D-Bus examples
Here are some code snippets for various programming languages (complete with completely unnecessary comments) showing how you can interface with Apertium by means of D-Bus. You'll need to install the D-Bus service for Apertium.
Python
#!/usr/bin/python # coding=utf-8 # -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- import dbus, sys, codecs; sys.stdin = codecs.getwriter('utf-8')(sys.stdin); sys.stdout = codecs.getwriter('utf-8')(sys.stdout); mode_name = 'en-af'; # The name of the installed mode dbus_mode_name = '/' + '_'.join(pair_name.split('-')); # Some mandatory mangling bus = dbus.SessionBus(); # Create a new session bus translator = dbus.Interface(bus.get_object('org.apertium.mode', dbus_mode_name), 'org.apertium.Mode'); # Get the translator input = sys.stdin.read(); # Read the data print translator.translate({}, input); # Print the translation
Java
Read the guide to installing the Java D-Bus bindings if you don't have the library installed already.
Since both D-Bus and Java use statically typed systems, Java needs to have the D-Bus interface descriptions of the objects it will use available at compile time. The 'CreateInterface' program in the Java D-Bus distribution creates Java interfaces by introspecting D-Bus objects.
We will create a Java interface corresponding to the info.apertium.Info interface and we will store it under the file org/apertium/Info.java. To do this, execute:
CreateInterface org.apertium.info / > org/apertium/Info.java
(and remember to use dbus-launch --exit-with-session
if this does not work).
The contents out the newly created file should look something like:
/* File: org/apertium/Info.java */ package org.apertium; import java.util.List; import org.freedesktop.dbus.DBusInterface; public interface Info extends DBusInterface { public String directory(); public List<List<String>> get_pipeline(String mode); public List<String> get_filters(String _type); public List<String> modes(); public String mode_directory(); }
The next step is to create our minimal Java program. Create a file called TestDBus
with the following contents:
import org.freedesktop.DBus; import org.freedesktop.dbus.DBusConnection; import org.freedesktop.dbus.exceptions.DBusException; import org.apertium.Info; // The interface we use to access org.apertium.info/ class TestDBus { public static void main(String[] args) throws org.freedesktop.dbus.exceptions.DBusException { DBusConnection bus = null; Info info = null; bus = DBusConnection.getConnection(DBusConnection.SESSION); info = bus.getRemoteObject("org.apertium.info", "/", Info.class); for (String s : info.modes()) { System.out.println(s); } bus.disconnect(); } }
To compile this program, we need to include the current path on the class path as well as the jar files needed by the Java D-Bus binding. To compile, execute (you should modify the directories to suit your installation):
javac -cp .:/usr/local/share/java/dbus.jar:/usr/local/share/java/unix.jar:\ /usr/local/share/java/debug-disable.jar TestDBus.java
To run the program, you need to specify the class paths specified above, as well as the JNI code (which installs to /usr/local/lib/jni
by default (if you are using TCP instead of UNIX domain sockets for transport, then this won't be needed). You can run the program using:
java -cp .:/usr/local/share/java/dbus.jar:\ /usr/local/share/java/unix.jar:/usr/local/share/java/debug-disable.jar\ -Djava.library.path=/usr/local/lib/jni TestDBus
(and if it does not work, prefix the command with dbus-launch --exit-with-session
).
Of course, if you are writing an application, you would hide all of these flags in a wrapper script.