sd_varlink_send, sd_varlink_sendb, sd_varlink_sendbo — Enqueues a Varlink method call, not expecting a reply
#include <systemd/sd-varlink.h>
int sd_varlink_send( | sd_varlink *link, |
const char *method, | |
sd_json_variant *parameters) ; |
int sd_varlink_sendb( | sd_varlink *link, |
const char *method, | |
…) ; |
int sd_varlink_sendbo( | sd_varlink *link, |
const char *method, | |
…) ; |
sd_varlink_send()
submits a method call via a Varlink connection. It takes the
Varlink connection object, a method name as string parameter, and a JSON object containing the parameters
to pass as function parameters. This call is asynchronous: the message will not be delivered immediately
but only once
sd_varlink_process(3) is
invoked (which will happen automatically in one of the following event loop iterations if the Varlink
connection is attached to an even loop).
sd_varlink_sendb()
is similar to sd_varlink_send()
, but
instead of expecting a fully constructed sd_json_variant object carrying the parameters,
this object is constructed on-the-fly directly from the parameter list, in a style identical to
sd_json_build(3).
sd_varlink_sendbo()
is identical to sd_varlink_sendb()
,
but an enclosing object is implicitly added, so that the parameter list is expected to consist of field
pairs only. For details about the expected argument list, see
sd_json_buildo(3).
Use sd_varlink_send()
, sd_varlink_sendb()
and
sd_varlink_sendbo()
only if no method call results are required, as they neither
provide return parameters nor success/failure information. Use
sd_varlink_call(3) (and
related calls) to submit a method call synchronously, returning the server's response.
On success, sd_varlink_send()
, sd_varlink_sendb()
and
sd_varlink_sendbo()
return a non-negative integer. On failure, they return a
negative errno-style error code.
Returned errors may indicate the following problems:
-EINVAL
¶An argument is invalid.
-ENOMEM
¶Memory allocation failed.
-ENOTCONN
¶The Varlink connection object is not connected.
-EBUSY
¶The Varlink connection object is already used for other purposes, i.e. executing a method call or similar.
-ENOBUFS
¶The internal limit of queued messages for the Varlink connection has been
reached. This limit is set very high, and hitting it typically indicates that the Varlink
connection object is stalled — possibly because sd_varlink_process()
has not
been called regularly enough, or because the peer is not processing any queued messages. This limit
is a safety precaution to ensure a stalled peer will not result in unbounded memory allocations on
the client side.
Functions described here are available as a shared
library, which can be compiled against and linked to with the
libsystemd
pkg-config(1)
file.
The code described here uses
getenv(3),
which is declared to be not multi-thread-safe. This means that the code calling the functions described
here must not call
setenv(3)
from a parallel thread. It is recommended to only do calls to setenv()
from an early phase of the program when no other threads have been started.