Application package:gi-gio

GApplication is the core class for application support. A GApplication is the foundation of an application. It wraps some low-level platform-specific services and is intended to act as the foundation for higher-level application classes such as GtkApplication or MxApplication. In general, you should not use this class outside of a higher level framework. GApplication provides convenient life-cycle management by maintaining a "use count" for the primary application instance. The use count can be changed using applicationHold and applicationRelease. If it drops to zero, the application exits. Higher-level classes such as GtkApplication employ the use count to ensure that the application stays alive as long as it has any opened windows. Another feature that GApplication (optionally) provides is process uniqueness. Applications can make use of this functionality by providing a unique application ID. If given, only one application with this ID can be running at a time per session. The session concept is platform-dependent, but corresponds roughly to a graphical desktop login. When your application is launched again, its arguments are passed through platform communication to the already running program. The already running instance of the program is called the "primary instance"; for non-unique applications this is always the current instance. On Linux, the D-Bus session bus is used for communication. The use of GApplication differs from some other commonly-used uniqueness libraries (such as libunique) in important ways. The application is not expected to manually register itself and check if it is the primary instance. Instead, the main() function of a GApplication should do very little more than instantiating the application instance, possibly connecting signal handlers, then calling applicationRun. All checks for uniqueness are done internally. If the application is the primary instance then the startup signal is emitted and the mainloop runs. If the application is not the primary instance then a signal is sent to the primary instance and applicationRun promptly returns. See the code examples below. If used, the expected form of an application identifier is the same as that of a D-Bus well-known bus name. Examples include: com.example.MyApp, org.example.internal_apps.Calculator, org._7_zip.Archiver. For details on valid application identifiers, see applicationIdIsValid. On Linux, the application identifier is claimed as a well-known bus name on the user's session bus. This means that the uniqueness of your application is scoped to the current session. It also means that your application may provide additional services (through registration of other object paths) at that bus name. The registration of these object paths should be done with the shared GDBus session bus. Note that due to the internal architecture of GDBus, method calls can be dispatched at any time (even if a main loop is not running). For this reason, you must ensure that any object paths that you wish to register are registered before Application attempts to acquire the bus name of your application (which happens in applicationRegister). Unfortunately, this means that you cannot use Application:isRemote to decide if you want to register object paths. GApplication also implements the ActionGroup and ActionMap interfaces and lets you easily export actions by adding them with actionMapAddAction. When invoking an action by calling actionGroupActivateAction on the application, it is always invoked in the primary instance. The actions are also exported on the session bus, and GIO provides the DBusActionGroup wrapper to conveniently access them remotely. GIO provides a DBusMenuModel wrapper for remote access to exported MenuModels. Note: Due to the fact that actions are exported on the session bus, using maybe parameters is not supported, since D-Bus does not support maybe types. There is a number of different entry points into a GApplication:
  • via 'Activate' (i.e. just starting the application)
  • via 'Open' (i.e. opening some files)
  • by handling a command-line
  • via activating an action
The Application::startup signal lets you handle the application initialization for all of these in a single place. Regardless of which of these entry points is used to start the application, GApplication passes some ‘platform data’ from the launching instance to the primary instance, in the form of a GVariant dictionary mapping strings to variants. To use platform data, override the Application.before_emit() or Application.after_emit() virtual functions in your GApplication subclass. When dealing with ApplicationCommandLine objects, the platform data is directly available via applicationCommandLineGetCwd, applicationCommandLineGetEnviron and applicationCommandLineGetPlatformData. As the name indicates, the platform data may vary depending on the operating system, but it always includes the current directory (key cwd), and optionally the environment (ie the set of environment variables and their values) of the calling process (key environ). The environment is only added to the platform data if the G_APPLICATION_SEND_ENVIRONMENT flag is set. GApplication subclasses can add their own platform data by overriding the Application.add_platform_data() virtual function. For instance, GtkApplication adds startup notification data in this way. To parse commandline arguments you may handle the Application::commandLine signal or override the Application.local_command_line() virtual function, to parse them in either the primary instance or the local instance, respectively. For an example of opening files with a GApplication, see gapplication-example-open.c. For an example of using actions with GApplication, see gapplication-example-actions.c. For an example of using extra D-Bus hooks with GApplication, see gapplication-example-dbushooks.c. Since: 2.28
Memory-managed wrapper type.
Flags used to define the behaviour of a Application. Since: 2.28
Allow another instance to take over the bus name. Since: 2.60
Allow users to override the application ID from the command line with --gapplication-app-id. Since: 2.48
Default flags. Since: 2.74
Default flags.
This application handles command line arguments (in the primary instance). Note that this flag only affect the default implementation of local_command_line(). See applicationRun for details.
This application handles opening files (in the primary instance). Note that this flag only affects the default implementation of local_command_line(), and has no effect if ApplicationFlagsHandlesCommandLine is given. See applicationRun for details.
Don't try to become the primary instance.
Run as a service. In this mode, registration fails if the service is already running, and the application will initially wait up to 10 seconds for an initial activation message to arrive.
Make no attempts to do any of the typical single-instance application negotiation, even if the application ID is given. The application neither attempts to become the owner of the application ID nor does it check if an existing owner already exists. Everything occurs in the local process. Since: 2.30.
Take over from another instance. This flag is usually set by passing --gapplication-replace on the commandline. Since: 2.60
Send the environment of the launching process to the primary instance. Set this flag if your application is expected to behave differently depending on certain environment variables. For instance, an editor might be expected to use the GIT_COMMITTER_NAME environment variable when editing a git commit message. The environment is available to the Application::commandLine signal handler, via applicationCommandLineGetenv.
The activate signal is emitted on the primary instance when an activation occurs. See applicationActivate.
The commandLine signal is emitted on the primary instance when a commandline is not handled locally. See applicationRun and the ApplicationCommandLine documentation for more information.