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xpc_dictionary_create(3) Library Functions Manual xpc_dictionary_create(3)

xpc_dictionary_createcreation and management of XPC messages

#include <xpc/xpc.h>

xpc_object_t
xpc_dictionary_create(const char * const *keys, const xpc_object_t *values, size_t count);

xpc_object_t
xpc_dictionary_create_reply(xpc_object_t original);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_value(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, xpc_object_t value);

xpc_object_t
xpc_dictionary_get_value(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

size_t
xpc_dictionary_get_count(xpc_object_t dictionary);

bool
xpc_dictionary_apply(xpc_object_t dictionary, xpc_dictionary_applier_t applier);

xpc_connection_t
xpc_dictionary_get_remote_connection(xpc_object_t dictionary);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_bool(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, bool value);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_int64(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, int64_t value);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_uint64(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, uint64_t value);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_double(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, double value);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_date(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, int64_t value);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_data(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, const void *value, size_t length);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_string(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, const char *value);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_uuid(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, const uuid_t value);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_fd(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, int value);

void
xpc_dictionary_set_connection(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, xpc_connection_t connection);

bool
xpc_dictionary_get_bool(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

int64_t
xpc_dictionary_get_int64(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

uint64_t
xpc_dictionary_get_uint64(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

double
xpc_dictionary_get_double(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

int64_t
xpc_dictionary_get_date(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

const void *
xpc_dictionary_get_data(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key, size_t *length);

const uint8_t *
xpc_dictionary_get_uuid(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

const char *
xpc_dictionary_get_string(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

int
xpc_dictionary_dup_fd(xpc_object_t dictionary, const char *key);

XPC dictionaries are collections of XPC objects that map keys (expressed as C strings) to values.

Objects of dictionary collection type are mutable and will automatically expand to accommodate new keys and values that are inserted into the dictionary.

The () function returns a newly created dictionary. The caller may optionally provide corresponding C arrays of keys and values to initialize the dictionary. All values must be XPC objects and are automatically retained by the XPC framework as they are inserted into the dictionary. The count is used to specify the size of the C arrays. Both arrays must be of the same size. The behavior when count is greater than the number of elements in either of the C arrays is undefined. These arguments are optional and NULL may be passed to both keys and values with a count of zero, resulting in an empty dictionary.

The () function may be used to insert or replace the value of a specified key in a dictionary. The XPC framework will retain a reference to the value while it is present in the dictionary, and will release the reference when it is removed. The value provided may be NULL, in which case the key will be removed from the dictionary.

The value of a specific key in the dictionary may be retrieved using the () function. This function returns the value for the specified key if it exists or NULL if it does not.

Various functions exist for retrieving primitive C and operating system types directly from a dictionary without the need for an intermediate boxed object. See xpc_object(3) for more information.

The () function may be used to iterate the key and value pairs of a dictionary using an applier callback block. The callback block is invoked for each pair and must return a bool indicating whether the iteration should continue (true if it should continue, false if it should not). The xpc_dictionary_apply() function will return true if the applier block was called and returned true for all pairs, or false if it was not (i.e. the applier returned false during the iteration, which may have caused iteration to stop early).

Note that the C language does not require an explicit return type to be declared for a block when the return expression is unambigous. Therefore the formal block declaration

(void)xpc_dictionary_apply(dictionary, ^ bool (const char *key, xpc_object_t value) {
	// Do iteration.
	return true;
});

may instead be written as follows (omitting the declared return type, and explicitly casting the return value to the desired type):

(void)xpc_dictionary_apply(dictionary, ^(const char *key, xpc_object_t value) {
	// Do iteration.
	return (bool)true;
});

Important: the behavior of modifying the contents of an XPC dictionary during iteration is undefined.

All messages sent and received by XPC connections are dictionaries. As a result, several functions are available to assist with the use of dictionaries as XPC messages.

The () function may be used to return the underlying XPC connection through which a message was received.

When a client sends a message using the xpc_connection_send_message_with_reply(3) function, a specific reply message must be created with (). This function returns a new dictionary which shares the underlying remote connection as the original message. A reply dictionary may be used the same as any other dictionary, but it must be sent to the connection returned by xpc_dictionary_get_remote_connection(), at which point the sender's reply block will be invoked when the reply message is received.

: Message dictionaries have side effects attached to their lifetimes and the lifetimes of reply messages created from them, so close attention should be paid to the lifetimes of such dictionaries. For details, see xpc_transaction_begin(3).

Errors encountered by the XPC framework are delivered to the event handler of a connection as a dictionary of type XPC_TYPE_ERROR. See xpc_get_type(3) for more information about XPC object types. These error dictionaries may be directly compared against the following constants:

Important: these dictionaries are constant singletons and must not be modified.

Error dictionaries contain a single XPC_ERROR_KEY_DESCRIPTION key. The value of this key is a string object which encapsulates a human-readable description of the error condition. This value is guaranteed to be a string type and it is safe to use the () function directly to obtain a C string representation of the description. The contents of this string is intended for diagnostic use and is subject to change in future releases.

Additional keys and values may be added to the error dictionaries over time.

xpc_object(3), xpc_objects(3), xpc_connection_create(3), xpc_array_create(3)

1 July, 2011 Darwin