varlinkctl — Introspect with and invoke Varlink services
varlinkctl  [OPTIONS...]  info   ADDRESS 
varlinkctl  [OPTIONS...]  list-interfaces   ADDRESS 
varlinkctl  [OPTIONS...]  list-methods   ADDRESS  [INTERFACE...]
varlinkctl  [OPTIONS...]  introspect   ADDRESS  [INTERFACE...]
varlinkctl  [OPTIONS...]  call   ADDRESS   METHOD  [ARGUMENTS]
varlinkctl  [OPTIONS...]  validate-idl  [FILE]
varlinkctl may be used to introspect and invoke Varlink services.
Services are referenced by one of the following:
A Varlink service reference starting with the "unix:" string, followed
      by an absolute AF_UNIX socket path, or by "@" and an arbitrary
      string (the latter for referencing sockets in the abstract namespace). In this case a stream socket
      connection is made to the specified socket.
A Varlink service reference starting with the "exec:" string, followed
      by an absolute path of a binary to execute. In this case the specified process is forked off locally,
      with a connected stream socket passed in.
A Varlink service reference starting with the "ssh-unix:" string, followed
      by an SSH host specification, followed by ":", followed by an absolute
      AF_UNIX socket path. (This requires OpenSSH 9.4 or newer on the server side,
      abstract namespace sockets are not supported.)
A Varlink service reference starting with the "ssh-exec:" string,
      followed by an SSH host specification, followed by ":", followed by a command line. In
      this case the command is invoked and the Varlink protocol is spoken on the standard input and output of
      the invoked command.
For convenience these two simpler (redundant) service address syntaxes are also supported:
A file system path to an AF_UNIX socket, either absolute
      (i.e. begins with "/") or relative (in which case it must begin with
      "./").
A file system path to an executable, either absolute or relative (as above, must begin
      with "/", resp. "./").
The following commands are understood:
ADDRESS¶Show brief information about the specified service, including vendor name and list of implemented interfaces. Expects a service address in one of the formats described above.
ADDRESS¶Show list of interfaces implemented by the specified service. Expects a service address in one of the formats described above.
ADDRESS [INTERFACE…]¶Show list of methods implemented by the specified service. Expects a service address in one of the formats described above as well as one or more interface names. If no interface name is specified, lists all methods of all interfaces implemented by the service, otherwise just the methods in the specified interfaces.
ADDRESS [INTERFACE…]¶Show the interface definitions of the specified interfaces provided by the specified service. Expects a service address in one of the formats described above and optionally one or more Varlink interface names. If no interface names are specified, shows all provided interfaces by the service.
ADDRESS METHOD [ARGUMENTS]¶Call the specified method of the specified service. Expects a service address in the
        format described above, a fully qualified Varlink method name, and a JSON arguments object. If the
        arguments object is not specified, it is read from STDIN instead. To pass an empty list of
        parameters, specify the empty object "{}".
The reply parameters are written as JSON object to STDOUT.
FILE]¶Reads a Varlink interface definition file, parses and validates it, then outputs it with syntax highlighting. This checks for syntax and internal consistency of the interface. Expects a file name to read the interface definition from. If omitted reads the interface definition from STDIN.
Show command syntax help.
The following options are understood:
--more¶When used with call: expect multiple method replies. If this flag
        is set the method call is sent with the more flag set, which tells the service
        to generate multiple replies, if needed. The command remains running until the service sends a reply
        message that indicates it is the last in the series (or if the configured timeout is reached, see
        below). This flag should be set only for method calls that support this mechanism.
If this mode is enabled output is automatically switched to JSON-SEQ mode, so that individual reply objects can be easily discerned.
This switch has no effect on the method call timeout applied by default: regardless if
        --more is specified or not, the default timeout will be 45s. Use
        --timeout= (see below) to change or disable the timeout. When invoking a method
        call that continuously returns updates it is typically desirable to disable the timeout with
        --timeout=infinity. On the other hand, when invoking a --more
        method call for the purpose of enumerating objects (which likely will complete quickly) it is
        typically beneficial to leave the timeout logic enabled, for robustness reasons.
-E¶A shortcut for --more --timeout=infinity. This switch is
        useful for method calls that implement subscription to a continuous stream of updates.
--collect¶This is similar to --more but collects all responses in a JSON
        array, and prints it, rather than in JSON_SEQ mode.
--oneway¶When used with call: do not expect a method reply. If this flag
        is set the method call is sent with the oneway flag set (the command exits
        immediately after), which tells the service not to generate a reply.
--json=MODE¶Selects the JSON output formatting, one of "pretty" (for nicely indented,
          colorized output) or "short" (for terse output with minimal whitespace and no
          newlines), defaults to "short".
-j¶Equivalent to --json=pretty when invoked interactively from a terminal. Otherwise
          equivalent to --json=short, in particular when the output is piped to some other
          program.
--quiet, -q¶Suppress output of method call replies.
--graceful=¶Takes a qualified Varlink error name (i.e. an interface name, suffixed by an error name,
          separated by a dot; e.g. "org.varlink.service.InvalidParameter"). Ensures that if
          a method call fails with the specified error this will be treated as success, i.e. will cause the
          varlinkctl invocation to exit with a zero exit status. This option may be used more
          than once in order to treat multiple different errors as successes.
--timeout=¶Expects a timeout in seconds as parameter. By default a timeout of 45s is enforced. To turn
          off the timeout specify "infinity" or an empty string.
--no-pager¶Do not pipe output into a pager.
-h, --help¶--version¶Example 1. Investigating a Service
The following three commands inspect the "io.systemd.Resolve" service
      implemented by
      systemd-resolved.service(8),
      listing general service information and implemented interfaces, and then displaying the interface
      definition of its primary interface:
$ varlinkctl info /run/systemd/resolve/io.systemd.Resolve
    Vendor: The systemd Project
   Product: systemd (systemd-resolved)
   Version: 254 (254-1522-g4790521^)
       URL: https://systemd.io/
Interfaces: io.systemd
            io.systemd.Resolve
            org.varlink.service
$ varlinkctl list-interfaces /run/systemd/resolve/io.systemd.Resolve
io.systemd
io.systemd.Resolve
org.varlink.service
$ varlinkctl introspect /run/systemd/resolve/io.systemd.Resolve io.systemd.Resolve
interface io.systemd.Resolve
type ResolvedAddress(
        ifindex: ?int,
        …(Interface definition has been truncated in the example above, in the interest of brevity.)
Example 2. Invoking a Method
The following command resolves a hostname via systemd-resolved.service(8)'s ResolveHostname  method call.
$ varlinkctl call /run/systemd/resolve/io.systemd.Resolve io.systemd.Resolve.ResolveHostname '{"name":"systemd.io","family":2}' -j
{
        "addresses" : [
                {
                        "ifindex" : 2,
                        "family" : 2,
                        "address" : [
                                185,
                                199,
                                111,
                                153
                        ]
                }
        ],
        "name" : "systemd.io",
        "flags" : 1048577
}Example 3. Investigating a Service Executable
The following command inspects the /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-pcrextend
      executable and the IPC APIs it provides. It then invokes a method on it:
# varlinkctl info /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-pcrextend
    Vendor: The systemd Project
   Product: systemd (systemd-pcrextend)
   Version: 254 (254-1536-g97734fb)
       URL: https://systemd.io/
Interfaces: io.systemd
            io.systemd.PCRExtend
            org.varlink.service
# varlinkctl introspect /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-pcrextend io.systemd.PCRExtend
interface io.systemd.PCRExtend
method Extend(
        pcr: int,
        text: ?string,
        data: ?string
) -> ()
# varlinkctl call /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-pcrextend io.systemd.PCRExtend.Extend '{"pcr":15,"text":"foobar"}'
{}Example 4. Invoking a method remotely via SSH
The following command acquires a report about the identity of a remote host
      "somehost" from
      systemd-hostnamed.service(8)
      by connecting via SSH to the AF_UNIX socket the service listens on:
# varlinkctl call ssh-unix:somehost:/run/systemd/io.systemd.Hostname io.systemd.Hostname.Describe '{}'To invoke a Varlink service binary directly on the remote host, rather than talking to a service
      via AF_UNIX can be done like this:
# varlinkctl call ssh-exec:somehost:/usr/bin/systemd-creds org.varlink.service.GetInfo '{}'