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|
The application framework daemons
=================================
Foreword
--------
This document describes application framework daemons
FCF (Fully Conform to Specification) implementation is still under development.
It may happen that current implementation somehow diverges with specifications.
Introduction
------------
Daemons ***afm-user-daemon*** and ***afm-system-daemon*** handle applications
life. Understand that they will manage operations like:
- ***installation***
- ***uninstallation***
- ***running***
- ***suspend***
- ***inventory***
- ...
In addition, they ensure that operations use the security framework as needed
and that applications are executed in the correct context.
***D-Bus*** is in charge of transmitting orders to the appropriate daemon
depending upon ***D-Bus*** destination.
The figure below summarizes the situation of both **afm-system-daemon** and
**afm-user-daemon** in the system.
![afm-daemons][afm-daemons]
The D-Bus interface
-------------------
### Overview of the dbus interface
The ***afm daemons*** takes theirs orders from the session instance
of D-Bus. The use of D-Bus is great because it allows to implement
discovery and signaling.
The dbus session is by default addressed by environment
variable *DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS*. Using **systemd**
variable *DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS* is automatically set for
user sessions.
They are listening with the destination name ***org.AGL.afm.[user|system]***
at the object of path ***/org/AGL/afm/[user|system]*** on the interface
***org.AGL.afm.[user|system]*** for the below detailed members for the
***afm-system-daemon***:
- ***install***
- ***uninstall***
And for ***afm-user-daemon***:
- ***runnables***
- ***detail***
- ***start***
- ***once***
- ***terminate***
- ***pause***
- ***resume***
- ***runners***
- ***state***
- ***install***
- ***uninstall***
D-Bus is mainly used for signaling and discovery. Its optimized
typed protocol is not used except for transmitting only one string
in both directions.
The client and the service are using JSON serialization to
exchange data. Signature of any member of the D-Bus interface is
***string -> string*** for ***JSON -> JSON***. This is the normal case, if there
is an error, current implementation returns a dbus error that is a string.
Here are examples using *dbus-send*, here to install an application from a
widget file:
dbus-send --session --print-reply \
--dest=org.AGL.afm.system \
/org/AGL/afm/system \
org.AGL.afm.system.install 'string:"/tmp/appli.wgt"
And here, to query data on installed applications that can be run:
dbus-send --session --print-reply \
--dest=org.AGL.afm.user \
/org/AGL/afm/user \
org.AGL.afm.user.runnables string:true
### The protocol over D-Bus
On all following sub-chapters we assume that we talk about either
***afm-system-daemon*** or ***afm-user-daemon***. Method and D-Bus parameters
are considered as self-explanatory.
The D-Bus interface is defined by:
* **DESTINATION**: org.AGL.afm.[user|system]
* **PATH**: /org/AGL/afm/[user|system]
* **INTERFACE**: org.AGL.afm.[user|system]
#### Method org.AGL.afm.system.install
**Description**: Install an application from a widget file.
When an application with the same *id* and *version* already exists. Outside of
using *force=true* the application is not reinstalled.
Applications are installed the subdirectories of applications common directory.
If *root* is specified, the application is installed under the
sub-directories of the *root* defined.
Note that this methods is a simple accessor method of
***org.AGL.afm.system.install*** from ***afm-system-daemon***.
After the installation and before returning to the sender,
***afm-system-daemon*** sends a signal ***org.AGL.afm.system.changed***.
**Input**: The *path* of the widget file to install and, optionally,
a flag to *force* reinstallation, and, optionally, a *root* directory.
Either just a string being the absolute path of the widget file:
"/a/path/driving/to/the/widget"
Or an object:
{
"wgt": "/a/path/to/the/widget",
"force": false,
"root": "/a/path/to/the/root"
}
"wgt" and "root" must be absolute paths.
**output**: An object with the field "added" being the string for
the id of the added application.
{"added":"appli@x.y"}
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.system.uninstall
**Description**: Uninstall an application from its id.
Note that this methods is a simple method accessor of
***org.AGL.afm.system.uninstall*** from ***afm-system-daemon***.
After the uninstallation and before returning to the sender,
***afm-system-daemon*** sends a signal ***org.AGL.afm.system.changed***.
**Input**: the *id* of the application and optionally the application *root* path.
Either a string:
"appli@x.y"
Or an object:
{
"id": "appli@x.y",
"root": "/a/path/to/the/root"
}
**output**: the value 'true'.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.detail
**Description**: Get details about an application from its id.
**Input**: the id of the application as below.
Either just a string:
"appli@x.y"
Or an object having the field "id" of type string:
{"id":"appli@x.y"}
**Output**: A JSON object describing the application containing
the fields described below.
{
"id": string, the application id (id@version)
"version": string, the version of the application
"width": integer, requested width of the application
"height": integer, resqueted height of the application
"name": string, the name of the application
"description": string, the description of the application
"shortname": string, the short name of the application
"author": string, the author of the application
}
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.runnables
**Description**: Get the list of applications that can be run.
**Input**: any valid json entry, can be anything except null.
**output**: An array of description of the runnable applications.
Each item of the array contains an object containing the detail of
an application as described above for the method
*org.AGL.afm.user.detail*.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.install
**Description**: Install an application from its widget file.
If an application of the same *id* and *version* exists, it is not
reinstalled except when *force=true*.
Applications are installed in the subdirectories of the common directory
reserved for applications.
If *root* is specified, the application is installed under
sub-directories of defined *root*.
Note that this methods is a simple accessor to the method
***org.AGL.afm.system.install*** of ***afm-system-daemon***.
After the installation and before returning to the sender,
***afm-user-daemon*** sends the signal ***org.AGL.afm.user.changed***.
**Input**: The *path* of widget file to be installed. Optionally,
a flag to *force* reinstallation and/or a *root* directory.
Simple form a simple string containing the absolute widget path:
"/a/path/driving/to/the/widget"
Or an object:
{
"wgt": "/a/path/to/the/widget",
"force": false,
"root": "/a/path/to/the/root"
}
***wgt*** and ***root*** MUST be absolute paths.
**output**: An object containing field "added" to use as application ID.
{"added":"appli@x.y"}
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.uninstall
**Description**: Uninstall an application from its id.
Note that this methods is a simple accessor to
***org.AGL.afm.system.uninstall*** method from ***afm-system-daemon***.
After the uninstallation and before returning to the sender,
***afm-user-daemon*** sends the signal ***org.AGL.afm.user.changed***.
**Input**: the *id* of the application and, optionally, the path to
application *root*.
Either a string:
"appli@x.y"
Or an object:
{
"id": "appli@x.y",
"root": "/a/path/to/the/root"
}
**output**: the value 'true'.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.start
**Description**:
**Input**: the *id* of the application and, optionally, the
start *mode* as below.
Either just a string:
"appli@x.y"
Or an object containing field "id" of type string and
optionally a field mode:
{"id":"appli@x.y","mode":"local"}
The field "mode" is a string equal to either "local" or "remote".
**output**: The *runid* of the application launched. *runid* is an integer.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.once
**Description**:
**Input**: the *id* of the application
Either just a string:
"appli@x.y"
Or an object containing field "id" of type string.
{"id":"appli@x.y"}
**output**: The *state* of the application retrieved or launched.
See *org.AGL.afm.user.state* to get a description of the returned
object.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.terminate
**Description**: Terminates the application attached to *runid*.
**Input**: The *runid* (an integer) of running instance to terminate.
**output**: the value 'true'.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.stop
Obsolete since 8th November 2016 (2016/11/08).
Kept for compatibility.
Use **org.AGL.afm.user.pause** instead.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.continue
Obsolete since 8th November 2016 (2016/11/08).
Kept for compatibility.
Use **org.AGL.afm.user.resume** instead.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.pause
**Description**: Pauses the application attached to *runid* until terminate or resume.
**Input**: The *runid* (integer) of the running instance to pause.
**output**: the value 'true'.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.resume
**Description**: Resumes the application attached to *runid* previously paused.
**Input**: The *runid* (integer) of the running instance to resume.
**output**: the value 'true'.
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.state
**Description**: Get informations about a running instance of *runid*.
**Input**: The *runid* (integer) of the running instance inspected.
**output**: An object describing instance state. It contains:
the runid (integer), the pids of the processes as an array starting
with the group leader, the id of the running application (string),
the state of the application (string either: "starting", "running", "paused").
Example of returned state:
{
"runid": 2,
"pids": [ 435, 436 ],
"state": "running",
"id": "appli@x.y"
}
---
#### Method org.AGL.afm.user.runners
**Description**: Get the list of currently running instances.
**Input**: anything.
**output**: An array of states, one per running instance, as returned by
the method ***org.AGL.afm.user.state***.
Starting **afm daemons**
----------------------
***afm-system-daemon*** and ***afm-user-daemon*** are launched as systemd
services attached to system and user respectively. Normally, service files are
locatedat */lib/systemd/system/afm-system-daemon.service* and
*/lib/systemd/user/afm-user-daemon.service*.
### ***afm-system-daemon*** options
The options for launching **afm-system-daemon** are:
-r
--root directory
Set the root application directory.
Note that the default root directory is defined
to be /usr/share/afm/applications (may change).
-d
--daemon
Daemonizes the process. It is not needed by sytemd.
-q
--quiet
Reduces the verbosity (can be repeated).
-v
--verbose
Increases the verbosity (can be repeated).
-h
--help
Prints a short help.
### ***afm-user-daemon*** options
The options for launching **afm-user-daemon** are:
-a
--application directory
Includes the given application directory to
the database base of applications.
Can be repeated.
-r
--root directory
Includes root application directory or directories when
passing multiple rootdir to
applications database.
Note that default root directory for
applications is always added. In current version
/usr/share/afm/applications is used as default.
-m
--mode (local|remote)
Set the default launch mode.
The default value is 'local'
-d
--daemon
Daemonizes the process. It is not needed by sytemd.
-q
--quiet
Reduces the verbosity (can be repeated).
-v
--verbose
Increases the verbosity (can be repeated).
-h
--help
Prints a short help.
Tasks of **afm-user-daemon**
----------------------------
### Maintaining list of applications
At start **afm-user-daemon** scans the directories containing
applications and load in memory a list of avaliable applications
accessible by current user.
When **afm-system-daemon** installs or removes an application.
On success it sends the signal *org.AGL.afm.system.changed*.
When receiving such a signal, **afm-user-daemon** rebuilds its
applications list.
**afm-user-daemon** provides the data it collects about
applications to its clients. Clients may either request the full list
of avaliable applications or a more specific information about a
given application.
### Launching application
**afm-user-daemon** launches application. Its builds a secure
environment for the application before starting it within a
secured environment.
Different kind of applications can be launched.
This is set using a configuration file that describes
how to launch an application of a given kind within a given
mode.
There is two launching modes: local or remote.
Launching an application locally means that
the application and its binder are launched together.
Launching application remotely translates in only launching
the application binder. The UI by itself has to be activated
remotely by the requested (ie: HTML5 homescreen in a browser)
Once launched, running instances of application receive
a runid that identify them.
### Managing instances of running applications
**afm-user-daemon** manages the list of applications
that it launched.
When owning the right permissions, a client can get the list
of running instances and details about a specific
running instance. It can also terminate, pause or
resume a given application.
### Installing and uninstalling applications
If the client own the right permissions,
**afm-user-daemon** delegates that task
to **afm-system-daemon**.
Launcher Configuration
----------------------
It contains rules for launching applications.
When **afm-user-daemon** has to launch an application,
it looks for launch mode (local or remote), as well as
for the type of application describe in ***config.xml***
widget configuration file.
This tuple mode+type allows to select the adequate rule.
Configuration file is **/etc/afm/afm-launch.conf**.
It contains sections and rules. It can also contain comments
and empty lines to improve readability.
The separators are space and tabulation, any other character
should have a meaning.
The format is line oriented.
The new line character separate the lines.
Lines having only separators are blank lines and ignored.
Line having character #(sharp) at first position are comment
lines and ignored.
Lines not starting with a separator are different
from lines starting with a separator character.
The grammar of the configuration file is defined below:
CONF: *COMMENT *SECTION
SECTION: MODE *RULE
RULE: +TYPE VECTOR ?VECTOR
MODE: 'mode' +SEP ('local' | 'remote') *SEP EOL
TYPE: DATA *SEP EOL
VECTOR: +SEP DATA *(+SEP NDATA) *SEP EOL
DATA: CHAR *NCHAR
NDATA: +NCHAR
EOL: NL *COMMENT
COMMENT: *SEP CMT *(SEP | NCHAR) NL
NL: '\x0a'
SEP: '\x20' | '\x09'
CMT: '#'
CHAR: '\x00'..'\x08' | '\x0b'..'\x1f' | '\x21' | '\x22' | '\x24'..'\xff'
NCHAR: CMT | CHAR
Here is a sample of configuration file for defining how
to launch an application of types *application/x-executable*,
*text/x-shellscript* and *text/html* in local mode:
mode local
application/x-executable
text/x-shellscript
%r/%c
text/html
/usr/bin/afb-daemon --mode=local --readyfd=%R --alias=/icons:%I --port=%P --rootdir=%r --token=%S --sessiondir=%D/.afb-daemon
/usr/bin/web-runtime http://localhost:%P/%c?token=%S
This shows that:
- within a section, several rules can be defined
- within a rule, several types can be defined
- within a rule, one or two vectors can be defined
- vectors are using %substitution
- launched binaries must be defined with their full path
### mode local
Within this mode, the launchers have either one or two description vectors.
All of those vectors are treated as programs
and are executed with 'execve' system call.
The first vector is the leader vector and it defines the process
group. The second vector (if any) is attached to the group
defined by this first vector.
### mode remote
Within this mode, the launchers have either one or two vectors
describing them.
The first vector is process as a program and is executed with
system call 'execve'.
The second vector (if any) defines a text that is returned
to the caller. This mechanism can be used to return a uri
for remote UI to connect on the newly launched application.
The daemon ***afm-user-daemon*** allocates a port for each
new remote application.
The current implementation port allocation is incremental.
A smarter (cacheable and discoverable) allocation should be defined.
### %substitutions
Vectors can include sequences of 2 characters that have a special
meaning. These sequences are named *%substitution* because their
first character is the percent sign (%) and because each occurrence
of the sequence is replaced, at launch time, by the value associated
to sequences.
Here is the list of *%substitutions*:
- ***%%***: %.
This simply emits the percent sign %
- ***%a***: appid
Holds application Id of launched application.
Defined by the attribute **id** of the element **<widget>**
of **config.xml**.
- ***%b***: bindings
In the future should represent the list of bindings and bindings directory separated by ','.
Warning: not supported in current version.
- ***%c***: content
The file within the widget directory that is the entry point.
For HTML applications, it represents the relative path to main
page (aka index.html).
Defined by attribute **src** of the element **<content>** within **config.xml**.
- ***%D***: datadir
Path of the directory where the application runs (cwd)
and stores its data.
It is equal to %h/%a.
- ***%H***: height
Requested height for the widget.
Defined by the attribute **height** of the element **<widget>**
of **config.xml**.
- ***%h***: homedir
Path of the home directory for all applications.
It is generally equal to $HOME/app-data
- ***%I***: icondir
Path of the directory were the icons of the applications can be found.
- ***%m***: mime-type
Mime type of the launched application.
Defined by the attribute **type** of the element **<content>**
of **config.xml**.
- ***%n***: name
Name of the application as defined by the content of the
element **<name>** of **config.xml**.
- ***%P***: port
A port to use. It is currently a kind of random port. The precise
model is to be defined later.
- ***%R***: readyfd
Number of file descriptor to use for signaling
readiness of launched process.
- ***%r***: rootdir
Path of directory containing the widget and its data.
- ***%S***: secret
An hexadecimal number that can be used to initialize pairing of client
and application binder.
- ***%W***: width
Requested width for the widget.
Defined by the attribute **width** of the element **<widget>**
of **config.xml**.
Using ***afm-util***
--------------------
The command line tool ***afm-util*** uses dbus-send to send
orders to **afm-user-daemon**. This small scripts allows to
send command to ***afm-user-daemon*** either interactively
at shell prompt or scriptically.
The syntax is simple: it accept a command and when requires attached arguments.
Here is the summary of ***afm-util***:
- **afm-util runnables **:
list the runnable widgets installed
- **afm-util install wgt **:
install the wgt file
- **afm-util uninstall id **:
remove the installed widget of id
- **afm-util detail id **:
print detail about the installed widget of id
- **afm-util runners **:
list the running instance
- **afm-util start id **:
start an instance of the widget of id
- **afm-util once id **:
run once an instance of the widget of id
- **afm-util terminate rid **:
terminate the running instance rid
- **afm-util pause rid **:
pause the running instance rid
- **afm-util resume rid **:
resume the previously paused rid
- **afm-util state rid **:
get status of the running instance rid
Here is how to list applications using ***afm-util***:
afm-util runnables
[afm-daemons]: pictures/afm-daemons.svg "afm daemons location in the system"
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