1DBus(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation DBus(3)
2
3
4
6 AnyEvent::DBus - adapt Net::DBus to AnyEvent
7
9 use AnyEvent::DBus;
10
11 # now use the Net::DBus API, preferably the non-blocking variants:
12
13 use Net::DBus::Annotation qw(:call);
14
15 $bus->get_object (...)
16 ->Method (dbus_call_async, $arg1, ...)
17 ->set_notify (sub {
18 my @data = $_[0]->get_result
19 ...
20 });
21
22 $bus->get_connection->send (...);
23
25 This module is an AnyEvent user, you need to make sure that you use and
26 run a supported event loop.
27
28 Loading this module will install the necessary magic to seamlessly
29 integrate Net::DBus into AnyEvent. It does this by quite brutally
30 hacking Net::DBus::Reactor so that all dbus connections created after
31 loading this module will automatically be managed by this module.
32
33 Note that a) a lot inside Net::DBus is still blocking b) if you call a
34 method that blocks, you again block your process (basically anything
35 but calls to the Net::DBus::Binding::Connection objects block, but see
36 Net::DBus::Annoation, specifically dbus_call_async) c) the underlying
37 libdbus is often blocking itself, even with infinite timeouts and d)
38 this module only implements the minimum API required to make Net::DBus
39 work - Net::DBus unfortunately has no nice hooking API.
40
41 However, unlike Net::DBus::Reactor, this module should be fully non-
42 blocking as long as you only use non-blocking APIs (Net::DBus::Reactor
43 blocks on writes). It should also be faster, but Net::DBus is such a
44 morass so unneeded method calls that speed won't matter much...
45
46 EXAMPLE
47 Here is a simple example. Both work with AnyEvent::DBus and do the same
48 thing, but only the second is actually non-blocking.
49
50 Example 1: list registered named, blocking version.
51
52 use AnyEvent::DBus;
53
54 my $conn = Net::DBus->find;
55 my $bus = $conn->get_bus_object;
56
57 for my $name (@{ $bus->ListNames }) {
58 print " $name\n";
59 }
60
61 Example 1: list registered named, somewhat non-blocking version.
62
63 use AnyEvent;
64 use AnyEvent::DBus;
65 use Net::DBus::Annotation qw(:call);
66
67 my $conn = Net::DBus->find; # always blocks :/
68 my $bus = $conn->get_bus_object;
69
70 my $quit = AE::cv;
71
72 # the trick here is to prepend dbus_call_async to any method
73 # arguments and then to call the set_notify method on the
74 # returned Net::DBus::AsyncReply object
75
76 $bus->ListNames (dbus_call_async)->set_notify (sub {
77 for my $name (@{ $_[0]->get_result }) {
78 print " $name\n";
79 }
80 $quit->send;
81 });
82
83 $quit->recv;
84
86 AnyEvent, Net::DBus.
87
89 Marc Lehmann <schmorp@schmorp.de>
90 http://home.schmorp.de/
91
92
93
94perl v5.30.0 2019-07-26 DBus(3)