1 /* -*- mode: C; c-file-style: "gnu"; indent-tabs-mode: nil; -*- */
2 /* dbus-message.c DBusMessage object
3 *
4 * Copyright (C) 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005 Red Hat Inc.
5 * Copyright (C) 2002, 2003 CodeFactory AB
6 *
7 * Licensed under the Academic Free License version 2.1
8 *
9 * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
10 * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
11 * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
12 * (at your option) any later version.
13 *
14 * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
15 * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
16 * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
17 * GNU General Public License for more details.
18 *
19 * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
20 * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
21 * Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
22 *
23 */
24
25 #include <config.h>
26 #include "dbus-internals.h"
27 #include "dbus-marshal-recursive.h"
28 #include "dbus-marshal-validate.h"
29 #include "dbus-marshal-byteswap.h"
30 #include "dbus-marshal-header.h"
31 #include "dbus-signature.h"
32 #include "dbus-message-private.h"
33 #include "dbus-object-tree.h"
34 #include "dbus-memory.h"
35 #include "dbus-list.h"
36 #include "dbus-threads-internal.h"
37 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
38 #include "dbus-sysdeps-unix.h"
39 #endif
40
41 #include <string.h>
42
43 static void dbus_message_finalize (DBusMessage *message);
44
45 /**
46 * @defgroup DBusMessageInternals DBusMessage implementation details
47 * @ingroup DBusInternals
48 * @brief DBusMessage private implementation details.
49 *
50 * The guts of DBusMessage and its methods.
51 *
52 * @{
53 */
54
55 /* Not thread locked, but strictly const/read-only so should be OK
56 */
57 /** An static string representing an empty signature */
58 _DBUS_STRING_DEFINE_STATIC(_dbus_empty_signature_str, "");
59
60 /* these have wacky values to help trap uninitialized iterators;
61 * but has to fit in 3 bits
62 */
63 enum {
64 DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_READER = 3,
65 DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER = 7
66 };
67
68 /** typedef for internals of message iterator */
69 typedef struct DBusMessageRealIter DBusMessageRealIter;
70
71 /**
72 * @brief Internals of DBusMessageIter
73 *
74 * Object representing a position in a message. All fields are internal.
75 */
76 struct DBusMessageRealIter
77 {
78 DBusMessage *message; /**< Message used */
79 dbus_uint32_t changed_stamp : CHANGED_STAMP_BITS; /**< stamp to detect invalid iters */
80 dbus_uint32_t iter_type : 3; /**< whether this is a reader or writer iter */
81 dbus_uint32_t sig_refcount : 8; /**< depth of open_signature() */
82 union
83 {
84 DBusTypeWriter writer; /**< writer */
85 DBusTypeReader reader; /**< reader */
86 } u; /**< the type writer or reader that does all the work */
87 };
88
89 static void
get_const_signature(DBusHeader * header,const DBusString ** type_str_p,int * type_pos_p)90 get_const_signature (DBusHeader *header,
91 const DBusString **type_str_p,
92 int *type_pos_p)
93 {
94 if (_dbus_header_get_field_raw (header,
95 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_SIGNATURE,
96 type_str_p,
97 type_pos_p))
98 {
99 *type_pos_p += 1; /* skip the signature length which is 1 byte */
100 }
101 else
102 {
103 *type_str_p = &_dbus_empty_signature_str;
104 *type_pos_p = 0;
105 }
106 }
107
108 /**
109 * Swaps the message to compiler byte order if required
110 *
111 * @param message the message
112 */
113 static void
_dbus_message_byteswap(DBusMessage * message)114 _dbus_message_byteswap (DBusMessage *message)
115 {
116 const DBusString *type_str;
117 int type_pos;
118
119 if (message->byte_order == DBUS_COMPILER_BYTE_ORDER)
120 return;
121
122 _dbus_verbose ("Swapping message into compiler byte order\n");
123
124 get_const_signature (&message->header, &type_str, &type_pos);
125
126 _dbus_marshal_byteswap (type_str, type_pos,
127 message->byte_order,
128 DBUS_COMPILER_BYTE_ORDER,
129 &message->body, 0);
130
131 message->byte_order = DBUS_COMPILER_BYTE_ORDER;
132
133 _dbus_header_byteswap (&message->header, DBUS_COMPILER_BYTE_ORDER);
134 }
135
136 /** byte-swap the message if it doesn't match our byte order.
137 * Called only when we need the message in our own byte order,
138 * normally when reading arrays of integers or doubles.
139 * Otherwise should not be called since it would do needless
140 * work.
141 */
142 #define ensure_byte_order(message) \
143 if (message->byte_order != DBUS_COMPILER_BYTE_ORDER) \
144 _dbus_message_byteswap (message)
145
146 /**
147 * Gets the data to be sent over the network for this message.
148 * The header and then the body should be written out.
149 * This function is guaranteed to always return the same
150 * data once a message is locked (with dbus_message_lock()).
151 *
152 * @param message the message.
153 * @param header return location for message header data.
154 * @param body return location for message body data.
155 */
156 void
_dbus_message_get_network_data(DBusMessage * message,const DBusString ** header,const DBusString ** body)157 _dbus_message_get_network_data (DBusMessage *message,
158 const DBusString **header,
159 const DBusString **body)
160 {
161 _dbus_assert (message->locked);
162
163 *header = &message->header.data;
164 *body = &message->body;
165 }
166
167 /**
168 * Gets the unix fds to be sent over the network for this message.
169 * This function is guaranteed to always return the same data once a
170 * message is locked (with dbus_message_lock()).
171 *
172 * @param message the message.
173 * @param fds return location of unix fd array
174 * @param n_fds return number of entries in array
175 */
_dbus_message_get_unix_fds(DBusMessage * message,const int ** fds,unsigned * n_fds)176 void _dbus_message_get_unix_fds(DBusMessage *message,
177 const int **fds,
178 unsigned *n_fds)
179 {
180 _dbus_assert (message->locked);
181
182 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
183 *fds = message->unix_fds;
184 *n_fds = message->n_unix_fds;
185 #else
186 *fds = NULL;
187 *n_fds = 0;
188 #endif
189 }
190
191 /**
192 * Sets the serial number of a message.
193 * This can only be done once on a message.
194 *
195 * DBusConnection will automatically set the serial to an appropriate value
196 * when the message is sent; this function is only needed when encapsulating
197 * messages in another protocol, or otherwise bypassing DBusConnection.
198 *
199 * @param message the message
200 * @param serial the serial
201 */
202 void
dbus_message_set_serial(DBusMessage * message,dbus_uint32_t serial)203 dbus_message_set_serial (DBusMessage *message,
204 dbus_uint32_t serial)
205 {
206 _dbus_return_if_fail (message != NULL);
207 _dbus_return_if_fail (!message->locked);
208
209 _dbus_header_set_serial (&message->header, serial);
210 }
211
212 /**
213 * Adds a counter to be incremented immediately with the size/unix fds
214 * of this message, and decremented by the size/unix fds of this
215 * message when this message if finalized. The link contains a
216 * counter with its refcount already incremented, but the counter
217 * itself not incremented. Ownership of link and counter refcount is
218 * passed to the message.
219 *
220 * @param message the message
221 * @param link link with counter as data
222 */
223 void
_dbus_message_add_counter_link(DBusMessage * message,DBusList * link)224 _dbus_message_add_counter_link (DBusMessage *message,
225 DBusList *link)
226 {
227 /* right now we don't recompute the delta when message
228 * size changes, and that's OK for current purposes
229 * I think, but could be important to change later.
230 * Do recompute it whenever there are no outstanding counters,
231 * since it's basically free.
232 */
233 if (message->counters == NULL)
234 {
235 message->size_counter_delta =
236 _dbus_string_get_length (&message->header.data) +
237 _dbus_string_get_length (&message->body);
238
239 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
240 message->unix_fd_counter_delta = message->n_unix_fds;
241 #endif
242
243 #if 0
244 _dbus_verbose ("message has size %ld\n",
245 message->size_counter_delta);
246 #endif
247 }
248
249 _dbus_list_append_link (&message->counters, link);
250
251 _dbus_counter_adjust_size (link->data, message->size_counter_delta);
252
253 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
254 _dbus_counter_adjust_unix_fd (link->data, message->unix_fd_counter_delta);
255 #endif
256 }
257
258 /**
259 * Adds a counter to be incremented immediately with the size/unix fds
260 * of this message, and decremented by the size/unix fds of this
261 * message when this message if finalized.
262 *
263 * @param message the message
264 * @param counter the counter
265 * @returns #FALSE if no memory
266 */
267 dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_add_counter(DBusMessage * message,DBusCounter * counter)268 _dbus_message_add_counter (DBusMessage *message,
269 DBusCounter *counter)
270 {
271 DBusList *link;
272
273 link = _dbus_list_alloc_link (counter);
274 if (link == NULL)
275 return FALSE;
276
277 _dbus_counter_ref (counter);
278 _dbus_message_add_counter_link (message, link);
279
280 return TRUE;
281 }
282
283 /**
284 * Removes a counter tracking the size/unix fds of this message, and
285 * decrements the counter by the size/unix fds of this message.
286 *
287 * @param message the message
288 * @param link_return return the link used
289 * @param counter the counter
290 */
291 void
_dbus_message_remove_counter(DBusMessage * message,DBusCounter * counter,DBusList ** link_return)292 _dbus_message_remove_counter (DBusMessage *message,
293 DBusCounter *counter,
294 DBusList **link_return)
295 {
296 DBusList *link;
297
298 link = _dbus_list_find_last (&message->counters,
299 counter);
300 _dbus_assert (link != NULL);
301
302 _dbus_list_unlink (&message->counters,
303 link);
304 if (link_return)
305 *link_return = link;
306 else
307 _dbus_list_free_link (link);
308
309 _dbus_counter_adjust_size (counter, - message->size_counter_delta);
310
311 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
312 _dbus_counter_adjust_unix_fd (counter, - message->unix_fd_counter_delta);
313 #endif
314
315 _dbus_counter_unref (counter);
316 }
317
318 /**
319 * Locks a message. Allows checking that applications don't keep a
320 * reference to a message in the outgoing queue and change it
321 * underneath us. Messages are locked when they enter the outgoing
322 * queue (dbus_connection_send_message()), and the library complains
323 * if the message is modified while locked. This function may also
324 * called externally, for applications wrapping D-Bus in another protocol.
325 *
326 * @param message the message to lock.
327 */
328 void
dbus_message_lock(DBusMessage * message)329 dbus_message_lock (DBusMessage *message)
330 {
331 if (!message->locked)
332 {
333 _dbus_header_update_lengths (&message->header,
334 _dbus_string_get_length (&message->body));
335
336 /* must have a signature if you have a body */
337 _dbus_assert (_dbus_string_get_length (&message->body) == 0 ||
338 dbus_message_get_signature (message) != NULL);
339
340 message->locked = TRUE;
341 }
342 }
343
344 static dbus_bool_t
set_or_delete_string_field(DBusMessage * message,int field,int typecode,const char * value)345 set_or_delete_string_field (DBusMessage *message,
346 int field,
347 int typecode,
348 const char *value)
349 {
350 if (value == NULL)
351 return _dbus_header_delete_field (&message->header, field);
352 else
353 return _dbus_header_set_field_basic (&message->header,
354 field,
355 typecode,
356 &value);
357 }
358
359 #if 0
360 /* Probably we don't need to use this */
361 /**
362 * Sets the signature of the message, i.e. the arguments in the
363 * message payload. The signature includes only "in" arguments for
364 * #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL and only "out" arguments for
365 * #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_RETURN, so is slightly different from
366 * what you might expect (it does not include the signature of the
367 * entire C++-style method).
368 *
369 * The signature is a string made up of type codes such as
370 * #DBUS_TYPE_INT32. The string is terminated with nul (nul is also
371 * the value of #DBUS_TYPE_INVALID). The macros such as
372 * #DBUS_TYPE_INT32 evaluate to integers; to assemble a signature you
373 * may find it useful to use the string forms, such as
374 * #DBUS_TYPE_INT32_AS_STRING.
375 *
376 * An "unset" or #NULL signature is considered the same as an empty
377 * signature. In fact dbus_message_get_signature() will never return
378 * #NULL.
379 *
380 * @param message the message
381 * @param signature the type signature or #NULL to unset
382 * @returns #FALSE if no memory
383 */
384 static dbus_bool_t
385 _dbus_message_set_signature (DBusMessage *message,
386 const char *signature)
387 {
388 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
389 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->locked, FALSE);
390 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (signature == NULL ||
391 _dbus_check_is_valid_signature (signature));
392 /* can't delete the signature if you have a message body */
393 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_string_get_length (&message->body) == 0 ||
394 signature != NULL);
395
396 return set_or_delete_string_field (message,
397 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_SIGNATURE,
398 DBUS_TYPE_SIGNATURE,
399 signature);
400 }
401 #endif
402
403 /* Message Cache
404 *
405 * We cache some DBusMessage to reduce the overhead of allocating
406 * them. In my profiling this consistently made about an 8%
407 * difference. It avoids the malloc for the message, the malloc for
408 * the slot list, the malloc for the header string and body string,
409 * and the associated free() calls. It does introduce another global
410 * lock which could be a performance issue in certain cases.
411 *
412 * For the echo client/server the round trip time goes from around
413 * .000077 to .000069 with the message cache on my laptop. The sysprof
414 * change is as follows (numbers are cumulative percentage):
415 *
416 * with message cache implemented as array as it is now (0.000069 per):
417 * new_empty_header 1.46
418 * mutex_lock 0.56 # i.e. _DBUS_LOCK(message_cache)
419 * mutex_unlock 0.25
420 * self 0.41
421 * unref 2.24
422 * self 0.68
423 * list_clear 0.43
424 * mutex_lock 0.33 # i.e. _DBUS_LOCK(message_cache)
425 * mutex_unlock 0.25
426 *
427 * with message cache implemented as list (0.000070 per roundtrip):
428 * new_empty_header 2.72
429 * list_pop_first 1.88
430 * unref 3.3
431 * list_prepend 1.63
432 *
433 * without cache (0.000077 per roundtrip):
434 * new_empty_header 6.7
435 * string_init_preallocated 3.43
436 * dbus_malloc 2.43
437 * dbus_malloc0 2.59
438 *
439 * unref 4.02
440 * string_free 1.82
441 * dbus_free 1.63
442 * dbus_free 0.71
443 *
444 * If you implement the message_cache with a list, the primary reason
445 * it's slower is that you add another thread lock (on the DBusList
446 * mempool).
447 */
448
449 /** Avoid caching huge messages */
450 #define MAX_MESSAGE_SIZE_TO_CACHE 10 * _DBUS_ONE_KILOBYTE
451
452 /** Avoid caching too many messages */
453 #define MAX_MESSAGE_CACHE_SIZE 5
454
455 _DBUS_DEFINE_GLOBAL_LOCK (message_cache);
456 static DBusMessage *message_cache[MAX_MESSAGE_CACHE_SIZE];
457 static int message_cache_count = 0;
458 static dbus_bool_t message_cache_shutdown_registered = FALSE;
459
460 static void
dbus_message_cache_shutdown(void * data)461 dbus_message_cache_shutdown (void *data)
462 {
463 int i;
464
465 _DBUS_LOCK (message_cache);
466
467 i = 0;
468 while (i < MAX_MESSAGE_CACHE_SIZE)
469 {
470 if (message_cache[i])
471 dbus_message_finalize (message_cache[i]);
472
473 ++i;
474 }
475
476 message_cache_count = 0;
477 message_cache_shutdown_registered = FALSE;
478
479 _DBUS_UNLOCK (message_cache);
480 }
481
482 /**
483 * Tries to get a message from the message cache. The retrieved
484 * message will have junk in it, so it still needs to be cleared out
485 * in dbus_message_new_empty_header()
486 *
487 * @returns the message, or #NULL if none cached
488 */
489 static DBusMessage*
dbus_message_get_cached(void)490 dbus_message_get_cached (void)
491 {
492 DBusMessage *message;
493 int i;
494
495 message = NULL;
496
497 _DBUS_LOCK (message_cache);
498
499 _dbus_assert (message_cache_count >= 0);
500
501 if (message_cache_count == 0)
502 {
503 _DBUS_UNLOCK (message_cache);
504 return NULL;
505 }
506
507 /* This is not necessarily true unless count > 0, and
508 * message_cache is uninitialized until the shutdown is
509 * registered
510 */
511 _dbus_assert (message_cache_shutdown_registered);
512
513 i = 0;
514 while (i < MAX_MESSAGE_CACHE_SIZE)
515 {
516 if (message_cache[i])
517 {
518 message = message_cache[i];
519 message_cache[i] = NULL;
520 message_cache_count -= 1;
521 break;
522 }
523 ++i;
524 }
525 _dbus_assert (message_cache_count >= 0);
526 _dbus_assert (i < MAX_MESSAGE_CACHE_SIZE);
527 _dbus_assert (message != NULL);
528
529 _dbus_assert (message->refcount.value == 0);
530 _dbus_assert (message->counters == NULL);
531
532 _DBUS_UNLOCK (message_cache);
533
534 return message;
535 }
536
537 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
538 static void
close_unix_fds(int * fds,unsigned * n_fds)539 close_unix_fds(int *fds, unsigned *n_fds)
540 {
541 DBusError e;
542 int i;
543
544 if (*n_fds <= 0)
545 return;
546
547 dbus_error_init(&e);
548
549 for (i = 0; i < *n_fds; i++)
550 {
551 if (!_dbus_close(fds[i], &e))
552 {
553 _dbus_warn("Failed to close file descriptor: %s\n", e.message);
554 dbus_error_free(&e);
555 }
556 }
557
558 *n_fds = 0;
559
560 /* We don't free the array here, in case we can recycle it later */
561 }
562 #endif
563
564 static void
free_counter(void * element,void * data)565 free_counter (void *element,
566 void *data)
567 {
568 DBusCounter *counter = element;
569 DBusMessage *message = data;
570
571 _dbus_counter_adjust_size (counter, - message->size_counter_delta);
572 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
573 _dbus_counter_adjust_unix_fd (counter, - message->unix_fd_counter_delta);
574 #endif
575
576 _dbus_counter_unref (counter);
577 }
578
579 /**
580 * Tries to cache a message, otherwise finalize it.
581 *
582 * @param message the message
583 */
584 static void
dbus_message_cache_or_finalize(DBusMessage * message)585 dbus_message_cache_or_finalize (DBusMessage *message)
586 {
587 dbus_bool_t was_cached;
588 int i;
589
590 _dbus_assert (message->refcount.value == 0);
591
592 /* This calls application code and has to be done first thing
593 * without holding the lock
594 */
595 _dbus_data_slot_list_clear (&message->slot_list);
596
597 _dbus_list_foreach (&message->counters,
598 free_counter, message);
599 _dbus_list_clear (&message->counters);
600
601 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
602 close_unix_fds(message->unix_fds, &message->n_unix_fds);
603 #endif
604
605 was_cached = FALSE;
606
607 _DBUS_LOCK (message_cache);
608
609 if (!message_cache_shutdown_registered)
610 {
611 _dbus_assert (message_cache_count == 0);
612
613 if (!_dbus_register_shutdown_func (dbus_message_cache_shutdown, NULL))
614 goto out;
615
616 i = 0;
617 while (i < MAX_MESSAGE_CACHE_SIZE)
618 {
619 message_cache[i] = NULL;
620 ++i;
621 }
622
623 message_cache_shutdown_registered = TRUE;
624 }
625
626 _dbus_assert (message_cache_count >= 0);
627
628 if ((_dbus_string_get_length (&message->header.data) +
629 _dbus_string_get_length (&message->body)) >
630 MAX_MESSAGE_SIZE_TO_CACHE)
631 goto out;
632
633 if (message_cache_count >= MAX_MESSAGE_CACHE_SIZE)
634 goto out;
635
636 /* Find empty slot */
637 i = 0;
638 while (message_cache[i] != NULL)
639 ++i;
640
641 _dbus_assert (i < MAX_MESSAGE_CACHE_SIZE);
642
643 _dbus_assert (message_cache[i] == NULL);
644 message_cache[i] = message;
645 message_cache_count += 1;
646 was_cached = TRUE;
647 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
648 message->in_cache = TRUE;
649 #endif
650
651 out:
652 _dbus_assert (message->refcount.value == 0);
653
654 _DBUS_UNLOCK (message_cache);
655
656 if (!was_cached)
657 dbus_message_finalize (message);
658 }
659
660 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
661 static dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_iter_check(DBusMessageRealIter * iter)662 _dbus_message_iter_check (DBusMessageRealIter *iter)
663 {
664 if (iter == NULL)
665 {
666 _dbus_warn_check_failed ("dbus message iterator is NULL\n");
667 return FALSE;
668 }
669
670 if (iter->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_READER)
671 {
672 if (iter->u.reader.byte_order != iter->message->byte_order)
673 {
674 _dbus_warn_check_failed ("dbus message changed byte order since iterator was created\n");
675 return FALSE;
676 }
677 /* because we swap the message into compiler order when you init an iter */
678 _dbus_assert (iter->u.reader.byte_order == DBUS_COMPILER_BYTE_ORDER);
679 }
680 else if (iter->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER)
681 {
682 if (iter->u.writer.byte_order != iter->message->byte_order)
683 {
684 _dbus_warn_check_failed ("dbus message changed byte order since append iterator was created\n");
685 return FALSE;
686 }
687 /* because we swap the message into compiler order when you init an iter */
688 _dbus_assert (iter->u.writer.byte_order == DBUS_COMPILER_BYTE_ORDER);
689 }
690 else
691 {
692 _dbus_warn_check_failed ("dbus message iterator looks uninitialized or corrupted\n");
693 return FALSE;
694 }
695
696 if (iter->changed_stamp != iter->message->changed_stamp)
697 {
698 _dbus_warn_check_failed ("dbus message iterator invalid because the message has been modified (or perhaps the iterator is just uninitialized)\n");
699 return FALSE;
700 }
701
702 return TRUE;
703 }
704 #endif /* DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS */
705
706 /**
707 * Implementation of the varargs arg-getting functions.
708 * dbus_message_get_args() is the place to go for complete
709 * documentation.
710 *
711 * @todo This may leak memory and file descriptors if parsing fails. See #21259
712 *
713 * @see dbus_message_get_args
714 * @param iter the message iter
715 * @param error error to be filled in
716 * @param first_arg_type type of the first argument
717 * @param var_args return location for first argument, followed by list of type/location pairs
718 * @returns #FALSE if error was set
719 */
720 dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_iter_get_args_valist(DBusMessageIter * iter,DBusError * error,int first_arg_type,va_list var_args)721 _dbus_message_iter_get_args_valist (DBusMessageIter *iter,
722 DBusError *error,
723 int first_arg_type,
724 va_list var_args)
725 {
726 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
727 int spec_type, msg_type, i;
728 dbus_bool_t retval;
729
730 _dbus_assert (_dbus_message_iter_check (real));
731
732 retval = FALSE;
733
734 spec_type = first_arg_type;
735 i = 0;
736
737 while (spec_type != DBUS_TYPE_INVALID)
738 {
739 msg_type = dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type (iter);
740
741 if (msg_type != spec_type)
742 {
743 dbus_set_error (error, DBUS_ERROR_INVALID_ARGS,
744 "Argument %d is specified to be of type \"%s\", but "
745 "is actually of type \"%s\"\n", i,
746 _dbus_type_to_string (spec_type),
747 _dbus_type_to_string (msg_type));
748
749 goto out;
750 }
751
752 if (spec_type == DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD)
753 {
754 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
755 DBusBasicValue idx;
756 int *pfd, nfd;
757
758 pfd = va_arg (var_args, int*);
759 _dbus_assert(pfd);
760
761 _dbus_type_reader_read_basic(&real->u.reader, &idx);
762
763 if (idx.u32 >= real->message->n_unix_fds)
764 {
765 dbus_set_error (error, DBUS_ERROR_INCONSISTENT_MESSAGE,
766 "Message refers to file descriptor at index %i,"
767 "but has only %i descriptors attached.\n",
768 idx.u32,
769 real->message->n_unix_fds);
770 goto out;
771 }
772
773 if ((nfd = _dbus_dup(real->message->unix_fds[idx.u32], error)) < 0)
774 goto out;
775
776 *pfd = nfd;
777 #else
778 dbus_set_error (error, DBUS_ERROR_NOT_SUPPORTED,
779 "Platform does not support file desciptor passing.\n");
780 goto out;
781 #endif
782 }
783 else if (dbus_type_is_basic (spec_type))
784 {
785 DBusBasicValue *ptr;
786
787 ptr = va_arg (var_args, DBusBasicValue*);
788
789 _dbus_assert (ptr != NULL);
790
791 _dbus_type_reader_read_basic (&real->u.reader,
792 ptr);
793 }
794 else if (spec_type == DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY)
795 {
796 int element_type;
797 int spec_element_type;
798 const DBusBasicValue **ptr;
799 int *n_elements_p;
800 DBusTypeReader array;
801
802 spec_element_type = va_arg (var_args, int);
803 element_type = _dbus_type_reader_get_element_type (&real->u.reader);
804
805 if (spec_element_type != element_type)
806 {
807 dbus_set_error (error, DBUS_ERROR_INVALID_ARGS,
808 "Argument %d is specified to be an array of \"%s\", but "
809 "is actually an array of \"%s\"\n",
810 i,
811 _dbus_type_to_string (spec_element_type),
812 _dbus_type_to_string (element_type));
813
814 goto out;
815 }
816
817 if (dbus_type_is_fixed (spec_element_type) &&
818 element_type != DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD)
819 {
820 ptr = va_arg (var_args, const DBusBasicValue**);
821 n_elements_p = va_arg (var_args, int*);
822
823 _dbus_assert (ptr != NULL);
824 _dbus_assert (n_elements_p != NULL);
825
826 _dbus_type_reader_recurse (&real->u.reader, &array);
827
828 _dbus_type_reader_read_fixed_multi (&array,
829 (void *) ptr, n_elements_p);
830 }
831 else if (spec_element_type == DBUS_TYPE_STRING ||
832 spec_element_type == DBUS_TYPE_SIGNATURE ||
833 spec_element_type == DBUS_TYPE_OBJECT_PATH)
834 {
835 char ***str_array_p;
836 int n_elements;
837 char **str_array;
838
839 str_array_p = va_arg (var_args, char***);
840 n_elements_p = va_arg (var_args, int*);
841
842 _dbus_assert (str_array_p != NULL);
843 _dbus_assert (n_elements_p != NULL);
844
845 /* Count elements in the array */
846 _dbus_type_reader_recurse (&real->u.reader, &array);
847
848 n_elements = 0;
849 while (_dbus_type_reader_get_current_type (&array) != DBUS_TYPE_INVALID)
850 {
851 ++n_elements;
852 _dbus_type_reader_next (&array);
853 }
854
855 str_array = dbus_new0 (char*, n_elements + 1);
856 if (str_array == NULL)
857 {
858 _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
859 goto out;
860 }
861
862 /* Now go through and dup each string */
863 _dbus_type_reader_recurse (&real->u.reader, &array);
864
865 i = 0;
866 while (i < n_elements)
867 {
868 const char *s;
869 _dbus_type_reader_read_basic (&array,
870 (void *) &s);
871
872 str_array[i] = _dbus_strdup (s);
873 if (str_array[i] == NULL)
874 {
875 dbus_free_string_array (str_array);
876 _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
877 goto out;
878 }
879
880 ++i;
881
882 if (!_dbus_type_reader_next (&array))
883 _dbus_assert (i == n_elements);
884 }
885
886 _dbus_assert (_dbus_type_reader_get_current_type (&array) == DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
887 _dbus_assert (i == n_elements);
888 _dbus_assert (str_array[i] == NULL);
889
890 *str_array_p = str_array;
891 *n_elements_p = n_elements;
892 }
893 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
894 else
895 {
896 _dbus_warn ("you can't read arrays of container types (struct, variant, array) with %s for now\n",
897 _DBUS_FUNCTION_NAME);
898 goto out;
899 }
900 #endif
901 }
902 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
903 else
904 {
905 _dbus_warn ("you can only read arrays and basic types with %s for now\n",
906 _DBUS_FUNCTION_NAME);
907 goto out;
908 }
909 #endif
910
911 spec_type = va_arg (var_args, int);
912 if (!_dbus_type_reader_next (&real->u.reader) && spec_type != DBUS_TYPE_INVALID)
913 {
914 dbus_set_error (error, DBUS_ERROR_INVALID_ARGS,
915 "Message has only %d arguments, but more were expected", i);
916 goto out;
917 }
918
919 i++;
920 }
921
922 retval = TRUE;
923
924 out:
925
926 return retval;
927 }
928
929 /** @} */
930
931 /**
932 * @defgroup DBusMessage DBusMessage
933 * @ingroup DBus
934 * @brief Message to be sent or received over a #DBusConnection.
935 *
936 * A DBusMessage is the most basic unit of communication over a
937 * DBusConnection. A DBusConnection represents a stream of messages
938 * received from a remote application, and a stream of messages
939 * sent to a remote application.
940 *
941 * A message has a message type, returned from
942 * dbus_message_get_type(). This indicates whether the message is a
943 * method call, a reply to a method call, a signal, or an error reply.
944 *
945 * A message has header fields such as the sender, destination, method
946 * or signal name, and so forth. DBusMessage has accessor functions for
947 * these, such as dbus_message_get_member().
948 *
949 * Convenience functions dbus_message_is_method_call(), dbus_message_is_signal(),
950 * and dbus_message_is_error() check several header fields at once and are
951 * slightly more efficient than checking the header fields with individual
952 * accessor functions.
953 *
954 * Finally, a message has arguments. The number and types of arguments
955 * are in the message's signature header field (accessed with
956 * dbus_message_get_signature()). Simple argument values are usually
957 * retrieved with dbus_message_get_args() but more complex values such
958 * as structs may require the use of #DBusMessageIter.
959 *
960 * The D-Bus specification goes into some more detail about header fields and
961 * message types.
962 *
963 * @{
964 */
965
966 /**
967 * @typedef DBusMessage
968 *
969 * Opaque data type representing a message received from or to be
970 * sent to another application.
971 */
972
973 /**
974 * Returns the serial of a message or 0 if none has been specified.
975 * The message's serial number is provided by the application sending
976 * the message and is used to identify replies to this message.
977 *
978 * All messages received on a connection will have a serial provided
979 * by the remote application.
980 *
981 * For messages you're sending, dbus_connection_send() will assign a
982 * serial and return it to you.
983 *
984 * @param message the message
985 * @returns the serial
986 */
987 dbus_uint32_t
dbus_message_get_serial(DBusMessage * message)988 dbus_message_get_serial (DBusMessage *message)
989 {
990 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, 0);
991
992 return _dbus_header_get_serial (&message->header);
993 }
994
995 /**
996 * Sets the reply serial of a message (the serial of the message this
997 * is a reply to).
998 *
999 * @param message the message
1000 * @param reply_serial the serial we're replying to
1001 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
1002 */
1003 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_set_reply_serial(DBusMessage * message,dbus_uint32_t reply_serial)1004 dbus_message_set_reply_serial (DBusMessage *message,
1005 dbus_uint32_t reply_serial)
1006 {
1007 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
1008 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->locked, FALSE);
1009 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (reply_serial != 0, FALSE); /* 0 is invalid */
1010
1011 return _dbus_header_set_field_basic (&message->header,
1012 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_REPLY_SERIAL,
1013 DBUS_TYPE_UINT32,
1014 &reply_serial);
1015 }
1016
1017 /**
1018 * Returns the serial that the message is a reply to or 0 if none.
1019 *
1020 * @param message the message
1021 * @returns the reply serial
1022 */
1023 dbus_uint32_t
dbus_message_get_reply_serial(DBusMessage * message)1024 dbus_message_get_reply_serial (DBusMessage *message)
1025 {
1026 dbus_uint32_t v_UINT32;
1027
1028 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, 0);
1029
1030 if (_dbus_header_get_field_basic (&message->header,
1031 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_REPLY_SERIAL,
1032 DBUS_TYPE_UINT32,
1033 &v_UINT32))
1034 return v_UINT32;
1035 else
1036 return 0;
1037 }
1038
1039 static void
dbus_message_finalize(DBusMessage * message)1040 dbus_message_finalize (DBusMessage *message)
1041 {
1042 _dbus_assert (message->refcount.value == 0);
1043
1044 /* This calls application callbacks! */
1045 _dbus_data_slot_list_free (&message->slot_list);
1046
1047 _dbus_list_foreach (&message->counters,
1048 free_counter, message);
1049 _dbus_list_clear (&message->counters);
1050
1051 _dbus_header_free (&message->header);
1052 _dbus_string_free (&message->body);
1053
1054 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
1055 close_unix_fds(message->unix_fds, &message->n_unix_fds);
1056 dbus_free(message->unix_fds);
1057 #endif
1058
1059 _dbus_assert (message->refcount.value == 0);
1060
1061 dbus_free (message);
1062 }
1063
1064 static DBusMessage*
dbus_message_new_empty_header(void)1065 dbus_message_new_empty_header (void)
1066 {
1067 DBusMessage *message;
1068 dbus_bool_t from_cache;
1069
1070 message = dbus_message_get_cached ();
1071
1072 if (message != NULL)
1073 {
1074 from_cache = TRUE;
1075 }
1076 else
1077 {
1078 from_cache = FALSE;
1079 message = dbus_new (DBusMessage, 1);
1080 if (message == NULL)
1081 return NULL;
1082 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
1083 message->generation = _dbus_current_generation;
1084 #endif
1085
1086 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
1087 message->unix_fds = NULL;
1088 message->n_unix_fds_allocated = 0;
1089 #endif
1090 }
1091
1092 message->refcount.value = 1;
1093 message->byte_order = DBUS_COMPILER_BYTE_ORDER;
1094 message->locked = FALSE;
1095 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
1096 message->in_cache = FALSE;
1097 #endif
1098 message->counters = NULL;
1099 message->size_counter_delta = 0;
1100 message->changed_stamp = 0;
1101
1102 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
1103 message->n_unix_fds = 0;
1104 message->n_unix_fds_allocated = 0;
1105 message->unix_fd_counter_delta = 0;
1106 #endif
1107
1108 if (!from_cache)
1109 _dbus_data_slot_list_init (&message->slot_list);
1110
1111 if (from_cache)
1112 {
1113 _dbus_header_reinit (&message->header, message->byte_order);
1114 _dbus_string_set_length (&message->body, 0);
1115 }
1116 else
1117 {
1118 if (!_dbus_header_init (&message->header, message->byte_order))
1119 {
1120 dbus_free (message);
1121 return NULL;
1122 }
1123
1124 if (!_dbus_string_init_preallocated (&message->body, 32))
1125 {
1126 _dbus_header_free (&message->header);
1127 dbus_free (message);
1128 return NULL;
1129 }
1130 }
1131
1132 return message;
1133 }
1134
1135 /**
1136 * Constructs a new message of the given message type.
1137 * Types include #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL,
1138 * #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL, and so forth.
1139 *
1140 * Usually you want to use dbus_message_new_method_call(),
1141 * dbus_message_new_method_return(), dbus_message_new_signal(),
1142 * or dbus_message_new_error() instead.
1143 *
1144 * @param message_type type of message
1145 * @returns new message or #NULL if no memory
1146 */
1147 DBusMessage*
dbus_message_new(int message_type)1148 dbus_message_new (int message_type)
1149 {
1150 DBusMessage *message;
1151
1152 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message_type != DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INVALID, NULL);
1153
1154 message = dbus_message_new_empty_header ();
1155 if (message == NULL)
1156 return NULL;
1157
1158 if (!_dbus_header_create (&message->header,
1159 message_type,
1160 NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL))
1161 {
1162 dbus_message_unref (message);
1163 return NULL;
1164 }
1165
1166 return message;
1167 }
1168
1169 /**
1170 * Constructs a new message to invoke a method on a remote
1171 * object. Returns #NULL if memory can't be allocated for the
1172 * message. The destination may be #NULL in which case no destination
1173 * is set; this is appropriate when using D-Bus in a peer-to-peer
1174 * context (no message bus). The interface may be #NULL, which means
1175 * that if multiple methods with the given name exist it is undefined
1176 * which one will be invoked.
1177 *
1178 * The path and method names may not be #NULL.
1179 *
1180 * Destination, path, interface, and method name can't contain
1181 * any invalid characters (see the D-Bus specification).
1182 *
1183 * @param destination name that the message should be sent to or #NULL
1184 * @param path object path the message should be sent to
1185 * @param interface interface to invoke method on, or #NULL
1186 * @param method method to invoke
1187 *
1188 * @returns a new DBusMessage, free with dbus_message_unref()
1189 */
1190 DBusMessage*
dbus_message_new_method_call(const char * destination,const char * path,const char * interface,const char * method)1191 dbus_message_new_method_call (const char *destination,
1192 const char *path,
1193 const char *interface,
1194 const char *method)
1195 {
1196 DBusMessage *message;
1197
1198 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (path != NULL, NULL);
1199 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (method != NULL, NULL);
1200 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (destination == NULL ||
1201 _dbus_check_is_valid_bus_name (destination), NULL);
1202 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_path (path), NULL);
1203 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (interface == NULL ||
1204 _dbus_check_is_valid_interface (interface), NULL);
1205 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_member (method), NULL);
1206
1207 message = dbus_message_new_empty_header ();
1208 if (message == NULL)
1209 return NULL;
1210
1211 if (!_dbus_header_create (&message->header,
1212 DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL,
1213 destination, path, interface, method, NULL))
1214 {
1215 dbus_message_unref (message);
1216 return NULL;
1217 }
1218
1219 return message;
1220 }
1221
1222 /**
1223 * Constructs a message that is a reply to a method call. Returns
1224 * #NULL if memory can't be allocated for the message.
1225 *
1226 * @param method_call the message being replied to
1227 * @returns a new DBusMessage, free with dbus_message_unref()
1228 */
1229 DBusMessage*
dbus_message_new_method_return(DBusMessage * method_call)1230 dbus_message_new_method_return (DBusMessage *method_call)
1231 {
1232 DBusMessage *message;
1233 const char *sender;
1234
1235 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (method_call != NULL, NULL);
1236
1237 sender = dbus_message_get_sender (method_call);
1238
1239 /* sender is allowed to be null here in peer-to-peer case */
1240
1241 message = dbus_message_new_empty_header ();
1242 if (message == NULL)
1243 return NULL;
1244
1245 if (!_dbus_header_create (&message->header,
1246 DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_RETURN,
1247 sender, NULL, NULL, NULL, NULL))
1248 {
1249 dbus_message_unref (message);
1250 return NULL;
1251 }
1252
1253 dbus_message_set_no_reply (message, TRUE);
1254
1255 if (!dbus_message_set_reply_serial (message,
1256 dbus_message_get_serial (method_call)))
1257 {
1258 dbus_message_unref (message);
1259 return NULL;
1260 }
1261
1262 return message;
1263 }
1264
1265 /**
1266 * Constructs a new message representing a signal emission. Returns
1267 * #NULL if memory can't be allocated for the message. A signal is
1268 * identified by its originating object path, interface, and the name
1269 * of the signal.
1270 *
1271 * Path, interface, and signal name must all be valid (the D-Bus
1272 * specification defines the syntax of these fields).
1273 *
1274 * @param path the path to the object emitting the signal
1275 * @param interface the interface the signal is emitted from
1276 * @param name name of the signal
1277 * @returns a new DBusMessage, free with dbus_message_unref()
1278 */
1279 DBusMessage*
dbus_message_new_signal(const char * path,const char * interface,const char * name)1280 dbus_message_new_signal (const char *path,
1281 const char *interface,
1282 const char *name)
1283 {
1284 DBusMessage *message;
1285
1286 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (path != NULL, NULL);
1287 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (interface != NULL, NULL);
1288 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (name != NULL, NULL);
1289 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_path (path), NULL);
1290 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_interface (interface), NULL);
1291 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_member (name), NULL);
1292
1293 message = dbus_message_new_empty_header ();
1294 if (message == NULL)
1295 return NULL;
1296
1297 if (!_dbus_header_create (&message->header,
1298 DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL,
1299 NULL, path, interface, name, NULL))
1300 {
1301 dbus_message_unref (message);
1302 return NULL;
1303 }
1304
1305 dbus_message_set_no_reply (message, TRUE);
1306
1307 return message;
1308 }
1309
1310 /**
1311 * Creates a new message that is an error reply to another message.
1312 * Error replies are most common in response to method calls, but
1313 * can be returned in reply to any message.
1314 *
1315 * The error name must be a valid error name according to the syntax
1316 * given in the D-Bus specification. If you don't want to make
1317 * up an error name just use #DBUS_ERROR_FAILED.
1318 *
1319 * @param reply_to the message we're replying to
1320 * @param error_name the error name
1321 * @param error_message the error message string (or #NULL for none, but please give a message)
1322 * @returns a new error message object, free with dbus_message_unref()
1323 */
1324 DBusMessage*
dbus_message_new_error(DBusMessage * reply_to,const char * error_name,const char * error_message)1325 dbus_message_new_error (DBusMessage *reply_to,
1326 const char *error_name,
1327 const char *error_message)
1328 {
1329 DBusMessage *message;
1330 const char *sender;
1331 DBusMessageIter iter;
1332
1333 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (reply_to != NULL, NULL);
1334 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (error_name != NULL, NULL);
1335 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_error_name (error_name), NULL);
1336
1337 sender = dbus_message_get_sender (reply_to);
1338
1339 /* sender may be NULL for non-message-bus case or
1340 * when the message bus is dealing with an unregistered
1341 * connection.
1342 */
1343 message = dbus_message_new_empty_header ();
1344 if (message == NULL)
1345 return NULL;
1346
1347 if (!_dbus_header_create (&message->header,
1348 DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR,
1349 sender, NULL, NULL, NULL, error_name))
1350 {
1351 dbus_message_unref (message);
1352 return NULL;
1353 }
1354
1355 dbus_message_set_no_reply (message, TRUE);
1356
1357 if (!dbus_message_set_reply_serial (message,
1358 dbus_message_get_serial (reply_to)))
1359 {
1360 dbus_message_unref (message);
1361 return NULL;
1362 }
1363
1364 if (error_message != NULL)
1365 {
1366 dbus_message_iter_init_append (message, &iter);
1367 if (!dbus_message_iter_append_basic (&iter,
1368 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
1369 &error_message))
1370 {
1371 dbus_message_unref (message);
1372 return NULL;
1373 }
1374 }
1375
1376 return message;
1377 }
1378
1379 /**
1380 * Creates a new message that is an error reply to another message, allowing
1381 * you to use printf formatting.
1382 *
1383 * See dbus_message_new_error() for details - this function is the same
1384 * aside from the printf formatting.
1385 *
1386 * @todo add _DBUS_GNUC_PRINTF to this (requires moving _DBUS_GNUC_PRINTF to
1387 * public header, see DBUS_DEPRECATED for an example)
1388 *
1389 * @param reply_to the original message
1390 * @param error_name the error name
1391 * @param error_format the error message format as with printf
1392 * @param ... format string arguments
1393 * @returns a new error message
1394 */
1395 DBusMessage*
dbus_message_new_error_printf(DBusMessage * reply_to,const char * error_name,const char * error_format,...)1396 dbus_message_new_error_printf (DBusMessage *reply_to,
1397 const char *error_name,
1398 const char *error_format,
1399 ...)
1400 {
1401 va_list args;
1402 DBusString str;
1403 DBusMessage *message;
1404
1405 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (reply_to != NULL, NULL);
1406 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (error_name != NULL, NULL);
1407 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_check_is_valid_error_name (error_name), NULL);
1408
1409 if (!_dbus_string_init (&str))
1410 return NULL;
1411
1412 va_start (args, error_format);
1413
1414 if (_dbus_string_append_printf_valist (&str, error_format, args))
1415 message = dbus_message_new_error (reply_to, error_name,
1416 _dbus_string_get_const_data (&str));
1417 else
1418 message = NULL;
1419
1420 _dbus_string_free (&str);
1421
1422 va_end (args);
1423
1424 return message;
1425 }
1426
1427
1428 /**
1429 * Creates a new message that is an exact replica of the message
1430 * specified, except that its refcount is set to 1, its message serial
1431 * is reset to 0, and if the original message was "locked" (in the
1432 * outgoing message queue and thus not modifiable) the new message
1433 * will not be locked.
1434 *
1435 * @todo This function can't be used in programs that try to recover from OOM errors.
1436 *
1437 * @param message the message
1438 * @returns the new message.or #NULL if not enough memory or Unix file descriptors (in case the message to copy includes Unix file descriptors) can be allocated.
1439 */
1440 DBusMessage *
dbus_message_copy(const DBusMessage * message)1441 dbus_message_copy (const DBusMessage *message)
1442 {
1443 DBusMessage *retval;
1444
1445 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
1446
1447 retval = dbus_new0 (DBusMessage, 1);
1448 if (retval == NULL)
1449 return NULL;
1450
1451 retval->refcount.value = 1;
1452 retval->byte_order = message->byte_order;
1453 retval->locked = FALSE;
1454 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
1455 retval->generation = message->generation;
1456 #endif
1457
1458 if (!_dbus_header_copy (&message->header, &retval->header))
1459 {
1460 dbus_free (retval);
1461 return NULL;
1462 }
1463
1464 if (!_dbus_string_init_preallocated (&retval->body,
1465 _dbus_string_get_length (&message->body)))
1466 {
1467 _dbus_header_free (&retval->header);
1468 dbus_free (retval);
1469 return NULL;
1470 }
1471
1472 if (!_dbus_string_copy (&message->body, 0,
1473 &retval->body, 0))
1474 goto failed_copy;
1475
1476 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
1477 retval->unix_fds = dbus_new(int, message->n_unix_fds);
1478 if (retval->unix_fds == NULL && message->n_unix_fds > 0)
1479 goto failed_copy;
1480
1481 retval->n_unix_fds_allocated = message->n_unix_fds;
1482
1483 for (retval->n_unix_fds = 0;
1484 retval->n_unix_fds < message->n_unix_fds;
1485 retval->n_unix_fds++)
1486 {
1487 retval->unix_fds[retval->n_unix_fds] = _dbus_dup(message->unix_fds[retval->n_unix_fds], NULL);
1488
1489 if (retval->unix_fds[retval->n_unix_fds] < 0)
1490 goto failed_copy;
1491 }
1492
1493 #endif
1494
1495 return retval;
1496
1497 failed_copy:
1498 _dbus_header_free (&retval->header);
1499 _dbus_string_free (&retval->body);
1500
1501 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
1502 close_unix_fds(retval->unix_fds, &retval->n_unix_fds);
1503 dbus_free(retval->unix_fds);
1504 #endif
1505
1506 dbus_free (retval);
1507
1508 return NULL;
1509 }
1510
1511
1512 /**
1513 * Increments the reference count of a DBusMessage.
1514 *
1515 * @param message the message
1516 * @returns the message
1517 * @see dbus_message_unref
1518 */
1519 DBusMessage *
dbus_message_ref(DBusMessage * message)1520 dbus_message_ref (DBusMessage *message)
1521 {
1522 dbus_int32_t old_refcount;
1523
1524 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
1525 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message->generation == _dbus_current_generation, NULL);
1526 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->in_cache, NULL);
1527
1528 old_refcount = _dbus_atomic_inc (&message->refcount);
1529 _dbus_assert (old_refcount >= 1);
1530
1531 return message;
1532 }
1533
1534 /**
1535 * Decrements the reference count of a DBusMessage, freeing the
1536 * message if the count reaches 0.
1537 *
1538 * @param message the message
1539 * @see dbus_message_ref
1540 */
1541 void
dbus_message_unref(DBusMessage * message)1542 dbus_message_unref (DBusMessage *message)
1543 {
1544 dbus_int32_t old_refcount;
1545
1546 _dbus_return_if_fail (message != NULL);
1547 _dbus_return_if_fail (message->generation == _dbus_current_generation);
1548 _dbus_return_if_fail (!message->in_cache);
1549
1550 old_refcount = _dbus_atomic_dec (&message->refcount);
1551
1552 _dbus_assert (old_refcount >= 0);
1553
1554 if (old_refcount == 1)
1555 {
1556 /* Calls application callbacks! */
1557 dbus_message_cache_or_finalize (message);
1558 }
1559 }
1560
1561 /**
1562 * Gets the type of a message. Types include
1563 * #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL, #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_RETURN,
1564 * #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR, #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL, but other
1565 * types are allowed and all code must silently ignore messages of
1566 * unknown type. #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INVALID will never be returned.
1567 *
1568 * @param message the message
1569 * @returns the type of the message
1570 */
1571 int
dbus_message_get_type(DBusMessage * message)1572 dbus_message_get_type (DBusMessage *message)
1573 {
1574 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INVALID);
1575
1576 return _dbus_header_get_message_type (&message->header);
1577 }
1578
1579 /**
1580 * Appends fields to a message given a variable argument list. The
1581 * variable argument list should contain the type of each argument
1582 * followed by the value to append. Appendable types are basic types,
1583 * and arrays of fixed-length basic types (except arrays of Unix file
1584 * descriptors). To append variable-length basic types, or any more
1585 * complex value, you have to use an iterator rather than this
1586 * function.
1587 *
1588 * To append a basic type, specify its type code followed by the
1589 * address of the value. For example:
1590 *
1591 * @code
1592 *
1593 * dbus_int32_t v_INT32 = 42;
1594 * const char *v_STRING = "Hello World";
1595 * dbus_message_append_args (message,
1596 * DBUS_TYPE_INT32, &v_INT32,
1597 * DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &v_STRING,
1598 * DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
1599 * @endcode
1600 *
1601 * To append an array of fixed-length basic types (except Unix file
1602 * descriptors), pass in the DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY typecode, the element
1603 * typecode, the address of the array pointer, and a 32-bit integer
1604 * giving the number of elements in the array. So for example: @code
1605 * const dbus_int32_t array[] = { 1, 2, 3 }; const dbus_int32_t
1606 * *v_ARRAY = array; dbus_message_append_args (message,
1607 * DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY, DBUS_TYPE_INT32, &v_ARRAY, 3, DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
1608 * @endcode
1609 *
1610 * This function does not support arrays of Unix file descriptors. If
1611 * you need those you need to manually recurse into the array.
1612 *
1613 * For Unix file descriptors this function will internally duplicate
1614 * the descriptor you passed in. Hence you may close the descriptor
1615 * immediately after this call.
1616 *
1617 * @warning in C, given "int array[]", "&array == array" (the
1618 * comp.lang.c FAQ says otherwise, but gcc and the FAQ don't agree).
1619 * So if you're using an array instead of a pointer you have to create
1620 * a pointer variable, assign the array to it, then take the address
1621 * of the pointer variable. For strings it works to write
1622 * const char *array = "Hello" and then use &array though.
1623 *
1624 * The last argument to this function must be #DBUS_TYPE_INVALID,
1625 * marking the end of the argument list. If you don't do this
1626 * then libdbus won't know to stop and will read invalid memory.
1627 *
1628 * String/signature/path arrays should be passed in as "const char***
1629 * address_of_array" and "int n_elements"
1630 *
1631 * @todo support DBUS_TYPE_STRUCT and DBUS_TYPE_VARIANT and complex arrays
1632 *
1633 * @todo If this fails due to lack of memory, the message is hosed and
1634 * you have to start over building the whole message.
1635 *
1636 * @param message the message
1637 * @param first_arg_type type of the first argument
1638 * @param ... value of first argument, list of additional type-value pairs
1639 * @returns #TRUE on success
1640 */
1641 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_append_args(DBusMessage * message,int first_arg_type,...)1642 dbus_message_append_args (DBusMessage *message,
1643 int first_arg_type,
1644 ...)
1645 {
1646 dbus_bool_t retval;
1647 va_list var_args;
1648
1649 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
1650
1651 va_start (var_args, first_arg_type);
1652 retval = dbus_message_append_args_valist (message,
1653 first_arg_type,
1654 var_args);
1655 va_end (var_args);
1656
1657 return retval;
1658 }
1659
1660 /**
1661 * Like dbus_message_append_args() but takes a va_list for use by language bindings.
1662 *
1663 * @todo for now, if this function fails due to OOM it will leave
1664 * the message half-written and you have to discard the message
1665 * and start over.
1666 *
1667 * @see dbus_message_append_args.
1668 * @param message the message
1669 * @param first_arg_type type of first argument
1670 * @param var_args value of first argument, then list of type/value pairs
1671 * @returns #TRUE on success
1672 */
1673 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_append_args_valist(DBusMessage * message,int first_arg_type,va_list var_args)1674 dbus_message_append_args_valist (DBusMessage *message,
1675 int first_arg_type,
1676 va_list var_args)
1677 {
1678 int type;
1679 DBusMessageIter iter;
1680
1681 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
1682
1683 type = first_arg_type;
1684
1685 dbus_message_iter_init_append (message, &iter);
1686
1687 while (type != DBUS_TYPE_INVALID)
1688 {
1689 if (dbus_type_is_basic (type))
1690 {
1691 const DBusBasicValue *value;
1692 value = va_arg (var_args, const DBusBasicValue*);
1693
1694 if (!dbus_message_iter_append_basic (&iter,
1695 type,
1696 value))
1697 goto failed;
1698 }
1699 else if (type == DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY)
1700 {
1701 int element_type;
1702 DBusMessageIter array;
1703 char buf[2];
1704
1705 element_type = va_arg (var_args, int);
1706
1707 buf[0] = element_type;
1708 buf[1] = '\0';
1709 if (!dbus_message_iter_open_container (&iter,
1710 DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY,
1711 buf,
1712 &array))
1713 goto failed;
1714
1715 if (dbus_type_is_fixed (element_type) &&
1716 element_type != DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD)
1717 {
1718 const DBusBasicValue **value;
1719 int n_elements;
1720
1721 value = va_arg (var_args, const DBusBasicValue**);
1722 n_elements = va_arg (var_args, int);
1723
1724 if (!dbus_message_iter_append_fixed_array (&array,
1725 element_type,
1726 value,
1727 n_elements)) {
1728 dbus_message_iter_abandon_container (&iter, &array);
1729 goto failed;
1730 }
1731 }
1732 else if (element_type == DBUS_TYPE_STRING ||
1733 element_type == DBUS_TYPE_SIGNATURE ||
1734 element_type == DBUS_TYPE_OBJECT_PATH)
1735 {
1736 const char ***value_p;
1737 const char **value;
1738 int n_elements;
1739 int i;
1740
1741 value_p = va_arg (var_args, const char***);
1742 n_elements = va_arg (var_args, int);
1743
1744 value = *value_p;
1745
1746 i = 0;
1747 while (i < n_elements)
1748 {
1749 if (!dbus_message_iter_append_basic (&array,
1750 element_type,
1751 &value[i])) {
1752 dbus_message_iter_abandon_container (&iter, &array);
1753 goto failed;
1754 }
1755 ++i;
1756 }
1757 }
1758 else
1759 {
1760 _dbus_warn ("arrays of %s can't be appended with %s for now\n",
1761 _dbus_type_to_string (element_type),
1762 _DBUS_FUNCTION_NAME);
1763 goto failed;
1764 }
1765
1766 if (!dbus_message_iter_close_container (&iter, &array))
1767 goto failed;
1768 }
1769 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
1770 else
1771 {
1772 _dbus_warn ("type %s isn't supported yet in %s\n",
1773 _dbus_type_to_string (type), _DBUS_FUNCTION_NAME);
1774 goto failed;
1775 }
1776 #endif
1777
1778 type = va_arg (var_args, int);
1779 }
1780
1781 return TRUE;
1782
1783 failed:
1784 return FALSE;
1785 }
1786
1787 /**
1788 * Gets arguments from a message given a variable argument list. The
1789 * supported types include those supported by
1790 * dbus_message_append_args(); that is, basic types and arrays of
1791 * fixed-length basic types. The arguments are the same as they would
1792 * be for dbus_message_iter_get_basic() or
1793 * dbus_message_iter_get_fixed_array().
1794 *
1795 * In addition to those types, arrays of string, object path, and
1796 * signature are supported; but these are returned as allocated memory
1797 * and must be freed with dbus_free_string_array(), while the other
1798 * types are returned as const references. To get a string array
1799 * pass in "char ***array_location" and "int *n_elements".
1800 *
1801 * Similar to dbus_message_get_fixed_array() this function does not
1802 * support arrays of type DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD. If you need to parse
1803 * messages with arrays of Unix file descriptors you need to recurse
1804 * into the array manually.
1805 *
1806 * Unix file descriptors that are read with this function will have
1807 * the FD_CLOEXEC flag set. If you need them without this flag set,
1808 * make sure to unset it with fcntl().
1809 *
1810 * The variable argument list should contain the type of the argument
1811 * followed by a pointer to where the value should be stored. The list
1812 * is terminated with #DBUS_TYPE_INVALID.
1813 *
1814 * Except for string arrays, the returned values are constant; do not
1815 * free them. They point into the #DBusMessage.
1816 *
1817 * If the requested arguments are not present, or do not have the
1818 * requested types, then an error will be set.
1819 *
1820 * If more arguments than requested are present, the requested
1821 * arguments are returned and the extra arguments are ignored.
1822 *
1823 * @todo support DBUS_TYPE_STRUCT and DBUS_TYPE_VARIANT and complex arrays
1824 *
1825 * @param message the message
1826 * @param error error to be filled in on failure
1827 * @param first_arg_type the first argument type
1828 * @param ... location for first argument value, then list of type-location pairs
1829 * @returns #FALSE if the error was set
1830 */
1831 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_get_args(DBusMessage * message,DBusError * error,int first_arg_type,...)1832 dbus_message_get_args (DBusMessage *message,
1833 DBusError *error,
1834 int first_arg_type,
1835 ...)
1836 {
1837 dbus_bool_t retval;
1838 va_list var_args;
1839
1840 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
1841 _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, FALSE);
1842
1843 va_start (var_args, first_arg_type);
1844 retval = dbus_message_get_args_valist (message, error, first_arg_type, var_args);
1845 va_end (var_args);
1846
1847 return retval;
1848 }
1849
1850 /**
1851 * Like dbus_message_get_args but takes a va_list for use by language bindings.
1852 *
1853 * @see dbus_message_get_args
1854 * @param message the message
1855 * @param error error to be filled in
1856 * @param first_arg_type type of the first argument
1857 * @param var_args return location for first argument, followed by list of type/location pairs
1858 * @returns #FALSE if error was set
1859 */
1860 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_get_args_valist(DBusMessage * message,DBusError * error,int first_arg_type,va_list var_args)1861 dbus_message_get_args_valist (DBusMessage *message,
1862 DBusError *error,
1863 int first_arg_type,
1864 va_list var_args)
1865 {
1866 DBusMessageIter iter;
1867
1868 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
1869 _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, FALSE);
1870
1871 dbus_message_iter_init (message, &iter);
1872 return _dbus_message_iter_get_args_valist (&iter, error, first_arg_type, var_args);
1873 }
1874
1875 static void
_dbus_message_iter_init_common(DBusMessage * message,DBusMessageRealIter * real,int iter_type)1876 _dbus_message_iter_init_common (DBusMessage *message,
1877 DBusMessageRealIter *real,
1878 int iter_type)
1879 {
1880 _dbus_assert (sizeof (DBusMessageRealIter) <= sizeof (DBusMessageIter));
1881
1882 /* Since the iterator will read or write who-knows-what from the
1883 * message, we need to get in the right byte order
1884 */
1885 ensure_byte_order (message);
1886
1887 real->message = message;
1888 real->changed_stamp = message->changed_stamp;
1889 real->iter_type = iter_type;
1890 real->sig_refcount = 0;
1891 }
1892
1893 /**
1894 * Initializes a #DBusMessageIter for reading the arguments of the
1895 * message passed in.
1896 *
1897 * When possible, dbus_message_get_args() is much more convenient.
1898 * Some types of argument can only be read with #DBusMessageIter
1899 * however.
1900 *
1901 * The easiest way to iterate is like this:
1902 * @code
1903 * dbus_message_iter_init (message, &iter);
1904 * while ((current_type = dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type (&iter)) != DBUS_TYPE_INVALID)
1905 * dbus_message_iter_next (&iter);
1906 * @endcode
1907 *
1908 * #DBusMessageIter contains no allocated memory; it need not be
1909 * freed, and can be copied by assignment or memcpy().
1910 *
1911 * @param message the message
1912 * @param iter pointer to an iterator to initialize
1913 * @returns #FALSE if the message has no arguments
1914 */
1915 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_iter_init(DBusMessage * message,DBusMessageIter * iter)1916 dbus_message_iter_init (DBusMessage *message,
1917 DBusMessageIter *iter)
1918 {
1919 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
1920 const DBusString *type_str;
1921 int type_pos;
1922
1923 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
1924 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (iter != NULL, FALSE);
1925
1926 get_const_signature (&message->header, &type_str, &type_pos);
1927
1928 _dbus_message_iter_init_common (message, real,
1929 DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_READER);
1930
1931 _dbus_type_reader_init (&real->u.reader,
1932 message->byte_order,
1933 type_str, type_pos,
1934 &message->body,
1935 0);
1936
1937 return _dbus_type_reader_get_current_type (&real->u.reader) != DBUS_TYPE_INVALID;
1938 }
1939
1940 /**
1941 * Checks if an iterator has any more fields.
1942 *
1943 * @param iter the message iter
1944 * @returns #TRUE if there are more fields following
1945 */
1946 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_iter_has_next(DBusMessageIter * iter)1947 dbus_message_iter_has_next (DBusMessageIter *iter)
1948 {
1949 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
1950
1951 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real), FALSE);
1952 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_READER, FALSE);
1953
1954 return _dbus_type_reader_has_next (&real->u.reader);
1955 }
1956
1957 /**
1958 * Moves the iterator to the next field, if any. If there's no next
1959 * field, returns #FALSE. If the iterator moves forward, returns
1960 * #TRUE.
1961 *
1962 * @param iter the message iter
1963 * @returns #TRUE if the iterator was moved to the next field
1964 */
1965 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_iter_next(DBusMessageIter * iter)1966 dbus_message_iter_next (DBusMessageIter *iter)
1967 {
1968 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
1969
1970 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real), FALSE);
1971 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_READER, FALSE);
1972
1973 return _dbus_type_reader_next (&real->u.reader);
1974 }
1975
1976 /**
1977 * Returns the argument type of the argument that the message iterator
1978 * points to. If the iterator is at the end of the message, returns
1979 * #DBUS_TYPE_INVALID. You can thus write a loop as follows:
1980 *
1981 * @code
1982 * dbus_message_iter_init (&iter);
1983 * while ((current_type = dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type (&iter)) != DBUS_TYPE_INVALID)
1984 * dbus_message_iter_next (&iter);
1985 * @endcode
1986 *
1987 * @param iter the message iter
1988 * @returns the argument type
1989 */
1990 int
dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type(DBusMessageIter * iter)1991 dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type (DBusMessageIter *iter)
1992 {
1993 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
1994
1995 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real), DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
1996 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_READER, FALSE);
1997
1998 return _dbus_type_reader_get_current_type (&real->u.reader);
1999 }
2000
2001 /**
2002 * Returns the element type of the array that the message iterator
2003 * points to. Note that you need to check that the iterator points to
2004 * an array prior to using this function.
2005 *
2006 * @param iter the message iter
2007 * @returns the array element type
2008 */
2009 int
dbus_message_iter_get_element_type(DBusMessageIter * iter)2010 dbus_message_iter_get_element_type (DBusMessageIter *iter)
2011 {
2012 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2013
2014 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real), DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
2015 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_READER, DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
2016 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type (iter) == DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY, DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
2017
2018 return _dbus_type_reader_get_element_type (&real->u.reader);
2019 }
2020
2021 /**
2022 * Recurses into a container value when reading values from a message,
2023 * initializing a sub-iterator to use for traversing the child values
2024 * of the container.
2025 *
2026 * Note that this recurses into a value, not a type, so you can only
2027 * recurse if the value exists. The main implication of this is that
2028 * if you have for example an empty array of array of int32, you can
2029 * recurse into the outermost array, but it will have no values, so
2030 * you won't be able to recurse further. There's no array of int32 to
2031 * recurse into.
2032 *
2033 * If a container is an array of fixed-length types (except Unix file
2034 * descriptors), it is much more efficient to use
2035 * dbus_message_iter_get_fixed_array() to get the whole array in one
2036 * shot, rather than individually walking over the array elements.
2037 *
2038 * Be sure you have somehow checked that
2039 * dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type() matches the type you are expecting
2040 * to recurse into. Results of this function are undefined if there is
2041 * no container to recurse into at the current iterator position.
2042 *
2043 * @param iter the message iterator
2044 * @param sub the sub-iterator to initialize
2045 */
2046 void
dbus_message_iter_recurse(DBusMessageIter * iter,DBusMessageIter * sub)2047 dbus_message_iter_recurse (DBusMessageIter *iter,
2048 DBusMessageIter *sub)
2049 {
2050 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2051 DBusMessageRealIter *real_sub = (DBusMessageRealIter *)sub;
2052
2053 _dbus_return_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real));
2054 _dbus_return_if_fail (sub != NULL);
2055
2056 *real_sub = *real;
2057 _dbus_type_reader_recurse (&real->u.reader, &real_sub->u.reader);
2058 }
2059
2060 /**
2061 * Returns the current signature of a message iterator. This
2062 * is useful primarily for dealing with variants; one can
2063 * recurse into a variant and determine the signature of
2064 * the variant's value.
2065 *
2066 * The returned string must be freed with dbus_free().
2067 *
2068 * @param iter the message iterator
2069 * @returns the contained signature, or NULL if out of memory
2070 */
2071 char *
dbus_message_iter_get_signature(DBusMessageIter * iter)2072 dbus_message_iter_get_signature (DBusMessageIter *iter)
2073 {
2074 const DBusString *sig;
2075 DBusString retstr;
2076 char *ret;
2077 int start, len;
2078 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2079
2080 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real), NULL);
2081
2082 if (!_dbus_string_init (&retstr))
2083 return NULL;
2084
2085 _dbus_type_reader_get_signature (&real->u.reader, &sig,
2086 &start, &len);
2087 if (!_dbus_string_append_len (&retstr,
2088 _dbus_string_get_const_data (sig) + start,
2089 len))
2090 return NULL;
2091 if (!_dbus_string_steal_data (&retstr, &ret))
2092 return NULL;
2093 _dbus_string_free (&retstr);
2094 return ret;
2095 }
2096
2097 /**
2098 * Reads a basic-typed value from the message iterator.
2099 * Basic types are the non-containers such as integer and string.
2100 *
2101 * The value argument should be the address of a location to store
2102 * the returned value. So for int32 it should be a "dbus_int32_t*"
2103 * and for string a "const char**". The returned value is
2104 * by reference and should not be freed.
2105 *
2106 * This call duplicates Unix file descriptors when reading them. It is
2107 * your job to close them when you don't need them anymore.
2108 *
2109 * Unix file descriptors that are read with this function will have
2110 * the FD_CLOEXEC flag set. If you need them without this flag set,
2111 * make sure to unset it with fcntl().
2112 *
2113 * Be sure you have somehow checked that
2114 * dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type() matches the type you are
2115 * expecting, or you'll crash when you try to use an integer as a
2116 * string or something.
2117 *
2118 * To read any container type (array, struct, dict) you will need to
2119 * recurse into the container with dbus_message_iter_recurse(). If
2120 * the container is an array of fixed-length values (except Unix file
2121 * descriptors), you can get all the array elements at once with
2122 * dbus_message_iter_get_fixed_array(). Otherwise, you have to iterate
2123 * over the container's contents one value at a time.
2124 *
2125 * All basic-typed values are guaranteed to fit in 8 bytes. So you can
2126 * write code like this:
2127 *
2128 * @code
2129 * dbus_uint64_t value;
2130 * int type;
2131 * dbus_message_iter_get_basic (&read_iter, &value);
2132 * type = dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type (&read_iter);
2133 * dbus_message_iter_append_basic (&write_iter, type, &value);
2134 * @endcode
2135 *
2136 * On some really obscure platforms dbus_uint64_t might not exist, if
2137 * you need to worry about this you will know. dbus_uint64_t is just
2138 * one example of a type that's large enough to hold any possible
2139 * value, you could use a struct or char[8] instead if you like.
2140 *
2141 * @param iter the iterator
2142 * @param value location to store the value
2143 */
2144 void
dbus_message_iter_get_basic(DBusMessageIter * iter,void * value)2145 dbus_message_iter_get_basic (DBusMessageIter *iter,
2146 void *value)
2147 {
2148 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2149
2150 _dbus_return_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real));
2151 _dbus_return_if_fail (value != NULL);
2152
2153 if (dbus_message_iter_get_arg_type (iter) == DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD)
2154 {
2155 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
2156 DBusBasicValue idx;
2157
2158 _dbus_type_reader_read_basic(&real->u.reader, &idx);
2159
2160 if (idx.u32 >= real->message->n_unix_fds) {
2161 /* Hmm, we cannot really signal an error here, so let's make
2162 sure to return an invalid fd. */
2163 *((int*) value) = -1;
2164 return;
2165 }
2166
2167 *((int*) value) = _dbus_dup(real->message->unix_fds[idx.u32], NULL);
2168 #else
2169 *((int*) value) = -1;
2170 #endif
2171 }
2172 else
2173 {
2174 _dbus_type_reader_read_basic (&real->u.reader,
2175 value);
2176 }
2177 }
2178
2179 /**
2180 * Returns the number of bytes in the array as marshaled in the wire
2181 * protocol. The iterator must currently be inside an array-typed
2182 * value.
2183 *
2184 * This function is deprecated on the grounds that it is stupid. Why
2185 * would you want to know how many bytes are in the array as marshaled
2186 * in the wire protocol? For now, use the n_elements returned from
2187 * dbus_message_iter_get_fixed_array() instead, or iterate over the
2188 * array values and count them.
2189 *
2190 * @todo introduce a variant of this get_n_elements that returns
2191 * the number of elements, though with a non-fixed array it will not
2192 * be very efficient, so maybe it's not good.
2193 *
2194 * @param iter the iterator
2195 * @returns the number of bytes in the array
2196 */
2197 int
dbus_message_iter_get_array_len(DBusMessageIter * iter)2198 dbus_message_iter_get_array_len (DBusMessageIter *iter)
2199 {
2200 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2201
2202 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real), 0);
2203
2204 return _dbus_type_reader_get_array_length (&real->u.reader);
2205 }
2206
2207 /**
2208 * Reads a block of fixed-length values from the message iterator.
2209 * Fixed-length values are those basic types that are not string-like,
2210 * such as integers, bool, double. The returned block will be from the
2211 * current position in the array until the end of the array.
2212 *
2213 * There is one exception here: although DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD is
2214 * considered a 'fixed' type arrays of this type may not be read with
2215 * this function.
2216 *
2217 * The message iter should be "in" the array (that is, you recurse into the
2218 * array, and then you call dbus_message_iter_get_fixed_array() on the
2219 * "sub-iterator" created by dbus_message_iter_recurse()).
2220 *
2221 * The value argument should be the address of a location to store the
2222 * returned array. So for int32 it should be a "const dbus_int32_t**"
2223 * The returned value is by reference and should not be freed.
2224 *
2225 * This function should only be used if dbus_type_is_fixed() returns
2226 * #TRUE for the element type.
2227 *
2228 * If an array's elements are not fixed in size, you have to recurse
2229 * into the array with dbus_message_iter_recurse() and read the
2230 * elements one by one.
2231 *
2232 * Because the array is not copied, this function runs in constant
2233 * time and is fast; it's much preferred over walking the entire array
2234 * with an iterator. (However, you can always use
2235 * dbus_message_iter_recurse(), even for fixed-length types;
2236 * dbus_message_iter_get_fixed_array() is just an optimization.)
2237 *
2238 * @param iter the iterator
2239 * @param value location to store the block
2240 * @param n_elements number of elements in the block
2241 */
2242 void
dbus_message_iter_get_fixed_array(DBusMessageIter * iter,void * value,int * n_elements)2243 dbus_message_iter_get_fixed_array (DBusMessageIter *iter,
2244 void *value,
2245 int *n_elements)
2246 {
2247 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2248 int subtype = _dbus_type_reader_get_current_type(&real->u.reader);
2249
2250 _dbus_return_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_check (real));
2251 _dbus_return_if_fail (value != NULL);
2252 _dbus_return_if_fail ((subtype == DBUS_TYPE_INVALID) ||
2253 (dbus_type_is_fixed (subtype) && subtype != DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD));
2254
2255 _dbus_type_reader_read_fixed_multi (&real->u.reader,
2256 value, n_elements);
2257 }
2258
2259 /**
2260 * Initializes a #DBusMessageIter for appending arguments to the end
2261 * of a message.
2262 *
2263 * @todo If appending any of the arguments fails due to lack of
2264 * memory, the message is hosed and you have to start over building
2265 * the whole message.
2266 *
2267 * @param message the message
2268 * @param iter pointer to an iterator to initialize
2269 */
2270 void
dbus_message_iter_init_append(DBusMessage * message,DBusMessageIter * iter)2271 dbus_message_iter_init_append (DBusMessage *message,
2272 DBusMessageIter *iter)
2273 {
2274 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2275
2276 _dbus_return_if_fail (message != NULL);
2277 _dbus_return_if_fail (iter != NULL);
2278
2279 _dbus_message_iter_init_common (message, real,
2280 DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER);
2281
2282 /* We create the signature string and point iterators at it "on demand"
2283 * when a value is actually appended. That means that init() never fails
2284 * due to OOM.
2285 */
2286 _dbus_type_writer_init_types_delayed (&real->u.writer,
2287 message->byte_order,
2288 &message->body,
2289 _dbus_string_get_length (&message->body));
2290 }
2291
2292 /**
2293 * Creates a temporary signature string containing the current
2294 * signature, stores it in the iterator, and points the iterator to
2295 * the end of it. Used any time we write to the message.
2296 *
2297 * @param real an iterator without a type_str
2298 * @returns #FALSE if no memory
2299 */
2300 static dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_iter_open_signature(DBusMessageRealIter * real)2301 _dbus_message_iter_open_signature (DBusMessageRealIter *real)
2302 {
2303 DBusString *str;
2304 const DBusString *current_sig;
2305 int current_sig_pos;
2306
2307 _dbus_assert (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER);
2308
2309 if (real->u.writer.type_str != NULL)
2310 {
2311 _dbus_assert (real->sig_refcount > 0);
2312 real->sig_refcount += 1;
2313 return TRUE;
2314 }
2315
2316 str = dbus_new (DBusString, 1);
2317 if (str == NULL)
2318 return FALSE;
2319
2320 if (!_dbus_header_get_field_raw (&real->message->header,
2321 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_SIGNATURE,
2322 ¤t_sig, ¤t_sig_pos))
2323 current_sig = NULL;
2324
2325 if (current_sig)
2326 {
2327 int current_len;
2328
2329 current_len = _dbus_string_get_byte (current_sig, current_sig_pos);
2330 current_sig_pos += 1; /* move on to sig data */
2331
2332 if (!_dbus_string_init_preallocated (str, current_len + 4))
2333 {
2334 dbus_free (str);
2335 return FALSE;
2336 }
2337
2338 if (!_dbus_string_copy_len (current_sig, current_sig_pos, current_len,
2339 str, 0))
2340 {
2341 _dbus_string_free (str);
2342 dbus_free (str);
2343 return FALSE;
2344 }
2345 }
2346 else
2347 {
2348 if (!_dbus_string_init_preallocated (str, 4))
2349 {
2350 dbus_free (str);
2351 return FALSE;
2352 }
2353 }
2354
2355 real->sig_refcount = 1;
2356
2357 _dbus_type_writer_add_types (&real->u.writer,
2358 str, _dbus_string_get_length (str));
2359 return TRUE;
2360 }
2361
2362 /**
2363 * Sets the new signature as the message signature, frees the
2364 * signature string, and marks the iterator as not having a type_str
2365 * anymore. Frees the signature even if it fails, so you can't
2366 * really recover from failure. Kinda busted.
2367 *
2368 * @param real an iterator without a type_str
2369 * @returns #FALSE if no memory
2370 */
2371 static dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_iter_close_signature(DBusMessageRealIter * real)2372 _dbus_message_iter_close_signature (DBusMessageRealIter *real)
2373 {
2374 DBusString *str;
2375 const char *v_STRING;
2376 dbus_bool_t retval;
2377
2378 _dbus_assert (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER);
2379 _dbus_assert (real->u.writer.type_str != NULL);
2380 _dbus_assert (real->sig_refcount > 0);
2381
2382 real->sig_refcount -= 1;
2383
2384 if (real->sig_refcount > 0)
2385 return TRUE;
2386 _dbus_assert (real->sig_refcount == 0);
2387
2388 retval = TRUE;
2389
2390 str = real->u.writer.type_str;
2391
2392 v_STRING = _dbus_string_get_const_data (str);
2393 if (!_dbus_header_set_field_basic (&real->message->header,
2394 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_SIGNATURE,
2395 DBUS_TYPE_SIGNATURE,
2396 &v_STRING))
2397 retval = FALSE;
2398
2399 _dbus_type_writer_remove_types (&real->u.writer);
2400 _dbus_string_free (str);
2401 dbus_free (str);
2402
2403 return retval;
2404 }
2405
2406 /**
2407 * Frees the signature string and marks the iterator as not having a
2408 * type_str anymore. Since the new signature is not set, the message
2409 * will generally be hosed after this is called.
2410 *
2411 * @param real an iterator without a type_str
2412 */
2413 static void
_dbus_message_iter_abandon_signature(DBusMessageRealIter * real)2414 _dbus_message_iter_abandon_signature (DBusMessageRealIter *real)
2415 {
2416 DBusString *str;
2417
2418 _dbus_assert (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER);
2419 _dbus_assert (real->u.writer.type_str != NULL);
2420 _dbus_assert (real->sig_refcount > 0);
2421
2422 real->sig_refcount -= 1;
2423
2424 if (real->sig_refcount > 0)
2425 return;
2426 _dbus_assert (real->sig_refcount == 0);
2427
2428 str = real->u.writer.type_str;
2429
2430 _dbus_type_writer_remove_types (&real->u.writer);
2431 _dbus_string_free (str);
2432 dbus_free (str);
2433 }
2434
2435 #ifndef DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS
2436 static dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_iter_append_check(DBusMessageRealIter * iter)2437 _dbus_message_iter_append_check (DBusMessageRealIter *iter)
2438 {
2439 if (!_dbus_message_iter_check (iter))
2440 return FALSE;
2441
2442 if (iter->message->locked)
2443 {
2444 _dbus_warn_check_failed ("dbus append iterator can't be used: message is locked (has already been sent)\n");
2445 return FALSE;
2446 }
2447
2448 return TRUE;
2449 }
2450 #endif /* DBUS_DISABLE_CHECKS */
2451
2452 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
2453 static int *
expand_fd_array(DBusMessage * m,unsigned n)2454 expand_fd_array(DBusMessage *m,
2455 unsigned n)
2456 {
2457 _dbus_assert(m);
2458
2459 /* This makes space for adding n new fds to the array and returns a
2460 pointer to the place were the first fd should be put. */
2461
2462 if (m->n_unix_fds + n > m->n_unix_fds_allocated)
2463 {
2464 unsigned k;
2465 int *p;
2466
2467 /* Make twice as much space as necessary */
2468 k = (m->n_unix_fds + n) * 2;
2469
2470 /* Allocate at least four */
2471 if (k < 4)
2472 k = 4;
2473
2474 p = dbus_realloc(m->unix_fds, k * sizeof(int));
2475 if (p == NULL)
2476 return NULL;
2477
2478 m->unix_fds = p;
2479 m->n_unix_fds_allocated = k;
2480 }
2481
2482 return m->unix_fds + m->n_unix_fds;
2483 }
2484 #endif
2485
2486 /**
2487 * Appends a basic-typed value to the message. The basic types are the
2488 * non-container types such as integer and string.
2489 *
2490 * The "value" argument should be the address of a basic-typed value.
2491 * So for string, const char**. For integer, dbus_int32_t*.
2492 *
2493 * For Unix file descriptors this function will internally duplicate
2494 * the descriptor you passed in. Hence you may close the descriptor
2495 * immediately after this call.
2496 *
2497 * @todo If this fails due to lack of memory, the message is hosed and
2498 * you have to start over building the whole message.
2499 *
2500 * @param iter the append iterator
2501 * @param type the type of the value
2502 * @param value the address of the value
2503 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
2504 */
2505 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_iter_append_basic(DBusMessageIter * iter,int type,const void * value)2506 dbus_message_iter_append_basic (DBusMessageIter *iter,
2507 int type,
2508 const void *value)
2509 {
2510 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2511 dbus_bool_t ret;
2512
2513 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_append_check (real), FALSE);
2514 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER, FALSE);
2515 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (dbus_type_is_basic (type), FALSE);
2516 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, FALSE);
2517
2518 if (!_dbus_message_iter_open_signature (real))
2519 return FALSE;
2520
2521 if (type == DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD)
2522 {
2523 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
2524 int *fds;
2525 dbus_uint32_t u;
2526
2527 /* First step, include the fd in the fd list of this message */
2528 if (!(fds = expand_fd_array(real->message, 1)))
2529 return FALSE;
2530
2531 *fds = _dbus_dup(*(int*) value, NULL);
2532 if (*fds < 0)
2533 return FALSE;
2534
2535 u = real->message->n_unix_fds;
2536
2537 /* Second step, write the index to the fd */
2538 if (!(ret = _dbus_type_writer_write_basic (&real->u.writer, DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD, &u))) {
2539 _dbus_close(*fds, NULL);
2540 return FALSE;
2541 }
2542
2543 real->message->n_unix_fds += 1;
2544 u += 1;
2545
2546 /* Final step, update the header accordingly */
2547 ret = _dbus_header_set_field_basic (&real->message->header,
2548 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_UNIX_FDS,
2549 DBUS_TYPE_UINT32,
2550 &u);
2551
2552 /* If any of these operations fail the message is
2553 hosed. However, no memory or fds should be leaked since what
2554 has been added to message has been added to the message, and
2555 can hence be accounted for when the message is being
2556 freed. */
2557 #else
2558 ret = FALSE;
2559 #endif
2560 }
2561 else
2562 {
2563 ret = _dbus_type_writer_write_basic (&real->u.writer, type, value);
2564 }
2565
2566 if (!_dbus_message_iter_close_signature (real))
2567 ret = FALSE;
2568
2569 return ret;
2570 }
2571
2572 /**
2573 * Appends a block of fixed-length values to an array. The
2574 * fixed-length types are all basic types that are not string-like. So
2575 * int32, double, bool, etc. (Unix file descriptors however are not
2576 * supported.) You must call dbus_message_iter_open_container() to
2577 * open an array of values before calling this function. You may call
2578 * this function multiple times (and intermixed with calls to
2579 * dbus_message_iter_append_basic()) for the same array.
2580 *
2581 * The "value" argument should be the address of the array. So for
2582 * integer, "dbus_int32_t**" is expected for example.
2583 *
2584 * @warning in C, given "int array[]", "&array == array" (the
2585 * comp.lang.c FAQ says otherwise, but gcc and the FAQ don't agree).
2586 * So if you're using an array instead of a pointer you have to create
2587 * a pointer variable, assign the array to it, then take the address
2588 * of the pointer variable.
2589 * @code
2590 * const dbus_int32_t array[] = { 1, 2, 3 };
2591 * const dbus_int32_t *v_ARRAY = array;
2592 * if (!dbus_message_iter_append_fixed_array (&iter, DBUS_TYPE_INT32, &v_ARRAY, 3))
2593 * fprintf (stderr, "No memory!\n");
2594 * @endcode
2595 * For strings it works to write const char *array = "Hello" and then
2596 * use &array though.
2597 *
2598 * @todo If this fails due to lack of memory, the message is hosed and
2599 * you have to start over building the whole message.
2600 *
2601 * For Unix file descriptors this function will internally duplicate
2602 * the descriptor you passed in. Hence you may close the descriptor
2603 * immediately after this call.
2604 *
2605 * @param iter the append iterator
2606 * @param element_type the type of the array elements
2607 * @param value the address of the array
2608 * @param n_elements the number of elements to append
2609 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
2610 */
2611 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_iter_append_fixed_array(DBusMessageIter * iter,int element_type,const void * value,int n_elements)2612 dbus_message_iter_append_fixed_array (DBusMessageIter *iter,
2613 int element_type,
2614 const void *value,
2615 int n_elements)
2616 {
2617 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2618 dbus_bool_t ret;
2619
2620 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_append_check (real), FALSE);
2621 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER, FALSE);
2622 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (dbus_type_is_fixed (element_type) && element_type != DBUS_TYPE_UNIX_FD, FALSE);
2623 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->u.writer.container_type == DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY, FALSE);
2624 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (value != NULL, FALSE);
2625 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (n_elements >= 0, FALSE);
2626 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (n_elements <=
2627 DBUS_MAXIMUM_ARRAY_LENGTH / _dbus_type_get_alignment (element_type),
2628 FALSE);
2629
2630 ret = _dbus_type_writer_write_fixed_multi (&real->u.writer, element_type, value, n_elements);
2631
2632 return ret;
2633 }
2634
2635 /**
2636 * Appends a container-typed value to the message; you are required to
2637 * append the contents of the container using the returned
2638 * sub-iterator, and then call
2639 * dbus_message_iter_close_container(). Container types are for
2640 * example struct, variant, and array. For variants, the
2641 * contained_signature should be the type of the single value inside
2642 * the variant. For structs and dict entries, contained_signature
2643 * should be #NULL; it will be set to whatever types you write into
2644 * the struct. For arrays, contained_signature should be the type of
2645 * the array elements.
2646 *
2647 * @todo If this fails due to lack of memory, the message is hosed and
2648 * you have to start over building the whole message.
2649 *
2650 * @param iter the append iterator
2651 * @param type the type of the value
2652 * @param contained_signature the type of container contents
2653 * @param sub sub-iterator to initialize
2654 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
2655 */
2656 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_iter_open_container(DBusMessageIter * iter,int type,const char * contained_signature,DBusMessageIter * sub)2657 dbus_message_iter_open_container (DBusMessageIter *iter,
2658 int type,
2659 const char *contained_signature,
2660 DBusMessageIter *sub)
2661 {
2662 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2663 DBusMessageRealIter *real_sub = (DBusMessageRealIter *)sub;
2664 DBusString contained_str;
2665
2666 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_append_check (real), FALSE);
2667 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER, FALSE);
2668 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (dbus_type_is_container (type), FALSE);
2669 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (sub != NULL, FALSE);
2670 _dbus_return_val_if_fail ((type == DBUS_TYPE_STRUCT &&
2671 contained_signature == NULL) ||
2672 (type == DBUS_TYPE_DICT_ENTRY &&
2673 contained_signature == NULL) ||
2674 (type == DBUS_TYPE_VARIANT &&
2675 contained_signature != NULL) ||
2676 (type == DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY &&
2677 contained_signature != NULL), FALSE);
2678
2679 /* this would fail if the contained_signature is a dict entry, since
2680 * dict entries are invalid signatures standalone (they must be in
2681 * an array)
2682 */
2683 _dbus_return_val_if_fail ((type == DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY && contained_signature && *contained_signature == DBUS_DICT_ENTRY_BEGIN_CHAR) ||
2684 (contained_signature == NULL ||
2685 _dbus_check_is_valid_signature (contained_signature)),
2686 FALSE);
2687
2688 if (!_dbus_message_iter_open_signature (real))
2689 return FALSE;
2690
2691 *real_sub = *real;
2692
2693 if (contained_signature != NULL)
2694 {
2695 _dbus_string_init_const (&contained_str, contained_signature);
2696
2697 return _dbus_type_writer_recurse (&real->u.writer,
2698 type,
2699 &contained_str, 0,
2700 &real_sub->u.writer);
2701 }
2702 else
2703 {
2704 return _dbus_type_writer_recurse (&real->u.writer,
2705 type,
2706 NULL, 0,
2707 &real_sub->u.writer);
2708 }
2709 }
2710
2711
2712 /**
2713 * Closes a container-typed value appended to the message; may write
2714 * out more information to the message known only after the entire
2715 * container is written, and may free resources created by
2716 * dbus_message_iter_open_container().
2717 *
2718 * @todo If this fails due to lack of memory, the message is hosed and
2719 * you have to start over building the whole message.
2720 *
2721 * @param iter the append iterator
2722 * @param sub sub-iterator to close
2723 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
2724 */
2725 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_iter_close_container(DBusMessageIter * iter,DBusMessageIter * sub)2726 dbus_message_iter_close_container (DBusMessageIter *iter,
2727 DBusMessageIter *sub)
2728 {
2729 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2730 DBusMessageRealIter *real_sub = (DBusMessageRealIter *)sub;
2731 dbus_bool_t ret;
2732
2733 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_append_check (real), FALSE);
2734 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER, FALSE);
2735 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_append_check (real_sub), FALSE);
2736 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (real_sub->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER, FALSE);
2737
2738 ret = _dbus_type_writer_unrecurse (&real->u.writer,
2739 &real_sub->u.writer);
2740
2741 if (!_dbus_message_iter_close_signature (real))
2742 ret = FALSE;
2743
2744 return ret;
2745 }
2746
2747 /**
2748 * Abandons creation of a contained-typed value and frees resources created
2749 * by dbus_message_iter_open_container(). Once this returns, the message
2750 * is hosed and you have to start over building the whole message.
2751 *
2752 * This should only be used to abandon creation of a message when you have
2753 * open containers.
2754 *
2755 * @param iter the append iterator
2756 * @param sub sub-iterator to close
2757 */
2758 void
dbus_message_iter_abandon_container(DBusMessageIter * iter,DBusMessageIter * sub)2759 dbus_message_iter_abandon_container (DBusMessageIter *iter,
2760 DBusMessageIter *sub)
2761 {
2762 DBusMessageRealIter *real = (DBusMessageRealIter *)iter;
2763 DBusMessageRealIter *real_sub = (DBusMessageRealIter *)sub;
2764
2765 _dbus_return_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_append_check (real));
2766 _dbus_return_if_fail (real->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER);
2767 _dbus_return_if_fail (_dbus_message_iter_append_check (real_sub));
2768 _dbus_return_if_fail (real_sub->iter_type == DBUS_MESSAGE_ITER_TYPE_WRITER);
2769
2770 _dbus_message_iter_abandon_signature (real);
2771 }
2772
2773 /**
2774 * Sets a flag indicating that the message does not want a reply; if
2775 * this flag is set, the other end of the connection may (but is not
2776 * required to) optimize by not sending method return or error
2777 * replies. If this flag is set, there is no way to know whether the
2778 * message successfully arrived at the remote end. Normally you know a
2779 * message was received when you receive the reply to it.
2780 *
2781 * The flag is #FALSE by default, that is by default the other end is
2782 * required to reply.
2783 *
2784 * On the protocol level this toggles #DBUS_HEADER_FLAG_NO_REPLY_EXPECTED
2785 *
2786 * @param message the message
2787 * @param no_reply #TRUE if no reply is desired
2788 */
2789 void
dbus_message_set_no_reply(DBusMessage * message,dbus_bool_t no_reply)2790 dbus_message_set_no_reply (DBusMessage *message,
2791 dbus_bool_t no_reply)
2792 {
2793 _dbus_return_if_fail (message != NULL);
2794 _dbus_return_if_fail (!message->locked);
2795
2796 _dbus_header_toggle_flag (&message->header,
2797 DBUS_HEADER_FLAG_NO_REPLY_EXPECTED,
2798 no_reply);
2799 }
2800
2801 /**
2802 * Returns #TRUE if the message does not expect
2803 * a reply.
2804 *
2805 * @param message the message
2806 * @returns #TRUE if the message sender isn't waiting for a reply
2807 */
2808 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_get_no_reply(DBusMessage * message)2809 dbus_message_get_no_reply (DBusMessage *message)
2810 {
2811 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
2812
2813 return _dbus_header_get_flag (&message->header,
2814 DBUS_HEADER_FLAG_NO_REPLY_EXPECTED);
2815 }
2816
2817 /**
2818 * Sets a flag indicating that an owner for the destination name will
2819 * be automatically started before the message is delivered. When this
2820 * flag is set, the message is held until a name owner finishes
2821 * starting up, or fails to start up. In case of failure, the reply
2822 * will be an error.
2823 *
2824 * The flag is set to #TRUE by default, i.e. auto starting is the default.
2825 *
2826 * On the protocol level this toggles #DBUS_HEADER_FLAG_NO_AUTO_START
2827 *
2828 * @param message the message
2829 * @param auto_start #TRUE if auto-starting is desired
2830 */
2831 void
dbus_message_set_auto_start(DBusMessage * message,dbus_bool_t auto_start)2832 dbus_message_set_auto_start (DBusMessage *message,
2833 dbus_bool_t auto_start)
2834 {
2835 _dbus_return_if_fail (message != NULL);
2836 _dbus_return_if_fail (!message->locked);
2837
2838 _dbus_header_toggle_flag (&message->header,
2839 DBUS_HEADER_FLAG_NO_AUTO_START,
2840 !auto_start);
2841 }
2842
2843 /**
2844 * Returns #TRUE if the message will cause an owner for
2845 * destination name to be auto-started.
2846 *
2847 * @param message the message
2848 * @returns #TRUE if the message will use auto-start
2849 */
2850 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_get_auto_start(DBusMessage * message)2851 dbus_message_get_auto_start (DBusMessage *message)
2852 {
2853 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
2854
2855 return !_dbus_header_get_flag (&message->header,
2856 DBUS_HEADER_FLAG_NO_AUTO_START);
2857 }
2858
2859
2860 /**
2861 * Sets the object path this message is being sent to (for
2862 * DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL) or the one a signal is being
2863 * emitted from (for DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL).
2864 *
2865 * The path must contain only valid characters as defined
2866 * in the D-Bus specification.
2867 *
2868 * @param message the message
2869 * @param object_path the path or #NULL to unset
2870 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
2871 */
2872 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_set_path(DBusMessage * message,const char * object_path)2873 dbus_message_set_path (DBusMessage *message,
2874 const char *object_path)
2875 {
2876 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
2877 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->locked, FALSE);
2878 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (object_path == NULL ||
2879 _dbus_check_is_valid_path (object_path),
2880 FALSE);
2881
2882 return set_or_delete_string_field (message,
2883 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_PATH,
2884 DBUS_TYPE_OBJECT_PATH,
2885 object_path);
2886 }
2887
2888 /**
2889 * Gets the object path this message is being sent to (for
2890 * DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL) or being emitted from (for
2891 * DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL). Returns #NULL if none.
2892 *
2893 * See also dbus_message_get_path_decomposed().
2894 *
2895 * The returned string becomes invalid if the message is
2896 * modified, since it points into the wire-marshaled message data.
2897 *
2898 * @param message the message
2899 * @returns the path (should not be freed) or #NULL
2900 */
2901 const char*
dbus_message_get_path(DBusMessage * message)2902 dbus_message_get_path (DBusMessage *message)
2903 {
2904 const char *v;
2905
2906 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
2907
2908 v = NULL; /* in case field doesn't exist */
2909 _dbus_header_get_field_basic (&message->header,
2910 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_PATH,
2911 DBUS_TYPE_OBJECT_PATH,
2912 (void *) &v);
2913 return v;
2914 }
2915
2916 /**
2917 * Checks if the message has a particular object path. The object
2918 * path is the destination object for a method call or the emitting
2919 * object for a signal.
2920 *
2921 * @param message the message
2922 * @param path the path name
2923 * @returns #TRUE if there is a path field in the header
2924 */
2925 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_has_path(DBusMessage * message,const char * path)2926 dbus_message_has_path (DBusMessage *message,
2927 const char *path)
2928 {
2929 const char *msg_path;
2930 msg_path = dbus_message_get_path (message);
2931
2932 if (msg_path == NULL)
2933 {
2934 if (path == NULL)
2935 return TRUE;
2936 else
2937 return FALSE;
2938 }
2939
2940 if (path == NULL)
2941 return FALSE;
2942
2943 if (strcmp (msg_path, path) == 0)
2944 return TRUE;
2945
2946 return FALSE;
2947 }
2948
2949 /**
2950 * Gets the object path this message is being sent to
2951 * (for DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL) or being emitted
2952 * from (for DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL) in a decomposed
2953 * format (one array element per path component).
2954 * Free the returned array with dbus_free_string_array().
2955 *
2956 * An empty but non-NULL path array means the path "/".
2957 * So the path "/foo/bar" becomes { "foo", "bar", NULL }
2958 * and the path "/" becomes { NULL }.
2959 *
2960 * See also dbus_message_get_path().
2961 *
2962 * @todo this could be optimized by using the len from the message
2963 * instead of calling strlen() again
2964 *
2965 * @param message the message
2966 * @param path place to store allocated array of path components; #NULL set here if no path field exists
2967 * @returns #FALSE if no memory to allocate the array
2968 */
2969 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_get_path_decomposed(DBusMessage * message,char *** path)2970 dbus_message_get_path_decomposed (DBusMessage *message,
2971 char ***path)
2972 {
2973 const char *v;
2974
2975 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
2976 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (path != NULL, FALSE);
2977
2978 *path = NULL;
2979
2980 v = dbus_message_get_path (message);
2981 if (v != NULL)
2982 {
2983 if (!_dbus_decompose_path (v, strlen (v),
2984 path, NULL))
2985 return FALSE;
2986 }
2987 return TRUE;
2988 }
2989
2990 /**
2991 * Sets the interface this message is being sent to
2992 * (for DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL) or
2993 * the interface a signal is being emitted from
2994 * (for DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL).
2995 *
2996 * The interface name must contain only valid characters as defined
2997 * in the D-Bus specification.
2998 *
2999 * @param message the message
3000 * @param interface the interface or #NULL to unset
3001 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
3002 */
3003 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_set_interface(DBusMessage * message,const char * interface)3004 dbus_message_set_interface (DBusMessage *message,
3005 const char *interface)
3006 {
3007 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3008 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->locked, FALSE);
3009 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (interface == NULL ||
3010 _dbus_check_is_valid_interface (interface),
3011 FALSE);
3012
3013 return set_or_delete_string_field (message,
3014 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_INTERFACE,
3015 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3016 interface);
3017 }
3018
3019 /**
3020 * Gets the interface this message is being sent to
3021 * (for DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL) or being emitted
3022 * from (for DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL).
3023 * The interface name is fully-qualified (namespaced).
3024 * Returns #NULL if none.
3025 *
3026 * The returned string becomes invalid if the message is
3027 * modified, since it points into the wire-marshaled message data.
3028 *
3029 * @param message the message
3030 * @returns the message interface (should not be freed) or #NULL
3031 */
3032 const char*
dbus_message_get_interface(DBusMessage * message)3033 dbus_message_get_interface (DBusMessage *message)
3034 {
3035 const char *v;
3036
3037 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
3038
3039 v = NULL; /* in case field doesn't exist */
3040 _dbus_header_get_field_basic (&message->header,
3041 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_INTERFACE,
3042 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3043 (void *) &v);
3044 return v;
3045 }
3046
3047 /**
3048 * Checks if the message has an interface
3049 *
3050 * @param message the message
3051 * @param interface the interface name
3052 * @returns #TRUE if the interface field in the header matches
3053 */
3054 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_has_interface(DBusMessage * message,const char * interface)3055 dbus_message_has_interface (DBusMessage *message,
3056 const char *interface)
3057 {
3058 const char *msg_interface;
3059 msg_interface = dbus_message_get_interface (message);
3060
3061 if (msg_interface == NULL)
3062 {
3063 if (interface == NULL)
3064 return TRUE;
3065 else
3066 return FALSE;
3067 }
3068
3069 if (interface == NULL)
3070 return FALSE;
3071
3072 if (strcmp (msg_interface, interface) == 0)
3073 return TRUE;
3074
3075 return FALSE;
3076
3077 }
3078
3079 /**
3080 * Sets the interface member being invoked
3081 * (DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL) or emitted
3082 * (DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL).
3083 *
3084 * The member name must contain only valid characters as defined
3085 * in the D-Bus specification.
3086 *
3087 * @param message the message
3088 * @param member the member or #NULL to unset
3089 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
3090 */
3091 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_set_member(DBusMessage * message,const char * member)3092 dbus_message_set_member (DBusMessage *message,
3093 const char *member)
3094 {
3095 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3096 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->locked, FALSE);
3097 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (member == NULL ||
3098 _dbus_check_is_valid_member (member),
3099 FALSE);
3100
3101 return set_or_delete_string_field (message,
3102 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_MEMBER,
3103 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3104 member);
3105 }
3106
3107 /**
3108 * Gets the interface member being invoked
3109 * (DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL) or emitted
3110 * (DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL). Returns #NULL if none.
3111 *
3112 * The returned string becomes invalid if the message is
3113 * modified, since it points into the wire-marshaled message data.
3114 *
3115 * @param message the message
3116 * @returns the member name (should not be freed) or #NULL
3117 */
3118 const char*
dbus_message_get_member(DBusMessage * message)3119 dbus_message_get_member (DBusMessage *message)
3120 {
3121 const char *v;
3122
3123 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
3124
3125 v = NULL; /* in case field doesn't exist */
3126 _dbus_header_get_field_basic (&message->header,
3127 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_MEMBER,
3128 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3129 (void *) &v);
3130 return v;
3131 }
3132
3133 /**
3134 * Checks if the message has an interface member
3135 *
3136 * @param message the message
3137 * @param member the member name
3138 * @returns #TRUE if there is a member field in the header
3139 */
3140 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_has_member(DBusMessage * message,const char * member)3141 dbus_message_has_member (DBusMessage *message,
3142 const char *member)
3143 {
3144 const char *msg_member;
3145 msg_member = dbus_message_get_member (message);
3146
3147 if (msg_member == NULL)
3148 {
3149 if (member == NULL)
3150 return TRUE;
3151 else
3152 return FALSE;
3153 }
3154
3155 if (member == NULL)
3156 return FALSE;
3157
3158 if (strcmp (msg_member, member) == 0)
3159 return TRUE;
3160
3161 return FALSE;
3162
3163 }
3164
3165 /**
3166 * Sets the name of the error (DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR).
3167 * The name is fully-qualified (namespaced).
3168 *
3169 * The error name must contain only valid characters as defined
3170 * in the D-Bus specification.
3171 *
3172 * @param message the message
3173 * @param error_name the name or #NULL to unset
3174 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
3175 */
3176 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_set_error_name(DBusMessage * message,const char * error_name)3177 dbus_message_set_error_name (DBusMessage *message,
3178 const char *error_name)
3179 {
3180 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3181 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->locked, FALSE);
3182 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (error_name == NULL ||
3183 _dbus_check_is_valid_error_name (error_name),
3184 FALSE);
3185
3186 return set_or_delete_string_field (message,
3187 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_ERROR_NAME,
3188 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3189 error_name);
3190 }
3191
3192 /**
3193 * Gets the error name (DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR only)
3194 * or #NULL if none.
3195 *
3196 * The returned string becomes invalid if the message is
3197 * modified, since it points into the wire-marshaled message data.
3198 *
3199 * @param message the message
3200 * @returns the error name (should not be freed) or #NULL
3201 */
3202 const char*
dbus_message_get_error_name(DBusMessage * message)3203 dbus_message_get_error_name (DBusMessage *message)
3204 {
3205 const char *v;
3206
3207 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
3208
3209 v = NULL; /* in case field doesn't exist */
3210 _dbus_header_get_field_basic (&message->header,
3211 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_ERROR_NAME,
3212 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3213 (void *) &v);
3214 return v;
3215 }
3216
3217 /**
3218 * Sets the message's destination. The destination is the name of
3219 * another connection on the bus and may be either the unique name
3220 * assigned by the bus to each connection, or a well-known name
3221 * specified in advance.
3222 *
3223 * The destination name must contain only valid characters as defined
3224 * in the D-Bus specification.
3225 *
3226 * @param message the message
3227 * @param destination the destination name or #NULL to unset
3228 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
3229 */
3230 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_set_destination(DBusMessage * message,const char * destination)3231 dbus_message_set_destination (DBusMessage *message,
3232 const char *destination)
3233 {
3234 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3235 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->locked, FALSE);
3236 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (destination == NULL ||
3237 _dbus_check_is_valid_bus_name (destination),
3238 FALSE);
3239
3240 return set_or_delete_string_field (message,
3241 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_DESTINATION,
3242 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3243 destination);
3244 }
3245
3246 /**
3247 * Gets the destination of a message or #NULL if there is none set.
3248 *
3249 * The returned string becomes invalid if the message is
3250 * modified, since it points into the wire-marshaled message data.
3251 *
3252 * @param message the message
3253 * @returns the message destination (should not be freed) or #NULL
3254 */
3255 const char*
dbus_message_get_destination(DBusMessage * message)3256 dbus_message_get_destination (DBusMessage *message)
3257 {
3258 const char *v;
3259
3260 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
3261
3262 v = NULL; /* in case field doesn't exist */
3263 _dbus_header_get_field_basic (&message->header,
3264 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_DESTINATION,
3265 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3266 (void *) &v);
3267 return v;
3268 }
3269
3270 /**
3271 * Sets the message sender.
3272 *
3273 * The sender must be a valid bus name as defined in the D-Bus
3274 * specification.
3275 *
3276 * Usually you don't want to call this. The message bus daemon will
3277 * call it to set the origin of each message. If you aren't implementing
3278 * a message bus daemon you shouldn't need to set the sender.
3279 *
3280 * @param message the message
3281 * @param sender the sender or #NULL to unset
3282 * @returns #FALSE if not enough memory
3283 */
3284 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_set_sender(DBusMessage * message,const char * sender)3285 dbus_message_set_sender (DBusMessage *message,
3286 const char *sender)
3287 {
3288 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3289 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (!message->locked, FALSE);
3290 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (sender == NULL ||
3291 _dbus_check_is_valid_bus_name (sender),
3292 FALSE);
3293
3294 return set_or_delete_string_field (message,
3295 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_SENDER,
3296 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3297 sender);
3298 }
3299
3300 /**
3301 * Gets the unique name of the connection which originated this
3302 * message, or #NULL if unknown or inapplicable. The sender is filled
3303 * in by the message bus.
3304 *
3305 * Note, the returned sender is always the unique bus name.
3306 * Connections may own multiple other bus names, but those
3307 * are not found in the sender field.
3308 *
3309 * The returned string becomes invalid if the message is
3310 * modified, since it points into the wire-marshaled message data.
3311 *
3312 * @param message the message
3313 * @returns the unique name of the sender or #NULL
3314 */
3315 const char*
dbus_message_get_sender(DBusMessage * message)3316 dbus_message_get_sender (DBusMessage *message)
3317 {
3318 const char *v;
3319
3320 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
3321
3322 v = NULL; /* in case field doesn't exist */
3323 _dbus_header_get_field_basic (&message->header,
3324 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_SENDER,
3325 DBUS_TYPE_STRING,
3326 (void *) &v);
3327 return v;
3328 }
3329
3330 /**
3331 * Gets the type signature of the message, i.e. the arguments in the
3332 * message payload. The signature includes only "in" arguments for
3333 * #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL and only "out" arguments for
3334 * #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_RETURN, so is slightly different from
3335 * what you might expect (that is, it does not include the signature of the
3336 * entire C++-style method).
3337 *
3338 * The signature is a string made up of type codes such as
3339 * #DBUS_TYPE_INT32. The string is terminated with nul (nul is also
3340 * the value of #DBUS_TYPE_INVALID).
3341 *
3342 * The returned string becomes invalid if the message is
3343 * modified, since it points into the wire-marshaled message data.
3344 *
3345 * @param message the message
3346 * @returns the type signature
3347 */
3348 const char*
dbus_message_get_signature(DBusMessage * message)3349 dbus_message_get_signature (DBusMessage *message)
3350 {
3351 const DBusString *type_str;
3352 int type_pos;
3353
3354 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
3355
3356 get_const_signature (&message->header, &type_str, &type_pos);
3357
3358 return _dbus_string_get_const_data_len (type_str, type_pos, 0);
3359 }
3360
3361 static dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_has_type_interface_member(DBusMessage * message,int type,const char * interface,const char * member)3362 _dbus_message_has_type_interface_member (DBusMessage *message,
3363 int type,
3364 const char *interface,
3365 const char *member)
3366 {
3367 const char *n;
3368
3369 _dbus_assert (message != NULL);
3370 _dbus_assert (interface != NULL);
3371 _dbus_assert (member != NULL);
3372
3373 if (dbus_message_get_type (message) != type)
3374 return FALSE;
3375
3376 /* Optimize by checking the short member name first
3377 * instead of the longer interface name
3378 */
3379
3380 n = dbus_message_get_member (message);
3381
3382 if (n && strcmp (n, member) == 0)
3383 {
3384 n = dbus_message_get_interface (message);
3385
3386 if (n == NULL || strcmp (n, interface) == 0)
3387 return TRUE;
3388 }
3389
3390 return FALSE;
3391 }
3392
3393 /**
3394 * Checks whether the message is a method call with the given
3395 * interface and member fields. If the message is not
3396 * #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL, or has a different interface or
3397 * member field, returns #FALSE. If the interface field is missing,
3398 * then it will be assumed equal to the provided interface. The D-Bus
3399 * protocol allows method callers to leave out the interface name.
3400 *
3401 * @param message the message
3402 * @param interface the name to check (must not be #NULL)
3403 * @param method the name to check (must not be #NULL)
3404 *
3405 * @returns #TRUE if the message is the specified method call
3406 */
3407 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_is_method_call(DBusMessage * message,const char * interface,const char * method)3408 dbus_message_is_method_call (DBusMessage *message,
3409 const char *interface,
3410 const char *method)
3411 {
3412 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3413 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (interface != NULL, FALSE);
3414 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (method != NULL, FALSE);
3415 /* don't check that interface/method are valid since it would be
3416 * expensive, and not catch many common errors
3417 */
3418
3419 return _dbus_message_has_type_interface_member (message,
3420 DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL,
3421 interface, method);
3422 }
3423
3424 /**
3425 * Checks whether the message is a signal with the given interface and
3426 * member fields. If the message is not #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL, or
3427 * has a different interface or member field, returns #FALSE.
3428 *
3429 * @param message the message
3430 * @param interface the name to check (must not be #NULL)
3431 * @param signal_name the name to check (must not be #NULL)
3432 *
3433 * @returns #TRUE if the message is the specified signal
3434 */
3435 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_is_signal(DBusMessage * message,const char * interface,const char * signal_name)3436 dbus_message_is_signal (DBusMessage *message,
3437 const char *interface,
3438 const char *signal_name)
3439 {
3440 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3441 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (interface != NULL, FALSE);
3442 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (signal_name != NULL, FALSE);
3443 /* don't check that interface/name are valid since it would be
3444 * expensive, and not catch many common errors
3445 */
3446
3447 return _dbus_message_has_type_interface_member (message,
3448 DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL,
3449 interface, signal_name);
3450 }
3451
3452 /**
3453 * Checks whether the message is an error reply with the given error
3454 * name. If the message is not #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR, or has a
3455 * different name, returns #FALSE.
3456 *
3457 * @param message the message
3458 * @param error_name the name to check (must not be #NULL)
3459 *
3460 * @returns #TRUE if the message is the specified error
3461 */
3462 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_is_error(DBusMessage * message,const char * error_name)3463 dbus_message_is_error (DBusMessage *message,
3464 const char *error_name)
3465 {
3466 const char *n;
3467
3468 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3469 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (error_name != NULL, FALSE);
3470 /* don't check that error_name is valid since it would be expensive,
3471 * and not catch many common errors
3472 */
3473
3474 if (dbus_message_get_type (message) != DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR)
3475 return FALSE;
3476
3477 n = dbus_message_get_error_name (message);
3478
3479 if (n && strcmp (n, error_name) == 0)
3480 return TRUE;
3481 else
3482 return FALSE;
3483 }
3484
3485 /**
3486 * Checks whether the message was sent to the given name. If the
3487 * message has no destination specified or has a different
3488 * destination, returns #FALSE.
3489 *
3490 * @param message the message
3491 * @param name the name to check (must not be #NULL)
3492 *
3493 * @returns #TRUE if the message has the given destination name
3494 */
3495 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_has_destination(DBusMessage * message,const char * name)3496 dbus_message_has_destination (DBusMessage *message,
3497 const char *name)
3498 {
3499 const char *s;
3500
3501 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3502 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (name != NULL, FALSE);
3503 /* don't check that name is valid since it would be expensive, and
3504 * not catch many common errors
3505 */
3506
3507 s = dbus_message_get_destination (message);
3508
3509 if (s && strcmp (s, name) == 0)
3510 return TRUE;
3511 else
3512 return FALSE;
3513 }
3514
3515 /**
3516 * Checks whether the message has the given unique name as its sender.
3517 * If the message has no sender specified or has a different sender,
3518 * returns #FALSE. Note that a peer application will always have the
3519 * unique name of the connection as the sender. So you can't use this
3520 * function to see whether a sender owned a well-known name.
3521 *
3522 * Messages from the bus itself will have #DBUS_SERVICE_DBUS
3523 * as the sender.
3524 *
3525 * @param message the message
3526 * @param name the name to check (must not be #NULL)
3527 *
3528 * @returns #TRUE if the message has the given sender
3529 */
3530 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_has_sender(DBusMessage * message,const char * name)3531 dbus_message_has_sender (DBusMessage *message,
3532 const char *name)
3533 {
3534 const char *s;
3535
3536 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3537 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (name != NULL, FALSE);
3538 /* don't check that name is valid since it would be expensive, and
3539 * not catch many common errors
3540 */
3541
3542 s = dbus_message_get_sender (message);
3543
3544 if (s && strcmp (s, name) == 0)
3545 return TRUE;
3546 else
3547 return FALSE;
3548 }
3549
3550 /**
3551 * Checks whether the message has the given signature; see
3552 * dbus_message_get_signature() for more details on what the signature
3553 * looks like.
3554 *
3555 * @param message the message
3556 * @param signature typecode array
3557 * @returns #TRUE if message has the given signature
3558 */
3559 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_has_signature(DBusMessage * message,const char * signature)3560 dbus_message_has_signature (DBusMessage *message,
3561 const char *signature)
3562 {
3563 const char *s;
3564
3565 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3566 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (signature != NULL, FALSE);
3567 /* don't check that signature is valid since it would be expensive,
3568 * and not catch many common errors
3569 */
3570
3571 s = dbus_message_get_signature (message);
3572
3573 if (s && strcmp (s, signature) == 0)
3574 return TRUE;
3575 else
3576 return FALSE;
3577 }
3578
3579 /**
3580 * Sets a #DBusError based on the contents of the given
3581 * message. The error is only set if the message
3582 * is an error message, as in #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR.
3583 * The name of the error is set to the name of the message,
3584 * and the error message is set to the first argument
3585 * if the argument exists and is a string.
3586 *
3587 * The return value indicates whether the error was set (the error is
3588 * set if and only if the message is an error message). So you can
3589 * check for an error reply and convert it to DBusError in one go:
3590 * @code
3591 * if (dbus_set_error_from_message (error, reply))
3592 * return error;
3593 * else
3594 * process reply;
3595 * @endcode
3596 *
3597 * @param error the error to set
3598 * @param message the message to set it from
3599 * @returns #TRUE if the message had type #DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR
3600 */
3601 dbus_bool_t
dbus_set_error_from_message(DBusError * error,DBusMessage * message)3602 dbus_set_error_from_message (DBusError *error,
3603 DBusMessage *message)
3604 {
3605 const char *str;
3606
3607 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
3608 _dbus_return_val_if_error_is_set (error, FALSE);
3609
3610 if (dbus_message_get_type (message) != DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR)
3611 return FALSE;
3612
3613 str = NULL;
3614 dbus_message_get_args (message, NULL,
3615 DBUS_TYPE_STRING, &str,
3616 DBUS_TYPE_INVALID);
3617
3618 dbus_set_error (error, dbus_message_get_error_name (message),
3619 str ? "%s" : NULL, str);
3620
3621 return TRUE;
3622 }
3623
3624 /**
3625 * Checks whether a message contains unix fds
3626 *
3627 * @param message the message
3628 * @returns #TRUE if the message contains unix fds
3629 */
3630 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_contains_unix_fds(DBusMessage * message)3631 dbus_message_contains_unix_fds(DBusMessage *message)
3632 {
3633 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
3634 _dbus_assert(message);
3635
3636 return message->n_unix_fds > 0;
3637 #else
3638 return FALSE;
3639 #endif
3640 }
3641
3642 /** @} */
3643
3644 /**
3645 * @addtogroup DBusMessageInternals
3646 *
3647 * @{
3648 */
3649
3650 /**
3651 * The initial buffer size of the message loader.
3652 *
3653 * @todo this should be based on min header size plus some average
3654 * body size, or something. Or rather, the min header size only, if we
3655 * want to try to read only the header, store that in a DBusMessage,
3656 * then read only the body and store that, etc., depends on
3657 * how we optimize _dbus_message_loader_get_buffer() and what
3658 * the exact message format is.
3659 */
3660 #define INITIAL_LOADER_DATA_LEN 32
3661
3662 /**
3663 * Creates a new message loader. Returns #NULL if memory can't
3664 * be allocated.
3665 *
3666 * @returns new loader, or #NULL.
3667 */
3668 DBusMessageLoader*
_dbus_message_loader_new(void)3669 _dbus_message_loader_new (void)
3670 {
3671 DBusMessageLoader *loader;
3672
3673 loader = dbus_new0 (DBusMessageLoader, 1);
3674 if (loader == NULL)
3675 return NULL;
3676
3677 loader->refcount = 1;
3678
3679 loader->corrupted = FALSE;
3680 loader->corruption_reason = DBUS_VALID;
3681
3682 /* this can be configured by the app, but defaults to the protocol max */
3683 loader->max_message_size = DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_LENGTH;
3684
3685 /* We set a very relatively conservative default here since due to how
3686 SCM_RIGHTS works we need to preallocate an fd array of the maximum
3687 number of unix fds we want to receive in advance. A
3688 try-and-reallocate loop is not possible. */
3689 loader->max_message_unix_fds = 1024;
3690
3691 if (!_dbus_string_init (&loader->data))
3692 {
3693 dbus_free (loader);
3694 return NULL;
3695 }
3696
3697 /* preallocate the buffer for speed, ignore failure */
3698 _dbus_string_set_length (&loader->data, INITIAL_LOADER_DATA_LEN);
3699 _dbus_string_set_length (&loader->data, 0);
3700
3701 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
3702 loader->unix_fds = NULL;
3703 loader->n_unix_fds = loader->n_unix_fds_allocated = 0;
3704 loader->unix_fds_outstanding = FALSE;
3705 #endif
3706
3707 return loader;
3708 }
3709
3710 /**
3711 * Increments the reference count of the loader.
3712 *
3713 * @param loader the loader.
3714 * @returns the loader
3715 */
3716 DBusMessageLoader *
_dbus_message_loader_ref(DBusMessageLoader * loader)3717 _dbus_message_loader_ref (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
3718 {
3719 loader->refcount += 1;
3720
3721 return loader;
3722 }
3723
3724 /**
3725 * Decrements the reference count of the loader and finalizes the
3726 * loader when the count reaches zero.
3727 *
3728 * @param loader the loader.
3729 */
3730 void
_dbus_message_loader_unref(DBusMessageLoader * loader)3731 _dbus_message_loader_unref (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
3732 {
3733 loader->refcount -= 1;
3734 if (loader->refcount == 0)
3735 {
3736 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
3737 close_unix_fds(loader->unix_fds, &loader->n_unix_fds);
3738 dbus_free(loader->unix_fds);
3739 #endif
3740 _dbus_list_foreach (&loader->messages,
3741 (DBusForeachFunction) dbus_message_unref,
3742 NULL);
3743 _dbus_list_clear (&loader->messages);
3744 _dbus_string_free (&loader->data);
3745 dbus_free (loader);
3746 }
3747 }
3748
3749 /**
3750 * Gets the buffer to use for reading data from the network. Network
3751 * data is read directly into an allocated buffer, which is then used
3752 * in the DBusMessage, to avoid as many extra memcpy's as possible.
3753 * The buffer must always be returned immediately using
3754 * _dbus_message_loader_return_buffer(), even if no bytes are
3755 * successfully read.
3756 *
3757 * @todo this function can be a lot more clever. For example
3758 * it can probably always return a buffer size to read exactly
3759 * the body of the next message, thus avoiding any memory wastage
3760 * or reallocs.
3761 *
3762 * @todo we need to enforce a max length on strings in header fields.
3763 *
3764 * @param loader the message loader.
3765 * @param buffer the buffer
3766 */
3767 void
_dbus_message_loader_get_buffer(DBusMessageLoader * loader,DBusString ** buffer)3768 _dbus_message_loader_get_buffer (DBusMessageLoader *loader,
3769 DBusString **buffer)
3770 {
3771 _dbus_assert (!loader->buffer_outstanding);
3772
3773 *buffer = &loader->data;
3774
3775 loader->buffer_outstanding = TRUE;
3776 }
3777
3778 /**
3779 * Returns a buffer obtained from _dbus_message_loader_get_buffer(),
3780 * indicating to the loader how many bytes of the buffer were filled
3781 * in. This function must always be called, even if no bytes were
3782 * successfully read.
3783 *
3784 * @param loader the loader.
3785 * @param buffer the buffer.
3786 * @param bytes_read number of bytes that were read into the buffer.
3787 */
3788 void
_dbus_message_loader_return_buffer(DBusMessageLoader * loader,DBusString * buffer,int bytes_read)3789 _dbus_message_loader_return_buffer (DBusMessageLoader *loader,
3790 DBusString *buffer,
3791 int bytes_read)
3792 {
3793 _dbus_assert (loader->buffer_outstanding);
3794 _dbus_assert (buffer == &loader->data);
3795
3796 loader->buffer_outstanding = FALSE;
3797 }
3798
3799 /**
3800 * Gets the buffer to use for reading unix fds from the network.
3801 *
3802 * This works similar to _dbus_message_loader_get_buffer()
3803 *
3804 * @param loader the message loader.
3805 * @param fds the array to read fds into
3806 * @param max_n_fds how many fds to read at most
3807 * @return TRUE on success, FALSE on OOM
3808 */
3809 dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_loader_get_unix_fds(DBusMessageLoader * loader,int ** fds,unsigned * max_n_fds)3810 _dbus_message_loader_get_unix_fds(DBusMessageLoader *loader,
3811 int **fds,
3812 unsigned *max_n_fds)
3813 {
3814 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
3815 _dbus_assert (!loader->unix_fds_outstanding);
3816
3817 /* Allocate space where we can put the fds we read. We allocate
3818 space for max_message_unix_fds since this is an
3819 upper limit how many fds can be received within a single
3820 message. Since SCM_RIGHTS doesn't allow a reallocate+retry logic
3821 we are allocating the maximum possible array size right from the
3822 beginning. This sucks a bit, however unless SCM_RIGHTS is fixed
3823 there is no better way. */
3824
3825 if (loader->n_unix_fds_allocated < loader->max_message_unix_fds)
3826 {
3827 int *a = dbus_realloc(loader->unix_fds,
3828 loader->max_message_unix_fds * sizeof(loader->unix_fds[0]));
3829
3830 if (!a)
3831 return FALSE;
3832
3833 loader->unix_fds = a;
3834 loader->n_unix_fds_allocated = loader->max_message_unix_fds;
3835 }
3836
3837 *fds = loader->unix_fds + loader->n_unix_fds;
3838 *max_n_fds = loader->n_unix_fds_allocated - loader->n_unix_fds;
3839
3840 loader->unix_fds_outstanding = TRUE;
3841 return TRUE;
3842 #else
3843 _dbus_assert_not_reached("Platform doesn't support unix fd passing");
3844 return FALSE;
3845 #endif
3846 }
3847
3848 /**
3849 * Returns a buffer obtained from _dbus_message_loader_get_unix_fds().
3850 *
3851 * This works similar to _dbus_message_loader_return_buffer()
3852 *
3853 * @param loader the message loader.
3854 * @param fds the array fds were read into
3855 * @param max_n_fds how many fds were read
3856 */
3857
3858 void
_dbus_message_loader_return_unix_fds(DBusMessageLoader * loader,int * fds,unsigned n_fds)3859 _dbus_message_loader_return_unix_fds(DBusMessageLoader *loader,
3860 int *fds,
3861 unsigned n_fds)
3862 {
3863 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
3864 _dbus_assert(loader->unix_fds_outstanding);
3865 _dbus_assert(loader->unix_fds + loader->n_unix_fds == fds);
3866 _dbus_assert(loader->n_unix_fds + n_fds <= loader->n_unix_fds_allocated);
3867
3868 loader->n_unix_fds += n_fds;
3869 loader->unix_fds_outstanding = FALSE;
3870 #else
3871 _dbus_assert_not_reached("Platform doesn't support unix fd passing");
3872 #endif
3873 }
3874
3875 /*
3876 * FIXME when we move the header out of the buffer, that memmoves all
3877 * buffered messages. Kind of crappy.
3878 *
3879 * Also we copy the header and body, which is kind of crappy. To
3880 * avoid this, we have to allow header and body to be in a single
3881 * memory block, which is good for messages we read and bad for
3882 * messages we are creating. But we could move_len() the buffer into
3883 * this single memory block, and move_len() will just swap the buffers
3884 * if you're moving the entire buffer replacing the dest string.
3885 *
3886 * We could also have the message loader tell the transport how many
3887 * bytes to read; so it would first ask for some arbitrary number like
3888 * 256, then if the message was incomplete it would use the
3889 * header/body len to ask for exactly the size of the message (or
3890 * blocks the size of a typical kernel buffer for the socket). That
3891 * way we don't get trailing bytes in the buffer that have to be
3892 * memmoved. Though I suppose we also don't have a chance of reading a
3893 * bunch of small messages at once, so the optimization may be stupid.
3894 *
3895 * Another approach would be to keep a "start" index into
3896 * loader->data and only delete it occasionally, instead of after
3897 * each message is loaded.
3898 *
3899 * load_message() returns FALSE if not enough memory OR the loader was corrupted
3900 */
3901 static dbus_bool_t
load_message(DBusMessageLoader * loader,DBusMessage * message,int byte_order,int fields_array_len,int header_len,int body_len)3902 load_message (DBusMessageLoader *loader,
3903 DBusMessage *message,
3904 int byte_order,
3905 int fields_array_len,
3906 int header_len,
3907 int body_len)
3908 {
3909 dbus_bool_t oom;
3910 DBusValidity validity;
3911 const DBusString *type_str;
3912 int type_pos;
3913 DBusValidationMode mode;
3914 dbus_uint32_t n_unix_fds = 0;
3915
3916 mode = DBUS_VALIDATION_MODE_DATA_IS_UNTRUSTED;
3917
3918 oom = FALSE;
3919
3920 #if 0
3921 _dbus_verbose_bytes_of_string (&loader->data, 0, header_len /* + body_len */);
3922 #endif
3923
3924 /* 1. VALIDATE AND COPY OVER HEADER */
3925 _dbus_assert (_dbus_string_get_length (&message->header.data) == 0);
3926 _dbus_assert ((header_len + body_len) <= _dbus_string_get_length (&loader->data));
3927
3928 if (!_dbus_header_load (&message->header,
3929 mode,
3930 &validity,
3931 byte_order,
3932 fields_array_len,
3933 header_len,
3934 body_len,
3935 &loader->data, 0,
3936 _dbus_string_get_length (&loader->data)))
3937 {
3938 _dbus_verbose ("Failed to load header for new message code %d\n", validity);
3939
3940 /* assert here so we can catch any code that still uses DBUS_VALID to indicate
3941 oom errors. They should use DBUS_VALIDITY_UNKNOWN_OOM_ERROR instead */
3942 _dbus_assert (validity != DBUS_VALID);
3943
3944 if (validity == DBUS_VALIDITY_UNKNOWN_OOM_ERROR)
3945 oom = TRUE;
3946 else
3947 {
3948 loader->corrupted = TRUE;
3949 loader->corruption_reason = validity;
3950 }
3951 goto failed;
3952 }
3953
3954 _dbus_assert (validity == DBUS_VALID);
3955
3956 message->byte_order = byte_order;
3957
3958 /* 2. VALIDATE BODY */
3959 if (mode != DBUS_VALIDATION_MODE_WE_TRUST_THIS_DATA_ABSOLUTELY)
3960 {
3961 get_const_signature (&message->header, &type_str, &type_pos);
3962
3963 /* Because the bytes_remaining arg is NULL, this validates that the
3964 * body is the right length
3965 */
3966 validity = _dbus_validate_body_with_reason (type_str,
3967 type_pos,
3968 byte_order,
3969 NULL,
3970 &loader->data,
3971 header_len,
3972 body_len);
3973 if (validity != DBUS_VALID)
3974 {
3975 _dbus_verbose ("Failed to validate message body code %d\n", validity);
3976
3977 loader->corrupted = TRUE;
3978 loader->corruption_reason = validity;
3979
3980 goto failed;
3981 }
3982 }
3983
3984 /* 3. COPY OVER UNIX FDS */
3985 _dbus_header_get_field_basic(&message->header,
3986 DBUS_HEADER_FIELD_UNIX_FDS,
3987 DBUS_TYPE_UINT32,
3988 &n_unix_fds);
3989
3990 #ifdef HAVE_UNIX_FD_PASSING
3991
3992 if (n_unix_fds > loader->n_unix_fds)
3993 {
3994 _dbus_verbose("Message contains references to more unix fds than were sent %u != %u\n",
3995 n_unix_fds, loader->n_unix_fds);
3996
3997 loader->corrupted = TRUE;
3998 loader->corruption_reason = DBUS_INVALID_MISSING_UNIX_FDS;
3999 goto failed;
4000 }
4001
4002 /* If this was a recycled message there might still be
4003 some memory allocated for the fds */
4004 dbus_free(message->unix_fds);
4005
4006 if (n_unix_fds > 0)
4007 {
4008 message->unix_fds = _dbus_memdup(loader->unix_fds, n_unix_fds * sizeof(message->unix_fds[0]));
4009 if (message->unix_fds == NULL)
4010 {
4011 _dbus_verbose ("Failed to allocate file descriptor array\n");
4012 oom = TRUE;
4013 goto failed;
4014 }
4015
4016 message->n_unix_fds_allocated = message->n_unix_fds = n_unix_fds;
4017 loader->n_unix_fds -= n_unix_fds;
4018 memmove(loader->unix_fds + n_unix_fds, loader->unix_fds, loader->n_unix_fds);
4019 }
4020 else
4021 message->unix_fds = NULL;
4022
4023 #else
4024
4025 if (n_unix_fds > 0)
4026 {
4027 _dbus_verbose ("Hmm, message claims to come with file descriptors "
4028 "but that's not supported on our platform, disconnecting.\n");
4029
4030 loader->corrupted = TRUE;
4031 loader->corruption_reason = DBUS_INVALID_MISSING_UNIX_FDS;
4032 goto failed;
4033 }
4034
4035 #endif
4036
4037 /* 3. COPY OVER BODY AND QUEUE MESSAGE */
4038
4039 if (!_dbus_list_append (&loader->messages, message))
4040 {
4041 _dbus_verbose ("Failed to append new message to loader queue\n");
4042 oom = TRUE;
4043 goto failed;
4044 }
4045
4046 _dbus_assert (_dbus_string_get_length (&message->body) == 0);
4047 _dbus_assert (_dbus_string_get_length (&loader->data) >=
4048 (header_len + body_len));
4049
4050 if (!_dbus_string_copy_len (&loader->data, header_len, body_len, &message->body, 0))
4051 {
4052 _dbus_verbose ("Failed to move body into new message\n");
4053 oom = TRUE;
4054 goto failed;
4055 }
4056
4057 _dbus_string_delete (&loader->data, 0, header_len + body_len);
4058
4059 /* don't waste more than 2k of memory */
4060 _dbus_string_compact (&loader->data, 2048);
4061
4062 _dbus_assert (_dbus_string_get_length (&message->header.data) == header_len);
4063 _dbus_assert (_dbus_string_get_length (&message->body) == body_len);
4064
4065 _dbus_verbose ("Loaded message %p\n", message);
4066
4067 _dbus_assert (!oom);
4068 _dbus_assert (!loader->corrupted);
4069 _dbus_assert (loader->messages != NULL);
4070 _dbus_assert (_dbus_list_find_last (&loader->messages, message) != NULL);
4071
4072 return TRUE;
4073
4074 failed:
4075
4076 /* Clean up */
4077
4078 /* does nothing if the message isn't in the list */
4079 _dbus_list_remove_last (&loader->messages, message);
4080
4081 if (oom)
4082 _dbus_assert (!loader->corrupted);
4083 else
4084 _dbus_assert (loader->corrupted);
4085
4086 _dbus_verbose_bytes_of_string (&loader->data, 0, _dbus_string_get_length (&loader->data));
4087
4088 return FALSE;
4089 }
4090
4091 /**
4092 * Converts buffered data into messages, if we have enough data. If
4093 * we don't have enough data, does nothing.
4094 *
4095 * @todo we need to check that the proper named header fields exist
4096 * for each message type.
4097 *
4098 * @todo If a message has unknown type, we should probably eat it
4099 * right here rather than passing it out to applications. However
4100 * it's not an error to see messages of unknown type.
4101 *
4102 * @param loader the loader.
4103 * @returns #TRUE if we had enough memory to finish.
4104 */
4105 dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_loader_queue_messages(DBusMessageLoader * loader)4106 _dbus_message_loader_queue_messages (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
4107 {
4108 while (!loader->corrupted &&
4109 _dbus_string_get_length (&loader->data) >= DBUS_MINIMUM_HEADER_SIZE)
4110 {
4111 DBusValidity validity;
4112 int byte_order, fields_array_len, header_len, body_len;
4113
4114 if (_dbus_header_have_message_untrusted (loader->max_message_size,
4115 &validity,
4116 &byte_order,
4117 &fields_array_len,
4118 &header_len,
4119 &body_len,
4120 &loader->data, 0,
4121 _dbus_string_get_length (&loader->data)))
4122 {
4123 DBusMessage *message;
4124
4125 _dbus_assert (validity == DBUS_VALID);
4126
4127 message = dbus_message_new_empty_header ();
4128 if (message == NULL)
4129 return FALSE;
4130
4131 if (!load_message (loader, message,
4132 byte_order, fields_array_len,
4133 header_len, body_len))
4134 {
4135 dbus_message_unref (message);
4136 /* load_message() returns false if corrupted or OOM; if
4137 * corrupted then return TRUE for not OOM
4138 */
4139 return loader->corrupted;
4140 }
4141
4142 _dbus_assert (loader->messages != NULL);
4143 _dbus_assert (_dbus_list_find_last (&loader->messages, message) != NULL);
4144 }
4145 else
4146 {
4147 _dbus_verbose ("Initial peek at header says we don't have a whole message yet, or data broken with invalid code %d\n",
4148 validity);
4149 if (validity != DBUS_VALID)
4150 {
4151 loader->corrupted = TRUE;
4152 loader->corruption_reason = validity;
4153 }
4154 return TRUE;
4155 }
4156 }
4157
4158 return TRUE;
4159 }
4160
4161 /**
4162 * Peeks at first loaded message, returns #NULL if no messages have
4163 * been queued.
4164 *
4165 * @param loader the loader.
4166 * @returns the next message, or #NULL if none.
4167 */
4168 DBusMessage*
_dbus_message_loader_peek_message(DBusMessageLoader * loader)4169 _dbus_message_loader_peek_message (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
4170 {
4171 if (loader->messages)
4172 return loader->messages->data;
4173 else
4174 return NULL;
4175 }
4176
4177 /**
4178 * Pops a loaded message (passing ownership of the message
4179 * to the caller). Returns #NULL if no messages have been
4180 * queued.
4181 *
4182 * @param loader the loader.
4183 * @returns the next message, or #NULL if none.
4184 */
4185 DBusMessage*
_dbus_message_loader_pop_message(DBusMessageLoader * loader)4186 _dbus_message_loader_pop_message (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
4187 {
4188 return _dbus_list_pop_first (&loader->messages);
4189 }
4190
4191 /**
4192 * Pops a loaded message inside a list link (passing ownership of the
4193 * message and link to the caller). Returns #NULL if no messages have
4194 * been loaded.
4195 *
4196 * @param loader the loader.
4197 * @returns the next message link, or #NULL if none.
4198 */
4199 DBusList*
_dbus_message_loader_pop_message_link(DBusMessageLoader * loader)4200 _dbus_message_loader_pop_message_link (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
4201 {
4202 return _dbus_list_pop_first_link (&loader->messages);
4203 }
4204
4205 /**
4206 * Returns a popped message link, used to undo a pop.
4207 *
4208 * @param loader the loader
4209 * @param link the link with a message in it
4210 */
4211 void
_dbus_message_loader_putback_message_link(DBusMessageLoader * loader,DBusList * link)4212 _dbus_message_loader_putback_message_link (DBusMessageLoader *loader,
4213 DBusList *link)
4214 {
4215 _dbus_list_prepend_link (&loader->messages, link);
4216 }
4217
4218 /**
4219 * Checks whether the loader is confused due to bad data.
4220 * If messages are received that are invalid, the
4221 * loader gets confused and gives up permanently.
4222 * This state is called "corrupted."
4223 *
4224 * @param loader the loader
4225 * @returns #TRUE if the loader is hosed.
4226 */
4227 dbus_bool_t
_dbus_message_loader_get_is_corrupted(DBusMessageLoader * loader)4228 _dbus_message_loader_get_is_corrupted (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
4229 {
4230 _dbus_assert ((loader->corrupted && loader->corruption_reason != DBUS_VALID) ||
4231 (!loader->corrupted && loader->corruption_reason == DBUS_VALID));
4232 return loader->corrupted;
4233 }
4234
4235 /**
4236 * Checks what kind of bad data confused the loader.
4237 *
4238 * @param loader the loader
4239 * @returns why the loader is hosed, or DBUS_VALID if it isn't.
4240 */
4241 DBusValidity
_dbus_message_loader_get_corruption_reason(DBusMessageLoader * loader)4242 _dbus_message_loader_get_corruption_reason (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
4243 {
4244 _dbus_assert ((loader->corrupted && loader->corruption_reason != DBUS_VALID) ||
4245 (!loader->corrupted && loader->corruption_reason == DBUS_VALID));
4246
4247 return loader->corruption_reason;
4248 }
4249
4250 /**
4251 * Sets the maximum size message we allow.
4252 *
4253 * @param loader the loader
4254 * @param size the max message size in bytes
4255 */
4256 void
_dbus_message_loader_set_max_message_size(DBusMessageLoader * loader,long size)4257 _dbus_message_loader_set_max_message_size (DBusMessageLoader *loader,
4258 long size)
4259 {
4260 if (size > DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_LENGTH)
4261 {
4262 _dbus_verbose ("clamping requested max message size %ld to %d\n",
4263 size, DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_LENGTH);
4264 size = DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_LENGTH;
4265 }
4266 loader->max_message_size = size;
4267 }
4268
4269 /**
4270 * Gets the maximum allowed message size in bytes.
4271 *
4272 * @param loader the loader
4273 * @returns max size in bytes
4274 */
4275 long
_dbus_message_loader_get_max_message_size(DBusMessageLoader * loader)4276 _dbus_message_loader_get_max_message_size (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
4277 {
4278 return loader->max_message_size;
4279 }
4280
4281 /**
4282 * Sets the maximum unix fds per message we allow.
4283 *
4284 * @param loader the loader
4285 * @param size the max number of unix fds in a message
4286 */
4287 void
_dbus_message_loader_set_max_message_unix_fds(DBusMessageLoader * loader,long n)4288 _dbus_message_loader_set_max_message_unix_fds (DBusMessageLoader *loader,
4289 long n)
4290 {
4291 if (n > DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_UNIX_FDS)
4292 {
4293 _dbus_verbose ("clamping requested max message unix_fds %ld to %d\n",
4294 n, DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_UNIX_FDS);
4295 n = DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_UNIX_FDS;
4296 }
4297 loader->max_message_unix_fds = n;
4298 }
4299
4300 /**
4301 * Gets the maximum allowed number of unix fds per message
4302 *
4303 * @param loader the loader
4304 * @returns max unix fds
4305 */
4306 long
_dbus_message_loader_get_max_message_unix_fds(DBusMessageLoader * loader)4307 _dbus_message_loader_get_max_message_unix_fds (DBusMessageLoader *loader)
4308 {
4309 return loader->max_message_unix_fds;
4310 }
4311
4312 static DBusDataSlotAllocator slot_allocator;
4313 _DBUS_DEFINE_GLOBAL_LOCK (message_slots);
4314
4315 /**
4316 * Allocates an integer ID to be used for storing application-specific
4317 * data on any DBusMessage. The allocated ID may then be used
4318 * with dbus_message_set_data() and dbus_message_get_data().
4319 * The passed-in slot must be initialized to -1, and is filled in
4320 * with the slot ID. If the passed-in slot is not -1, it's assumed
4321 * to be already allocated, and its refcount is incremented.
4322 *
4323 * The allocated slot is global, i.e. all DBusMessage objects will
4324 * have a slot with the given integer ID reserved.
4325 *
4326 * @param slot_p address of a global variable storing the slot
4327 * @returns #FALSE on failure (no memory)
4328 */
4329 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_allocate_data_slot(dbus_int32_t * slot_p)4330 dbus_message_allocate_data_slot (dbus_int32_t *slot_p)
4331 {
4332 return _dbus_data_slot_allocator_alloc (&slot_allocator,
4333 &_DBUS_LOCK_NAME (message_slots),
4334 slot_p);
4335 }
4336
4337 /**
4338 * Deallocates a global ID for message data slots.
4339 * dbus_message_get_data() and dbus_message_set_data() may no
4340 * longer be used with this slot. Existing data stored on existing
4341 * DBusMessage objects will be freed when the message is
4342 * finalized, but may not be retrieved (and may only be replaced if
4343 * someone else reallocates the slot). When the refcount on the
4344 * passed-in slot reaches 0, it is set to -1.
4345 *
4346 * @param slot_p address storing the slot to deallocate
4347 */
4348 void
dbus_message_free_data_slot(dbus_int32_t * slot_p)4349 dbus_message_free_data_slot (dbus_int32_t *slot_p)
4350 {
4351 _dbus_return_if_fail (*slot_p >= 0);
4352
4353 _dbus_data_slot_allocator_free (&slot_allocator, slot_p);
4354 }
4355
4356 /**
4357 * Stores a pointer on a DBusMessage, along
4358 * with an optional function to be used for freeing
4359 * the data when the data is set again, or when
4360 * the message is finalized. The slot number
4361 * must have been allocated with dbus_message_allocate_data_slot().
4362 *
4363 * @param message the message
4364 * @param slot the slot number
4365 * @param data the data to store
4366 * @param free_data_func finalizer function for the data
4367 * @returns #TRUE if there was enough memory to store the data
4368 */
4369 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_set_data(DBusMessage * message,dbus_int32_t slot,void * data,DBusFreeFunction free_data_func)4370 dbus_message_set_data (DBusMessage *message,
4371 dbus_int32_t slot,
4372 void *data,
4373 DBusFreeFunction free_data_func)
4374 {
4375 DBusFreeFunction old_free_func;
4376 void *old_data;
4377 dbus_bool_t retval;
4378
4379 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, FALSE);
4380 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (slot >= 0, FALSE);
4381
4382 retval = _dbus_data_slot_list_set (&slot_allocator,
4383 &message->slot_list,
4384 slot, data, free_data_func,
4385 &old_free_func, &old_data);
4386
4387 if (retval)
4388 {
4389 /* Do the actual free outside the message lock */
4390 if (old_free_func)
4391 (* old_free_func) (old_data);
4392 }
4393
4394 return retval;
4395 }
4396
4397 /**
4398 * Retrieves data previously set with dbus_message_set_data().
4399 * The slot must still be allocated (must not have been freed).
4400 *
4401 * @param message the message
4402 * @param slot the slot to get data from
4403 * @returns the data, or #NULL if not found
4404 */
4405 void*
dbus_message_get_data(DBusMessage * message,dbus_int32_t slot)4406 dbus_message_get_data (DBusMessage *message,
4407 dbus_int32_t slot)
4408 {
4409 void *res;
4410
4411 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
4412
4413 res = _dbus_data_slot_list_get (&slot_allocator,
4414 &message->slot_list,
4415 slot);
4416
4417 return res;
4418 }
4419
4420 /**
4421 * Utility function to convert a machine-readable (not translated)
4422 * string into a D-Bus message type.
4423 *
4424 * @code
4425 * "method_call" -> DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL
4426 * "method_return" -> DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_RETURN
4427 * "signal" -> DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL
4428 * "error" -> DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR
4429 * anything else -> DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INVALID
4430 * @endcode
4431 *
4432 */
4433 int
dbus_message_type_from_string(const char * type_str)4434 dbus_message_type_from_string (const char *type_str)
4435 {
4436 if (strcmp (type_str, "method_call") == 0)
4437 return DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL;
4438 if (strcmp (type_str, "method_return") == 0)
4439 return DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_RETURN;
4440 else if (strcmp (type_str, "signal") == 0)
4441 return DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL;
4442 else if (strcmp (type_str, "error") == 0)
4443 return DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR;
4444 else
4445 return DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INVALID;
4446 }
4447
4448 /**
4449 * Utility function to convert a D-Bus message type into a
4450 * machine-readable string (not translated).
4451 *
4452 * @code
4453 * DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL -> "method_call"
4454 * DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_RETURN -> "method_return"
4455 * DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL -> "signal"
4456 * DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR -> "error"
4457 * DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_INVALID -> "invalid"
4458 * @endcode
4459 *
4460 */
4461 const char *
dbus_message_type_to_string(int type)4462 dbus_message_type_to_string (int type)
4463 {
4464 switch (type)
4465 {
4466 case DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_CALL:
4467 return "method_call";
4468 case DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_METHOD_RETURN:
4469 return "method_return";
4470 case DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_SIGNAL:
4471 return "signal";
4472 case DBUS_MESSAGE_TYPE_ERROR:
4473 return "error";
4474 default:
4475 return "invalid";
4476 }
4477 }
4478
4479 /**
4480 * Turn a DBusMessage into the marshalled form as described in the D-Bus
4481 * specification.
4482 *
4483 * Generally, this function is only useful for encapsulating D-Bus messages in
4484 * a different protocol.
4485 *
4486 * @param msg the DBusMessage
4487 * @param marshalled_data_p the location to save the marshalled form to
4488 * @param len_p the location to save the length of the marshalled form to
4489 * @returns #FALSE if there was not enough memory
4490 */
4491 dbus_bool_t
dbus_message_marshal(DBusMessage * msg,char ** marshalled_data_p,int * len_p)4492 dbus_message_marshal (DBusMessage *msg,
4493 char **marshalled_data_p,
4494 int *len_p)
4495 {
4496 DBusString tmp;
4497 dbus_bool_t was_locked;
4498
4499 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (msg != NULL, FALSE);
4500 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (marshalled_data_p != NULL, FALSE);
4501 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (len_p != NULL, FALSE);
4502
4503 if (!_dbus_string_init (&tmp))
4504 return FALSE;
4505
4506 /* Ensure the message is locked, to ensure the length header is filled in. */
4507 was_locked = msg->locked;
4508
4509 if (!was_locked)
4510 dbus_message_lock (msg);
4511
4512 if (!_dbus_string_copy (&(msg->header.data), 0, &tmp, 0))
4513 goto fail;
4514
4515 *len_p = _dbus_string_get_length (&tmp);
4516
4517 if (!_dbus_string_copy (&(msg->body), 0, &tmp, *len_p))
4518 goto fail;
4519
4520 *len_p = _dbus_string_get_length (&tmp);
4521
4522 if (!_dbus_string_steal_data (&tmp, marshalled_data_p))
4523 goto fail;
4524
4525 _dbus_string_free (&tmp);
4526
4527 if (!was_locked)
4528 msg->locked = FALSE;
4529
4530 return TRUE;
4531
4532 fail:
4533 _dbus_string_free (&tmp);
4534
4535 if (!was_locked)
4536 msg->locked = FALSE;
4537
4538 return FALSE;
4539 }
4540
4541 /**
4542 * Demarshal a D-Bus message from the format described in the D-Bus
4543 * specification.
4544 *
4545 * Generally, this function is only useful for encapsulating D-Bus messages in
4546 * a different protocol.
4547 *
4548 * @param str the marshalled DBusMessage
4549 * @param len the length of str
4550 * @param error the location to save errors to
4551 * @returns #NULL if there was an error
4552 */
4553 DBusMessage *
dbus_message_demarshal(const char * str,int len,DBusError * error)4554 dbus_message_demarshal (const char *str,
4555 int len,
4556 DBusError *error)
4557 {
4558 DBusMessageLoader *loader;
4559 DBusString *buffer;
4560 DBusMessage *msg;
4561
4562 _dbus_return_val_if_fail (str != NULL, NULL);
4563
4564 loader = _dbus_message_loader_new ();
4565
4566 if (loader == NULL)
4567 return NULL;
4568
4569 _dbus_message_loader_get_buffer (loader, &buffer);
4570 _dbus_string_append_len (buffer, str, len);
4571 _dbus_message_loader_return_buffer (loader, buffer, len);
4572
4573 if (!_dbus_message_loader_queue_messages (loader))
4574 goto fail_oom;
4575
4576 if (_dbus_message_loader_get_is_corrupted (loader))
4577 goto fail_corrupt;
4578
4579 msg = _dbus_message_loader_pop_message (loader);
4580
4581 if (!msg)
4582 goto fail_oom;
4583
4584 _dbus_message_loader_unref (loader);
4585 return msg;
4586
4587 fail_corrupt:
4588 dbus_set_error (error, DBUS_ERROR_INVALID_ARGS, "Message is corrupted (%s)",
4589 _dbus_validity_to_error_message (loader->corruption_reason));
4590 _dbus_message_loader_unref (loader);
4591 return NULL;
4592
4593 fail_oom:
4594 _DBUS_SET_OOM (error);
4595 _dbus_message_loader_unref (loader);
4596 return NULL;
4597 }
4598
4599 /**
4600 * Returns the number of bytes required to be in the buffer to demarshal a
4601 * D-Bus message.
4602 *
4603 * Generally, this function is only useful for encapsulating D-Bus messages in
4604 * a different protocol.
4605 *
4606 * @param str data to be marshalled
4607 * @param len the length of str
4608 * @param error the location to save errors to
4609 * @returns -1 if there was no valid data to be demarshalled, 0 if there wasn't enough data to determine how much should be demarshalled. Otherwise returns the number of bytes to be demarshalled
4610 *
4611 */
4612 int
dbus_message_demarshal_bytes_needed(const char * buf,int len)4613 dbus_message_demarshal_bytes_needed(const char *buf,
4614 int len)
4615 {
4616 DBusString str;
4617 int byte_order, fields_array_len, header_len, body_len;
4618 DBusValidity validity = DBUS_VALID;
4619 int have_message;
4620
4621 if (!buf || len < DBUS_MINIMUM_HEADER_SIZE)
4622 return 0;
4623
4624 if (len > DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_LENGTH)
4625 len = DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_LENGTH;
4626 _dbus_string_init_const_len (&str, buf, len);
4627
4628 validity = DBUS_VALID;
4629 have_message
4630 = _dbus_header_have_message_untrusted(DBUS_MAXIMUM_MESSAGE_LENGTH,
4631 &validity, &byte_order,
4632 &fields_array_len,
4633 &header_len,
4634 &body_len,
4635 &str, 0,
4636 len);
4637 _dbus_string_free (&str);
4638
4639 if (validity == DBUS_VALID)
4640 {
4641 _dbus_assert(have_message);
4642 return header_len + body_len;
4643 }
4644 else
4645 {
4646 return -1; /* broken! */
4647 }
4648 }
4649
4650 /** @} */
4651
4652 /* tests in dbus-message-util.c */
4653