sd_bus_add_node_enumerator — Add a node enumerator for a D-Bus object path prefix
#include <systemd/sd-bus.h>
typedef int (*sd_bus_node_enumerator_t)( | sd_bus *bus, |
const char *prefix, | |
void *userdata, | |
char ***ret_nodes, | |
sd_bus_error *ret_error) ; |
int sd_bus_add_node_enumerator( | sd_bus *bus, |
sd_bus_slot **slot, | |
const char *path, | |
sd_bus_node_enumerator_t callback, | |
void *userdata) ; |
sd_bus_add_node_enumerator()
adds a D-Bus node enumerator for the
given path prefix. The given callback is called to enumerate all the available objects with
the given path prefix when required (e.g. when
org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable.Introspect
or
org.freedesktop.DBus.ObjectManager.GetManagedObjects
are called on a
D-Bus service managed by sd-bus).
callback
is called with the path and userdata pointer registered
with sd_bus_add_node_enumerator()
. When called, it should store all the
child object paths of the given path prefix in ret_nodes
and return the
number of child objects under the given prefix. If an error occurs, it can either return a
negative integer, set ret_error
to a non-empty error or do both. Any
errors returned by the callback are encoded as D-Bus errors and sent back to the caller. Errors
in ret_error
take priority over negative return values.
Note that a node enumerator callback will only ever be called for a single path prefix
and hence, for normal operation, prefix
can be ignored. Also, a node
enumerator is only used to enumerate the available child objects under a given prefix. To
install a handler for a set of dynamic child objects, use
sd_bus_add_fallback_vtable(3).
When sd_bus_add_node_enumerator()
succeeds, a slot is created
internally. If the output parameter slot
is NULL
,
a "floating" slot object is created, see
sd_bus_slot_set_floating(3).
Otherwise, a pointer to the slot object is returned. In that case, the reference to the slot
object should be dropped when the node enumerator is not needed anymore, see
sd_bus_slot_unref(3).
On success, sd_bus_add_node_enumerator()
returns a non-negative
integer. On failure, it returns a negative errno-style error code.
These APIs are implemented as a shared
library, which can be compiled and linked to with the
libsystemd
pkg-config(1)
file.