sd_bus_new, sd_bus_ref, sd_bus_unref, sd_bus_unrefp — Create a new bus object and create or destroy references to it
#include <systemd/sd-bus.h>
int sd_bus_new( | sd_bus **bus) ; |
sd_bus *sd_bus_ref( | sd_bus *bus) ; |
sd_bus *sd_bus_unref( | sd_bus *bus) ; |
void sd_bus_unrefp( | sd_bus **bus) ; |
sd_bus_new()
creates a new bus
object. This object is reference-counted, and will be destroyed
when all references are gone. Initially, the caller of this
function owns the sole reference and the bus object will not be
connected to any bus. To connect it to a bus, make sure
to set an address with
sd_bus_set_address(3)
or a related call, and then start the connection with
sd_bus_start(3).
In most cases, it is a better idea to invoke
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 calls not
only allocate a bus object but also start the connection to a
well-known bus in a single function invocation.
sd_bus_ref()
increases the reference
counter of bus
by one.
sd_bus_unref()
decreases the reference
counter of bus
by one. Once the reference
count has dropped to zero, bus
is destroyed
and cannot be used anymore, so further calls to
sd_bus_ref()
or
sd_bus_unref()
are illegal.
sd_bus_unrefp()
is similar to
sd_bus_unref()
but takes a pointer to a
pointer to an sd_bus object. This call is useful in
conjunction with GCC's and LLVM's Clean-up
Variable Attribute. Note that this function is defined as
inline function. Use a declaration like the following, in order to
allocate a bus object that is freed automatically as the code
block is left:
{ __attribute__((cleanup(sd_bus_unrefp)) sd_bus *bus = NULL; int r; … r = sd_bus_default(&bus); if (r < 0) fprintf(stderr, "Failed to allocate bus: %s\n", strerror(-r)); … }
sd_bus_ref()
,
sd_bus_unref()
and
sd_bus_unrefp()
execute no operation if the
passed in bus object is NULL
.
On success, sd_bus_new()
returns 0 or a
positive integer. On failure, it returns a negative errno-style
error code.
sd_bus_ref()
always returns the argument.
sd_bus_unref()
always returns
NULL
.
These APIs are implemented as a shared
library, which can be compiled and linked to with the
libsystemd
pkg-config(1)
file.