SD_BUS_SET_ADDRESS(3) sd_bus_set_address SD_BUS_SET_ADDRESS(3)
NAME
sd_bus_set_address, sd_bus_get_address, sd_bus_set_exec - Set or query
the address of the bus connection
SYNOPSIS
#include <systemd/sd-bus.h>
int sd_bus_set_address(sd_bus *bus, const char *address);
int sd_bus_get_address(sd_bus *bus, const char **address);
int sd_bus_set_exec(sd_bus *bus, const char *path, char *const *argv);
DESCRIPTION
sd_bus_set_address() configures a list of addresses of bus brokers to
try to connect to from a subsequent sd_bus_start(3) call. The argument
is a ";"-separated list of addresses to try. Each item must be one of
the following:
o A unix socket address specified as "unix:guid=guid,path=path" or
"unix:guid=guid,abstract=path". Exactly one of the path= and
abstract= keys must be present, while guid= is optional.
o A TCP socket address specified as
"tcp:[guid=guid,][host=host][,port=port][,family=family]". One or
both of the host= and port= keys must be present, while the rest is
optional. family may be either ipv4 or ipv6.
o An executable to spawn specified as
"unixexec:guid=guid,path=path,argv1=argument,argv2=argument,...".
The path= key must be present, while guid= is optional.
o A machine (container) to connect to specified as
"x-machine-unix:guid=guid,machine=machine,pid=pid". Exactly one of
the machine= and pid= keys must be present, while guid= is
optional. machine is the name of a local container. See
machinectl(1) for more information about the "machine" concept.
"machine=.host" may be used to specify the host machine. A
connection to the standard system bus socket inside of the
specified machine will be created.
In all cases, parameter guid is an identifier of the remote peer, in
the syntax accepted by sd_id128_from_string(3). If specified, the
identifier returned by the peer after the connection is established
will be checked and the connection will be rejected in case of a
mismatch.
Note that the addresses passed to sd_bus_set_address() may not be
verified immediately. If they are invalid, an error may be returned
e.g. from a subsequent call to sd_bus_start(3).
sd_bus_get_address() returns any previously set addresses. In addition
to being explicitly set by sd_bus_set_address(), the address will also
be set automatically by sd_bus_open(3) and similar calls, based on
environment variables or built-in defaults.
sd_bus_set_exec() is a shorthand function for setting a "unixexec"
address that spawns the given executable with the given arguments. If
argv is NULL, the given executable is spawned without any extra
arguments.
RETURN VALUE
On success, these functions return a non-negative integer. On failure,
they return a negative errno-style error code.
Errors
Returned errors may indicate the following problems:
-EINVAL
The input parameters bus or address are NULL.
-ENOPKG
The bus object bus could not be resolved.
-EPERM
The input parameter bus is in a wrong state (sd_bus_set_address()
may only be called once on a newly-created bus object).
-ECHILD
The bus object bus was created in a different process.
-ENODATA
The bus object bus has no address configured.
NOTES
These APIs are implemented as a shared library, which can be compiled
and linked to with the libsystemd pkg-config(1) file.
SEE ALSO
systemd(1), sd-bus(3), sd_bus_new(3), sd_bus_start(3), systemd-
machined.service(8), machinectl(1)
systemd 252 SD_BUS_SET_ADDRESS(3)
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