This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU Lesser General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301, USA.
Telepathy clients use connection managers, the channel dispatcher and optionally the account manager to provide useful functionality.
User interface processes are the obvious example of Telepathy clients, but they can provide other functionality, such as address-book synchronization.
Every running or activatable process with a well-known name of the form im.telepathy1.Client.clientname should be probed by the channel dispatcher to discover its capabilities. Each client is either an observer, an approver, a channel handler, or some combination of these.
Activatable services (those with a D-Bus .service
file) must be supported so that we can run clients
in response to channel creation.
Non-activatable services (those that do not register a D-Bus
.service
file for their well-known name, but do
request it at runtime) must be supported so that we can have
programs that process channels, but only if they are already
running - for instance, a full-screen media centre
application might do this.
The client name, clientname, MUST be a non-empty string of ASCII digits, letters, dots and/or underscores, starting with a letter, and without sets of two consecutive dots or a dot followed by a digit. For non-activatable services, it MAY contain a part that is generated per instance at runtime.
If each of a client Foo's instances should be able to manipulate
channels separately, the instance with unique name
:1.25
might request a well-known name like
im.telepathy1.Client.Foo._1._25
.
(Note that well-known bus-name components may not start with a digit, so o.f.T.Client.Foo.1.25 would not be acceptable.)
Each Client MUST export an object whose object path may be determined by replacing '.' with '/' in the well-known name and prepending '/'. This object represents its API as a Telepathy client; the channel dispatcher will call its methods and read its properties when appropriate.
As an optimization, activatable clients SHOULD install a file
$XDG_DATA_DIRS/telepathy/clients/clientname.client
containing a cached version of its immutable properties,
so that for most clients, the channel dispatcher can
just read a file to discover capabilities, instead of
having to service-activate the client immediately in order to fetch
its read-only properties. However, the D-Bus API is canonical, and
the channel dispatcher MUST support clients without such a file.
Non-activatable clients MAY install a .client
file,
but there's not much point in them doing so.
The .client files MUST contain UTF-8 text with the same syntax
as
Desktop
Entry files (although the allowed groups, keys and values differ).
Every .client
file MUST contain a group whose name is
the name of this interface.
The groups, keys and values in the .client
file are
defined by individual interfaces. Each interface that can usefully
cache information in the .client
file SHOULD correspond
to a group with the same name.
A list of the extra interfaces provided by this client.
This SHOULD include at least one of
In the .client
file, this is represented by key
"Interfaces
" in the group named after this interface.
The value of the key is a list of interface names each followed by
a semicolon (so it always ends with a semicolon unless it is empty),
i.e. a key of type "strings" as described in the Desktop Entry
specification.