Index · Directives systemd 250

Name

sd_bus_start — Initiate a bus connection to the D-bus broker daemon

Synopsis

#include <systemd/sd-bus.h>
int sd_bus_start(sd_bus *bus);
 

Description

sd_bus_start() connects an existing bus connection object to the D-Bus broker daemon, usually dbus-daemon(1) or dbus-broker(1). The mechanism to use for the connection must be configured before the call to sd_bus_start(), using one of sd_bus_set_address(3), sd_bus_set_fd(3), or sd_bus_set_exec(3). sd_bus_start() will open the connection socket or spawn the executable as needed, and asynchronously start a org.freedesktop.DBus.Hello() call. The answer to the Hello call will be processed later from sd_bus_process(3). If opening of the connection or queuing of the asynchronous call fail, the connection will be closed with sd_bus_close(3).

In most cases, it is better to use sd_bus_default_user(3), sd_bus_default_system(3) or related calls instead of the more low-level sd_bus_new() and sd_bus_start(). The higher-level functions not only allocate a bus object but also start the connection to a well-known bus in a single function call.

Return Value

On success, this function returns a non-negative integer. On failure, it returns a negative errno-style error code.

Errors

-EINVAL

The input parameter bus is NULL.

-ENOPKG

Bus object bus could not be resolved.

-EPERM

The input parameter bus is in a wrong state (sd_bus_start() may only be called once on a newly-created bus object).

-ECHILD

The bus object bus was created in a different process.

In addition, other connection-related errors may be returned. See sd_bus_send(3).

Notes

These APIs are implemented as a shared library, which can be compiled and linked to with the libsystemd pkg-config(1) file.

See Also

systemd(1), sd-bus(3), sd_bus_default(3), sd_bus_call_async(3)