XDG-DBUS-PROXY(1) User Commands XDG-DBUS-PROXY(1)
NAME
xdg-dbus-proxy - D-Bus proxy
SYNOPSIS
xdg-dbus-proxy [OPTION...] [ADDRESS PATH [OPTION...]...]
DESCRIPTION
xdg-dbus-proxy is a filtering proxy for D-Bus connections. Its
arguments are one or more ADDRESS-PATH pairs specifying the buses to
proxy, with options that specify what filtering to apply.
Basic Operation
The proxy listens to the unix domain socket at PATH, and for each
client that connects to the socket, it opens up a new connection to the
specified D-Bus ADDRESS (typically the session bus) and forwards data
between the two. During the authentication phase all data is forwarded
as received, and additionally for the first 1 byte zero we also send
the proxy credentials to the bus.
Once the connection is authenticated there are two modes, filtered and
unfiltered. In the unfiltered mode all messages are sent on as they are
received. In the filtering mode policy is applied to determine which
messages to allow, and which to drop.
Filtering is applied only to outgoing signals and method calls and
incoming broadcast signals. All replies (errors or method returns) are
allowed once for an outstanding method call, and never otherwise.
If a client ever receives a message from another peer on the bus, the
senders unique name is made visible, so the client can track caller
lifetimes via NameOwnerChanged signals. If a client calls a method on
or receives a broadcast signal from a name (even if filtered to some
subset of paths or interfaces), that names basic policy is considered
to be (at least) TALK, from then on.
Policy
The policy for the filtering consists of a mapping from well-known
names to a policy that is either SEE, TALK or OWN. The default initial
policy is that the the user is only allowed to TALK to the bus itself
(org.freedesktop.DBus, or no destination specified), and TALK to its
own unique ID. All other clients are invisible.
Here is a description of the policy levels (each level implies the ones
before it):
SEE
The name/ID is visible in the ListNames reply
The name/ID is visible in the ListActivatableNames reply
You can call GetNameOwner on the name
You can call NameHasOwner on the name
You see NameOwnerChanged signals on the name
You see NameOwnerChanged signals on the ID when the client
disconnects
You can call the GetXXX methods on the name/ID to get e.g. the peer
pid
You get AccessDenied rather than NameHasNoOwner when sending
messages to the name/ID
TALK
You can send any method calls and signals to the name/ID
You will receive broadcast signals from the name/ID (if you have a
match rule for them)
You can call StartServiceByName on the name
OWN
You are allowed to call RequestName/ReleaseName/ListQueuedOwners on
the name
Policy is specified with the --see, --talk and --own options. The
well-known names in these options can have a '.*' suffix. A name of
"org.foo.*" matches "org.foo", org.foo.bar", and "org.foo.bar.gazonk",
but not "org.foobar".
Polices are specified for well-known names, but they also affect the
owner of that name, so that the policy for a unique ID is the union of
the polices for all the names it owns. For technical reasons, the
policy for a unique name is "sticky", in that the highest policy
granted by a once-owned name is kept, even when the client releases
that name. This is impossible to avoid in a race-free way in a proxy.
But it is rarely a problem in practice, as few clients release names
and stay on the bus.
In addition to the basic SEE/TALK/OWN policy, it is possible to specify
more complicated rules about what method calls can be made on and what
broadcast signals can be received from well-known names. A rule can
restrict the allowed calls/signals to a specific object path or a
subtree of object paths, and it can restrict the allowed interface down
to an individual method or signal name.
Rules are specified with the --call and --broadcast options. The RULE
in these options determines what interfaces, methods and object paths
are allowed. It must be of the form [METHOD][@PATH], where METHOD can
be either '*' or a D-Bus interface, possible with a '.*' suffix, or a
fully-qualified method name, and PATH is a D-Bus object path, possible
with a '/*' suffix.
OPTIONS
When options are used multiple times, the last option wins, unless
otherwise specified.
General options:
--help
Print help and exit
--version
Print version
--fd=FD
Write to FD when the proxies are ready, and stop when it is closed.
--args=FD
Parse nul-separated arguments from the given file descriptor. This
option can be used multiple times to parse options from multiple
sources.
Proxy Options:
These options can only be used after an ADDRESS and apply to the proxy
for that address.
--filter
Enable filtering
--log
Turn on logging
--sloppy-names
Make all unique names visible.
--see=NAME
Set the SEE policy for the given name.
--talk=NAME
Set the TALK policy for the given name.
--own=NAME
Set the OWN policy for the given name.
--call=NAME=RULE
Set a rule for calls on the given name.
--broadcast=NAME=RULE
Set a rule for broadcast signals from the given name.
EXAMPLES
$ xdg-dbus-proxy --fd=26 unix:path=/run/usr/1000/bus
/run/usr/1000/.dbus-proxy/session-bus-proxy --filter
--own=org.gnome.ghex.* --talk=ca.desrt.dconf
--call=org.freedesktop.portal.*=*
--broadcast=org.freedesktop.portal.*=@/org/freedesktop/portal/*
flatpak XDG-DBUS-PROXY(1)
Generated by dwww version 1.14 on Sun Aug 17 11:50:08 CEST 2025.