properties from systemd’s main service:
use zbus::{Connection, dbus_proxy, Result}; #[dbus_proxy( interface = "org.freedesktop.systemd1.Manager", default_service = "org.freedesktop.systemd1", default_path = "/org/freedesktop/systemd1" )] trait SystemdManager { #[dbus_proxy(property)] fn architecture(&self) -> Result<String>; #[dbus_proxy(property)] fn environment(&self) -> Result<Vec<String>>; } #[async_std::main] async fn main() -> Result<()> { let connection = Connection::session().await?; let proxy = SystemdManagerProxy::new(&connection).await?; println!("Host architecture: {}", proxy.architecture().await?); println!("Environment:"); for env in proxy.environment().await? { println!(" {}", env); } Ok(()) }
You should get an output similar to this:
Host architecture: x86-64
Environment variables:
HOME=/home/zeenix
LANG=en_US.UTF-8
LC_ADDRESS=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_IDENTIFICATION=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_MEASUREMENT=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_MONETARY=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_NAME=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_NUMERIC=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_PAPER=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_TELEPHONE=de_DE.UTF-8
LC_TIME=de_DE.UTF-8
...
Watching for changes
By default, the proxy will cache the properties and watch for changes.
To be notified of a property change, you use a stream API, just like for receiving signals. The
methods are named after the properties’ names: receive_<prop_name>_changed()
.
Here is an example:
use zbus::{Connection, dbus_proxy, Result}; use futures_util::stream::StreamExt; #[async_std::main] async fn main() -> Result<()> { #[dbus_proxy( interface = "org.freedesktop.systemd1.Manager", default_service = "org.freedesktop.systemd1", default_path = "/org/freedesktop/systemd1" )] trait SystemdManager { #[dbus_proxy(property)] fn log_level(&self) -> Result<String>; } let connection = Connection::session().await?; let proxy = SystemdManagerProxy::new(&connection).await?; let mut stream = proxy.receive_log_level_changed().await; while let Some(v) = stream.next().await { println!("LogLevel changed: {:?}", v.get().await); } Ok(()) }
Generating the trait from an XML interface
The zbus_xmlgen
crate provides a developer-friendly tool, that can generate Rust traits from a
given D-Bus introspection XML for you.
Note: This tool should not be considered a drop-in Rust-specific replacement for similar tools
available for low-level languages, such as gdbus-codegen
. Unlike those tools, this is only meant
as a starting point to generate the code, once. In many cases, you will want to tweak the generated
code.
The tool can be used to generate rust code directly from a D-Bus service running on our system:
zbus-xmlgen --session \
org.freedesktop.Notifications \
/org/freedesktop/Notifications
Alternatively you can also get the XML interface from a different source and use it to generate the
interface code. Some packages may also provide the XML directly as an installed file, allowing it to
be queried using pkg-config
, for example.
We can fetch the XML interface of the notification service, using the --xml-interface
option of
the busctl
1 command. This option was introduced to busctl
in systemd v243.
busctl --user --xml-interface introspect \
org.freedesktop.Notifications \
/org/freedesktop/Notifications
You should get a similar output:
<!DOCTYPE node PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD D-BUS Object Introspection 1.0//EN"
"http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/introspect.dtd">
<node>
<!-- other interfaces omitted -->
<interface name="org.freedesktop.Notifications">
<method name="Notify">
<arg type="s" name="arg_0" direction="in">
</arg>
<arg type="u" name="arg_1" direction="in">
</arg>
<arg type="s" name="arg_2" direction="in">
</arg>
<arg type="s" name="arg_3" direction="in">
</arg>
<arg type="s" name="arg_4" direction="in">
</arg>
<arg type="as" name="arg_5" direction="in">
</arg>
<arg type="a{sv}" name="arg_6" direction="in">
</arg>
<arg type="i" name="arg_7" direction="in">
</arg>
<arg type="u" name="arg_8" direction="out">
</arg>
</method>
<method name="CloseNotification">
<arg type="u" name="arg_0" direction="in">
</arg>
</method>
<method name="GetCapabilities">
<arg type="as" name="arg_0" direction="out">
</arg>
</method>
<method name="GetServerInformation">
<arg type="s" name="arg_0" direction="out">
</arg>
<arg type="s" name="arg_1" direction="out">
</arg>
<arg type="s" name="arg_2" direction="out">
</arg>
<arg type="s" name="arg_3" direction="out">
</arg>
</method>
<signal name="NotificationClosed">
<arg type="u" name="arg_0">
</arg>
<arg type="u" name="arg_1">
</arg>
</signal>
<signal name="ActionInvoked">
<arg type="u" name="arg_0">
</arg>
<arg type="s" name="arg_1">
</arg>
</signal>
</interface>
</node>
Save the output to a notify.xml
file. Then call:
zbus-xmlgen notify.xml
This will give back effortlessly the corresponding Rust traits boilerplate code:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { use zbus::dbus_proxy; #[dbus_proxy(interface = "org.freedesktop.Notifications")] trait Notifications { /// CloseNotification method fn close_notification(&self, arg_0: u32) -> zbus::Result<()>; /// GetCapabilities method fn get_capabilities(&self) -> zbus::Result<Vec<String>>; /// GetServerInformation method fn get_server_information(&self) -> zbus::Result<(String, String, String, String)>; /// Notify method fn notify( &self, arg_0: &str, arg_1: u32, arg_2: &str, arg_3: &str, arg_4: &str, arg_5: &[&str], arg_6: std::collections::HashMap<&str, zvariant::Value<'_>>, arg_7: i32, ) -> zbus::Result<u32>; /// ActionInvoked signal #[dbus_proxy(signal)] fn action_invoked(&self, arg_0: u32, arg_1: &str) -> zbus::Result<()>; /// NotificationClosed signal #[dbus_proxy(signal)] fn notification_closed(&self, arg_0: u32, arg_1: u32) -> zbus::Result<()>; } }
It should be usable as such. But you may as well improve a bit the naming of the arguments, use
better types (using BitFlags
, structs or other custom types), add extra documentation, and other
functions to make the binding more pleasing to use from Rust.
For example, the generated GetServerInformation
method can be improved to a nicer version:
#![allow(unused)] fn main() { use serde::{Serialize, Deserialize}; use zvariant::Type; use zbus::dbus_proxy; #[derive(Debug, Type, Serialize, Deserialize)] pub struct ServerInformation { /// The product name of the server. pub name: String, /// The vendor name. For example "KDE," "GNOME," "freedesktop.org" or "Microsoft". pub vendor: String, /// The server's version number. pub version: String, /// The specification version the server is compliant with. pub spec_version: String, } trait Notifications { /// Get server information. /// /// This message returns the information on the server. fn get_server_information(&self) -> zbus::Result<ServerInformation>; } }
You can learn more from the zbus-ify binding of PolicyKit, for example, which was implemented starting from the xmlgen output.
There you have it, a Rust-friendly binding for your D-Bus service!
busctl
is part of systemd
.