dbus/doc dbus-tutorial.xml,1.20,1.21

Simon McVittie smcv at kemper.freedesktop.org
Thu Jan 25 08:42:56 PST 2007


Update of /cvs/dbus/dbus/doc
In directory kemper:/tmp/cvs-serv9465/doc

Modified Files:
	dbus-tutorial.xml 
Log Message:
* doc/dbus-tutorial.xml: Replace Python section of tutorial with
a pointer to the tutorial maintained as part of dbus-python


Index: dbus-tutorial.xml
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvs/dbus/dbus/doc/dbus-tutorial.xml,v
retrieving revision 1.20
retrieving revision 1.21
diff -u -d -r1.20 -r1.21
--- dbus-tutorial.xml	20 Aug 2006 21:41:42 -0000	1.20
+++ dbus-tutorial.xml	25 Jan 2007 16:42:54 -0000	1.21
@@ -1640,551 +1640,13 @@
   </sect1>
 
   <sect1 id="python-client">
-    <title>Python API: Using Remote Objects</title>
-    <para>
-      The Python bindings provide a simple to use interface for talking over D-Bus.
-      Where possible much of the inner-workings of D-Bus are hidden behind what looks
-      like normal Python objects.
-    </para>
-    <sect2 id="python-typemappings">
-      <title>D-Bus - Python type mappings</title>
-      <para>
-        While python itself is a largely untyped language D-Bus provides a simple type system
-        for talking with other languages which may be strongly typed.  Python for the most part
-        tries automatically map python objects to types on the bus.  It is none the less good to 
-        know what the type mappings are so one can better utilize services over the bus.
-      </para>
-      <sect3 id="python-basic-typemappings">
-        <title>Basic type mappings</title>
-	<para>
-	  Below is a list of the basic types, along with their associated
-	  mapping to a Python object.
-	  <informaltable>
-	    <tgroup cols="3">
-	      <thead>
-		<row>
-		  <entry>D-Bus basic type</entry>
-		  <entry>Python wrapper</entry>
-		  <entry>Notes</entry>
-		</row>
-	      </thead>
-	      <tbody>
-		<row>
-		  <entry><literal>BYTE</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.Byte</literal></entry>
-		  <entry></entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>BOOLEAN</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.Boolean</literal></entry>
-		  <entry>Any variable assigned a True or False boolean value will automatically be converted into a BOOLEAN over the bus</entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>INT16</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.Int16</literal></entry>
-		  <entry></entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>UINT16</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.UInt16</literal></entry>
-		  <entry></entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>INT32</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.Int32</literal></entry>
-		  <entry>This is the default mapping for Python integers</entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>UINT32</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.UInt32</literal></entry>
-		  <entry></entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>INT64</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.Int64</literal></entry>
-		  <entry></entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>UINT64</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.UInt64</literal></entry>
-		  <entry></entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>DOUBLE</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.Double</literal></entry>
-		  <entry>Any variable assigned a floating point number will automatically be converted into a DOUBLE over the bus</entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>STRING</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.String</literal></entry>
-		  <entry>Any variable assigned a quoted string will automatically be converted into a STRING over the bus</entry>
-		  </row><row>
-		  <entry><literal>OBJECT_PATH</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>dbus.ObjectPath</literal></entry>
-		  <entry></entry>
-		</row>
-	      </tbody>
-	    </tgroup>
-	  </informaltable>
-	</para>
-      </sect3>
-      <sect3 id="python-container-typemappings">
-	<title>Container type mappings</title>
-	<para>
-	  The D-Bus type system also has a number of "container"
-	  types, such as <literal>DBUS_TYPE_ARRAY</literal> and
-	  <literal>DBUS_TYPE_STRUCT</literal>.  The D-Bus type system
-	  is fully recursive, so one can for example have an array of
-	  array of strings (i.e. type signature
-	  <literal>aas</literal>).
-	</para>
-	<para>
-	  D-Bus container types have native corresponding built-in Python types
-	  so it is easy to use them.
-	  <informaltable>
-	    <tgroup cols="3">
-	      <thead>
-		<row>
-		  <entry>D-Bus type</entry>
-		  <entry>Python type</entry>
-                  <entry>Python wrapper</entry>
-		  <entry>Notes</entry>
-		</row>
-	      </thead>
-	      <tbody>
-		<row>
-		  <entry><literal>ARRAY</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>Python lists</literal></entry>
-                  <entry><literal>dbus.Array</literal></entry>
-		  <entry>Python lists, denoted by square brackets [], are converted into arrays and visa versa.
-		  The one restriction is that when sending a Python list each element of the list must be of the same
-		  type.  This is because D-Bus arrays can contain only one element type.  Use Python tuples for mixed types.
-                  
-                  When using the wrapper you may also specify a type or signature of the elements contained in the Array.
-                  This is manditory when passing an empty Array to a method on the bus because Python can not guess at the 
-                  contents of an empty array.  For example if a method is expecting an Array of int32's and you need to pass
-                  it an empty Array you would do it as such:
-                  
-                  <programlisting>emptyint32array = dbus.Array([], type=dbus.Int32)</programlisting>
-
-                  or
-
-                  <programlisting>emptyint32array = dbus.Array([], signature="i")</programlisting>
-
-                  Note that dbus.Array derives from list so it acts just like a python list.
-                  </entry>
-		  </row>
-		<row>
-		  <entry><literal>STRUCT</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>Python tuple</literal></entry>
-                  <entry><literal>dbus.Struct</literal></entry>
-		  <entry>Python tuples, denoted by parentheses (,), are converted into structs and visa versa.
-		  Tuples can have mixed types.</entry>
-		</row>
-		<row>
-		  <entry><literal>DICTIONARY</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>Python dictionary</literal></entry>
-                  <entry><literal>dbus.Dictionary</literal></entry>
-		  <entry>D-Bus doesn't have an explicit dictionary type.  Instead it uses LISTS of DICT_ENTRIES to
-		  represent a dictionary.  A DICT_ENTRY is simply a two element struct containing a key/value pair.
-		  Python dictionaries are automatically converted to a LIST of DICT_ENTRIES and visa versa.
-                  
-                  Since dictonaries are described as lists of dict_entries we also need the signature in order
-                  to pass empty dictionaries.  The wrapper provides a way of specifying this through the key_type/value_type
-                  type parameters or the signature parameters.  To send an empty Dictionary where the key is a string
-                  and the value is a string you would do it as such:
-                  
-                  <programlisting>emptystringstringdict = dbus.Dictionary({}, key_type=dbus.String, value_type=dbus.Value)</programlisting>
-
-                  or
-
-                  <programlisting>emptystringstringdict = dbus.Dictionary({}, signature="ss")</programlisting>
-        
-                  Note that dbus.Dictionary derives from dict so it acts just like a python dictionary.
-                  </entry>
-		</row>
-		<row>
-		  <entry><literal>VARIANT</literal></entry>
-		  <entry><literal>any type</literal></entry>
-                  <entry><literal>dbus.Variant</literal></entry>
-		  <entry>A variant is a container for any type.  Python exports its methods to accept only variants 
-		   since we are an untyped language and can demarshal into any Python type.
-                   
-                   To send a variant you must first wrap it in a<literal>dbus.Variant</literal>.  If no type or signiture is 
-                   given to the variant the marshaler will get the type from the contents.</entry>
-		</row>
-
-	      </tbody>
-	    </tgroup>
-	  </informaltable>
-	</para>
-      </sect3>
-    </sect2>
-    <sect2 id="python-invoking-methods">
-      <title>Invoking Methods</title>
-      <para>Here is a D-Bus program using the Python bindings to get a listing of all names on the session bus.
-<programlisting>      
-import dbus
-
-bus = dbus.SessionBus()
-proxy_obj = bus.bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.DBus', '/org/freedesktop/DBus')
-dbus_iface = dbus.Interface(proxy_obj, 'org.freedesktop.DBus')
-
-print dbus_iface.ListNames()
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        Notice I get an interface on the proxy object and use that to make the call.  While the specifications
-	state that you do not need to specify an interface if the call is unambiguous (i.e. only one method implements
-	that name) due to a bug on the bus that drops messages which don't have an interface field you need to specify
-	interfaces at this time.  In any event it is always good practice to specify the interface of the method you 
-	wish to call to avoid any side effects should a method of the same name be implemented on another interface.
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        You can specify the interface for a single call using the dbus_interface keyword.
-<programlisting>
-proxy_obj.ListNames(dbus_interface = 'org.freedesktop.DBus')
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        This is all fine and good if all you want to do is call methods on the bus and then exit.  In order to 
-        do more complex things such as use a GUI or make asynchronous calls you will need a mainloop.  You would use
-	asynchronous calls because in GUI applications it is very bad to block for any long period of time.  This cause
-	the GUI to seem to freeze.  Since replies to D-Bus messages can take an indeterminate amount of time using async 
-	calls allows you to return control to the GUI while you wait for the reply.  This is exceedingly easy to do in
-	Python.  Here is an example using the GLib/GTK+ mainloop.
-<programlisting>
-import gobject 
-import dbus
-if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
-    import dbus.glib
-
-def print_list_names_reply(list):
-    print str(list) 
-
-def print_error(e):
-    print str(e)
-    
-bus = dbus.SessionBus()
-proxy_obj = bus.bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.DBus', '/org/freedesktop/DBus')
-dbus_iface = dbus.Interface(proxy_obj, 'org.freedesktop.DBus')
-
-dbus_iface.ListNames(reply_handler=print_list_names_reply, error_handler=print_error)
-
-mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
-mainloop.run()
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        In the above listing you will notice the reply_handler and error_handler keywords.  These tell the method that
-	it should be called async and to call print_list_names_reply or print_error depending if you get a reply or an error.
-	The signature for replys depends on the number of arguments being sent back.  Error handlers always take one parameter
-	which is the error object returned.
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        You will also notice that I check the version of the dbus bindings before importing dbus.glib.  In older versions
-	glib was the only available mainloop.  As of version 0.41.0 we split out the glib dependency to allow for other mainloops
-	to be implemented.  Notice also the python binding version does not match up with the D-Bus version.  Once we reach 1.0
-	this should change with Python changes simply tracking the D-Bus changes.
-        While the glib mainloop is the only mainloop currently implemented, integrating other mainloops should
-	be very easy to do.  There are plans for creating a a generic mainloop to be the default for non gui programs.
-      </para>
-    </sect2>
-    <sect2 id="python-listening-for-signals">
-      <title>Listening for Signals</title>
-      <para>
-        Signals are emitted by objects on the bus to notify listening programs that an event has occurred.  There are a couple of ways
-        to register a signal handler on the bus.  One way is to attach to an already created proxy using the connect_to_signal method
-	which takes a signal name and handler as arguments.  Let us look at an example of connecting to the HAL service to receive
-	signals when devices are added and removed and when devices register a capability.  This example assumes you have HAL already running.
-<programlisting>
-import gobject 
-import dbus
-if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
-    import dbus.glib
-
-def device_added_callback(udi):
-    print 'Device with udi %s was added' % (udi)
-
-def device_removed_callback(udi):
-    print 'Device with udi %s was added' % (udi)
-
-def device_capability_callback(udi, capability):
-    print 'Device with udi %s added capability %s' % (udi, capability)
-
-bus = dbus.SystemBus()
-hal_manager_obj = bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.Hal', 
-                                 '/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager')
-hal_manager = dbus.Interface(hal_manager_obj,
-                             'org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager')
-
-hal_manager.connect_to_signal('DeviceAdded', device_added_callback)
-hal_manager.connect_to_signal('DeviceRemoved', device_removed_callback)
-hal_manager.connect_to_signal('NewCapability', device_capability_callback)
-
-mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
-mainloop.run()
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        The drawback of using this method is that the service that you are connecting to has to be around when you register
-	your signal handler.  While HAL is guaranteed to be around on systems that use it this is not always the case for every
-	service on the bus.  Say our program started up before HAL, we could connect to the signal by adding a signal receiver
-	directly to the bus.
-<programlisting>
-bus.add_signal_receiver(device_added_callback,
-                        'DeviceAdded',
-                        'org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager',
-                        'org.freedesktop.Hal',
-                        '/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager')
-
-bus.add_signal_receiver(device_removed_callback,
-                        'DeviceRemoved',
-                        'org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager',
-                        'org.freedesktop.Hal',
-                        '/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager')
-
-bus.add_signal_receiver(device_capability_callback,
-                        'DeviceAdded',
-                        'org.freedesktop.Hal.Manager',
-                        'org.freedesktop.Hal',
-                        '/org/freedesktop/Hal/Manager')
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        All this can be done without creating the proxy object if one wanted to but in most cases you would want to have 
-	a reference to the object so once a signal was received operations could be executed on the object.
-      </para>
-      <sidebar>
-        <title>Signal matching on arguments</title>
-        <para>
-          Starting with D-Bus 0.36 and the (0, 43, 0) version of the python 
-          bindings you can now add a match on arguments being sent in a signal.
-          This is useful for instance for only getting NameOwnerChanged
-          signals for your service.  Lets say we create a name on the bus called
-          'org.foo.MyName' we could also add a match to just get 
-          NameOwnerChanges for that name as such:
-<programlisting>
-bus.add_signal_receiver(myname_changed,
-                        'NameOwnerChanged',
-                        'org.freedesktop.DBus',
-                        'org.freedesktop.DBus',
-                        '/org/freedesktop/DBus',
-                        arg0='org.foo.MyName')
-</programlisting>
-
-          It is as simple as that.  To match the second arg you would use arg1=,
-          the third arg2=, etc.
-        </para>
-      </sidebar>
-      <sidebar>
-        <title>Cost of Creating a Proxy Object</title>
-	<para>
-	  Note that creating proxy objects can have an associated processing cost.  When introspection is implemented
-	  a proxy may wait for introspection data before processing any requests.  It is generally good practice to
-	  create proxies once and reuse the proxy when calling into the object.  Constantly creating the same proxy 
-	  over and over again can become a bottleneck for your program.
-	</para>
-      </sidebar>
-      <para>
-        TODO: example of getting information about devices from HAL
-      </para>
-    </sect2>
-  </sect1>
-
-  <sect1 id="python-server">
-    <title>Python API: Implementing Objects</title>
+    <title>Python API</title>
     <para>
-      Implementing object on the bus is just as easy as invoking methods or listening for signals on the bus.
+      The Python API, dbus-python, is now documented separately in
+      <ulink url="http://dbus.freedesktop.org/doc/dbus-python/doc/tutorial.html">the dbus-python tutorial</ulink> (also available in doc/tutorial.txt,
+      and doc/tutorial.html if built with python-docutils, in the dbus-python
+      source distribution).
     </para>
-    <sidebar>
-      <title>Version Alert</title>
-      <para>
-        The Python D-Bus bindings require version 2.4 or greater of Python when creating D-Bus objects.
-      </para>
-    </sidebar>
-
-    <sect2 id="python-inheriting-from-dbus-object">
-      <title>Inheriting From dbus.service.Object</title>
-      <para>
-        In order to export a Python object over the bus one must first get a bus name and then create
-        a Python object that inherits from dbus.service.Object.  The following is the start of an example
-	HelloWorld object that we want to export over the session bus.
-<programlisting>
-import gobject 
-import dbus
-import dbus.service
-if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
-    import dbus.glib
-
-class HelloWorldObject(dbus.service.Object):
-    def __init__(self, bus_name, object_path='/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldObject'):
-        dbus.service.Object.__init__(self, bus_name, object_path)
-
-session_bus = dbus.SessionBus()
-bus_name = dbus.service.BusName('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', bus=session_bus)
-object = HelloWorldObject(bus_name)
-
-mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
-mainloop.run()
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        Here we got the session bus, then created a BusName object which requests a name on the bus.
-	We pass that bus name to the HelloWorldObject object which inherits from dbus.service.Object.
-	We now have an object on the bus but it is pretty useless.
-      </para>
-    </sect2>
-    <sect2 id="python-exporting-methods">
-      <title>Exporting Methods Over The Bus</title>
-      <para>
-        Let's make this object do something and export a method over the bus.
-<programlisting>
-import gobject
-import dbus
-import dbus.service
-if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
-    import dbus.glib
-
-class HelloWorldObject(dbus.service.Object):
-    def __init__(self, bus_name, object_path='/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldObject'):
-        dbus.service.Object.__init__(self, bus_name, object_path)
-
-    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-    def hello(self):
-        return 'Hello from the HelloWorldObject'
-      
-session_bus = dbus.SessionBus()
-bus_name = dbus.service.BusName('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', bus=session_bus)
-object = HelloWorldObject(bus_name)
-
-mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
-mainloop.run()
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <sidebar>
-        <title>Python Decorators</title>
-	<para>
-	  Notice the @ symbol on the line before the hello method.  This is a new directive introduced in
-	  Python 2.4.  It is called a decorator and it "decorates" methods.  All you have to know is that
-	  it provides metadata that can then be used to alter the behavior of the method being decorated.
-	  In this case we are telling the bindings that the hello method should be exported as a D-Bus method
-	  over the bus.
-	</para>
-      </sidebar>
-      <para>
-        As you can see we exported the hello method as part of the org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace interface.
-	It takes no arguments and returns a string to the calling program. Let's create a proxy and invoke this
-	method.
-<programlisting>      
-import dbus
-
-bus = dbus.SessionBus()
-proxy_obj = bus.bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', '/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldObject')
-iface = dbus.Interface(proxy_obj, 'org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-
-print iface.hello()
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        When invoking methods exported over the bus the bindings automatically know how many parameters
-	the method exports.  You can even make a method that exports an arbitrary number of parameters.
-	Also, whatever you return will automatically be transfered as a reply over the bus. Some examples.
-<programlisting>
-    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-    def one_arg(self, first_arg):
-        return 'I got arg %s' % first_arg
-      
-    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-    def two_args(self, first_arg, second_arg):
-        return ('I got 2 args', first_arg, second_arg)
-
-    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-    def return_list(self):
-        return [1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6]
-    
-    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-    def return_dict(self):
-        return {one: '1ne', two: '2wo', three: '3ree'}
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-    </sect2>
-    <sect2 id="python-emitting-signals">
-      <title>Emitting Signals</title>
-      <para>
-        Setting up signals to emit is just as easy as exporting methods.  It uses the same syntax as methods.
-<programlisting>
-import gobject
-import dbus
-import dbus.service
-if getattr(dbus, 'version', (0,0,0)) >= (0,41,0):
-    import dbus.glib
-
-class HelloWorldObject(dbus.service.Object):
-    def __init__(self, bus_name, object_path='/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldObject'):
-        dbus.service.Object.__init__(self, bus_name, object_path)
-
-    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-    def hello(self):
-        return 'Hello from the HelloWorldObject'
-      
-    @dbus.service.signal('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-    def hello_signal(self, message):
-        pass
-	
-session_bus = dbus.SessionBus()
-bus_name = dbus.service.BusName('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', bus=session_bus)
-object = HelloWorldObject(bus_name)
-
-object.hello_signal('I sent a hello signal')
-
-mainloop = gobject.MainLoop()
-mainloop.run()
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        Adding a @dbus.service.signal decorator to a method turns it into a signal emitter.  You can put code
-	in this method to do things like keep track of how many times you call the emitter or to print out debug
-	messages but for the most part a pass noop will do.  Whenever you call the emitter a signal will be emitted
-	with the parameters you passed in as arguments.  In the above example we send the message 'I sent a hello signal'
-	with the signal.
-      </para>
-    </sect2>
-    <sect2 id="python-inheriting-and-overriding">
-      <title>Inheriting from HelloWorldObject</title>
-      <para>
-        One of the cool things you can do in Python is inherit from another D-Bus object.  We use this trick in
-	the bindings to provide a default implementation for the org.freedesktop.DBus.Introspectable interface.
-	Let's inherit from the HelloWorldObject example above and overide the hello method to say goodbye.
-<programlisting>
-class HelloWorldGoodbyeObject(HelloWorldObject):
-    def __init__(self, bus_name, object_path='/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldGoodbyeObject'):
-        HelloWorldObject.__init__(self, bus_name, object_path)
-
-    @dbus.service.method('org.freedesktop.HelloWorldGoodbyeIFace')
-    def hello(self):
-        return 'Goodbye'
-
-goodbye_object = HelloWorldGoodbyeObject(bus_name)
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-       <para>
-       Let's now call both methods with a little help from interfaces.
-<programlisting>      
-import dbus
-
-bus = dbus.SessionBus()
-proxy_obj = bus.bus.get_object('org.freedesktop.HelloWorld', '/org/freedesktop/HelloWorldGoodbyeObject')
-
-print proxy_obj.hello(dbus_interface='org.freedesktop.HelloWorldIFace')
-print proxy_obj.hello(dbus_interface='org.freedesktop.HelloWorldGoodbyeIFace')
-</programlisting>
-      </para>
-      <para>
-        This should print out 'Hello from the HelloWorldObject' followed by a 'Goodbye'.
-      </para>
-    </sect2>
-    <sect2 id="python-conclusion">
-      <title>Conclusion</title>
-      <para>
-        As you can see, using D-Bus from Python is an extremely easy proposition.  Hopefully
-	the tutorial has been helpful in getting you started.  If you need anymore help please
-	feel free to post on the <ulink url="http://lists.freedesktop.org/mailman/listinfo/dbus/">mailing list</ulink>.
-	The Python bindings are still in a state of flux and there may be API changes in the future.
-	This tutorial will be updated if such changes occur.
-      </para>
-    </sect2>
   </sect1>
 
   <sect1 id="qt-client">



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