D-BUS: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(20 intermediate revisions by 12 users not shown) | |||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
D-BUS is a message bus system, rather like |
[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D-BUS D-BUS] is a message bus system, rather like AppleScript and DCOM, that allows applications to send messages to one another. [[Sugar]] uses D-BUS extensively, and requires that all apps interact with it via D-BUS. |
||
The [[GCompris]] activity is a native (C language) app which uses glib to implement D-BUS ability. See [http://svn.gnome.org/viewcvs/gcompris/branches/gcomprixo/src/gcompris/dbus.c?revision=3041&view=markup dbus.c] for the code. |
|||
== D-BUS Services on the OLPC-XO == |
|||
The python code for the following services is in share/<service> , while much of the code that uses them is in site-packages/sugar or in share/activities . |
|||
* NetworkManager -- Standard Linux desktop component that provides a D-BUS API for controlling network connectivity |
|||
* [[Activity DBus API]] -- Describes the API an activity must implement on D-BUS in order to interact with the [[Sugar]] desktop |
|||
** Activity Service (Python implementation of the Activity DBus API) |
|||
** Activity Factory Service (Python implementation of the Activity-launching Factory DBus API) |
|||
* [[Presence Service DBus API]] -- friend discovery and collaboration primitives, including a description of the Telepathy API |
|||
** Telepathy Connection Manager |
|||
** Telepathy StreamEngine |
|||
* Data Store Service (Journal) -- the core data-storage operation of the laptop |
|||
* Clipboard Service -- manages cross-activity sharing of data and files |
|||
* Hardware Manager Service -- provides access to the OLPC-specific hardware on the laptop |
|||
* Activity Registry Service -- registry of installed activity bundles on the laptop |
|||
* Object Type Registry Service -- MIME-type registry service |
|||
* Sugar Console Service |
|||
D-BUS services can also be used from Squeak EToys: http://etoys-squeak-and-sugar.blogspot.com/2010/01/dbus-and-etoys-dbus-interface.html |
|||
Look at the code on the D-BUS SqueakSource repository: http://squeaksource.com/dbus.html |
|||
==References== |
|||
[http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/dbus D-BUS website]. |
|||
[[Category:Developers]] |
[[Category:Developers]] |
||
[[Category:Python]] |
|||
[[Category:Sugar]] |
Latest revision as of 04:14, 7 July 2010
D-BUS is a message bus system, rather like AppleScript and DCOM, that allows applications to send messages to one another. Sugar uses D-BUS extensively, and requires that all apps interact with it via D-BUS.
The GCompris activity is a native (C language) app which uses glib to implement D-BUS ability. See dbus.c for the code.
D-BUS Services on the OLPC-XO
The python code for the following services is in share/<service> , while much of the code that uses them is in site-packages/sugar or in share/activities .
- NetworkManager -- Standard Linux desktop component that provides a D-BUS API for controlling network connectivity
- Activity DBus API -- Describes the API an activity must implement on D-BUS in order to interact with the Sugar desktop
- Activity Service (Python implementation of the Activity DBus API)
- Activity Factory Service (Python implementation of the Activity-launching Factory DBus API)
- Presence Service DBus API -- friend discovery and collaboration primitives, including a description of the Telepathy API
- Telepathy Connection Manager
- Telepathy StreamEngine
- Data Store Service (Journal) -- the core data-storage operation of the laptop
- Clipboard Service -- manages cross-activity sharing of data and files
- Hardware Manager Service -- provides access to the OLPC-specific hardware on the laptop
- Activity Registry Service -- registry of installed activity bundles on the laptop
- Object Type Registry Service -- MIME-type registry service
- Sugar Console Service
D-BUS services can also be used from Squeak EToys: http://etoys-squeak-and-sugar.blogspot.com/2010/01/dbus-and-etoys-dbus-interface.html
Look at the code on the D-BUS SqueakSource repository: http://squeaksource.com/dbus.html