Deepak Kodihalli | db17b50 | 2017-08-27 06:49:27 -0500 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | description: > |
| 2 | Implement to enable an object. |
| 3 | |
| 4 | A d-bus object under certain circumstances may have the need to be denoted |
| 5 | as "disabled". So the object exists, but it's current state (described by |
| 6 | the object properties) can't be relied upon, until the object is "enabled" |
| 7 | again. What causes the object to be enabled or disabled - whether it's via |
| 8 | an external interface or internal logic - depends on a specific |
| 9 | implementation and use-case. |
| 10 | |
| 11 | An example could be a d-bus object that denotes boot settings. However let's |
| 12 | say there's a permanent settings object versus a one-time (the next boot) |
| 13 | settings object. In this case, one of these objects, typically the one which |
| 14 | is not supposed to be used as a default, can implement the Enable interface |
| 15 | so that a user can indicate whether this setting object is to be used or |
| 16 | not, by setting the Enabled property. |
| 17 | properties: |
| 18 | - name: Enabled |
| 19 | type: boolean |
| 20 | description: > |
| 21 | Whether the object is enabled or not. |
| 22 | default: false |