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DBUS-DAEMON(1)                            User Commands                            DBUS-DAEMON(1)



NAME
       dbus-daemon - Message bus daemon

SYNOPSIS
       dbus-daemon

       dbus-daemon [--version] [--session] [--system] [--config-file=FILE]
                   [--print-address [=DESCRIPTOR]] [--print-pid [=DESCRIPTOR]] [--fork]


DESCRIPTION
       dbus-daemon is the D-Bus message bus daemon. See http://www.freedesktop.org/software/dbus/
       for more information about the big picture. D-Bus is first a library that provides
       one-to-one communication between any two applications; dbus-daemon is an application that
       uses this library to implement a message bus daemon. Multiple programs connect to the
       message bus daemon and can exchange messages with one another.

       There are two standard message bus instances: the systemwide message bus (installed on
       many systems as the "messagebus" init service) and the per-user-login-session message bus
       (started each time a user logs in).  dbus-daemon is used for both of these instances, but
       with a different configuration file.

       The --session option is equivalent to "--config-file=/usr/share/dbus-1/session.conf" and
       the --system option is equivalent to "--config-file=/usr/share/dbus-1/system.conf". By
       creating additional configuration files and using the --config-file option, additional
       special-purpose message bus daemons could be created.

       The systemwide daemon is normally launched by an init script, standardly called simply
       "messagebus".

       The systemwide daemon is largely used for broadcasting system events, such as changes to
       the printer queue, or adding/removing devices.

       The per-session daemon is used for various interprocess communication among desktop
       applications (however, it is not tied to X or the GUI in any way).

       SIGHUP will cause the D-Bus daemon to PARTIALLY reload its configuration file and to flush
       its user/group information caches. Some configuration changes would require kicking all
       apps off the bus; so they will only take effect if you restart the daemon. Policy changes
       should take effect with SIGHUP.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       --config-file=FILE
           Use the given configuration file.

       --fork
           Force the message bus to fork and become a daemon, even if the configuration file does
           not specify that it should. In most contexts the configuration file already gets this
           right, though. This option is not supported on Windows.

       --nofork
           Force the message bus not to fork and become a daemon, even if the configuration file
           specifies that it should. On Windows, the dbus-daemon never forks, so this option is
           allowed but does nothing.

       --print-address[=DESCRIPTOR]
           Print the address of the message bus to standard output, or to the given file
           descriptor. This is used by programs that launch the message bus.

       --print-pid[=DESCRIPTOR]
           Print the process ID of the message bus to standard output, or to the given file
           descriptor. This is used by programs that launch the message bus.

       --session
           Use the standard configuration file for the per-login-session message bus.

       --system
           Use the standard configuration file for the systemwide message bus.

       --version
           Print the version of the daemon.

       --introspect
           Print the introspection information for all D-Bus internal interfaces.

       --address[=ADDRESS]
           Set the address to listen on. This option overrides the address configured in the
           configuration file.

       --systemd-activation
           Enable systemd-style service activation. Only useful in conjunction with the systemd
           system and session manager on Linux.

       --nopidfile
           Don't write a PID file even if one is configured in the configuration files.

CONFIGURATION FILE
       A message bus daemon has a configuration file that specializes it for a particular
       application. For example, one configuration file might set up the message bus to be a
       systemwide message bus, while another might set it up to be a per-user-login-session bus.

       The configuration file also establishes resource limits, security parameters, and so
       forth.

       The configuration file is not part of any interoperability specification and its backward
       compatibility is not guaranteed; this document is documentation, not specification.

       The standard systemwide and per-session message bus setups are configured in the files
       "/usr/share/dbus-1/system.conf" and "/usr/share/dbus-1/session.conf". These files normally
       <include> a system-local.conf or session-local.conf in /etc/dbus-1; you can put local
       overrides in those files to avoid modifying the primary configuration files.

       The configuration file is an XML document. It must have the following doctype declaration:


              <!DOCTYPE busconfig PUBLIC "-//freedesktop//DTD D-Bus Bus Configuration 1.0//EN"
               "http://www.freedesktop.org/standards/dbus/1.0/busconfig.dtd">


       The following elements may be present in the configuration file.

       o   <busconfig>

       Root element.

       o   <type>

       The well-known type of the message bus. Currently known values are "system" and "session";
       if other values are set, they should be either added to the D-Bus specification, or
       namespaced. The last <type> element "wins" (previous values are ignored). This element
       only controls which message bus specific environment variables are set in activated
       clients. Most of the policy that distinguishes a session bus from the system bus is
       controlled from the other elements in the configuration file.

       If the well-known type of the message bus is "session", then the DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE
       environment variable will be set to "session" and the DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS environment
       variable will be set to the address of the session bus. Likewise, if the type of the
       message bus is "system", then the DBUS_STARTER_BUS_TYPE environment variable will be set
       to "system" and the DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS environment variable will be set to the
       address of the system bus (which is normally well known anyway).

       Example: <type>session</type>

       o   <include>

       Include a file <include>filename.conf</include> at this point. If the filename is
       relative, it is located relative to the configuration file doing the including.

       <include> has an optional attribute "ignore_missing=(yes|no)" which defaults to "no" if
       not provided. This attribute controls whether it's a fatal error for the included file to
       be absent.

       o   <includedir>

       Include all files in <includedir>foo.d</includedir> at this point. Files in the directory
       are included in undefined order. Only files ending in ".conf" are included.

       This is intended to allow extension of the system bus by particular packages. For example,
       if CUPS wants to be able to send out notification of printer queue changes, it could
       install a file to /usr/share/dbus-1/system.d or /etc/dbus-1/system.d that allowed all apps
       to receive this message and allowed the printer daemon user to send it.

       o   <user>

       The user account the daemon should run as, as either a username or a UID. If the daemon
       cannot change to this UID on startup, it will exit. If this element is not present, the
       daemon will not change or care about its UID.

       The last <user> entry in the file "wins", the others are ignored.

       The user is changed after the bus has completed initialization. So sockets etc. will be
       created before changing user, but no data will be read from clients before changing user.
       This means that sockets and PID files can be created in a location that requires root
       privileges for writing.

       o   <fork>

       If present, the bus daemon becomes a real daemon (forks into the background, etc.). This
       is generally used rather than the --fork command line option.

       o   <keep_umask>

       If present, the bus daemon keeps its original umask when forking. This may be useful to
       avoid affecting the behavior of child processes.

       o   <syslog>

       If present, the bus daemon will log to syslog.

       o   <pidfile>

       If present, the bus daemon will write its pid to the specified file. The --nopidfile
       command-line option takes precedence over this setting.

       o   <allow_anonymous>

       If present, connections that authenticated using the ANONYMOUS mechanism will be
       authorized to connect. This option has no practical effect unless the ANONYMOUS mechanism
       has also been enabled using the <auth> element, described below.

       o   <listen>

       Add an address that the bus should listen on. The address is in the standard D-Bus format
       that contains a transport name plus possible parameters/options.

       Example: <listen>unix:path=/tmp/foo</listen>

       Example: <listen>tcp:host=localhost,port=1234</listen>

       If there are multiple <listen> elements, then the bus listens on multiple addresses. The
       bus will pass its address to started services or other interested parties with the last
       address given in <listen> first. That is, apps will try to connect to the last <listen>
       address first.

       tcp sockets can accept IPv4 addresses, IPv6 addresses or hostnames. If a hostname resolves
       to multiple addresses, the server will bind to all of them. The family=ipv4 or family=ipv6
       options can be used to force it to bind to a subset of addresses

       Example: <listen>tcp:host=localhost,port=0,family=ipv4</listen>

       A special case is using a port number of zero (or omitting the port), which means to
       choose an available port selected by the operating system. The port number chosen can be
       obtained with the --print-address command line parameter and will be present in other
       cases where the server reports its own address, such as when DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS is
       set.

       Example: <listen>tcp:host=localhost,port=0</listen>

       tcp/nonce-tcp addresses also allow a bind=hostname option, used in a listenable address to
       configure the interface on which the server will listen: either the hostname is the IP
       address of one of the local machine's interfaces (most commonly 127.0.0.1), a DNS name
       that resolves to one of those IP addresses, '0.0.0.0' to listen on all IPv4 interfaces
       simultaneously, or '::' to listen on all IPv4 and IPv6 interfaces simultaneously (if
       supported by the OS). If not specified, the default is the same value as "host".

       Example: <listen>tcp:host=localhost,bind=0.0.0.0,port=0</listen>

       o   <auth>

       Lists permitted authorization mechanisms. If this element doesn't exist, then all known
       mechanisms are allowed. If there are multiple <auth> elements, all the listed mechanisms
       are allowed. The order in which mechanisms are listed is not meaningful.

       Example: <auth>EXTERNAL</auth>

       Example: <auth>DBUS_COOKIE_SHA1</auth>

       o   <servicedir>

       Adds a directory to scan for .service files. Directories are scanned starting with the
       first to appear in the config file (the first .service file found that provides a
       particular service will be used).

       Service files tell the bus how to automatically start a program. They are primarily used
       with the per-user-session bus, not the systemwide bus.

       o   <standard_session_servicedirs/>

       <standard_session_servicedirs/> is equivalent to specifying a series of <servicedir/>
       elements for each of the data directories in the "XDG Base Directory Specification" with
       the subdirectory "dbus-1/services", so for example "/usr/share/dbus-1/services" would be
       among the directories searched.

       The "XDG Base Directory Specification" can be found at
       http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Standards/basedir-spec if it hasn't moved, otherwise try your
       favorite search engine.

       The <standard_session_servicedirs/> option is only relevant to the per-user-session bus
       daemon defined in /etc/dbus-1/session.conf. Putting it in any other configuration file
       would probably be nonsense.

       o   <standard_system_servicedirs/>

       <standard_system_servicedirs/> specifies the standard system-wide activation directories
       that should be searched for service files. This option defaults to
       /usr/share/dbus-1/system-services.

       The <standard_system_servicedirs/> option is only relevant to the per-system bus daemon
       defined in /usr/share/dbus-1/system.conf. Putting it in any other configuration file would
       probably be nonsense.

       o   <servicehelper/>

       <servicehelper/> specifies the setuid helper that is used to launch system daemons with an
       alternate user. Typically this should be the dbus-daemon-launch-helper executable in
       located in libexec.

       The <servicehelper/> option is only relevant to the per-system bus daemon defined in
       /usr/share/dbus-1/system.conf. Putting it in any other configuration file would probably
       be nonsense.

       o   <limit>

       <limit> establishes a resource limit. For example:

             <limit name="max_message_size">64</limit>
             <limit name="max_completed_connections">512</limit>

       The name attribute is mandatory. Available limit names are:

                 "max_incoming_bytes"         : total size in bytes of messages
                                                incoming from a single connection
                 "max_incoming_unix_fds"      : total number of unix fds of messages
                                                incoming from a single connection
                 "max_outgoing_bytes"         : total size in bytes of messages
                                                queued up for a single connection
                 "max_outgoing_unix_fds"      : total number of unix fds of messages
                                                queued up for a single connection
                 "max_message_size"           : max size of a single message in
                                                bytes
                 "max_message_unix_fds"       : max unix fds of a single message
                 "service_start_timeout"      : milliseconds (thousandths) until
                                                a started service has to connect
                 "auth_timeout"               : milliseconds (thousandths) a
                                                connection is given to
                                                authenticate
                 "pending_fd_timeout"         : milliseconds (thousandths) a
                                                fd is given to be transmitted to
                                                dbus-daemon before disconnecting the
                                                connection
                 "max_completed_connections"  : max number of authenticated connections
                 "max_incomplete_connections" : max number of unauthenticated
                                                connections
                 "max_connections_per_user"   : max number of completed connections from
                                                the same user
                 "max_pending_service_starts" : max number of service launches in
                                                progress at the same time
                 "max_names_per_connection"   : max number of names a single
                                                connection can own
                 "max_match_rules_per_connection": max number of match rules for a single
                                                   connection
                 "max_replies_per_connection" : max number of pending method
                                                replies per connection
                                                (number of calls-in-progress)
                 "reply_timeout"              : milliseconds (thousandths)
                                                until a method call times out

       The max incoming/outgoing queue sizes allow a new message to be queued if one byte remains
       below the max. So you can in fact exceed the max by max_message_size.

       max_completed_connections divided by max_connections_per_user is the number of users that
       can work together to denial-of-service all other users by using up all connections on the
       systemwide bus.

       Limits are normally only of interest on the systemwide bus, not the user session buses.

       o   <policy>

       The <policy> element defines a security policy to be applied to a particular set of
       connections to the bus. A policy is made up of <allow> and <deny> elements. Policies are
       normally used with the systemwide bus; they are analogous to a firewall in that they allow
       expected traffic and prevent unexpected traffic.

       Currently, the system bus has a default-deny policy for sending method calls and owning
       bus names. Everything else, in particular reply messages, receive checks, and signals has
       a default allow policy.

       In general, it is best to keep system services as small, targeted programs which run in
       their own process and provide a single bus name. Then, all that is needed is an <allow>
       rule for the "own" permission to let the process claim the bus name, and a
       "send_destination" rule to allow traffic from some or all uids to your service.

       The <policy> element has one of four attributes:

             context="(default|mandatory)"
             at_console="(true|false)"
             user="username or userid"
             group="group name or gid"

       Policies are applied to a connection as follows:

              - all context="default" policies are applied
              - all group="connection's user's group" policies are applied
                in undefined order
              - all user="connection's auth user" policies are applied
                in undefined order
              - all at_console="true" policies are applied
              - all at_console="false" policies are applied
              - all context="mandatory" policies are applied

       Policies applied later will override those applied earlier, when the policies overlap.
       Multiple policies with the same user/group/context are applied in the order they appear in
       the config file.

       <deny>
           <allow>

       A <deny> element appears below a <policy> element and prohibits some action. The <allow>
       element makes an exception to previous <deny> statements, and works just like <deny> but
       with the inverse meaning.

       The possible attributes of these elements are:

              send_interface="interface_name"
              send_member="method_or_signal_name"
              send_error="error_name"
              send_destination="name"
              send_type="method_call" | "method_return" | "signal" | "error"
              send_path="/path/name"

              receive_interface="interface_name"
              receive_member="method_or_signal_name"
              receive_error="error_name"
              receive_sender="name"
              receive_type="method_call" | "method_return" | "signal" | "error"
              receive_path="/path/name"

              send_requested_reply="true" | "false"
              receive_requested_reply="true" | "false"

              eavesdrop="true" | "false"

              own="name"
              own_prefix="name"
              user="username"
              group="groupname"

       Examples:

              <deny send_destination="org.freedesktop.Service" send_interface="org.freedesktop.System" send_member="Reboot"/>
              <deny send_destination="org.freedesktop.System"/>
              <deny receive_sender="org.freedesktop.System"/>
              <deny user="john"/>
              <deny group="enemies"/>

       The <deny> element's attributes determine whether the deny "matches" a particular action.
       If it matches, the action is denied (unless later rules in the config file allow it).

       send_destination and receive_sender rules mean that messages may not be sent to or
       received from the *owner* of the given name, not that they may not be sent *to that name*.
       That is, if a connection owns services A, B, C, and sending to A is denied, sending to B
       or C will not work either.

       The other send_* and receive_* attributes are purely textual/by-value matches against the
       given field in the message header.

       "Eavesdropping" occurs when an application receives a message that was explicitly
       addressed to a name the application does not own, or is a reply to such a message.
       Eavesdropping thus only applies to messages that are addressed to services and replies to
       such messages (i.e. it does not apply to signals).

       For <allow>, eavesdrop="true" indicates that the rule matches even when eavesdropping.
       eavesdrop="false" is the default and means that the rule only allows messages to go to
       their specified recipient. For <deny>, eavesdrop="true" indicates that the rule matches
       only when eavesdropping. eavesdrop="false" is the default for <deny> also, but here it
       means that the rule applies always, even when not eavesdropping. The eavesdrop attribute
       can only be combined with send and receive rules (with send_* and receive_* attributes).

       The [send|receive]_requested_reply attribute works similarly to the eavesdrop attribute.
       It controls whether the <deny> or <allow> matches a reply that is expected (corresponds to
       a previous method call message). This attribute only makes sense for reply messages
       (errors and method returns), and is ignored for other message types.

       For <allow>, [send|receive]_requested_reply="true" is the default and indicates that only
       requested replies are allowed by the rule. [send|receive]_requested_reply="false" means
       that the rule allows any reply even if unexpected.

       For <deny>, [send|receive]_requested_reply="false" is the default but indicates that the
       rule matches only when the reply was not requested. [send|receive]_requested_reply="true"
       indicates that the rule applies always, regardless of pending reply state.

       user and group denials mean that the given user or group may not connect to the message
       bus.

       For "name", "username", "groupname", etc. the character "*" can be substituted, meaning
       "any." Complex globs like "foo.bar.*" aren't allowed for now because they'd be work to
       implement and maybe encourage sloppy security anyway.

       <allow own_prefix="a.b"/> allows you to own the name "a.b" or any name whose first
       dot-separated elements are "a.b": in particular, you can own "a.b.c" or "a.b.c.d", but not
       "a.bc" or "a.c". This is useful when services like Telepathy and ReserveDevice define a
       meaning for subtrees of well-known names, such as
       org.freedesktop.Telepathy.ConnectionManager.(anything) and
       org.freedesktop.ReserveDevice1.(anything).

       It does not make sense to deny a user or group inside a <policy> for a user or group;
       user/group denials can only be inside context="default" or context="mandatory" policies.

       A single <deny> rule may specify combinations of attributes such as send_destination and
       send_interface and send_type. In this case, the denial applies only if both attributes
       match the message being denied. e.g. <deny send_interface="foo.bar"
       send_destination="foo.blah"/> would deny messages with the given interface AND the given
       bus name. To get an OR effect you specify multiple <deny> rules.

       You can't include both send_ and receive_ attributes on the same rule, since "whether the
       message can be sent" and "whether it can be received" are evaluated separately.

       Be careful with send_interface/receive_interface, because the interface field in messages
       is optional. In particular, do NOT specify <deny send_interface="org.foo.Bar"/>! This will
       cause no-interface messages to be blocked for all services, which is almost certainly not
       what you intended. Always use rules of the form: <deny send_interface="org.foo.Bar"
       send_destination="org.foo.Service"/>

       o   <selinux>

       The <selinux> element contains settings related to Security Enhanced Linux. More details
       below.

       o   <associate>

       An <associate> element appears below an <selinux> element and creates a mapping. Right now
       only one kind of association is possible:

              <associate own="org.freedesktop.Foobar" context="foo_t"/>

       This means that if a connection asks to own the name "org.freedesktop.Foobar" then the
       source context will be the context of the connection and the target context will be
       "foo_t" - see the short discussion of SELinux below.

       Note, the context here is the target context when requesting a name, NOT the context of
       the connection owning the name.

       There's currently no way to set a default for owning any name, if we add this syntax it
       will look like:

              <associate own="*" context="foo_t"/>

       If you find a reason this is useful, let the developers know. Right now the default will
       be the security context of the bus itself.

       If two <associate> elements specify the same name, the element appearing later in the
       configuration file will be used.

       o   <apparmor>

       The <apparmor> element is used to configure AppArmor mediation on the bus. It can contain
       one attribute that specifies the mediation mode:

              <apparmor mode="(enabled|disabled|required)"/>

       The default mode is "enabled". In "enabled" mode, AppArmor mediation will be performed if
       AppArmor support is available in the kernel. If it is not available, dbus-daemon will
       start but AppArmor mediation will not occur. In "disabled" mode, AppArmor mediation is
       disabled. In "required" mode, AppArmor mediation will be enabled if AppArmor support is
       available, otherwise dbus-daemon will refuse to start.

       The AppArmor mediation mode of the bus cannot be changed after the bus starts. Modifying
       the mode in the configuration file and sending a SIGHUP signal to the daemon has no effect
       on the mediation mode.

SELINUX
       See http://www.nsa.gov/selinux/ for full details on SELinux. Some useful excerpts:

       Every subject (process) and object (e.g. file, socket, IPC object, etc) in the system is
       assigned a collection of security attributes, known as a security context. A security
       context contains all of the security attributes associated with a particular subject or
       object that are relevant to the security policy.

       In order to better encapsulate security contexts and to provide greater efficiency, the
       policy enforcement code of SELinux typically handles security identifiers (SIDs) rather
       than security contexts. A SID is an integer that is mapped by the security server to a
       security context at runtime.

       When a security decision is required, the policy enforcement code passes a pair of SIDs
       (typically the SID of a subject and the SID of an object, but sometimes a pair of subject
       SIDs or a pair of object SIDs), and an object security class to the security server. The
       object security class indicates the kind of object, e.g. a process, a regular file, a
       directory, a TCP socket, etc.

       Access decisions specify whether or not a permission is granted for a given pair of SIDs
       and class. Each object class has a set of associated permissions defined to control
       operations on objects with that class.

       D-Bus performs SELinux security checks in two places.

       First, any time a message is routed from one connection to another connection, the bus
       daemon will check permissions with the security context of the first connection as source,
       security context of the second connection as target, object class "dbus" and requested
       permission "send_msg".

       If a security context is not available for a connection (impossible when using UNIX domain
       sockets), then the target context used is the context of the bus daemon itself. There is
       currently no way to change this default, because we're assuming that only UNIX domain
       sockets will be used to connect to the systemwide bus. If this changes, we'll probably add
       a way to set the default connection context.

       Second, any time a connection asks to own a name, the bus daemon will check permissions
       with the security context of the connection as source, the security context specified for
       the name in the config file as target, object class "dbus" and requested permission
       "acquire_svc".

       The security context for a bus name is specified with the <associate> element described
       earlier in this document. If a name has no security context associated in the
       configuration file, the security context of the bus daemon itself will be used.

APPARMOR
       The AppArmor confinement context is stored when applications connect to the bus. The
       confinement context consists of a label and a confinement mode. When a security decision
       is required, the daemon uses the confinement context to query the AppArmor policy to
       determine if the action should be allowed or denied and if the action should be audited.

       The daemon performs AppArmor security checks in three places.

       First, any time a message is routed from one connection to another connection, the bus
       daemon will check permissions with the label of the first connection as source, label
       and/or connection name of the second connection as target, along with the bus name, the
       path name, the interface name, and the member name. Reply messages, such as method_return
       and error messages, are implicitly allowed if they are in response to a message that has
       already been allowed.

       Second, any time a connection asks to own a name, the bus daemon will check permissions
       with the label of the connection as source, the requested name as target, along with the
       bus name.

       Third, any time a connection attempts to eavesdrop, the bus daemon will check permissions
       with the label of the connection as the source, along with the bus name.

       AppArmor rules for bus mediation are not stored in the bus configuration files. They are
       stored in the application's AppArmor profile. Please see apparmor.d(5) for more details.

DEBUGGING
       If you're trying to figure out where your messages are going or why you aren't getting
       messages, there are several things you can try.

       Remember that the system bus is heavily locked down and if you haven't installed a
       security policy file to allow your message through, it won't work. For the session bus,
       this is not a concern.

       The simplest way to figure out what's happening on the bus is to run the dbus-monitor
       program, which comes with the D-Bus package. You can also send test messages with
       dbus-send. These programs have their own man pages.

       If you want to know what the daemon itself is doing, you might consider running a separate
       copy of the daemon to test against. This will allow you to put the daemon under a
       debugger, or run it with verbose output, without messing up your real session and system
       daemons.

       To run a separate test copy of the daemon, for example you might open a terminal and type:

             DBUS_VERBOSE=1 dbus-daemon --session --print-address

       The test daemon address will be printed when the daemon starts. You will need to
       copy-and-paste this address and use it as the value of the DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS
       environment variable when you launch the applications you want to test. This will cause
       those applications to connect to your test bus instead of the DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS of
       your real session bus.

       DBUS_VERBOSE=1 will have NO EFFECT unless your copy of D-Bus was compiled with verbose
       mode enabled. This is not recommended in production builds due to performance impact. You
       may need to rebuild D-Bus if your copy was not built with debugging in mind. (DBUS_VERBOSE
       also affects the D-Bus library and thus applications using D-Bus; it may be useful to see
       verbose output on both the client side and from the daemon.)

       If you want to get fancy, you can create a custom bus configuration for your test bus (see
       the session.conf and system.conf files that define the two default configurations for
       example). This would allow you to specify a different directory for .service files, for
       example.

AUTHOR
       See http://www.freedesktop.org/software/dbus/doc/AUTHORS

BUGS
       Please send bug reports to the D-Bus mailing list or bug tracker, see
       http://www.freedesktop.org/software/dbus/



D-Bus 1.10.24                               09/30/2020                             DBUS-DAEMON(1)

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