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-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/.gitignore2
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/Makefile44
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.bus.xml344
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.connection.xml1244
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.endpoint.xml429
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.fs.xml124
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.item.xml839
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.match.xml555
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.message.xml1276
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.name.xml711
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.policy.xml406
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.pool.xml326
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.xml1012
-rw-r--r--Documentation/kdbus/stylesheet.xsl16
14 files changed, 7328 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/.gitignore b/Documentation/kdbus/.gitignore
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..b4a77ccba
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/.gitignore
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+*.7
+*.html
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/Makefile b/Documentation/kdbus/Makefile
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..8caffe565
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/Makefile
@@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
+DOCS := \
+ kdbus.xml \
+ kdbus.bus.xml \
+ kdbus.connection.xml \
+ kdbus.endpoint.xml \
+ kdbus.fs.xml \
+ kdbus.item.xml \
+ kdbus.match.xml \
+ kdbus.message.xml \
+ kdbus.name.xml \
+ kdbus.policy.xml \
+ kdbus.pool.xml
+
+XMLFILES := $(addprefix $(obj)/,$(DOCS))
+MANFILES := $(patsubst %.xml, %.7, $(XMLFILES))
+HTMLFILES := $(patsubst %.xml, %.html, $(XMLFILES))
+
+XMLTO_ARGS := -m $(srctree)/$(src)/stylesheet.xsl --skip-validation
+
+quiet_cmd_db2man = MAN $@
+ cmd_db2man = xmlto man $(XMLTO_ARGS) -o $(obj) $<
+%.7: %.xml
+ @(which xmlto > /dev/null 2>&1) || \
+ (echo "*** You need to install xmlto ***"; \
+ exit 1)
+ $(call cmd,db2man)
+
+quiet_cmd_db2html = HTML $@
+ cmd_db2html = xmlto html-nochunks $(XMLTO_ARGS) -o $(obj) $<
+%.html: %.xml
+ @(which xmlto > /dev/null 2>&1) || \
+ (echo "*** You need to install xmlto ***"; \
+ exit 1)
+ $(call cmd,db2html)
+
+mandocs: $(MANFILES)
+
+htmldocs: $(HTMLFILES)
+
+clean-files := $(MANFILES) $(HTMLFILES)
+
+# we don't support other %docs targets right now
+%docs:
+ @true
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.bus.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.bus.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..83f1198bc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.bus.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,344 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus.bus">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.bus</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.bus</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.bus</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus bus</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A bus is a resource that is shared between connections in order to
+ transmit messages (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>).
+ Each bus is independent, and operations on the bus will not have any
+ effect on other buses. A bus is a management entity that controls the
+ addresses of its connections, their policies and message transactions
+ performed via this bus.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Each bus is bound to the mount instance it was created on. It has a
+ custom name that is unique across all buses of a domain. In
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ a bus is presented as a directory. No operations can be performed on
+ the bus itself; instead you need to perform the operations on an endpoint
+ associated with the bus. Endpoints are accessible as files underneath the
+ bus directory. A default endpoint called <constant>bus</constant> is
+ provided on each bus.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Bus names may be chosen freely except for one restriction: the name must
+ be prefixed with the numeric effective UID of the creator and a dash. This
+ is required to avoid namespace clashes between different users. When
+ creating a bus, the name that is passed in must be properly formatted, or
+ the kernel will refuse creation of the bus. Example:
+ <literal>1047-foobar</literal> is an acceptable name for a bus
+ registered by a user with UID 1047. However,
+ <literal>1024-foobar</literal> is not, and neither is
+ <literal>foobar</literal>. The UID must be provided in the
+ user-namespace of the bus owner.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ To create a new bus, you need to open the control file of a domain and
+ employ the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant> ioctl. The control
+ file descriptor that was used to issue
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant> must not previously have been
+ used for any other control-ioctl and must be kept open for the entire
+ life-time of the created bus. Closing it will immediately cleanup the
+ entire bus and all its associated resources and endpoints. Every control
+ file descriptor can only be used to create a single new bus; from that
+ point on, it is not used for any further communication until the final
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>close</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ .
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Each bus will generate a random, 128-bit UUID upon creation. This UUID
+ will be returned to creators of connections through
+ <varname>kdbus_cmd_hello.id128</varname> and can be used to uniquely
+ identify buses, even across different machines or containers. The UUID
+ will have its variant bits set to <literal>DCE</literal>, and denote
+ version 4 (random). For more details on UUIDs, see <ulink
+ url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universally_unique_identifier">
+ the Wikipedia article on UUIDs</ulink>.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Creating buses</title>
+ <para>
+ To create a new bus, the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant>
+ command is used. It takes a <type>struct kdbus_cmd</type> argument.
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>The flags for creation.</para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_MAKE_ACCESS_GROUP</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>Make the bus file group-accessible.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_MAKE_ACCESS_WORLD</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>Make the bus file world-accessible.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Requests a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will return
+ <errorcode>0</errorcode>, and the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that are valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The following items (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>)
+ are expected for <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant>.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_MAKE_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Contains a null-terminated string that identifies the
+ bus. The name must be unique across the kdbus domain and
+ must start with the effective UID of the caller, followed by
+ a '<literal>-</literal>' (dash). This item is mandatory.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_PARAMETER</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Bus-wide bloom parameters passed in a
+ <type>struct kdbus_bloom_parameter</type>. These settings are
+ copied back to new connections verbatim. This item is
+ mandatory. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for a more detailed description of this item.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ATTACH_FLAGS_SEND</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An optional item that contains a set of attach flags that are
+ returned to connections when they query the bus creator
+ metadata. If not set, no metadata is returned.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With this item, programs can <emphasis>probe</emphasis> the
+ kernel for known item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Return value</title>
+ <para>
+ On success, all mentioned ioctl commands return <errorcode>0</errorcode>;
+ on error, <errorcode>-1</errorcode> is returned, and
+ <varname>errno</varname> is set to indicate the error.
+ If the issued ioctl is illegal for the file descriptor used,
+ <varname>errno</varname> will be set to <constant>ENOTTY</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EBADMSG</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ A mandatory item is missing.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The flags supplied in the <constant>struct kdbus_cmd</constant>
+ are invalid or the supplied name does not start with the current
+ UID and a '<literal>-</literal>' (dash).
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EEXIST</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ A bus of that name already exists.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ESHUTDOWN</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The kdbus mount instance for the bus was already shut down.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EMFILE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The maximum number of buses for the current user is exhausted.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.connection.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.connection.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..4bb5f30f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.connection.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,1244 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus.connection">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.connection</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.connection</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.connection</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus connection</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Connections are identified by their <emphasis>connection ID</emphasis>,
+ internally implemented as a <type>uint64_t</type> counter.
+ The IDs of every newly created bus start at <constant>1</constant>, and
+ every new connection will increment the counter by <constant>1</constant>.
+ The IDs are not reused.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In higher level tools, the user visible representation of a connection is
+ defined by the D-Bus protocol specification as
+ <constant>":1.&lt;ID&gt;"</constant>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Messages with a specific <type>uint64_t</type> destination ID are
+ directly delivered to the connection with the corresponding ID. Signal
+ messages (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>)
+ may be addressed to the special destination ID
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_BROADCAST</constant> (~0ULL) and will then
+ potentially be delivered to all currently active connections on the bus.
+ However, in order to receive any signal messages, clients must subscribe
+ to them by installing a match (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Messages synthesized and sent directly by the kernel will carry the
+ special source ID <constant>KDBUS_SRC_ID_KERNEL</constant> (0).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In addition to the unique <type>uint64_t</type> connection ID,
+ established connections can request the ownership of
+ <emphasis>well-known names</emphasis>, under which they can be found and
+ addressed by other bus clients. A well-known name is associated with one
+ and only one connection at a time. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ on name acquisition, the name registry, and the validity of names.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Messages can specify the special destination ID
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_NAME</constant> (0) and carry a well-known name
+ in the message data. Such a message is delivered to the destination
+ connection which owns that well-known name.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting><![CDATA[
+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | +---------------+ +---------------------------+ |
+ | | Connection | | Message | -----------------+ |
+ | | :1.22 | --> | src: 22 | | |
+ | | | | dst: 25 | | |
+ | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | |
+ | | | +---------------------------+ | |
+ | | | | |
+ | | | <--------------------------------------+ | |
+ | +---------------+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ | +---------------+ +---------------------------+ | | |
+ | | Connection | | Message | -----+ | |
+ | | :1.25 | --> | src: 25 | | |
+ | | | | dst: 0xffffffffffffffff | -------------+ | |
+ | | | | (KDBUS_DST_ID_BROADCAST) | | | |
+ | | | | | ---------+ | | |
+ | | | +---------------------------+ | | | |
+ | | | | | | |
+ | | | <--------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | +---------------+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ | +---------------+ +---------------------------+ | | |
+ | | Connection | | Message | --+ | | |
+ | | :1.55 | --> | src: 55 | | | | |
+ | | | | dst: 0 / org.foo.bar | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | | | | | | |
+ | | | +---------------------------+ | | | |
+ | | | | | | |
+ | | | <------------------------------------------+ | |
+ | +---------------+ | | |
+ | | | |
+ | +---------------+ | | |
+ | | Connection | | | |
+ | | :1.81 | | | |
+ | | org.foo.bar | | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ | | | <-----------------------------------+ | |
+ | | | | |
+ | | | <----------------------------------------------+ |
+ | +---------------+ |
+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ ]]></programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Privileged connections</title>
+ <para>
+ A connection is considered <emphasis>privileged</emphasis> if the user
+ it was created by is the same that created the bus, or if the creating
+ task had <constant>CAP_IPC_OWNER</constant> set when it called
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> (see below).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Privileged connections have permission to employ certain restricted
+ functions and commands, which are explained below and in other kdbus
+ man-pages.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Activator and policy holder connection</title>
+ <para>
+ An <emphasis>activator</emphasis> connection is a placeholder for a
+ <emphasis>well-known name</emphasis>. Messages sent to such a connection
+ can be used to start an implementer connection, which will then get all
+ the messages from the activator copied over. An activator connection
+ cannot be used to send any message.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ A <emphasis>policy holder</emphasis> connection only installs a policy
+ for one or more names. These policy entries are kept active as long as
+ the connection is alive, and are removed once it terminates. Such a
+ policy connection type can be used to deploy restrictions for names that
+ are not yet active on the bus. A policy holder connection cannot be used
+ to send any message.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The creation of activator or policy holder connections is restricted to
+ privileged users on the bus (see above).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Monitor connections</title>
+ <para>
+ Monitors are eavesdropping connections that receive all the traffic on the
+ bus, but is invisible to other connections. Such connections have all
+ properties of any other, regular connection, except for the following
+ details:
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem><para>
+ They will get every message sent over the bus, both unicasts and
+ broadcasts.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ Installing matches for signal messages is neither necessary
+ nor allowed.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ They cannot send messages or be directly addressed as receiver.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ They cannot own well-known names. Therefore, they also can't operate as
+ activators.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ Their creation and destruction will not cause
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID_{ADD,REMOVE}</constant> (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>).
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ They are not listed with their unique name in name registry dumps
+ (see <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_LIST</constant> in
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>), so other connections cannot detect the presence of
+ a monitor.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ <para>
+ The creation of monitor connections is restricted to privileged users on
+ the bus (see above).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Creating connections</title>
+ <para>
+ A connection to a bus is created by opening an endpoint file (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>)
+ of a bus and becoming an active client with the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> ioctl. Every connection has a unique
+ identifier on the bus and can address messages to every other connection
+ on the same bus by using the peer's connection ID as the destination.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> ioctl takes a <type>struct
+ kdbus_cmd_hello</type> as argument.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd_hello {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ __u64 attach_flags_send;
+ __u64 attach_flags_recv;
+ __u64 bus_flags;
+ __u64 id;
+ __u64 pool_size;
+ __u64 offset;
+ __u8 id128[16];
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>Flags to apply to this connection</para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_HELLO_ACCEPT_FD</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When this flag is set, the connection can be sent file
+ descriptors as message payload of unicast messages. If it's
+ not set, an attempt to send file descriptors will result in
+ <constant>-ECOMM</constant> on the sender's side.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_HELLO_ACTIVATOR</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Make this connection an activator (see above). With this bit
+ set, an item of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> has
+ to be attached. This item describes the well-known name this
+ connection should be an activator for.
+ A connection can not be an activator and a policy holder at
+ the same time time, so this bit is not allowed together with
+ <constant>KDBUS_HELLO_POLICY_HOLDER</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_HELLO_POLICY_HOLDER</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Make this connection a policy holder (see above). With this
+ bit set, an item of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant>
+ has to be attached. This item describes the well-known name
+ this connection should hold a policy for.
+ A connection can not be an activator and a policy holder at
+ the same time time, so this bit is not allowed together with
+ <constant>KDBUS_HELLO_ACTIVATOR</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_HELLO_MONITOR</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Make this connection a monitor connection (see above).
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This flag can only be set by privileged bus connections. See
+ below for more information.
+ A connection can not be monitor and an activator or a policy
+ holder at the same time time, so this bit is not allowed
+ together with <constant>KDBUS_HELLO_ACTIVATOR</constant> or
+ <constant>KDBUS_HELLO_POLICY_HOLDER</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Requests a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will return
+ <errorcode>0</errorcode>, and the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that are valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>attach_flags_send</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Set the bits for metadata this connection permits to be sent to the
+ receiving peer. Only metadata items that are both allowed to be sent
+ by the sender and that are requested by the receiver will be attached
+ to the message.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>attach_flags_recv</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Request the attachment of metadata for each message received by this
+ connection. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for information about metadata, and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ regarding items in general.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>bus_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Upon successful completion of the ioctl, this member will contain the
+ flags of the bus it connected to.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>id</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Upon successful completion of the command, this member will contain
+ the numerical ID of the new connection.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>pool_size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The size of the communication pool, in bytes. The pool can be
+ accessed by calling
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>mmap</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ on the file descriptor that was used to issue the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> ioctl.
+ The pool size of a connection must be greater than
+ <constant>0</constant> and a multiple of
+ <constant>PAGE_SIZE</constant>. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>offset</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The kernel will return the offset in the pool where returned details
+ will be stored. See below.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>id128</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Upon successful completion of the ioctl, this member will contain the
+ <emphasis>128-bit UUID</emphasis> of the connected bus.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Variable list of items containing optional additional information.
+ The following items are currently expected/valid:
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CONN_DESCRIPTION</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Contains a string that describes this connection, so it can
+ be identified later.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ For activators and policy holders only, combinations of
+ these two items describe policy access entries. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CREDS</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PIDS</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_SECLABEL</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Privileged bus users may submit these types in order to
+ create connections with faked credentials. This information
+ will be returned when peer information is queried by
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant>. See below for more
+ information on retrieving information on connections.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With this item, programs can <emphasis>probe</emphasis> the
+ kernel for known item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ At the offset returned in the <varname>offset</varname> field of
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_hello</type>, the kernel will store items
+ of the following types:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_PARAMETER</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Bloom filter parameter as defined by the bus creator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The offset in the pool has to be freed with the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> ioctl. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Retrieving information on a connection</title>
+ <para>
+ The <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant> ioctl can be used to
+ retrieve credentials and properties of the initial creator of a
+ connection. This ioctl uses the following struct.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd_info {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ __u64 id;
+ __u64 attach_flags;
+ __u64 offset;
+ __u64 info_size;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Currently, no flags are supported.
+ <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> is accepted to probe for
+ valid flags. If set, the ioctl will return <errorcode>0</errorcode>,
+ and the <varname>flags</varname> field is set to
+ <constant>0</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>id</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The numerical ID of the connection for which information is to be
+ retrieved. If set to a non-zero value, the
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_OWNED_NAME</constant> item is ignored.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>attach_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Specifies which metadata items should be attached to the answer. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>offset</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ When the ioctl returns, this field will contain the offset of the
+ connection information inside the caller's pool. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further information.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>info_size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The kernel will return the size of the returned information, so
+ applications can optionally
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>mmap</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ specific parts of the pool. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further information.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The following items are expected for
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant>.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_OWNED_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Contains the well-known name of the connection to look up as.
+ This item is mandatory if the <varname>id</varname> field is
+ set to 0.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With this item, programs can <emphasis>probe</emphasis> the
+ kernel for known item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ When the ioctl returns, the following struct will be stored in the
+ caller's pool at <varname>offset</varname>. The fields in this struct
+ are described below.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_info {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 id;
+ __u64 flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>id</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The connection's unique ID.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The connection's flags as specified when it was created.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Depending on the <varname>flags</varname> field in
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_info</type>, items of types
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_OWNED_NAME</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CONN_DESCRIPTION</constant> may follow here.
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant> is also allowed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Once the caller is finished with parsing the return buffer, it needs to
+ employ the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> command for the offset, in
+ order to free the buffer part. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Getting information about a connection's bus creator</title>
+ <para>
+ The <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_CREATOR_INFO</constant> ioctl takes the same
+ struct as <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant>, but is used to
+ retrieve information about the creator of the bus the connection is
+ attached to. The metadata returned by this call is collected during the
+ creation of the bus and is never altered afterwards, so it provides
+ pristine information on the task that created the bus, at the moment when
+ it did so.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In response to this call, a slice in the connection's pool is allocated
+ and filled with an object of type <type>struct kdbus_info</type>,
+ pointed to by the ioctl's <varname>offset</varname> field.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_info {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 id;
+ __u64 flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>id</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The bus ID.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The bus flags as specified when it was created.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Metadata information is stored in items here. The item list
+ contains a <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_MAKE_NAME</constant> item that
+ indicates the bus name of the calling connection.
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant> is allowed to probe
+ for known item types.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Once the caller is finished with parsing the return buffer, it needs to
+ employ the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> command for the offset, in
+ order to free the buffer part. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Updating connection details</title>
+ <para>
+ Some of a connection's details can be updated with the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_UPDATE</constant> ioctl, using the file
+ descriptor that was used to create the connection. The update command
+ uses the following struct.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Currently, no flags are supported.
+ <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> is accepted to probe for
+ valid flags. If set, the ioctl will return <errorcode>0</errorcode>,
+ and the <varname>flags</varname> field is set to
+ <constant>0</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Items to describe the connection details to be updated. The
+ following item types are supported.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ATTACH_FLAGS_SEND</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Supply a new set of metadata items that this connection
+ permits to be sent along with messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ATTACH_FLAGS_RECV</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Supply a new set of metadata items that this connection
+ requests to be attached to each message.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Policy holder connections may supply a new set of policy
+ information with these items. For other connection types,
+ <constant>EOPNOTSUPP</constant> is returned in
+ <varname>errno</varname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With this item, programs can <emphasis>probe</emphasis> the
+ kernel for known item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Termination of connections</title>
+ <para>
+ A connection can be terminated by simply calling
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>close</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ on its file descriptor. All pending incoming messages will be discarded,
+ and the memory allocated by the pool will be freed.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ An alternative way of closing down a connection is via the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BYEBYE</constant> ioctl. This ioctl will succeed only
+ if the message queue of the connection is empty at the time of closing;
+ otherwise, the ioctl will fail with <varname>errno</varname> set to
+ <constant>EBUSY</constant>. When this ioctl returns
+ successfully, the connection has been terminated and won't accept any new
+ messages from remote peers. This way, a connection can be terminated
+ race-free, without losing any messages. The ioctl takes an argument of
+ type <type>struct kdbus_cmd</type>.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Currently, no flags are supported.
+ <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> is accepted to probe for
+ valid flags. If set, the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EPROTO</constant>, and
+ the <varname>flags</varname> field is set to <constant>0</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The following item types are supported.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With this item, programs can <emphasis>probe</emphasis> the
+ kernel for known item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Return value</title>
+ <para>
+ On success, all mentioned ioctl commands return <errorcode>0</errorcode>;
+ on error, <errorcode>-1</errorcode> is returned, and
+ <varname>errno</varname> is set to indicate the error.
+ If the issued ioctl is illegal for the file descriptor used,
+ <varname>errno</varname> will be set to <constant>ENOTTY</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EFAULT</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The supplied pool size was 0 or not a multiple of the page size.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The flags supplied in <type>struct kdbus_cmd_hello</type>
+ are invalid.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ An illegal combination of
+ <constant>KDBUS_HELLO_MONITOR</constant>,
+ <constant>KDBUS_HELLO_ACTIVATOR</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_HELLO_POLICY_HOLDER</constant> was passed in
+ <varname>flags</varname>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ An invalid set of items was supplied.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ECONNREFUSED</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The attach_flags_send field did not satisfy the requirements of
+ the bus.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EPERM</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ A <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CREDS</constant> items was supplied, but the
+ current user is not privileged.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ESHUTDOWN</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The bus you were trying to connect to has already been shut down.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EMFILE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The maximum number of connections on the bus has been reached.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EOPNOTSUPP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The endpoint does not support the connection flags supplied in
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_hello</type>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BYEBYE</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EALREADY</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The connection has already been shut down.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EBUSY</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ There are still messages queued up in the connection's pool.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Invalid flags, or neither an ID nor a name was provided, or the
+ name is invalid.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ESRCH</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Connection lookup by name failed.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ENXIO</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ No connection with the provided connection ID found.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_UPDATE</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Illegal flags or items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Wildcards submitted in policy entries, or illegal sequence
+ of policy items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EOPNOTSUPP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Operation not supported by connection.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>E2BIG</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Too many policy items attached.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.endpoint.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.endpoint.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..6632485f3
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.endpoint.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,429 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus.endpoint">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.endpoint</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.endpoint</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.endpoint</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus endpoint</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Endpoints are entry points to a bus (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>).
+ By default, each bus has a default
+ endpoint called 'bus'. The bus owner has the ability to create custom
+ endpoints with specific names, permissions, and policy databases
+ (see below). An endpoint is presented as file underneath the directory
+ of the parent bus.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ To create a custom endpoint, open the default endpoint
+ (<literal>bus</literal>) and use the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant> ioctl with
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd</type>. Custom endpoints always have a policy
+ database that, by default, forbids any operation. You have to explicitly
+ install policy entries to allow any operation on this endpoint.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Once <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant> succeeded, the new
+ endpoint will appear in the filesystem
+ (<citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>), and the used file descriptor will manage the
+ newly created endpoint resource. It cannot be used to manage further
+ resources and must be kept open as long as the endpoint is needed. The
+ endpoint will be terminated as soon as the file descriptor is closed.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Endpoint names may be chosen freely except for one restriction: the name
+ must be prefixed with the numeric effective UID of the creator and a dash.
+ This is required to avoid namespace clashes between different users. When
+ creating an endpoint, the name that is passed in must be properly
+ formatted or the kernel will refuse creation of the endpoint. Example:
+ <literal>1047-my-endpoint</literal> is an acceptable name for an
+ endpoint registered by a user with UID 1047. However,
+ <literal>1024-my-endpoint</literal> is not, and neither is
+ <literal>my-endpoint</literal>. The UID must be provided in the
+ user-namespace of the bus.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ To create connections to a bus, use <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>
+ on a file descriptor returned by <function>open()</function> on an
+ endpoint node. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Creating custom endpoints</title>
+ <para>
+ To create a new endpoint, the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant> command is used. Along with
+ the endpoint's name, which will be used to expose the endpoint in the
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>,
+ the command also optionally takes items to set up the endpoint's
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant> takes a
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd</type> argument.
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>The flags for creation.</para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_MAKE_ACCESS_GROUP</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>Make the endpoint file group-accessible.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_MAKE_ACCESS_WORLD</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>Make the endpoint file world-accessible.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Requests a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will return
+ <errorcode>0</errorcode>, and the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that are valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The following items are expected for
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant>.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_MAKE_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>Contains a string to identify the endpoint name.</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These items are used to set the policy attached to the
+ endpoint. For more details on bus and endpoint policies, see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <varname>EINVAL</varname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Updating endpoints</title>
+ <para>
+ To update an existing endpoint, the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_UPDATE</constant> command is used on the file
+ descriptor that was used to create the endpoint, using
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant>. The only relevant detail of
+ the endpoint that can be updated is the policy. When the command is
+ employed, the policy of the endpoint is <emphasis>replaced</emphasis>
+ atomically with the new set of rules.
+ The command takes a <type>struct kdbus_cmd</type> argument.
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Unused for this command.
+ <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> is accepted to probe for
+ valid flags. If set, the ioctl will return <errorcode>0</errorcode>,
+ and the <varname>flags</varname> field is set to
+ <constant>0</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The following items are expected for
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_UPDATE</constant>.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These items are used to set the policy attached to the
+ endpoint. For more details on bus and endpoint policies, see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ Existing policy is atomically replaced with the new rules
+ provided.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With this item, programs can <emphasis>probe</emphasis> the
+ kernel for known item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Return value</title>
+ <para>
+ On success, all mentioned ioctl commands return <errorcode>0</errorcode>;
+ on error, <errorcode>-1</errorcode> is returned, and
+ <varname>errno</varname> is set to indicate the error.
+ If the issued ioctl is illegal for the file descriptor used,
+ <varname>errno</varname> will be set to <constant>ENOTTY</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant> may fail with the
+ following errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The flags supplied in the <type>struct kdbus_cmd</type>
+ are invalid.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Illegal combination of <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant> was provided.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EEXIST</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ An endpoint of that name already exists.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EPERM</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The calling user is not privileged. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for information about privileged users.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_UPDATE</constant> may fail with the
+ following errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The flags supplied in <type>struct kdbus_cmd</type>
+ are invalid.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Illegal combination of <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant> was provided.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.fs.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.fs.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..8c2a90e10
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.fs.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,124 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus_fs">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.fs</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.fs</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.fs</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus file system</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>File-system Layout</title>
+
+ <para>
+ The <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis> pseudo filesystem provides access to
+ kdbus entities, such as <emphasis>buses</emphasis> and
+ <emphasis>endpoints</emphasis>. Each time the filesystem is mounted,
+ a new, isolated kdbus instance is created, which is independent from the
+ other instances.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The system-wide standard mount point for <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis> is
+ <constant>/sys/fs/kdbus</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Buses are represented as directories in the file system layout, whereas
+ endpoints are exposed as files inside these directories. At the top-level,
+ a <emphasis>control</emphasis> node is present, which can be opened to
+ create new buses via the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant> ioctl.
+ Each <emphasis>bus</emphasis> shows a default endpoint called
+ <varname>bus</varname>, which can be opened to either create a connection
+ with the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> ioctl, or to create new
+ custom endpoints for the bus with
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant>. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>,
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry> and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>Following, you can see an example layout of the
+ <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis> filesystem:</para>
+
+<programlisting>
+ /sys/fs/kdbus/ ; mount-point
+ |-- 0-system ; bus directory
+ | |-- bus ; default endpoint
+ | `-- 1017-custom ; custom endpoint
+ |-- 1000-user ; bus directory
+ | |-- bus ; default endpoint
+ | |-- 1000-service-A ; custom endpoint
+ | `-- 1000-service-B ; custom endpoint
+ `-- control ; control file
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Mounting instances</title>
+ <para>
+ In order to get a new and separate kdbus environment, a new instance
+ of <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis> can be mounted like this:
+ </para>
+<programlisting>
+ # mount -t kdbusfs kdbusfs /tmp/new_kdbus/
+</programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>mount</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>8</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.item.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.item.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..ee09dfa44
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.item.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,839 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.item</title>
+ <productname>kdbus item</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.item</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus item structure, layout and usage</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ To flexibly augment transport structures, data blobs of type
+ <type>struct kdbus_item</type> can be attached to the structs passed
+ into the ioctls. Some ioctls make items of certain types mandatory,
+ others are optional. Items that are unsupported by ioctls they are
+ attached to will cause the ioctl to fail with <varname>errno</varname>
+ set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ Items are also used for information stored in a connection's
+ <emphasis>pool</emphasis>, such as received messages, name lists or
+ requested connection or bus owner information. Depending on the type of
+ an item, its total size is either fixed or variable.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Chaining items</title>
+ <para>
+ Whenever items are used as part of the kdbus kernel API, they are
+ embedded in structs that are embedded inside structs that themselves
+ include a size field containing the overall size of the structure.
+ This allows multiple items to be chained up, and an item iterator
+ (see below) is capable of detecting the end of an item chain.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Alignment</title>
+ <para>
+ The kernel expects all items to be aligned to 8-byte boundaries.
+ Unaligned items will cause the ioctl they are used with to fail
+ with <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ An item that has an unaligned size itself hence needs to be padded
+ if it is followed by another item.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Iterating items</title>
+ <para>
+ A simple iterator would iterate over the items until the items have
+ reached the embedding structure's overall size. An example
+ implementation is shown below.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting><![CDATA[
+#define KDBUS_ALIGN8(val) (((val) + 7) & ~7)
+
+#define KDBUS_ITEM_NEXT(item) \
+ (typeof(item))((uint8_t *)(item) + KDBUS_ALIGN8((item)->size))
+
+#define KDBUS_ITEM_FOREACH(item, head, first) \
+ for ((item) = (head)->first; \
+ ((uint8_t *)(item) < (uint8_t *)(head) + (head)->size) && \
+ ((uint8_t *)(item) >= (uint8_t *)(head)); \
+ (item) = KDBUS_ITEM_NEXT(item))
+ ]]></programlisting>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Item layout</title>
+ <para>
+ A <type>struct kdbus_item</type> consists of a
+ <varname>size</varname> field, describing its overall size, and a
+ <varname>type</varname> field, both 64 bit wide. They are followed by
+ a union to store information that is specific to the item's type.
+ The struct layout is shown below.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_item {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 type;
+ /* item payload - see below */
+ union {
+ __u8 data[0];
+ __u32 data32[0];
+ __u64 data64[0];
+ char str[0];
+
+ __u64 id;
+ struct kdbus_vec vec;
+ struct kdbus_creds creds;
+ struct kdbus_pids pids;
+ struct kdbus_audit audit;
+ struct kdbus_caps caps;
+ struct kdbus_timestamp timestamp;
+ struct kdbus_name name;
+ struct kdbus_bloom_parameter bloom_parameter;
+ struct kdbus_bloom_filter bloom_filter;
+ struct kdbus_memfd memfd;
+ int fds[0];
+ struct kdbus_notify_name_change name_change;
+ struct kdbus_notify_id_change id_change;
+ struct kdbus_policy_access policy_access;
+ };
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>
+ <type>struct kdbus_item</type> should never be used to allocate
+ an item instance, as its size may grow in future releases of the API.
+ Instead, it should be manually assembled by storing the
+ <varname>size</varname>, <varname>type</varname> and payload to a
+ struct of its own.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Item types</title>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Negotiation item</title>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With this item is attached to any ioctl, programs can
+ <emphasis>probe</emphasis> the kernel for known item types.
+ The item carries an array of <type>uint64_t</type> values in
+ <varname>item.data64</varname>, each set to an item type to
+ probe. The kernel will reset each member of this array that is
+ not recognized as valid item type to <constant>0</constant>.
+ This way, users can negotiate kernel features at start-up to
+ keep newer userspace compatible with older kernels. This item
+ is never attached by the kernel in response to any command.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Command specific items</title>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_VEC</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_OFF</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Messages are directly copied by the sending process into the
+ receiver's
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ This way, two peers can exchange data by effectively doing a
+ single-copy from one process to another; the kernel will not buffer
+ the data anywhere else. <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_VEC</constant>
+ is used when <emphasis>sending</emphasis> message. The item
+ references a memory address when the payload data can be found.
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_OFF</constant> is used when messages
+ are <emphasis>received</emphasis>, and the
+ <constant>offset</constant> value describes the offset inside the
+ receiving connection's
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ where the message payload can be found. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on passing of payload data along with a
+ message.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_vec {
+ __u64 size;
+ union {
+ __u64 address;
+ __u64 offset;
+ };
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_MEMFD</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Transports a file descriptor of a <emphasis>memfd</emphasis> in
+ <type>struct kdbus_memfd</type> in <varname>item.memfd</varname>.
+ The <varname>size</varname> field has to match the actual size of
+ the memfd that was specified when it was created. The
+ <varname>start</varname> parameter denotes the offset inside the
+ memfd at which the referenced payload starts. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on passing of payload data along with a
+ message.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_memfd {
+ __u64 start;
+ __u64 size;
+ int fd;
+ __u32 __pad;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains an array of <emphasis>file descriptors</emphasis>.
+ When used with <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant>, the values of
+ this array must be filled with valid file descriptor numbers.
+ When received as item attached to a message, the array will
+ contain the numbers of the installed file descriptors, or
+ <constant>-1</constant> in case an error occurred.
+ In either case, the number of entries in the array is derived from
+ the item's total size. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Items specific to some commands</title>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CANCEL_FD</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Transports a file descriptor that can be used to cancel a
+ synchronous <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant> operation by
+ writing to it. The file descriptor is stored in
+ <varname>item.fd[0]</varname>. The item may only contain one
+ file descriptor. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on this item and how to use it.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_PARAMETER</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains a set of <emphasis>bloom parameters</emphasis> as
+ <type>struct kdbus_bloom_parameter</type> in
+ <varname>item.bloom_parameter</varname>.
+ The item is passed from userspace to kernel during the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant> ioctl, and returned
+ verbatim when <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> is called.
+ The kernel does not use the bloom parameters, but they need to
+ be known by each connection on the bus in order to define the
+ bloom filter hash details. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on matching and bloom filters.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_bloom_parameter {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 n_hash;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_FILTER</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Carries a <emphasis>bloom filter</emphasis> as
+ <type>struct kdbus_bloom_filter</type> in
+ <varname>item.bloom_filter</varname>. It is mandatory to send this
+ item attached to a <type>struct kdbus_msg</type>, in case the
+ message is a signal. This item is never transported from kernel to
+ userspace. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on matching and bloom filters.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_bloom_filter {
+ __u64 generation;
+ __u64 data[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_MASK</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Transports a <emphasis>bloom mask</emphasis> as binary data blob
+ stored in <varname>item.data</varname>. This item is used to
+ describe a match into a connection's match database. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on matching and bloom filters.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_DST_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains a <emphasis>well-known name</emphasis> to send a
+ message to, as null-terminated string in
+ <varname>item.str</varname>. This item is used with
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant>. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on how to send a message.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_MAKE_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains a <emphasis>bus name</emphasis> or
+ <emphasis>endpoint name</emphasis>, stored as null-terminated
+ string in <varname>item.str</varname>. This item is sent from
+ userspace to kernel when buses or endpoints are created, and
+ returned back to userspace when the bus creator information is
+ queried. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ATTACH_FLAGS_SEND</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ATTACH_FLAGS_RECV</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains a set of <emphasis>attach flags</emphasis> at
+ <emphasis>send</emphasis> or <emphasis>receive</emphasis> time. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>,
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry> and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on attach flags.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Transports a connection's <emphasis>numerical ID</emphasis> of
+ a connection as <type>uint64_t</type> value in
+ <varname>item.id</varname>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Transports a name associated with the
+ <emphasis>name registry</emphasis> as null-terminated string as
+ <type>struct kdbus_name</type> in
+ <varname>item.name</varname>. The <varname>flags</varname>
+ contains the flags of the name. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on how to access the name registry of a bus.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_name {
+ __u64 flags;
+ char name[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Items attached by the kernel as metadata</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_TIMESTAMP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains both the <emphasis>monotonic</emphasis> and the
+ <emphasis>realtime</emphasis> timestamp, taken when the message
+ was processed on the kernel side.
+ Stored as <type>struct kdbus_timestamp</type> in
+ <varname>item.timestamp</varname>.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_timestamp {
+ __u64 seqnum;
+ __u64 monotonic_ns;
+ __u64 realtime_ns;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CREDS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains a set of <emphasis>user</emphasis> and
+ <emphasis>group</emphasis> information as 32-bit values, in the
+ usual four flavors: real, effective, saved and filesystem related.
+ Stored as <type>struct kdbus_creds</type> in
+ <varname>item.creds</varname>.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_creds {
+ __u32 uid;
+ __u32 euid;
+ __u32 suid;
+ __u32 fsuid;
+ __u32 gid;
+ __u32 egid;
+ __u32 sgid;
+ __u32 fsgid;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PIDS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>PID</emphasis>, <emphasis>TID</emphasis>
+ and <emphasis>parent PID (PPID)</emphasis> of a remote peer.
+ Stored as <type>struct kdbus_pids</type> in
+ <varname>item.pids</varname>.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_pids {
+ __u64 pid;
+ __u64 tid;
+ __u64 ppid;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_AUXGROUPS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>auxiliary (supplementary) groups</emphasis>
+ a remote peer is a member of, stored as array of
+ <type>uint32_t</type> values in <varname>item.data32</varname>.
+ The array length can be determined by looking at the item's total
+ size, subtracting the size of the header and dividing the
+ remainder by <constant>sizeof(uint32_t)</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_OWNED_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains a <emphasis>well-known name</emphasis> currently owned
+ by a connection. The name is stored as null-terminated string in
+ <varname>item.str</varname>. Its length can also be derived from
+ the item's total size.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_TID_COMM</constant> [*]</term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>comm</emphasis> string of a task's
+ <emphasis>TID</emphasis> (thread ID), stored as null-terminated
+ string in <varname>item.str</varname>. Its length can also be
+ derived from the item's total size. Receivers of this item should
+ not use its contents for any kind of security measures. See below.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PID_COMM</constant> [*]</term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>comm</emphasis> string of a task's
+ <emphasis>PID</emphasis> (process ID), stored as null-terminated
+ string in <varname>item.str</varname>. Its length can also be
+ derived from the item's total size. Receivers of this item should
+ not use its contents for any kind of security measures. See below.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_EXE</constant> [*]</term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>path to the executable</emphasis> of a task,
+ stored as null-terminated string in <varname>item.str</varname>. Its
+ length can also be derived from the item's total size. Receivers of
+ this item should not use its contents for any kind of security
+ measures. See below.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CMDLINE</constant> [*]</term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>command line arguments</emphasis> of a
+ task, stored as an <emphasis>array</emphasis> of null-terminated
+ strings in <varname>item.str</varname>. The total length of all
+ strings in the array can be derived from the item's total size.
+ Receivers of this item should not use its contents for any kind
+ of security measures. See below.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CGROUP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>cgroup path</emphasis> of a task, stored
+ as null-terminated string in <varname>item.str</varname>. Its
+ length can also be derived from the item's total size.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CAPS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains sets of <emphasis>capabilities</emphasis>, stored as
+ <type>struct kdbus_caps</type> in <varname>item.caps</varname>.
+ As the item size may increase in the future, programs should be
+ written in a way that it takes
+ <varname>item.caps.last_cap</varname> into account, and derive
+ the number of sets and rows from the item size and the reported
+ number of valid capability bits.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_caps {
+ __u32 last_cap;
+ __u32 caps[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_SECLABEL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>LSM label</emphasis> of a task, stored as
+ null-terminated string in <varname>item.str</varname>. Its length
+ can also be derived from the item's total size.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_AUDIT</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the audit <emphasis>sessionid</emphasis> and
+ <emphasis>loginuid</emphasis> of a task, stored as
+ <type>struct kdbus_audit</type> in
+ <varname>item.audit</varname>.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_audit {
+ __u32 sessionid;
+ __u32 loginuid;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CONN_DESCRIPTION</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Contains the <emphasis>connection description</emphasis>, as set
+ by <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> or
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_UPDATE</constant>, stored as
+ null-terminated string in <varname>item.str</varname>. Its length
+ can also be derived from the item's total size.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ All metadata is automatically translated into the
+ <emphasis>namespaces</emphasis> of the task that receives them. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ [*] Note that the content stored in metadata items of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_TID_COMM</constant>,
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PID_COMM</constant>,
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_EXE</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CMDLINE</constant>
+ can easily be tampered by the sending tasks. Therefore, they should
+ <emphasis>not</emphasis> be used for any sort of security relevant
+ assumptions. The only reason they are transmitted is to let
+ receivers know about details that were set when metadata was
+ collected, even though the task they were collected from is not
+ active any longer when the items are received.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Items used for policy entries, matches and notifications</title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ This item describes a <emphasis>policy access</emphasis> entry to
+ access the policy database of a
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry> or
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ Please refer to
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on the policy database and how to access it.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_policy_access {
+ __u64 type;
+ __u64 access;
+ __u64 id;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID_ADD</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID_REMOVE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ This item is sent as attachment to a
+ <emphasis>kernel notification</emphasis> and indicates that a
+ new connection was created on the bus, or that a connection was
+ disconnected, respectively. It stores a
+ <type>struct kdbus_notify_id_change</type> in
+ <varname>item.id_change</varname>.
+ The <varname>id</varname> field contains the numeric ID of the
+ connection that was added or removed, and <varname>flags</varname>
+ is set to the connection flags, as passed by
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on matches and notification messages.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_notify_id_change {
+ __u64 id;
+ __u64 flags;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_ADD</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_REMOVE</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_CHANGE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ This item is sent as attachment to a
+ <emphasis>kernel notification</emphasis> and indicates that a
+ <emphasis>well-known name</emphasis> appeared, disappeared or
+ transferred to another owner on the bus. It stores a
+ <type>struct kdbus_notify_name_change</type> in
+ <varname>item.name_change</varname>.
+ <varname>old_id</varname> describes the former owner of the name
+ and is set to <constant>0</constant> values in case of
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_ADD</constant>.
+ <varname>new_id</varname> describes the new owner of the name and
+ is set to <constant>0</constant> values in case of
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_REMOVE</constant>.
+ The <varname>name</varname> field contains the well-known name the
+ notification is about, as null-terminated string. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on matches and notification messages.
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_notify_name_change {
+ struct kdbus_notify_id_change old_id;
+ struct kdbus_notify_id_change new_id;
+ char name[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_REPLY_TIMEOUT</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ This item is sent as attachment to a
+ <emphasis>kernel notification</emphasis>. It informs the receiver
+ that an expected reply to a message was not received in time.
+ The remote peer ID and the message cookie are stored in the message
+ header. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information about messages, timeouts and notifications.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_REPLY_DEAD</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ This item is sent as attachment to a
+ <emphasis>kernel notification</emphasis>. It informs the receiver
+ that a remote connection a reply is expected from was disconnected
+ before that reply was sent. The remote peer ID and the message
+ cookie are stored in the message header. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information about messages, timeouts and notifications.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>memfd_create</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.match.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.match.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..ae38e04ab
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.match.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,555 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus.match">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.match</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.match</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.match</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus match</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ kdbus connections can install matches in order to subscribe to signal
+ messages sent on the bus. Such signal messages can be either directed
+ to a single connection (by setting a specific connection ID in
+ <varname>struct kdbus_msg.dst_id</varname> or by sending it to a
+ well-known name), or to potentially <emphasis>all</emphasis> currently
+ active connections on the bus (by setting
+ <varname>struct kdbus_msg.dst_id</varname> to
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_BROADCAST</constant>).
+ A signal message always has the <constant>KDBUS_MSG_SIGNAL</constant>
+ bit set in the <varname>flags</varname> bitfield.
+ Also, signal messages can originate from either the kernel (called
+ <emphasis>notifications</emphasis>), or from other bus connections.
+ In either case, a bus connection needs to have a suitable
+ <emphasis>match</emphasis> installed in order to receive any signal
+ message. Without any rules installed in the connection, no signal message
+ will be received.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Matches for signal messages from other connections</title>
+ <para>
+ Matches for messages from other connections (not kernel notifications)
+ are implemented as bloom filters (see below). The sender adds certain
+ properties of the message as elements to a bloom filter bit field, and
+ sends that along with the signal message.
+
+ The receiving connection adds the message properties it is interested in
+ as elements to a bloom mask bit field, and uploads the mask as match rule,
+ possibly along with some other rules to further limit the match.
+
+ The kernel will match the signal message's bloom filter against the
+ connection's bloom mask (simply by &amp;-ing it), and will decide whether
+ the message should be delivered to a connection.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The kernel has no notion of any specific properties of the signal message,
+ all it sees are the bit fields of the bloom filter and the mask to match
+ against. The use of bloom filters allows simple and efficient matching,
+ without exposing any message properties or internals to the kernel side.
+ Clients need to deal with the fact that they might receive signal messages
+ which they did not subscribe to, as the bloom filter might allow
+ false-positives to pass the filter.
+
+ To allow the future extension of the set of elements in the bloom filter,
+ the filter specifies a <emphasis>generation</emphasis> number. A later
+ generation must always contain all elements of the set of the previous
+ generation, but can add new elements to the set. The match rules mask can
+ carry an array with all previous generations of masks individually stored.
+ When the filter and mask are matched by the kernel, the mask with the
+ closest matching generation is selected as the index into the mask array.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Bloom filters</title>
+ <para>
+ Bloom filters allow checking whether a given word is present in a
+ dictionary. This allows connections to set up a mask for information it
+ is interested in, and will be delivered signal messages that have a
+ matching filter.
+
+ For general information, see
+ <ulink url="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bloom_filter">the Wikipedia
+ article on bloom filters</ulink>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The size of the bloom filter is defined per bus when it is created, in
+ <varname>kdbus_bloom_parameter.size</varname>. All bloom filters attached
+ to signal messages on the bus must match this size, and all bloom filter
+ matches uploaded by connections must also match the size, or a multiple
+ thereof (see below).
+
+ The calculation of the mask has to be done in userspace applications. The
+ kernel just checks the bitmasks to decide whether or not to let the
+ message pass. All bits in the mask must match the filter in and bit-wise
+ <emphasis>AND</emphasis> logic, but the mask may have more bits set than
+ the filter. Consequently, false positive matches are expected to happen,
+ and programs must deal with that fact by checking the contents of the
+ payload again at receive time.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Masks are entities that are always passed to the kernel as part of a
+ match (with an item of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_MASK</constant>),
+ and filters can be attached to signals, with an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_FILTER</constant>. For a filter to match, all
+ its bits have to be set in the match mask as well.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For example, consider a bus that has a bloom size of 8 bytes, and the
+ following mask/filter combinations:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting><![CDATA[
+ filter 0x0101010101010101
+ mask 0x0101010101010101
+ -> matches
+
+ filter 0x0303030303030303
+ mask 0x0101010101010101
+ -> doesn't match
+
+ filter 0x0101010101010101
+ mask 0x0303030303030303
+ -> matches
+ ]]></programlisting>
+
+ <para>
+ Hence, in order to catch all messages, a mask filled with
+ <constant>0xff</constant> bytes can be installed as a wildcard match rule.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Generations</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Uploaded matches may contain multiple masks, which have to be as large
+ as the bloom filter size defined by the bus. Each block of a mask is
+ called a <emphasis>generation</emphasis>, starting at index 0.
+
+ At match time, when a signal is about to be delivered, a bloom mask
+ generation is passed, which denotes which of the bloom masks the filter
+ should be matched against. This allows programs to provide backward
+ compatible masks at upload time, while older clients can still match
+ against older versions of filters.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Matches for kernel notifications</title>
+ <para>
+ To receive kernel generated notifications (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>),
+ a connection must install match rules that are different from
+ the bloom filter matches described in the section above. They can be
+ filtered by the connection ID that caused the notification to be sent, by
+ one of the names it currently owns, or by the type of the notification
+ (ID/name add/remove/change).
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Adding a match</title>
+ <para>
+ To add a match, the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_ADD</constant> ioctl is
+ used, which takes a <type>struct kdbus_cmd_match</type> as an argument
+ described below.
+
+ Note that each of the items attached to this command will internally
+ create one match <emphasis>rule</emphasis>, and the collection of them,
+ which is submitted as one block via the ioctl, is called a
+ <emphasis>match</emphasis>. To allow a message to pass, all rules of a
+ match have to be satisfied. Hence, adding more items to the command will
+ only narrow the possibility of a match to effectively let the message
+ pass, and will decrease the chance that the connection's process will be
+ woken up needlessly.
+
+ Multiple matches can be installed per connection. As long as one of it has
+ a set of rules which allows the message to pass, this one will be
+ decisive.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd_match {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ __u64 cookie;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>Flags to control the behavior of the ioctl.</para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_MATCH_REPLACE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>Make the endpoint file group-accessible</para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Requests a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will return
+ <errorcode>0</errorcode>, and the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that are valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>cookie</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ A cookie which identifies the match, so it can be referred to when
+ removing it.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Items to define the actual rules of the matches. The following item
+ types are expected. Each item will create one new match rule.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_MASK</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An item that carries the bloom filter mask to match against
+ in its data field. The payload size must match the bloom
+ filter size that was specified when the bus was created.
+ See the "Bloom filters" section above for more information on
+ bloom filters.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When used as part of kernel notifications, this item specifies
+ a name that is acquired, lost or that changed its owner (see
+ below). When used as part of a match for user-generated signal
+ messages, it specifies a name that the sending connection must
+ own at the time of sending the signal.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Specify a sender connection's ID that will match this rule.
+ For kernel notifications, this specifies the ID of a
+ connection that was added to or removed from the bus.
+ For used-generated signals, it specifies the ID of the
+ connection that sent the signal message.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_ADD</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_REMOVE</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_CHANGE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These items request delivery of kernel notifications that
+ describe a name acquisition, loss, or change. The details
+ are stored in the item's
+ <varname>kdbus_notify_name_change</varname> member.
+ All information specified must be matched in order to make
+ the message pass. Use
+ <constant>KDBUS_MATCH_ID_ANY</constant> to
+ match against any unique connection ID.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID_ADD</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID_REMOVE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ These items request delivery of kernel notifications that are
+ generated when a connection is created or terminated.
+ <type>struct kdbus_notify_id_change</type> is used to
+ store the actual match information. This item can be used to
+ monitor one particular connection ID, or, when the ID field
+ is set to <constant>KDBUS_MATCH_ID_ANY</constant>,
+ all of them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With this item, programs can <emphasis>probe</emphasis> the
+ kernel for known item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Refer to
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on message types.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Removing a match</title>
+ <para>
+ Matches can be removed with the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_REMOVE</constant> ioctl, which takes
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_match</type> as argument, but its fields
+ usage slightly differs compared to that of
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_ADD</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd_match {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 cookie;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>cookie</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The cookie of the match, as it was passed when the match was added.
+ All matches that have this cookie will be removed.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ No flags are supported for this use case.
+ <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> is accepted to probe for
+ valid flags. If set, the ioctl will fail with
+ <errorcode>-1</errorcode>, <varname>errno</varname> is set to
+ <constant>EPROTO</constant>, and the <varname>flags</varname> field
+ is set to <constant>0</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ No items are supported for this use case, but
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant> is allowed nevertheless.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Return value</title>
+ <para>
+ On success, all mentioned ioctl commands return <errorcode>0</errorcode>;
+ on error, <errorcode>-1</errorcode> is returned, and
+ <varname>errno</varname> is set to indicate the error.
+ If the issued ioctl is illegal for the file descriptor used,
+ <varname>errno</varname> will be set to <constant>ENOTTY</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_ADD</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Illegal flags or items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EDOM</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Illegal bloom filter size.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EMFILE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Too many matches for this connection.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_REMOVE</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Illegal flags.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EBADSLT</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ A match entry with the given cookie could not be found.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.message.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.message.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..0115d9d50
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.message.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,1276 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus.message">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.message</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.message</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.message</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus message</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A kdbus message is used to exchange information between two connections
+ on a bus, or to transport notifications from the kernel to one or many
+ connections. This document describes the layout of messages, how payload
+ is added to them and how they are sent and received.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Message layout</title>
+
+ <para>The layout of a message is shown below.</para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Message |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | | Header | |
+ | | size: overall message size, including the data records | |
+ | | destination: connection ID of the receiver | |
+ | | source: connection ID of the sender (set by kernel) | |
+ | | payload_type: "DBusDBus" textual identifier stored as uint64_t | |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | | Data Record | |
+ | | size: overall record size (without padding) | |
+ | | type: type of data | |
+ | | data: reference to data (address or file descriptor) | |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | | padding bytes to the next 8 byte alignment | |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | | Data Record | |
+ | | size: overall record size (without padding) | |
+ | | ... | |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | | padding bytes to the next 8 byte alignment | |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | | Data Record | |
+ | | size: overall record size | |
+ | | ... | |
+ | +---------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | ... further data records ... |
+ +-------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ </programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Message payload</title>
+
+ <para>
+ When connecting to the bus, receivers request a memory pool of a given
+ size, large enough to carry all backlog of data enqueued for the
+ connection. The pool is internally backed by a shared memory file which
+ can be <function>mmap()</function>ed by the receiver. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Message payload must be described in items attached to a message when
+ it is sent. A receiver can access the payload by looking at the items
+ that are attached to a message in its pool. The following items are used.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_VEC</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This item references a piece of memory on the sender side which is
+ directly copied into the receiver's pool. This way, two peers can
+ exchange data by effectively doing a single-copy from one process
+ to another; the kernel will not buffer the data anywhere else.
+ This item is never found in a message received by a connection.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_OFF</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ This item is attached to messages on the receiving side and points
+ to a memory area inside the receiver's pool. The
+ <varname>offset</varname> variable in the item denotes the memory
+ location relative to the message itself.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_MEMFD</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Messages can reference <emphasis>memfd</emphasis> files which
+ contain the data. memfd files are tmpfs-backed files that allow
+ sealing of the content of the file, which prevents all writable
+ access to the file content.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Only memfds that have
+ <constant>(F_SEAL_SHRINK|F_SEAL_GROW|F_SEAL_WRITE|F_SEAL_SEAL)
+ </constant>
+ set are accepted as payload data, which enforces reliable passing of
+ data. The receiver can assume that neither the sender nor anyone
+ else can alter the content after the message is sent. If those
+ seals are not set on the memfd, the ioctl will fail with
+ <errorcode>-1</errorcode>, and <varname>errno</varname> will be
+ set to <constant>ETXTBUSY</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Messages can transport regular file descriptors via
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant>. This item carries an array
+ of <type>int</type> values in <varname>item.fd</varname>. The
+ maximum number of file descriptors in the item is
+ <constant>253</constant>, and only one item of this type is
+ accepted per message. All passed values must be valid file
+ descriptors; the open count of each file descriptors is increased
+ by installing it to the receiver's task. This item can only be
+ used for directed messages, not for broadcasts, and only to
+ remote peers that have opted-in for receiving file descriptors
+ at connection time (<constant>KDBUS_HELLO_ACCEPT_FD</constant>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The sender must not make any assumptions on the type in which data is
+ received by the remote peer. The kernel is free to re-pack multiple
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_VEC</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_MEMFD</constant> payloads. For instance, the
+ kernel may decide to merge multiple <constant>VECs</constant> into a
+ single <constant>VEC</constant>, inline <constant>MEMFD</constant>
+ payloads into memory, or merge all passed <constant>VECs</constant> into a
+ single <constant>MEMFD</constant>. However, the kernel preserves the order
+ of passed data. This means that the order of all <constant>VEC</constant>
+ and <constant>MEMFD</constant> items is not changed in respect to each
+ other. In other words: All passed <constant>VEC</constant> and
+ <constant>MEMFD</constant> data payloads are treated as a single stream
+ of data that may be received by the remote peer in a different set of
+ chunks than it was sent as.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Sending messages</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Messages are passed to the kernel with the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant> ioctl. Depending on the destination
+ address of the message, the kernel delivers the message to the specific
+ destination connection, or to some subset of all connections on the same
+ bus. Sending messages across buses is not possible. Messages are always
+ queued in the memory pool of the destination connection (see above).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant> ioctl uses a
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_send</type> to describe the message
+ transfer.
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd_send {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ __u64 msg_address;
+ struct kdbus_msg_info reply;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>Flags for message delivery</para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_SEND_SYNC_REPLY</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, all calls to kdbus are considered asynchronous,
+ non-blocking. However, as there are many use cases that need
+ to wait for a remote peer to answer a method call, there's a
+ way to send a message and wait for a reply in a synchronous
+ fashion. This is what the
+ <constant>KDBUS_SEND_SYNC_REPLY</constant> controls. The
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant> ioctl will block until the
+ reply has arrived, the timeout limit is reached, in case the
+ remote connection was shut down, or if interrupted by a signal
+ before any reply; see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>signal</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+
+ The offset of the reply message in the sender's pool is stored
+ in <varname>reply</varname> when the ioctl has returned without
+ error. Hence, there is no need for another
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant> ioctl or anything else to
+ receive the reply.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Request a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will fail with
+ <errorcode>-1</errorcode>, <varname>errno</varname>
+ is set to <constant>EPROTO</constant>.
+ Once the ioctl returned, the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that the kernel recognizes as
+ valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>msg_address</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ In this field, users have to provide a pointer to a message
+ (<type>struct kdbus_msg</type>) to send. See below for a
+ detailed description.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>reply</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Only used for synchronous replies. See description of
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_recv</type> for more details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The following items are currently recognized.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CANCEL_FD</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When this optional item is passed in, and the call is
+ executed as SYNC call, the passed in file descriptor can be
+ used as alternative cancellation point. The kernel will call
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>poll</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ on this file descriptor, and once it reports any incoming
+ bytes, the blocking send operation will be canceled; the
+ blocking, synchronous ioctl call will return
+ <errorcode>-1</errorcode>, and <varname>errno</varname> will
+ be set to <errorname>ECANCELED</errorname>.
+ Any type of file descriptor on which
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>poll</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ can be called on can be used as payload to this item; for
+ example, an eventfd can be used for this purpose, see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>eventfd</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ For asynchronous message sending, this item is allowed but
+ ignored.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The message referenced by the <varname>msg_address</varname> above has
+ the following layout.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_msg {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __s64 priority;
+ __u64 dst_id;
+ __u64 src_id;
+ __u64 payload_type;
+ __u64 cookie;
+ __u64 timeout_ns;
+ __u64 cookie_reply;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>Flags to describe message details.</para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_MSG_EXPECT_REPLY</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Expect a reply to this message from the remote peer. With
+ this bit set, the timeout_ns field must be set to a non-zero
+ number of nanoseconds in which the receiving peer is expected
+ to reply. If such a reply is not received in time, the sender
+ will be notified with a timeout message (see below). The
+ value must be an absolute value, in nanoseconds and based on
+ <constant>CLOCK_MONOTONIC</constant>.
+ </para><para>
+ For a message to be accepted as reply, it must be a direct
+ message to the original sender (not a broadcast and not a
+ signal message), and its
+ <varname>kdbus_msg.cookie_reply</varname> must match the
+ previous message's <varname>kdbus_msg.cookie</varname>.
+ </para><para>
+ Expected replies also temporarily open the policy of the
+ sending connection, so the other peer is allowed to respond
+ within the given time window.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_MSG_NO_AUTO_START</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ By default, when a message is sent to an activator
+ connection, the activator is notified and will start an
+ implementer. This flag inhibits that behavior. With this bit
+ set, and the remote being an activator, the ioctl will fail
+ with <varname>errno</varname> set to
+ <constant>EADDRNOTAVAIL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Requests a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will return
+ <errorcode>0</errorcode>, and the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that are valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>priority</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The priority of this message. Receiving messages (see below) may
+ optionally be constrained to messages of a minimal priority. This
+ allows for use cases where timing critical data is interleaved with
+ control data on the same connection. If unused, the priority field
+ should be set to <constant>0</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>dst_id</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The numeric ID of the destination connection, or
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_BROADCAST</constant>
+ (~0ULL) to address every peer on the bus, or
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_NAME</constant> (0) to look
+ it up dynamically from the bus' name registry.
+ In the latter case, an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_DST_NAME</constant> is mandatory.
+ Also see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ .
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>src_id</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Upon return of the ioctl, this member will contain the sending
+ connection's numerical ID. Should be 0 at send time.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>payload_type</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Type of the payload in the actual data records. Currently, only
+ <constant>KDBUS_PAYLOAD_DBUS</constant> is accepted as input value
+ of this field. When receiving messages that are generated by the
+ kernel (notifications), this field will contain
+ <constant>KDBUS_PAYLOAD_KERNEL</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>cookie</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Cookie of this message, for later recognition. Also, when replying
+ to a message (see above), the <varname>cookie_reply</varname>
+ field must match this value.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>timeout_ns</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ If the message sent requires a reply from the remote peer (see above),
+ this field contains the timeout in absolute nanoseconds based on
+ <constant>CLOCK_MONOTONIC</constant>. Also see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>clock_gettime</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>cookie_reply</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ If the message sent is a reply to another message, this field must
+ match the cookie of the formerly received message.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A dynamically sized list of items to contain additional information.
+ The following items are expected/valid:
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_VEC</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_MEMFD</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Actual data records containing the payload. See section
+ "Message payload".
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_FILTER</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Bloom filter for matches (see below).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ITEM_DST_NAME</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Well-known name to send this message to. Required if
+ <varname>dst_id</varname> is set to
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_NAME</constant>.
+ If a connection holding the given name can't be found,
+ the ioctl will fail with <varname>errno</varname> set to
+ <constant>ESRCH</constant> is returned.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ For messages to a unique name (ID), this item is optional. If
+ present, the kernel will make sure the name owner matches the
+ given unique name. This allows programs to tie the message
+ sending to the condition that a name is currently owned by a
+ certain unique name.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The message will be augmented by the requested metadata items when
+ queued into the receiver's pool. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on metadata.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Receiving messages</title>
+
+ <para>
+ Messages are received by the client with the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant> ioctl. The endpoint file of the bus
+ supports <function>poll()/epoll()/select()</function>; when new messages
+ are available on the connection's file descriptor,
+ <constant>POLLIN</constant> is reported. For compatibility reasons,
+ <constant>POLLOUT</constant> is always reported as well. Note, however,
+ that the latter does not guarantee that a message can in fact be sent, as
+ this depends on how many pending messages the receiver has in its pool.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ With the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant> ioctl, a
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_recv</type> is used.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd_recv {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ __s64 priority;
+ __u64 dropped_msgs;
+ struct kdbus_msg_info msg;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>Flags to control the receive command.</para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_RECV_PEEK</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Just return the location of the next message. Do not install
+ file descriptors or anything else. This is usually used to
+ determine the sender of the next queued message.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_RECV_DROP</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Drop the next message without doing anything else with it,
+ and free the pool slice. This a short-cut for
+ <constant>KDBUS_RECV_PEEK</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_RECV_USE_PRIORITY</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Dequeue the messages ordered by their priority, and filtering
+ them with the priority field (see below).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Request a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will fail with
+ <errorcode>-1</errorcode>, <varname>errno</varname>
+ is set to <constant>EPROTO</constant>.
+ Once the ioctl returned, the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that the kernel recognizes as
+ valid for this command.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. If the <varname>dropped_msgs</varname>
+ field is non-zero, <constant>KDBUS_RECV_RETURN_DROPPED_MSGS</constant>
+ is set. If a file descriptor could not be installed, the
+ <constant>KDBUS_RECV_RETURN_INCOMPLETE_FDS</constant> flag is set.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>priority</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ With <constant>KDBUS_RECV_USE_PRIORITY</constant> set in
+ <varname>flags</varname>, messages will be dequeued ordered by their
+ priority, starting with the highest value. Also, messages will be
+ filtered by the value given in this field, so the returned message
+ will at least have the requested priority. If no such message is
+ waiting in the queue, the ioctl will fail, and
+ <varname>errno</varname> will be set to <constant>EAGAIN</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>dropped_msgs</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Whenever a message with <constant>KDBUS_MSG_SIGNAL</constant> is sent
+ but cannot be queued on a peer (e.g., as it contains FDs but the peer
+ does not support FDs, or there is no space left in the peer's pool)
+ the 'dropped_msgs' counter of the peer is incremented. On the next
+ RECV ioctl, the 'dropped_msgs' field is copied into the ioctl struct
+ and cleared on the peer. If it was non-zero, the
+ <constant>KDBUS_RECV_RETURN_DROPPED_MSGS</constant> flag will be set
+ in <varname>return_flags</varname>. Note that this will only happen
+ if the ioctl succeeded or failed with <constant>EAGAIN</constant>. In
+ other error cases, the 'dropped_msgs' field of the peer is left
+ untouched.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>msg</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Embedded struct containing information on the received message when
+ this command succeeded (see below).
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Items to specify further details for the receive command.
+ Currently unused, and all items will be rejected with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Both <type>struct kdbus_cmd_recv</type> and
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_send</type> embed
+ <type>struct kdbus_msg_info</type>.
+ For the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant> ioctl, it is used to catch
+ synchronous replies, if one was requested, and is unused otherwise.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_msg_info {
+ __u64 offset;
+ __u64 msg_size;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>offset</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Upon return of the ioctl, this field contains the offset in the
+ receiver's memory pool. The memory must be freed with
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant>. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>msg_size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Upon successful return of the ioctl, this field contains the size of
+ the allocated slice at offset <varname>offset</varname>.
+ It is the combination of the size of the stored
+ <type>struct kdbus_msg</type> object plus all appended VECs.
+ You can use it in combination with <varname>offset</varname> to map
+ a single message, instead of mapping the entire pool. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for further details.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Kernel-provided return flags. Currently, the following flags are
+ defined.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_RECV_RETURN_INCOMPLETE_FDS</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The message contained memfds or file descriptors, and the
+ kernel failed to install one or more of them at receive time.
+ Most probably that happened because the maximum number of
+ file descriptors for the receiver's task were exceeded.
+ In such cases, the message is still delivered, so this is not
+ a fatal condition. File descriptors numbers inside the
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant> item or memfd files
+ referenced by <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_MEMFD</constant>
+ items which could not be installed will be set to
+ <constant>-1</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Unless <constant>KDBUS_RECV_DROP</constant> was passed, the
+ <varname>offset</varname> field contains the location of the new message
+ inside the receiver's pool after the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant>
+ ioctl was employed. The message is stored as <type>struct kdbus_msg</type>
+ at this offset, and can be interpreted with the semantics described above.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Also, if the connection allowed for file descriptor to be passed
+ (<constant>KDBUS_HELLO_ACCEPT_FD</constant>), and if the message contained
+ any, they will be installed into the receiving process when the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant> ioctl is called.
+ <emphasis>memfds</emphasis> may always be part of the message payload.
+ The receiving task is obliged to close all file descriptors appropriately
+ once no longer needed. If <constant>KDBUS_RECV_PEEK</constant> is set, no
+ file descriptors are installed. This allows for peeking at a message,
+ looking at its metadata only and dropping it via
+ <constant>KDBUS_RECV_DROP</constant>, without installing any of the file
+ descriptors into the receiving process.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The caller is obliged to call the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant>
+ ioctl with the returned offset when the memory is no longer needed.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Notifications</title>
+ <para>
+ A kernel notification is a regular kdbus message with the following
+ details.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem><para>
+ kdbus_msg.src_id == <constant>KDBUS_SRC_ID_KERNEL</constant>
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ kdbus_msg.dst_id == <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_BROADCAST</constant>
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ kdbus_msg.payload_type == <constant>KDBUS_PAYLOAD_KERNEL</constant>
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Has exactly one of the items attached that are described below.
+ </para></listitem>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Always has a timestamp item (<constant>KDBUS_ITEM_TIMESTAMP</constant>)
+ attached.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ The kernel will notify its users of the following events.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem><para>
+ When connection <emphasis>A</emphasis> is terminated while connection
+ <emphasis>B</emphasis> is waiting for a reply from it, connection
+ <emphasis>B</emphasis> is notified with a message with an item of
+ type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_REPLY_DEAD</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ When connection <emphasis>A</emphasis> does not receive a reply from
+ connection <emphasis>B</emphasis> within the specified timeout window,
+ connection <emphasis>A</emphasis> will receive a message with an
+ item of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_REPLY_TIMEOUT</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ When an ordinary connection (not a monitor) is created on or removed
+ from a bus, messages with an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID_ADD</constant> or
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ID_REMOVE</constant>, respectively, are delivered
+ to all bus members that match these messages through their match
+ database. Eavesdroppers (monitor connections) do not cause such
+ notifications to be sent. They are invisible on the bus.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ When a connection gains or loses ownership of a name, messages with an
+ item of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_ADD</constant>,
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_REMOVE</constant> or
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME_CHANGE</constant> are delivered to all bus
+ members that match these messages through their match database.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Return value</title>
+ <para>
+ On success, all mentioned ioctl commands return <errorcode>0</errorcode>;
+ on error, <errorcode>-1</errorcode> is returned, and
+ <varname>errno</varname> is set to indicate the error.
+ If the issued ioctl is illegal for the file descriptor used,
+ <varname>errno</varname> will be set to <constant>ENOTTY</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EOPNOTSUPP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The connection is not an ordinary connection, or the passed
+ file descriptors in <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant> item are
+ either kdbus handles or unix domain sockets. Both are currently
+ unsupported.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The submitted payload type is
+ <constant>KDBUS_PAYLOAD_KERNEL</constant>,
+ <constant>KDBUS_MSG_EXPECT_REPLY</constant> was set without timeout
+ or cookie values, <constant>KDBUS_SEND_SYNC_REPLY</constant> was
+ set without <constant>KDBUS_MSG_EXPECT_REPLY</constant>, an invalid
+ item was supplied, <constant>src_id</constant> was non-zero and was
+ different from the current connection's ID, a supplied memfd had a
+ size of 0, or a string was not properly null-terminated.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ENOTUNIQ</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The supplied destination is
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_BROADCAST</constant> and either
+ file descriptors were passed, or
+ <constant>KDBUS_MSG_EXPECT_REPLY</constant> was set,
+ or a timeout was given.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>E2BIG</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Too many items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EMSGSIZE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The size of the message header and items or the payload vector
+ is excessive.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EEXIST</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Multiple <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant>,
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_BLOOM_FILTER</constant> or
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_DST_NAME</constant> items were supplied.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EBADF</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The supplied <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant> or
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PAYLOAD_MEMFD</constant> items
+ contained an illegal file descriptor.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EMEDIUMTYPE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The supplied memfd is not a sealed kdbus memfd.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EMFILE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Too many file descriptors inside a
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_FDS</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EBADMSG</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ An item had illegal size, both a <constant>dst_id</constant> and a
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_DST_NAME</constant> was given, or both a name
+ and a bloom filter was given.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ETXTBSY</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The supplied kdbus memfd file cannot be sealed or the seal
+ was removed, because it is shared with other processes or
+ still mapped with
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>mmap</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ECOMM</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ A peer does not accept the file descriptors addressed to it.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EFAULT</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The supplied bloom filter size was not 64-bit aligned, or supplied
+ memory could not be accessed by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EDOM</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The supplied bloom filter size did not match the bloom filter
+ size of the bus.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EDESTADDRREQ</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>dst_id</constant> was set to
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_NAME</constant>, but no
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_DST_NAME</constant> was attached.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ESRCH</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The name to look up was not found in the name registry.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EADDRNOTAVAIL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_MSG_NO_AUTO_START</constant> was given but the
+ destination connection is an activator.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ENXIO</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The passed numeric destination connection ID couldn't be found,
+ or is not connected.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ECONNRESET</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The destination connection is no longer active.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ETIMEDOUT</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Timeout while synchronously waiting for a reply.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINTR</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Interrupted system call while synchronously waiting for a reply.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EPIPE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ When sending a message, a synchronous reply from the receiving
+ connection was expected but the connection died before answering.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ENOBUFS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Too many pending messages on the receiver side.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EREMCHG</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Both a well-known name and a unique name (ID) was given, but
+ the name is not currently owned by that connection.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EXFULL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The memory pool of the receiver is full.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EREMOTEIO</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ While synchronously waiting for a reply, the remote peer
+ failed with an I/O error.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EOPNOTSUPP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The connection is not an ordinary connection, or the passed
+ file descriptors are either kdbus handles or unix domain
+ sockets. Both are currently unsupported.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Invalid flags or offset.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EAGAIN</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ No message found in the queue.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>clock_gettime</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>ioctl</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>poll</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>select</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>epoll</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>eventfd</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>memfd_create</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.name.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.name.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..3f5f6a6c5
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.name.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,711 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus.name">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.name</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.name</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.name</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus.name</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ Each
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ instantiates a name registry to resolve well-known names into unique
+ connection IDs for message delivery. The registry will be queried when a
+ message is sent with <varname>kdbus_msg.dst_id</varname> set to
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_NAME</constant>, or when a registry dump is
+ requested with <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_LIST</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ All of the below is subject to policy rules for <emphasis>SEE</emphasis>
+ and <emphasis>OWN</emphasis> permissions. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Name validity</title>
+ <para>
+ A name has to comply with the following rules in order to be considered
+ valid.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name has two or more elements separated by a
+ '<literal>.</literal>' (period) character.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ All elements must contain at least one character.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Each element must only contain the ASCII characters
+ <literal>[A-Z][a-z][0-9]_</literal> and must not begin with a
+ digit.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name must contain at least one '<literal>.</literal>' (period)
+ character (and thus at least two elements).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name must not begin with a '<literal>.</literal>' (period)
+ character.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name must not exceed <constant>255</constant> characters in
+ length.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Acquiring a name</title>
+ <para>
+ To acquire a name, a client uses the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_ACQUIRE</constant> ioctl with
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd</type> as argument.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>Flags to control details in the name acquisition.</para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_NAME_REPLACE_EXISTING</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Acquiring a name that is already present usually fails,
+ unless this flag is set in the call, and
+ <constant>KDBUS_NAME_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT</constant> (see below)
+ was set when the current owner of the name acquired it, or
+ if the current owner is an activator connection (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_NAME_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Allow other connections to take over this name. When this
+ happens, the former owner of the connection will be notified
+ of the name loss.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_NAME_QUEUE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A name that is already acquired by a connection can not be
+ acquired again (unless the
+ <constant>KDBUS_NAME_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT</constant> flag was
+ set during acquisition; see above).
+ However, a connection can put itself in a queue of
+ connections waiting for the name to be released. Once that
+ happens, the first connection in that queue becomes the new
+ owner and is notified accordingly.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Request a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will fail with
+ <errorcode>-1</errorcode>, and <varname>errno</varname>
+ is set to <constant>EPROTO</constant>.
+ Once the ioctl returned, the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that the kernel recognizes as
+ valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently, the following may be
+ returned by the kernel.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_NAME_IN_QUEUE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The name was not acquired yet, but the connection was
+ placed in the queue of peers waiting for the name.
+ This can only happen if <constant>KDBUS_NAME_QUEUE</constant>
+ was set in the <varname>flags</varname> member (see above).
+ The connection will receive a name owner change notification
+ once the current owner has given up the name and its
+ ownership was transferred.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Items to submit the name. Currently, one item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> is expected and allowed, and
+ the contained string must be a valid bus name.
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant> may be used to probe for
+ valid item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for a detailed description of how this item is used.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <errorname>>EINVAL</errorname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Releasing a name</title>
+ <para>
+ A connection may release a name explicitly with the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_RELEASE</constant> ioctl. If the connection was
+ an implementer of an activatable name, its pending messages are moved
+ back to the activator. If there are any connections queued up as waiters
+ for the name, the first one in the queue (the oldest entry) will become
+ the new owner. The same happens implicitly for all names once a
+ connection terminates. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on connections.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_RELEASE</constant> ioctl uses the same data
+ structure as the acquisition call
+ (<constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_ACQUIRE</constant>),
+ but with slightly different field usage.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags to the command. Currently unused.
+ <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> is accepted to probe for
+ valid flags. If set, the ioctl will return <errorcode>0</errorcode>,
+ and the <varname>flags</varname> field is set to
+ <constant>0</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Items to submit the name. Currently, one item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> is expected and allowed, and
+ the contained string must be a valid bus name.
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant> may be used to probe for
+ valid item types. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for a detailed description of how this item is used.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Dumping the name registry</title>
+ <para>
+ A connection may request a complete or filtered dump of currently active
+ bus names with the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_LIST</constant> ioctl, which
+ takes a <type>struct kdbus_cmd_list</type> as argument.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd_list {
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ __u64 offset;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Any combination of flags to specify which names should be dumped.
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_LIST_UNIQUE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ List the unique (numeric) IDs of the connection, whether it
+ owns a name or not.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_LIST_NAMES</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ List well-known names stored in the database which are
+ actively owned by a real connection (not an activator).
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_LIST_ACTIVATORS</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ List names that are owned by an activator.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_LIST_QUEUED</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ List connections that are not yet owning a name but are
+ waiting for it to become available.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Request a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will fail with
+ <errorcode>-1</errorcode>, and <varname>errno</varname>
+ is set to <constant>EPROTO</constant>.
+ Once the ioctl returned, the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that the kernel recognizes as
+ valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>offset</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ When the ioctl returns successfully, the offset to the name registry
+ dump inside the connection's pool will be stored in this field.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The returned list of names is stored in a <type>struct kdbus_list</type>
+ that in turn contains an array of type <type>struct kdbus_info</type>,
+ The array-size in bytes is given as <varname>list_size</varname>.
+ The fields inside <type>struct kdbus_info</type> is described next.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_info {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 id;
+ __u64 flags;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>id</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The owning connection's unique ID.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The flags of the owning connection.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Items containing the actual name. Currently, one item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_OWNED_NAME</constant> will be attached,
+ including the name's flags. In that item, the flags field of the
+ name may carry the following bits:
+ </para>
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_NAME_ALLOW_REPLACEMENT</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Other connections are allowed to take over this name from the
+ connection that owns it.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_NAME_IN_QUEUE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When retrieving a list of currently acquired names in the
+ registry, this flag indicates whether the connection
+ actually owns the name or is currently waiting for it to
+ become available.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_NAME_ACTIVATOR</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An activator connection owns a name as a placeholder for an
+ implementer, which is started on demand by programs as soon
+ as the first message arrives. There's some more information
+ on this topic in
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ .
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ In contrast to
+ <constant>KDBUS_NAME_REPLACE_EXISTING</constant>,
+ when a name is taken over from an activator connection, all
+ the messages that have been queued in the activator
+ connection will be moved over to the new owner. The activator
+ connection will still be tracked for the name and will take
+ control again if the implementer connection terminates.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This flag can not be used when acquiring a name, but is
+ implicitly set through <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>
+ with <constant>KDBUS_HELLO_ACTIVATOR</constant> set in
+ <varname>kdbus_cmd_hello.conn_flags</varname>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Requests a set of valid flags for this ioctl. When this bit is
+ set, no action is taken; the ioctl will return
+ <errorcode>0</errorcode>, and the <varname>flags</varname>
+ field will have all bits set that are valid for this command.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> bit will be
+ cleared by the operation.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ The returned buffer must be freed with the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> ioctl when the user is finished with
+ it. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Return value</title>
+ <para>
+ On success, all mentioned ioctl commands return <errorcode>0</errorcode>;
+ on error, <errorcode>-1</errorcode> is returned, and
+ <varname>errno</varname> is set to indicate the error.
+ If the issued ioctl is illegal for the file descriptor used,
+ <varname>errno</varname> will be set to <constant>ENOTTY</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_ACQUIRE</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Illegal command flags, illegal name provided, or an activator
+ tried to acquire a second name.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EPERM</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Policy prohibited name ownership.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EALREADY</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Connection already owns that name.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EEXIST</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The name already exists and can not be taken over.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>E2BIG</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The maximum number of well-known names per connection is exhausted.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_RELEASE</constant>
+ may fail with the following errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Invalid command flags, or invalid name provided.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ESRCH</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Name is not found in the registry.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EADDRINUSE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Name is owned by a different connection and can't be released.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_LIST</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Invalid command flags
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ENOBUFS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ No available memory in the connection's pool.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.policy.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.policy.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..673241638
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.policy.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,406 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus.policy">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.policy</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.policy</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.policy</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus policy</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A kdbus policy restricts the possibilities of connections to own, see and
+ talk to well-known names. A policy can be associated with a bus (through a
+ policy holder connection) or a custom endpoint. kdbus stores its policy
+ information in a database that can be accessed through the following
+ ioctl commands:
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ When creating, or updating, a policy holder connection. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant></term>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_UPDATE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ When creating, or updating, a bus custom endpoint. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ In all cases, the name and policy access information is stored in items
+ of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant>. For this transport, the
+ following rules apply.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An item of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> must be followed
+ by at least one <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant> item.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An item of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> can be followed
+ by an arbitrary number of
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant> items.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ An arbitrary number of groups of names and access levels can be given.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ Names passed in items of type <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NAME</constant> must
+ comply to the rules of valid kdbus.name. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information.
+
+ The payload of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS</constant> is defined by the following
+ struct. For more information on the layout of items, please refer to
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+struct kdbus_policy_access {
+ __u64 type;
+ __u64 access;
+ __u64 id;
+};
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>type</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ One of the following.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_POLICY_ACCESS_USER</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Grant access to a user with the UID stored in the
+ <varname>id</varname> field.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_POLICY_ACCESS_GROUP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Grant access to a user with the GID stored in the
+ <varname>id</varname> field.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_POLICY_ACCESS_WORLD</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Grant access to everyone. The <varname>id</varname> field
+ is ignored.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>access</varname></term>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ The access to grant. One of the following.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_POLICY_SEE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Allow the name to be seen.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_POLICY_TALK</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Allow the name to be talked to.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_POLICY_OWN</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Allow the name to be owned.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>id</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ For <constant>KDBUS_POLICY_ACCESS_USER</constant>, stores the UID.
+ For <constant>KDBUS_POLICY_ACCESS_GROUP</constant>, stores the GID.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ All endpoints of buses have an empty policy database by default.
+ Therefore, unless policy rules are added, all operations will also be
+ denied by default. Also see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Wildcard names</title>
+ <para>
+ Policy holder connections may upload names that contain the wildcard
+ suffix (<literal>".*"</literal>). Such a policy entry is effective for
+ every well-known name that extends the provided name by exactly one more
+ level.
+
+ For example, the name <literal>foo.bar.*</literal> matches both
+ <literal>"foo.bar.baz"</literal> and
+ <literal>"foo.bar.bazbaz"</literal> are, but not
+ <literal>"foo.bar.baz.baz"</literal>.
+
+ This allows connections to take control over multiple names that the
+ policy holder doesn't need to know about when uploading the policy.
+
+ Such wildcard entries are not allowed for custom endpoints.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Privileged connections</title>
+ <para>
+ The policy database is overruled when action is taken by a privileged
+ connection. Please refer to
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information on what makes a connection privileged.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Examples</title>
+ <para>
+ For instance, a set of policy rules may look like this:
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting>
+KDBUS_ITEM_NAME: str='org.foo.bar'
+KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS: type=USER, access=OWN, ID=1000
+KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS: type=USER, access=TALK, ID=1001
+KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS: type=WORLD, access=SEE
+
+KDBUS_ITEM_NAME: str='org.blah.baz'
+KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS: type=USER, access=OWN, ID=0
+KDBUS_ITEM_POLICY_ACCESS: type=WORLD, access=TALK
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>
+ That means that 'org.foo.bar' may only be owned by UID 1000, but every
+ user on the bus is allowed to see the name. However, only UID 1001 may
+ actually send a message to the connection and receive a reply from it.
+
+ The second rule allows 'org.blah.baz' to be owned by UID 0 only, but
+ every user may talk to it.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>TALK access and multiple well-known names per connection</title>
+ <para>
+ Note that TALK access is checked against all names of a connection. For
+ example, if a connection owns both <constant>'org.foo.bar'</constant> and
+ <constant>'org.blah.baz'</constant>, and the policy database allows
+ <constant>'org.blah.baz'</constant> to be talked to by WORLD, then this
+ permission is also granted to <constant>'org.foo.bar'</constant>. That
+ might sound illogical, but after all, we allow messages to be directed to
+ either the ID or a well-known name, and policy is applied to the
+ connection, not the name. In other words, the effective TALK policy for a
+ connection is the most permissive of all names the connection owns.
+
+ For broadcast messages, the receiver needs TALK permissions to the sender
+ to receive the broadcast.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Both the endpoint and the bus policy databases are consulted to allow
+ name registry listing, owning a well-known name and message delivery.
+ If either one fails, the operation is failed with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EPERM</constant>.
+
+ For best practices, connections that own names with a restricted TALK
+ access should not install matches. This avoids cases where the sent
+ message may pass the bloom filter due to false-positives and may also
+ satisfy the policy rules.
+
+ Also see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Implicit policies</title>
+ <para>
+ Depending on the type of the endpoint, a set of implicit rules that
+ override installed policies might be enforced.
+
+ On default endpoints, the following set is enforced and checked before
+ any user-supplied policy is checked.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Privileged connections always override any installed policy. Those
+ connections could easily install their own policies, so there is no
+ reason to enforce installed policies.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Connections can always talk to connections of the same user. This
+ includes broadcast messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ Custom endpoints have stricter policies. The following rules apply:
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Policy rules are always enforced, even if the connection is a
+ privileged connection.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Policy rules are always enforced for <constant>TALK</constant> access,
+ even if both ends are running under the same user. This includes
+ broadcast messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ To restrict the set of names that can be seen, endpoint policies can
+ install <constant>SEE</constant> policies.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.pool.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.pool.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..a9e16f196
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.pool.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,326 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus.pool">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus.pool</title>
+ <productname>kdbus.pool</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus.pool</refname>
+ <refpurpose>kdbus pool</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ A pool for data received from the kernel is installed for every
+ <emphasis>connection</emphasis> of the <emphasis>bus</emphasis>, and
+ is sized according to the information stored in the
+ <varname>pool_size</varname> member of <type>struct kdbus_cmd_hello</type>
+ when <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> is employed. Internally, the
+ pool is segmented into <emphasis>slices</emphasis>, each referenced by its
+ <emphasis>offset</emphasis> in the pool, expressed in <type>bytes</type>.
+ See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more information about <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The pool is written to by the kernel when one of the following
+ <emphasis>ioctls</emphasis> is issued:
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ ... to receive details about the bus the connection was made to
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ ... to receive a message
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_CMD_LIST</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ ... to dump the name registry
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ ... to retrieve information on a connection
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_CREATOR_INFO</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ ... to retrieve information about a connection's bus creator
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ The <varname>offset</varname> fields returned by either one of the
+ aforementioned ioctls describe offsets inside the pool. In order to make
+ the slice available for subsequent calls,
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> has to be called on that offset
+ (see below). Otherwise, the pool will fill up, and the connection won't
+ be able to receive any more information through its pool.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Pool slice allocation</title>
+ <para>
+ Pool slices are allocated by the kernel in order to report information
+ back to a task, such as messages, returned name list etc.
+ Allocation of pool slices cannot be initiated by userspace. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for examples of commands that use the <emphasis>pool</emphasis> to
+ return data.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Accessing the pool memory</title>
+ <para>
+ Memory in the pool is read-only for userspace and may only be written
+ to by the kernel. To read from the pool memory, the caller is expected to
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>mmap</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ the buffer into its task, like this:
+ </para>
+ <programlisting>
+uint8_t *buf = mmap(NULL, size, PROT_READ, MAP_SHARED, conn_fd, 0);
+ </programlisting>
+
+ <para>
+ In order to map the entire pool, the <varname>size</varname> parameter in
+ the example above should be set to the value of the
+ <varname>pool_size</varname> member of
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_hello</type> when
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> was employed to create the
+ connection (see above).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The <emphasis>file descriptor</emphasis> used to map the memory must be
+ the one that was used to create the <emphasis>connection</emphasis>.
+ In other words, the one that was used to call
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Alternatively, instead of mapping the entire pool buffer, only parts
+ of it can be mapped. Every kdbus command that returns an
+ <emphasis>offset</emphasis> (see above) also reports a
+ <emphasis>size</emphasis> along with it, so programs can be written
+ in a way that it only maps portions of the pool to access a specific
+ <emphasis>slice</emphasis>.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ When access to the pool memory is no longer needed, programs should
+ call <function>munmap()</function> on the pointer returned by
+ <function>mmap()</function>.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Freeing pool slices</title>
+ <para>
+ The <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> ioctl is used to free a slice
+ inside the pool, describing an offset that was returned in an
+ <varname>offset</varname> field of another ioctl struct.
+ The <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> command takes a
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_free</type> as argument.
+ </para>
+
+<programlisting>
+struct kdbus_cmd_free {
+ __u64 size;
+ __u64 flags;
+ __u64 return_flags;
+ __u64 offset;
+ struct kdbus_item items[0];
+};
+</programlisting>
+
+ <para>The fields in this struct are described below.</para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>size</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The overall size of the struct, including its items.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Currently unused.
+ <constant>KDBUS_FLAG_NEGOTIATE</constant> is accepted to probe for
+ valid flags. If set, the ioctl will return <errorcode>0</errorcode>,
+ and the <varname>flags</varname> field is set to
+ <constant>0</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>return_flags</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Flags returned by the kernel. Currently unused and always set to
+ <constant>0</constant> by the kernel.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>offset</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The offset to free, as returned by other ioctls that allocated
+ memory for returned information.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><varname>items</varname></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Items to specify further details for the receive command.
+ Currently unused.
+ Unrecognized items are rejected, and the ioctl will fail with
+ <varname>errno</varname> set to <constant>EINVAL</constant>.
+ All items except for
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_NEGOTIATE</constant> (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ ) will be rejected.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Return value</title>
+ <para>
+ On success, all mentioned ioctl commands return <errorcode>0</errorcode>;
+ on error, <errorcode>-1</errorcode> is returned, and
+ <varname>errno</varname> is set to indicate the error.
+ If the issued ioctl is illegal for the file descriptor used,
+ <varname>errno</varname> will be set to <constant>ENOTTY</constant>.
+ </para>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> may fail with the following
+ errors
+ </title>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>ENXIO</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ No pool slice found at given offset.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Invalid flags provided.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>EINVAL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ The offset is valid, but the user is not allowed to free the slice.
+ This happens, for example, if the offset was retrieved with
+ <constant>KDBUS_RECV_PEEK</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>mmap</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>munmap</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.xml b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.xml
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..d8e7400df
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/kdbus.xml
@@ -0,0 +1,1012 @@
+<?xml version='1.0'?> <!--*-nxml-*-->
+<!DOCTYPE refentry PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DocBook XML V4.2//EN"
+ "http://www.oasis-open.org/docbook/xml/4.2/docbookx.dtd">
+
+<refentry id="kdbus">
+
+ <refentryinfo>
+ <title>kdbus</title>
+ <productname>kdbus</productname>
+ </refentryinfo>
+
+ <refmeta>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </refmeta>
+
+ <refnamediv>
+ <refname>kdbus</refname>
+ <refpurpose>Kernel Message Bus</refpurpose>
+ </refnamediv>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Synopsis</title>
+ <para>
+ kdbus is an inter-process communication bus system controlled by the
+ kernel. It provides user-space with an API to create buses and send
+ unicast and multicast messages to one, or many, peers connected to the
+ same bus. It does not enforce any layout on the transmitted data, but
+ only provides the transport layer used for message interchange between
+ peers.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ This set of man-pages gives a comprehensive overview of the kernel-level
+ API, with all ioctl commands, associated structs and bit masks. However,
+ most people will not use this API level directly, but rather let one of
+ the high-level abstraction libraries help them integrate D-Bus
+ functionality into their applications.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Description</title>
+ <para>
+ kdbus provides a pseudo filesystem called <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis>,
+ which is usually mounted on <filename>/sys/fs/kdbus</filename>. Bus
+ primitives can be accessed as files and sub-directories underneath this
+ mount-point. Any advanced operations are done via
+ <function>ioctl()</function> on files created by
+ <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis>. Multiple mount-points of
+ <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis> are independent of each other. This allows
+ namespacing of kdbus by mounting a new instance of
+ <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis> in a new mount-namespace. kdbus calls these
+ mount instances domains and each bus belongs to exactly one domain.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ kdbus was designed as a transport layer for D-Bus, but is in no way
+ limited, nor controlled by the D-Bus protocol specification. The D-Bus
+ protocol is one possible application layer on top of kdbus.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ For the general D-Bus protocol specification, its payload format, its
+ marshaling, and its communication semantics, please refer to the
+ <ulink url="http://dbus.freedesktop.org/doc/dbus-specification.html">
+ D-Bus specification</ulink>.
+ </para>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Terminology</title>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Domain</title>
+ <para>
+ A domain is a <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis> mount-point containing all
+ the bus primitives. Each domain is independent, and separate domains
+ do not affect each other.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Bus</title>
+ <para>
+ A bus is a named object inside a domain. Clients exchange messages
+ over a bus. Multiple buses themselves have no connection to each other;
+ messages can only be exchanged on the same bus. The default endpoint of
+ a bus, to which clients establish connections, is the "bus" file
+ /sys/fs/kdbus/&lt;bus name&gt;/bus.
+ Common operating system setups create one "system bus" per system,
+ and one "user bus" for every logged-in user. Applications or services
+ may create their own private buses. The kernel driver does not
+ distinguish between different bus types, they are all handled the same
+ way. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Endpoint</title>
+ <para>
+ An endpoint provides a file to talk to a bus. Opening an endpoint
+ creates a new connection to the bus to which the endpoint belongs. All
+ endpoints have unique names and are accessible as files underneath the
+ directory of a bus, e.g., /sys/fs/kdbus/&lt;bus&gt;/&lt;endpoint&gt;
+ Every bus has a default endpoint called "bus".
+ A bus can optionally offer additional endpoints with custom names
+ to provide restricted access to the bus. Custom endpoints carry
+ additional policy which can be used to create sandboxes with
+ locked-down, limited, filtered access to a bus. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Connection</title>
+ <para>
+ A connection to a bus is created by opening an endpoint file of a
+ bus. Every ordinary client connection has a unique identifier on the
+ bus and can address messages to every other connection on the same
+ bus by using the peer's connection ID as the destination. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Pool</title>
+ <para>
+ Each connection allocates a piece of shmem-backed memory that is
+ used to receive messages and answers to ioctl commands from the kernel.
+ It is never used to send anything to the kernel. In order to access that
+ memory, an application must mmap() it into its address space. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Well-known Name</title>
+ <para>
+ A connection can, in addition to its implicit unique connection ID,
+ request the ownership of a textual well-known name. Well-known names are
+ noted in reverse-domain notation, such as com.example.service1. A
+ connection that offers a service on a bus is usually reached by its
+ well-known name. An analogy of connection ID and well-known name is an
+ IP address and a DNS name associated with that address. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Message</title>
+ <para>
+ Connections can exchange messages with other connections by addressing
+ the peers with their connection ID or well-known name. A message
+ consists of a message header with information on how to route the
+ message, and the message payload, which is a logical byte stream of
+ arbitrary size. Messages can carry additional file descriptors to be
+ passed from one connection to another, just like passing file
+ descriptors over UNIX domain sockets. Every connection can specify which
+ set of metadata the kernel should attach to the message when it is
+ delivered to the receiving connection. Metadata contains information
+ like: system time stamps, UID, GID, TID, proc-starttime, well-known
+ names, process comm, process exe, process argv, cgroup, capabilities,
+ seclabel, audit session, loginuid and the connection's human-readable
+ name. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Item</title>
+ <para>
+ The API of kdbus implements the notion of items, submitted through and
+ returned by most ioctls, and stored inside data structures in the
+ connection's pool. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Broadcast, signal, filter, match</title>
+ <para>
+ Signals are messages that a receiver opts in for by installing a blob of
+ bytes, called a 'match'. Signal messages must always carry a
+ counter-part blob, called a 'filter', and signals are only delivered to
+ peers which have a match that white-lists the message's filter. Senders
+ of signal messages can use either a single connection ID as receiver,
+ or the special connection ID
+ <constant>KDBUS_DST_ID_BROADCAST</constant> to potentially send it to
+ all connections of a bus, following the logic described above. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ and
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Policy</title>
+ <para>
+ A policy is a set of rules that define which connections can see, talk
+ to, or register a well-known name on the bus. A policy is attached to
+ buses and custom endpoints, and modified by policy holder connections or
+ owners of custom endpoints. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.policy</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Privileged bus users</title>
+ <para>
+ A user connecting to the bus is considered privileged if it is either
+ the creator of the bus, or if it has the CAP_IPC_OWNER capability flag
+ set. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Bus Layout</title>
+
+ <para>
+ A <emphasis>bus</emphasis> provides and defines an environment that peers
+ can connect to for message interchange. A bus is created via the kdbus
+ control interface and can be modified by the bus creator. It applies the
+ policy that control all bus operations. The bus creator itself does not
+ participate as a peer. To establish a peer
+ <emphasis>connection</emphasis>, you have to open one of the
+ <emphasis>endpoints</emphasis> of a bus. Each bus provides a default
+ endpoint, but further endpoints can be created on-demand. Endpoints are
+ used to apply additional policies for all connections on this endpoint.
+ Thus, they provide additional filters to further restrict access of
+ specific connections to the bus.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ Following, you can see an example bus layout:
+ </para>
+
+ <programlisting><![CDATA[
+ Bus Creator
+ |
+ |
+ +-----+
+ | Bus |
+ +-----+
+ |
+ __________________/ \__________________
+ / \
+ | |
+ +----------+ +----------+
+ | Endpoint | | Endpoint |
+ +----------+ +----------+
+ _________/|\_________ _________/|\_________
+ / | \ / | \
+ | | | | | |
+ | | | | | |
+ Connection Connection Connection Connection Connection Connection
+ ]]></programlisting>
+
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Data structures and interconnections</title>
+ <programlisting><![CDATA[
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ | Domain (Mount Point) |
+ | /sys/fs/kdbus/control |
+ | +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | | Bus (System Bus) | |
+ | | /sys/fs/kdbus/0-system/ | |
+ | | +-------------------------------+ +--------------------------------+ | |
+ | | | Endpoint | | Endpoint | | |
+ | | | /sys/fs/kdbus/0-system/bus | | /sys/fs/kdbus/0-system/ep.app | | |
+ | | +-------------------------------+ +--------------------------------+ | |
+ | | +--------------+ +--------------+ +--------------+ +---------------+ | |
+ | | | Connection | | Connection | | Connection | | Connection | | |
+ | | | :1.22 | | :1.25 | | :1.55 | | :1.81 | | |
+ | | +--------------+ +--------------+ +--------------+ +---------------+ | |
+ | +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | |
+ | +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ | | Bus (User Bus for UID 2702) | |
+ | | /sys/fs/kdbus/2702-user/ | |
+ | | +-------------------------------+ +--------------------------------+ | |
+ | | | Endpoint | | Endpoint | | |
+ | | | /sys/fs/kdbus/2702-user/bus | | /sys/fs/kdbus/2702-user/ep.app | | |
+ | | +-------------------------------+ +--------------------------------+ | |
+ | | +--------------+ +--------------+ +--------------+ +---------------+ | |
+ | | | Connection | | Connection | | Connection | | Connection | | |
+ | | | :1.22 | | :1.25 | | :1.55 | | :1.81 | | |
+ | | +--------------+ +--------------+ +--------------------------------+ | |
+ | +----------------------------------------------------------------------+ |
+ +--------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+ ]]></programlisting>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>Metadata</title>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>When metadata is collected</title>
+ <para>
+ kdbus records data about the system in certain situations. Such metadata
+ can refer to the currently active process (creds, PIDs, current user
+ groups, process names and its executable path, cgroup membership,
+ capabilities, security label and audit information), connection
+ information (description string, currently owned names) and time stamps.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Metadata is collected at the following times.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem><para>
+ When a bus is created (<constant>KDBUS_CMD_MAKE</constant>),
+ information about the calling task is collected. This data is returned
+ by the kernel via the <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_CREATOR_INFO</constant>
+ call.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When a connection is created (<constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>),
+ information about the calling task is collected. Alternatively, a
+ privileged connection may provide 'faked' information about
+ credentials, PIDs and security labels which will be stored instead.
+ This data is returned by the kernel as information on a connection
+ (<constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant>). Only metadata that a
+ connection allowed to be sent (by setting its bit in
+ <varname>attach_flags_send</varname>) will be exported in this way.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ When a message is sent (<constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant>),
+ information about the sending task and the sending connection is
+ collected. This metadata will be attached to the message when it
+ arrives in the receiver's pool. If the connection sending the
+ message installed faked credentials (see
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>),
+ the message will not be augmented by any information about the
+ currently sending task. Note that only metadata that was requested
+ by the receiving connection will be collected and attached to
+ messages.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ Which metadata items are actually delivered depends on the following
+ sets and masks:
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem><para>
+ (a) the system-wide kmod creds mask
+ (module parameter <varname>attach_flags_mask</varname>)
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ (b) the per-connection send creds mask, set by the connecting client
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ (c) the per-connection receive creds mask, set by the connecting
+ client
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ (d) the per-bus minimal creds mask, set by the bus creator
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ (e) the per-bus owner creds mask, set by the bus creator
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ (f) the mask specified when querying creds of a bus peer
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ (g) the mask specified when querying creds of a bus owner
+ </para></listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ With the following rules:
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ [1] The creds attached to messages are determined as
+ <constant>a &amp; b &amp; c</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ [2] When connecting to a bus (<constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>),
+ and <constant>~b &amp; d != 0</constant>, the call will fail with,
+ <errorcode>-1</errorcode>, and <varname>errno</varname> is set to
+ <constant>ECONNREFUSED</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ [3] When querying creds of a bus peer, the creds returned are
+ <constant>a &amp; b &amp; f</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ [4] When querying creds of a bus owner, the creds returned are
+ <constant>a &amp; e &amp; g</constant>.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ Hence, programs might not always get all requested metadata items that
+ it requested. Code must be written so that it can cope with this fact.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Benefits and heads-up</title>
+ <para>
+ Attaching metadata to messages has two major benefits.
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ Metadata attached to messages is gathered at the moment when the
+ other side calls <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant>, or,
+ respectively, then the kernel notification is generated. There is
+ no need for the receiving peer to retrieve information about the
+ task in a second step. This closes a race gap that would otherwise
+ be inherent.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ As metadata is delivered along with messages in the same data
+ blob, no extra calls to kernel functions etc. are needed to gather
+ them.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ Note, however, that collecting metadata does come at a price for
+ performance, so developers should carefully assess which metadata to
+ really opt-in for. For best practice, data that is not needed as part
+ of a message should not be requested by the connection in the first
+ place (see <varname>attach_flags_recv</varname> in
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>).
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+
+ <refsect2>
+ <title>Attach flags for metadata items</title>
+ <para>
+ To let the kernel know which metadata information to attach as items
+ to the aforementioned commands, it uses a bitmask. In those, the
+ following <emphasis>attach flags</emphasis> are currently supported.
+ Both the <varname>attach_flags_recv</varname> and
+ <varname>attach_flags_send</varname> fields of
+ <type>struct kdbus_cmd_hello</type>, as well as the payload of the
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ATTACH_FLAGS_SEND</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_ATTACH_FLAGS_RECV</constant> items follow this
+ scheme.
+ </para>
+
+ <variablelist>
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_TIMESTAMP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_TIMESTAMP</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_CREDS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CREDS</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_PIDS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PIDS</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_AUXGROUPS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_AUXGROUPS</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_NAMES</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_OWNED_NAME</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_TID_COMM</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_TID_COMM</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_PID_COMM</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_PID_COMM</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_EXE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_EXE</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_CMDLINE</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CMDLINE</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_CGROUP</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CGROUP</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_CAPS</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CAPS</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_SECLABEL</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_SECLABEL</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_AUDIT</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_AUDIT</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><constant>KDBUS_ATTACH_CONN_DESCRIPTION</constant></term>
+ <listitem><para>
+ Requests the attachment of an item of type
+ <constant>KDBUS_ITEM_CONN_DESCRIPTION</constant>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+ </variablelist>
+
+ <para>
+ Please refer to
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for detailed information about the layout and payload of items and
+ what metadata should be used to.
+ </para>
+ </refsect2>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>The ioctl interface</title>
+
+ <para>
+ As stated in the 'synopsis' section above, application developers are
+ strongly encouraged to use kdbus through one of the high-level D-Bus
+ abstraction libraries, rather than using the low-level API directly.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ kdbus on the kernel level exposes its functions exclusively through
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>ioctl</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>,
+ employed on file descriptors returned by
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>open</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ on pseudo files exposed by
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para>
+ <para>
+ Following is a list of all the ioctls, along with the command structs
+ they must be used with.
+ </para>
+
+ <informaltable frame="none">
+ <tgroup cols="3" colsep="1">
+ <thead>
+ <row>
+ <entry>ioctl signature</entry>
+ <entry>command</entry>
+ <entry>transported struct</entry>
+ </row>
+ </thead>
+ <tbody>
+ <row>
+ <entry><constant>0x40189500</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x40189510</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0xc0609580</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_hello *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x40189582</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_BYEBYE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x40389590</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_send *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x80409591</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_recv *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x40209583</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_free *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x401895a0</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_ACQUIRE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x401895a1</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_RELEASE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x80289586</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_LIST</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_list *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x80309584</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_info *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x40209551</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_UPDATE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x80309585</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_CREATOR_INFO</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_info *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x40189511</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_UPDATE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x402095b0</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_ADD</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_match *</type></entry>
+ </row><row>
+ <entry><constant>0x402095b1</constant></entry>
+ <entry><constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_REMOVE</constant></entry>
+ <entry><type>struct kdbus_cmd_match *</type></entry>
+ </row>
+ </tbody>
+ </tgroup>
+ </informaltable>
+
+ <para>
+ Depending on the type of <emphasis>kdbusfs</emphasis> node that was
+ opened and what ioctls have been executed on a file descriptor before,
+ a different sub-set of ioctl commands is allowed.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ On a file descriptor resulting from opening a
+ <emphasis>control node</emphasis>, only the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant> ioctl may be executed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ On a file descriptor resulting from opening a
+ <emphasis>bus endpoint node</emphasis>, only the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant> ioctls may be executed.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A file descriptor that was used to create a bus
+ (via <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_MAKE</constant>) is called a
+ <emphasis>bus owner</emphasis> file descriptor. The bus will be
+ active as long as the file descriptor is kept open.
+ A bus owner file descriptor can not be used to
+ employ any further ioctls. As soon as
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>close</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ is called on it, the bus will be shut down, along will all associated
+ endpoints and connections. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A file descriptor that was used to create an endpoint
+ (via <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_MAKE</constant>) is called an
+ <emphasis>endpoint owner</emphasis> file descriptor. The endpoint
+ will be active as long as the file descriptor is kept open.
+ An endpoint owner file descriptor can only be used
+ to update details of an endpoint through the
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_ENDPOINT_UPDATE</constant> ioctl. As soon as
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>close</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ is called on it, the endpoint will be removed from the bus, and all
+ connections that are connected to the bus through it are shut down.
+ See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ for more details.
+ </para>
+ </listitem>
+ <listitem>
+ <para>
+ A file descriptor that was used to create a connection
+ (via <constant>KDBUS_CMD_HELLO</constant>) is called a
+ <emphasis>connection owner</emphasis> file descriptor. The connection
+ will be active as long as the file descriptor is kept open.
+ A connection owner file descriptor may be used to
+ issue any of the following ioctls.
+ </para>
+
+ <itemizedlist>
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_UPDATE</constant> to tweak details of the
+ connection. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BYEBYE</constant> to shut down a connection
+ without losing messages. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_FREE</constant> to free a slice of memory in
+ the pool. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_CONN_INFO</constant> to retrieve information
+ on other connections on the bus. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_BUS_CREATOR_INFO</constant> to retrieve
+ information on the bus creator. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_LIST</constant> to retrieve a list of
+ currently active well-known names and unique IDs on the bus. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_SEND</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_RECV</constant> to send or receive a message.
+ See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_ACQUIRE</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_NAME_RELEASE</constant> to acquire or release
+ a well-known name on the bus. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+
+ <listitem><para>
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_ADD</constant> and
+ <constant>KDBUS_CMD_MATCH_REMOVE</constant> to add or remove
+ a match for signal messages. See
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.match</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>.
+ </para></listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+ </listitem>
+ </itemizedlist>
+
+ <para>
+ These ioctls, along with the structs they transport, are explained in
+ detail in the other documents linked to in the "See Also" section below.
+ </para>
+ </refsect1>
+
+ <refsect1>
+ <title>See Also</title>
+ <simplelist type="inline">
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.bus</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.connection</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.endpoint</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.fs</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.item</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.message</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.name</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>kdbus.pool</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>7</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>ioctl</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>mmap</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>open</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <citerefentry>
+ <refentrytitle>close</refentrytitle>
+ <manvolnum>2</manvolnum>
+ </citerefentry>
+ </member>
+ <member>
+ <ulink url="http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/dbus">D-Bus</ulink>
+ </member>
+ </simplelist>
+ </refsect1>
+
+</refentry>
diff --git a/Documentation/kdbus/stylesheet.xsl b/Documentation/kdbus/stylesheet.xsl
new file mode 100644
index 000000000..52565eac7
--- /dev/null
+++ b/Documentation/kdbus/stylesheet.xsl
@@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
+<stylesheet xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/XSL/Transform" version="1.0">
+ <param name="chunk.quietly">1</param>
+ <param name="funcsynopsis.style">ansi</param>
+ <param name="funcsynopsis.tabular.threshold">80</param>
+ <param name="callout.graphics">0</param>
+ <param name="paper.type">A4</param>
+ <param name="generate.section.toc.level">2</param>
+ <param name="use.id.as.filename">1</param>
+ <param name="citerefentry.link">1</param>
+ <strip-space elements="*"/>
+ <template name="generate.citerefentry.link">
+ <value-of select="refentrytitle"/>
+ <text>.html</text>
+ </template>
+</stylesheet>