man dbus-daemon (Commandes) - Message bus daemon

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=/etc/dbus-1/session.conf" and the --system option is equivalent to "--config-file=/etc/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. 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.
--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.

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 "/etc/dbus-1/system.conf" and "/etc/dbus-1/session.conf". These files normally <include> a system-local.conf or session-local.conf; 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.

<busconfig>

Root element.

<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).

Example: <type>session</type>

<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.

<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 /etc/dbus-1/system.d that allowed all apps to receive this message and allowed the printer daemon user to send it.

<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.

<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.

<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>

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.

<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>

<servicedir>

Adds a directory to scan for .service files. Directories are scanned starting with the last 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.

<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_outgoing_bytes"         : total size in bytes of messages
                                     queued up for a single connection
      "max_message_size"           : max size of a single message in
                                     bytes
      "service_start_timeout"      : milliseconds (thousandths) until 
                                     a started service has to connect
      "auth_timeout"               : milliseconds (thousandths) a
                                     connection is given to
                                     authenticate
      "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 DOS all other users by using up all connections.

<policy>

The <policy> element defines a policy to be applied to a particular set of connections to the bus. A policy is made up of <allow> and <deny> elements.

The <policy> element has one of three attributes:

  context="(default|mandatory)"
  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 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" user="username" group="groupname"

Examples:

   <deny send_interface="org.freedesktop.System" send_member="Reboot"/> 
   <deny receive_interface="org.freedesktop.System" receive_member="Reboot"/>
   <deny own="org.freedesktop.System"/>
   <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. Eavesdropping thus only applies to messages that are addressed to services (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 receive rules (with 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.

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.

<selinux>

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

<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.

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 with an <associate> element as target, object class "dbus" and requested permission "acquire_svc".

If the name has no security context associated in the configuration file, the security context of the bus daemon itself will be used.

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/