An unsigned 32-bit integer representing time as the number of seconds elapsed since the Unix epoch (1970-01-01T00:00:00Z) An signed 64-bit integer representing time as the number of seconds elapsed since the Unix epoch (1970-01-01T00:00:00Z); negative for times before the epoch The Text interface is the only user of Unix_Timestamp so far, and we'd like to be Y2038 compatible in future interfaces. A string representing a D-Bus bus name - either a well-known name like "org.freedesktop.Telepathy.MissionControl" or a unique name like ":1.123" A string representing a D-Bus well-known name like "org.freedesktop.Telepathy.MissionControl". A string representing a D-Bus unique name, such as ":1.123" An ASCII string representing a D-Bus interface - two or more elements separated by dots, where each element is a non-empty string of ASCII letters, digits and underscores, not starting with a digit. The maximum total length is 255 characters. For example, "org.freedesktop.DBus.Peer". An ASCII string representing a D-Bus error. This is syntactically the same as a DBus_Interface, but the meaning is different. A string representing a D-Bus signature (the 'g' type isn't used because of poor interoperability, particularly with dbus-glib) An ASCII string representing a D-Bus method, signal or property name - a non-empty string of ASCII letters, digits and underscores, not starting with a digit, with a maximum length of 255 characters. For example, "Ping". A string representing the full name of a D-Bus method, signal or property, consisting of a DBus_Interface, followed by a dot, followed by a DBus_Member. For example, "org.freedesktop.DBus.Peer.Ping". A mapping from strings representing D-Bus properties (by their namespaced names) to their values. A D-Bus interface name, followed by a dot and a D-Bus property name. The value of the property. A mapping from strings to variants representing extra key-value pairs. A mapping from strings to strings representing extra key-value pairs. An IP address and port. Either a dotted-quad IPv4 address literal as for Socket_Address_IPv4, or an RFC2373 IPv6 address as for Socket_Address_IPv6. The TCP or UDP port number. An IPv4 address and port. A dotted-quad IPv4 address literal: four ASCII decimal numbers, each between 0 and 255 inclusive, e.g. "192.168.0.1". The TCP or UDP port number. An IPv6 address and port. An IPv6 address literal as specified by RFC2373 section 2.2, e.g. "2001:DB8::8:800:200C:4171". The TCP or UDP port number. An IPv4 network or subnet. A dotted-quad IPv4 address literal: four ASCII decimal numbers, each between 0 and 255 inclusive, e.g. "192.168.0.1". The number of leading bits of the address that must match, for this netmask to be considered to match an address. An IPv6 network or subnet. An IPv6 address literal as specified by RFC2373 section 2.2, e.g. "2001:DB8::8:800:200C:4171". The number of leading bits of the address that must match, for this netmask to be considered to match an address.

The time at which an user action occurred. This type has the 2 following special values:

0: the action doesn't involve any user action. Clients SHOULD avoid stealing focus when presenting the channel.

MAX_INT64: clients SHOULD behave as though the user action happened at the current time, e.g. a client MAY request that its window gains focus.

This can be used by clients that can't know the X server time like command line applications for example.

For all the other values it corresponds to the time of the user action. Clients SHOULD use this for focus-stealing prevention, if applicable. Note that the time is dependant on the local environment and so is not necessarily a wall-clock time. For example in an X environment it's expected to be the X timestamp of events. This corresponds to the _NET_WM_USER_TIME property in EWMH.

A mapping from object path to the immutable properties of the object. The object path of an object The immutable properties of the object A language tag as defined in IETF BCP 47, such as "en_US".