diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/devel')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/code-provenance.rst | 338 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/index-process.rst | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/migration/CPR.rst | 5 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/migration/main.rst | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/migration/postcopy.rst | 36 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/migration/vfio.rst | 35 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/qapi-code-gen.rst | 28 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/qapi-domain.rst | 35 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/rust.rst | 31 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/submitting-a-patch.rst | 65 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/testing/functional.rst | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/testing/main.rst | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/devel/tracing.rst | 2 |
13 files changed, 505 insertions, 81 deletions
diff --git a/docs/devel/code-provenance.rst b/docs/devel/code-provenance.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b5aae2e --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/devel/code-provenance.rst @@ -0,0 +1,338 @@ +.. _code-provenance: + +Code provenance +=============== + +Certifying patch submissions +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The QEMU community **mandates** all contributors to certify provenance of +patch submissions they make to the project. To put it another way, +contributors must indicate that they are legally permitted to contribute to +the project. + +Certification is achieved with a low overhead by adding a single line to the +bottom of every git commit:: + + Signed-off-by: YOUR NAME <YOUR@EMAIL> + +The addition of this line asserts that the author of the patch is contributing +in accordance with the clauses specified in the +`Developer's Certificate of Origin <https://developercertificate.org>`__: + +.. _dco: + + Developer's Certificate of Origin 1.1 + + By making a contribution to this project, I certify that: + + (a) The contribution was created in whole or in part by me and I + have the right to submit it under the open source license + indicated in the file; or + + (b) The contribution is based upon previous work that, to the best + of my knowledge, is covered under an appropriate open source + license and I have the right under that license to submit that + work with modifications, whether created in whole or in part + by me, under the same open source license (unless I am + permitted to submit under a different license), as indicated + in the file; or + + (c) The contribution was provided directly to me by some other + person who certified (a), (b) or (c) and I have not modified + it. + + (d) I understand and agree that this project and the contribution + are public and that a record of the contribution (including all + personal information I submit with it, including my sign-off) is + maintained indefinitely and may be redistributed consistent with + this project or the open source license(s) involved. + +The name used with "Signed-off-by" does not need to be your legal name, nor +birth name, nor appear on any government ID. It is the identity you choose to +be known by in the community, but should not be anonymous, nor misrepresent +whom you are. + +It is generally expected that the name and email addresses used in one of the +``Signed-off-by`` lines, matches that of the git commit ``Author`` field. +It's okay if you subscribe or contribute to the list via more than one +address, but using multiple addresses in one commit just confuses +things. + +If the person sending the mail is not one of the patch authors, they are +nonetheless expected to add their own ``Signed-off-by`` to comply with the +DCO clause (c). + +Multiple authorship +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +It is not uncommon for a patch to have contributions from multiple authors. In +this scenario, git commits will usually be expected to have a ``Signed-off-by`` +line for each contributor involved in creation of the patch. Some edge cases: + + * The non-primary author's contributions were so trivial that they can be + considered not subject to copyright. In this case the secondary authors + need not include a ``Signed-off-by``. + + This case most commonly applies where QEMU reviewers give short snippets + of code as suggested fixes to a patch. The reviewers don't need to have + their own ``Signed-off-by`` added unless their code suggestion was + unusually large, but it is common to add ``Suggested-by`` as a credit + for non-trivial code. + + * Both contributors work for the same employer and the employer requires + copyright assignment. + + It can be said that in this case a ``Signed-off-by`` is indicating that + the person has permission to contribute from their employer who is the + copyright holder. It is nonetheless still preferable to include a + ``Signed-off-by`` for each contributor, as in some countries employees are + not able to assign copyright to their employer, and it also covers any + time invested outside working hours. + +When multiple ``Signed-off-by`` tags are present, they should be strictly kept +in order of authorship, from oldest to newest. + +Other commit tags +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +While the ``Signed-off-by`` tag is mandatory, there are a number of other tags +that are commonly used during QEMU development: + + * **``Reviewed-by``**: when a QEMU community member reviews a patch on the + mailing list, if they consider the patch acceptable, they should send an + email reply containing a ``Reviewed-by`` tag. Subsystem maintainers who + review a patch should add this even if they are also adding their + ``Signed-off-by`` to the same commit. + + * **``Acked-by``**: when a QEMU subsystem maintainer approves a patch that + touches their subsystem, but intends to allow a different maintainer to + queue it and send a pull request, they would send a mail containing a + ``Acked-by`` tag. Where a patch touches multiple subsystems, ``Acked-by`` + only implies review of the maintainers' own areas of responsibility. If a + maintainer wants to indicate they have done a full review they should use + a ``Reviewed-by`` tag. + + * **``Tested-by``**: when a QEMU community member has functionally tested the + behaviour of the patch in some manner, they should send an email reply + containing a ``Tested-by`` tag. + + * **``Reported-by``**: when a QEMU community member reports a problem via the + mailing list, or some other informal channel that is not the issue tracker, + it is good practice to credit them by including a ``Reported-by`` tag on + any patch fixing the issue. When the problem is reported via the GitLab + issue tracker, however, it is sufficient to just include a link to the + issue. + + * **``Suggested-by``**: when a reviewer or other 3rd party makes non-trivial + suggestions for how to change a patch, it is good practice to credit them + by including a ``Suggested-by`` tag. + +Subsystem maintainer requirements +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +When a subsystem maintainer accepts a patch from a contributor, in addition to +the normal code review points, they are expected to validate the presence of +suitable ``Signed-off-by`` tags. + +At the time they queue the patch in their subsystem tree, the maintainer +**must** also then add their own ``Signed-off-by`` to indicate that they have +done the aforementioned validation. This is in addition to any of their own +``Reviewed-by`` tags the subsystem maintainer may wish to include. + +When the maintainer modifies the patch after pulling into their tree, they +should record their contribution. This is typically done via a note in the +commit message, just prior to the maintainer's ``Signed-off-by``:: + + Signed-off-by: Cory Contributor <cory.contributor@example.com> + [Comment rephrased for clarity] + Signed-off-by: Mary Maintainer <mary.maintainer@mycorp.test> + + +Tools for adding ``Signed-off-by`` +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +There are a variety of ways tools can support adding ``Signed-off-by`` tags +for patches, avoiding the need for contributors to manually type in this +repetitive text each time. + +git commands +^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +When creating, or amending, a commit the ``-s`` flag to ``git commit`` will +append a suitable line matching the configured git author details. + +If preparing patches using the ``git format-patch`` tool, the ``-s`` flag can +be used to append a suitable line in the emails it creates, without modifying +the local commits. Alternatively to modify all the local commits on a branch:: + + git rebase master -x 'git commit --amend --no-edit -s' + +emacs +^^^^^ + +In the file ``$HOME/.emacs.d/abbrev_defs`` add: + +.. code:: elisp + + (define-abbrev-table 'global-abbrev-table + '( + ("8rev" "Reviewed-by: YOUR NAME <your@email.addr>" nil 1) + ("8ack" "Acked-by: YOUR NAME <your@email.addr>" nil 1) + ("8test" "Tested-by: YOUR NAME <your@email.addr>" nil 1) + ("8sob" "Signed-off-by: YOUR NAME <your@email.addr>" nil 1) + )) + +with this change, if you type (for example) ``8rev`` followed by ``<space>`` +or ``<enter>`` it will expand to the whole phrase. + +vim +^^^ + +In the file ``$HOME/.vimrc`` add:: + + iabbrev 8rev Reviewed-by: YOUR NAME <your@email.addr> + iabbrev 8ack Acked-by: YOUR NAME <your@email.addr> + iabbrev 8test Tested-by: YOUR NAME <your@email.addr> + iabbrev 8sob Signed-off-by: YOUR NAME <your@email.addr> + +with this change, if you type (for example) ``8rev`` followed by ``<space>`` +or ``<enter>`` it will expand to the whole phrase. + +Re-starting abandoned work +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +For a variety of reasons there are some patches that get submitted to QEMU but +never merged. An unrelated contributor may decide (months or years later) to +continue working from the abandoned patch and re-submit it with extra changes. + +The general principles when picking up abandoned work are: + + * Continue to credit the original author for their work, by maintaining their + original ``Signed-off-by`` + * Indicate where the original patch was obtained from (mailing list, bug + tracker, author's git repo, etc) when sending it for review + * Acknowledge the extra work of the new contributor by including their + ``Signed-off-by`` in the patch in addition to the orignal author's + * Indicate who is responsible for what parts of the patch. This is typically + done via a note in the commit message, just prior to the new contributor's + ``Signed-off-by``:: + + Signed-off-by: Some Person <some.person@example.com> + [Rebased and added support for 'foo'] + Signed-off-by: New Person <new.person@mycorp.test> + +In complicated cases, or if otherwise unsure, ask for advice on the project +mailing list. + +It is also recommended to attempt to contact the original author to let them +know you are interested in taking over their work, in case they still intended +to return to the work, or had any suggestions about the best way to continue. + +Inclusion of generated files +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +Files in patches contributed to QEMU are generally expected to be provided +only in the preferred format for making modifications. The implication of +this is that the output of code generators or compilers is usually not +appropriate to contribute to QEMU. + +For reasons of practicality there are some exceptions to this rule, where +generated code is permitted, provided it is also accompanied by the +corresponding preferred source format. This is done where it is impractical +to expect those building QEMU to run the code generation or compilation +process. A non-exhaustive list of examples is: + + * Images: where an bitmap image is created from a vector file it is common + to include the rendered bitmaps at desired resolution(s), since subtle + changes in the rasterization process / tools may affect quality. The + original vector file is expected to accompany any generated bitmaps. + + * Firmware: QEMU includes pre-compiled binary ROMs for a variety of guest + firmwares. When such binary ROMs are contributed, the corresponding source + must also be provided, either directly, or through a git submodule link. + + * Dockerfiles: the majority of the dockerfiles are automatically generated + from a canonical list of build dependencies maintained in tree, together + with the libvirt-ci git submodule link. The generated dockerfiles are + included in tree because it is desirable to be able to directly build + container images from a clean git checkout. + + * eBPF: QEMU includes some generated eBPF machine code, since the required + eBPF compilation tools are not broadly available on all targetted OS + distributions. The corresponding eBPF C code for the binary is also + provided. This is a time-limited exception until the eBPF toolchain is + sufficiently broadly available in distros. + +In all cases above, the existence of generated files must be acknowledged +and justified in the commit that introduces them. + +Tools which perform changes to existing code with deterministic algorithmic +manipulation, driven by user specified inputs, are not generally considered +to be "generators". + +For instance, using Coccinelle to convert code from one pattern to another +pattern, or fixing documentation typos with a spell checker, or transforming +code using sed / awk / etc, are not considered to be acts of code +generation. Where an automated manipulation is performed on code, however, +this should be declared in the commit message. + +At times contributors may use or create scripts/tools to generate an initial +boilerplate code template which is then filled in to produce the final patch. +The output of such a tool would still be considered the "preferred format", +since it is intended to be a foundation for further human authored changes. +Such tools are acceptable to use, provided there is clearly defined copyright +and licensing for their output. Note in particular the caveats applying to AI +content generators below. + +Use of AI content generators +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +TL;DR: + + **Current QEMU project policy is to DECLINE any contributions which are + believed to include or derive from AI generated content. This includes + ChatGPT, Claude, Copilot, Llama and similar tools.** + +The increasing prevalence of AI-assisted software development results in a +number of difficult legal questions and risks for software projects, including +QEMU. Of particular concern is content generated by `Large Language Models +<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Large_language_model>`__ (LLMs). + +The QEMU community requires that contributors certify their patch submissions +are made in accordance with the rules of the `Developer's Certificate of +Origin (DCO) <dco>`. + +To satisfy the DCO, the patch contributor has to fully understand the +copyright and license status of content they are contributing to QEMU. With AI +content generators, the copyright and license status of the output is +ill-defined with no generally accepted, settled legal foundation. + +Where the training material is known, it is common for it to include large +volumes of material under restrictive licensing/copyright terms. Even where +the training material is all known to be under open source licenses, it is +likely to be under a variety of terms, not all of which will be compatible +with QEMU's licensing requirements. + +How contributors could comply with DCO terms (b) or (c) for the output of AI +content generators commonly available today is unclear. The QEMU project is +not willing or able to accept the legal risks of non-compliance. + +The QEMU project thus requires that contributors refrain from using AI content +generators on patches intended to be submitted to the project, and will +decline any contribution if use of AI is either known or suspected. + +This policy does not apply to other uses of AI, such as researching APIs or +algorithms, static analysis, or debugging, provided their output is not to be +included in contributions. + +Examples of tools impacted by this policy includes GitHub's CoPilot, OpenAI's +ChatGPT, Anthropic's Claude, and Meta's Code Llama, and code/content +generation agents which are built on top of such tools. + +This policy may evolve as AI tools mature and the legal situation is +clarifed. In the meanwhile, requests for exceptions to this policy will be +evaluated by the QEMU project on a case by case basis. To be granted an +exception, a contributor will need to demonstrate clarity of the license and +copyright status for the tool's output in relation to its training model and +code, to the satisfaction of the project maintainers. diff --git a/docs/devel/index-process.rst b/docs/devel/index-process.rst index cb7c664..5807752 100644 --- a/docs/devel/index-process.rst +++ b/docs/devel/index-process.rst @@ -13,6 +13,7 @@ Notes about how to interact with the community and how and where to submit patch maintainers style submitting-a-patch + code-provenance trivial-patches stable-process submitting-a-pull-request diff --git a/docs/devel/migration/CPR.rst b/docs/devel/migration/CPR.rst index 7897873..0a0fd4f 100644 --- a/docs/devel/migration/CPR.rst +++ b/docs/devel/migration/CPR.rst @@ -152,8 +152,7 @@ cpr-transfer mode This mode allows the user to transfer a guest to a new QEMU instance on the same host with minimal guest pause time, by preserving guest RAM in place, albeit with new virtual addresses in new QEMU. Devices -and their pinned memory pages will also be preserved in a future QEMU -release. +and their pinned memory pages are also preserved for VFIO and IOMMUFD. The user starts new QEMU on the same host as old QEMU, with command- line arguments to create the same machine, plus the ``-incoming`` @@ -322,6 +321,6 @@ Futures cpr-transfer mode is based on a capability to transfer open file descriptors from old to new QEMU. In the future, descriptors for -vfio, iommufd, vhost, and char devices could be transferred, +vhost, and char devices could be transferred, preserving those devices and their kernel state without interruption, even if they do not explicitly support live migration. diff --git a/docs/devel/migration/main.rst b/docs/devel/migration/main.rst index cdd4f4a..6493c1d 100644 --- a/docs/devel/migration/main.rst +++ b/docs/devel/migration/main.rst @@ -508,8 +508,8 @@ An iterative device must provide: the point that stream bandwidth limits tell it to stop. Each call generates one section. - - A ``save_live_complete_precopy`` function that must transmit the - last section for the device containing any remaining data. + - A ``save_complete`` function that must transmit the last section for + the device containing any remaining data. - A ``load_state`` function used to load sections generated by any of the save functions that generate sections. diff --git a/docs/devel/migration/postcopy.rst b/docs/devel/migration/postcopy.rst index 82e7a84..e319388 100644 --- a/docs/devel/migration/postcopy.rst +++ b/docs/devel/migration/postcopy.rst @@ -33,25 +33,6 @@ will now cause the transition from precopy to postcopy. It can be issued immediately after migration is started or any time later on. Issuing it after the end of a migration is harmless. -Blocktime is a postcopy live migration metric, intended to show how -long the vCPU was in state of interruptible sleep due to pagefault. -That metric is calculated both for all vCPUs as overlapped value, and -separately for each vCPU. These values are calculated on destination -side. To enable postcopy blocktime calculation, enter following -command on destination monitor: - -``migrate_set_capability postcopy-blocktime on`` - -Postcopy blocktime can be retrieved by query-migrate qmp command. -postcopy-blocktime value of qmp command will show overlapped blocking -time for all vCPU, postcopy-vcpu-blocktime will show list of blocking -time per vCPU. - -.. note:: - During the postcopy phase, the bandwidth limits set using - ``migrate_set_parameter`` is ignored (to avoid delaying requested pages that - the destination is waiting for). - Postcopy internals ================== @@ -312,3 +293,20 @@ explicitly) to be sent in a separate preempt channel, rather than queued in the background migration channel. Anyone who cares about latencies of page faults during a postcopy migration should enable this feature. By default, it's not enabled. + +Postcopy blocktime statistics +----------------------------- + +Blocktime is a postcopy live migration metric, intended to show how +long the vCPU was in state of interruptible sleep due to pagefault. +That metric is calculated both for all vCPUs as overlapped value, and +separately for each vCPU. These values are calculated on destination +side. To enable postcopy blocktime calculation, enter following +command on destination monitor: + +``migrate_set_capability postcopy-blocktime on`` + +Postcopy blocktime can be retrieved by query-migrate qmp command. +postcopy-blocktime value of qmp command will show overlapped blocking +time for all vCPU, postcopy-vcpu-blocktime will show list of blocking +time per vCPU. diff --git a/docs/devel/migration/vfio.rst b/docs/devel/migration/vfio.rst index 673e354..0790e50 100644 --- a/docs/devel/migration/vfio.rst +++ b/docs/devel/migration/vfio.rst @@ -75,12 +75,12 @@ VFIO implements the device hooks for the iterative approach as follows: in the non-multifd mode. In the multifd mode it just emits either a dummy EOS marker. -* A ``save_live_complete_precopy`` function that sets the VFIO device in - _STOP_COPY state and iteratively copies the data for the VFIO device until - the vendor driver indicates that no data remains. - In the multifd mode it just emits a dummy EOS marker. +* A ``save_complete`` function that sets the VFIO device in _STOP_COPY + state and iteratively copies the data for the VFIO device until the + vendor driver indicates that no data remains. In the multifd mode it + just emits a dummy EOS marker. -* A ``save_live_complete_precopy_thread`` function that in the multifd mode +* A ``save_complete_precopy_thread`` function that in the multifd mode provides thread handler performing multifd device state transfer. It sets the VFIO device to _STOP_COPY state, iteratively reads the data from the VFIO device and queues it for multifd transmission until the vendor @@ -195,12 +195,12 @@ Live migration save path | Then the VFIO device is put in _STOP_COPY state (FINISH_MIGRATE, _ACTIVE, _STOP_COPY) - .save_live_complete_precopy() is called for each active device + .save_complete() is called for each active device For the VFIO device: in the non-multifd mode iterate in - .save_live_complete_precopy() until + .save_complete() until pending data is 0 In the multifd mode this iteration is done in - .save_live_complete_precopy_thread() instead. + .save_complete_precopy_thread() instead. | (POSTMIGRATE, _COMPLETED, _STOP_COPY) Migraton thread schedules cleanup bottom half and exits @@ -247,3 +247,22 @@ The multifd VFIO device state transfer is controlled by "x-migration-multifd-transfer" VFIO device property. This property defaults to AUTO, which means that VFIO device state transfer via multifd channels is attempted in configurations that otherwise support it. + +Since the target QEMU needs to load device state buffers in-order it needs to +queue incoming buffers until they can be loaded into the device. +This means that a malicious QEMU source could theoretically cause the target +QEMU to allocate unlimited amounts of memory for such buffers-in-flight. + +The "x-migration-max-queued-buffers-size" property allows capping the total size +of these VFIO device state buffers queued at the destination. + +Because a malicious QEMU source causing OOM on the target is not expected to be +a realistic threat in most of VFIO live migration use cases and the right value +depends on the particular setup by default this queued buffers size limit is +disabled by setting it to UINT64_MAX. + +Some host platforms (like ARM64) require that VFIO device config is loaded only +after all iterables were loaded, during non-iterables loading phase. +Such interlocking is controlled by "x-migration-load-config-after-iter" VFIO +device property, which in its default setting (AUTO) does so only on platforms +that actually require it. diff --git a/docs/devel/qapi-code-gen.rst b/docs/devel/qapi-code-gen.rst index 231cc0f..dfdbeac 100644 --- a/docs/devel/qapi-code-gen.rst +++ b/docs/devel/qapi-code-gen.rst @@ -876,25 +876,35 @@ structuring content. Headings and subheadings ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -A free-form documentation comment containing a line which starts with -some ``=`` symbols and then a space defines a section heading:: +Free-form documentation does not start with ``@SYMBOL`` and can contain +arbitrary rST markup. Headings can be marked up using the standard rST +syntax:: ## - # = This is a top level heading + # ************************* + # This is a level 2 heading + # ************************* # # This is a free-form comment which will go under the # top level heading. ## ## - # == This is a second level heading + # This is a third level heading + # ============================== + # + # Level 4 + # _______ + # + # Level 5 + # ^^^^^^^ + # + # Level 6 + # """"""" ## -A heading line must be the first line of the documentation -comment block. - -Section headings must always be correctly nested, so you can only -define a third-level heading inside a second-level heading, and so on. +Level 1 headings are reserved for use by the generated documentation +page itself, leaving level 2 as the highest level that should be used. Documentation markup diff --git a/docs/devel/qapi-domain.rst b/docs/devel/qapi-domain.rst index 1123872..fe540d1 100644 --- a/docs/devel/qapi-domain.rst +++ b/docs/devel/qapi-domain.rst @@ -9,7 +9,7 @@ in Sphinx is provided by the QAPI Domain, located in `Python Domain <https://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/master/usage/domains/python.html>`_ included with Sphinx, but provides special directives and roles -speciically for annotating and documenting QAPI definitions +for annotating and documenting QAPI definitions specifically. A `Domain @@ -101,7 +101,7 @@ without types. The QAPI domain uses this class for features, returns, and enum values. TypedField: - * Creates a grouped, typed field. Multiple adjacent entres will be + * Creates a grouped, typed field. Multiple adjacent entries will be merged into one section, and the content will form a bulleted list. * *Must* take at least one argument, but supports up to two - nominally, a name and a type. @@ -242,6 +242,37 @@ Example:: } +``:return-nodesc:`` +------------------- + +Document the return type of a QAPI command, without an accompanying +description. + +:availability: This field list is only available in the body of the + Command directive. +:syntax: ``:return-nodesc: type`` +:type: `sphinx.util.docfields.Field + <https://pydoc.dev/sphinx/latest/sphinx.util.docfields.Field.html?private=1>`_ + + +Example:: + + .. qapi:command:: query-replay + :since: 5.2 + + Retrieve the record/replay information. It includes current + instruction count which may be used for ``replay-break`` and + ``replay-seek`` commands. + + :return-nodesc: ReplayInfo + + .. qmp-example:: + + -> { "execute": "query-replay" } + <- { "return": { + "mode": "play", "filename": "log.rr", "icount": 220414 } + } + ``:value:`` ----------- diff --git a/docs/devel/rust.rst b/docs/devel/rust.rst index 171d908..b673753 100644 --- a/docs/devel/rust.rst +++ b/docs/devel/rust.rst @@ -37,12 +37,16 @@ output directory (typically ``rust/target/``). A vanilla invocation of Cargo will complain that it cannot find the generated sources, which can be fixed in different ways: -* by using special shorthand targets in the QEMU build directory:: +* by using Makefile targets, provided by Meson, that run ``clippy`` or + ``rustdoc``: make clippy - make rustfmt make rustdoc +A target for ``rustfmt`` is also declared in ``rust/meson.build``: + + make rustfmt + * by invoking ``cargo`` through the Meson `development environment`__ feature:: @@ -50,7 +54,7 @@ which can be fixed in different ways: pyvenv/bin/meson devenv -w ../rust cargo fmt If you are going to use ``cargo`` repeatedly, ``pyvenv/bin/meson devenv`` - will enter a shell where commands like ``cargo clippy`` just work. + will enter a shell where commands like ``cargo fmt`` just work. __ https://mesonbuild.com/Commands.html#devenv @@ -66,7 +70,7 @@ be run via ``meson test`` or ``make``:: make check-rust -Building Rust code with ``--enable-modules`` is not supported yet. +Note that doctests require all ``.o`` files from the build to be available. Supported tools ''''''''''''''' @@ -92,6 +96,11 @@ are missing: architecture (VMState). Right now, VMState lacks type safety because it is hard to place the ``VMStateField`` definitions in traits. +* NUL-terminated file names with ``#[track_caller]`` are scheduled for + inclusion as ``#![feature(location_file_nul)]``, but it will be a while + before QEMU can use them. For now, there is special code in + ``util/error.c`` to support non-NUL-terminated file names. + * associated const equality would be nice to have for some users of ``callbacks::FnCall``, but is still experimental. ``ASSERT_IS_SOME`` replaces it. @@ -151,10 +160,11 @@ module status ``callbacks`` complete ``cell`` stable ``errno`` complete +``error`` stable ``irq`` complete +``log`` proof of concept ``memory`` stable ``module`` complete -``offset_of`` stable ``qdev`` stable ``qom`` stable ``sysbus`` stable @@ -341,7 +351,7 @@ Writing procedural macros ''''''''''''''''''''''''' By conventions, procedural macros are split in two functions, one -returning ``Result<proc_macro2::TokenStream, MacroError>`` with the body of +returning ``Result<proc_macro2::TokenStream, syn::Error>`` with the body of the procedural macro, and the second returning ``proc_macro::TokenStream`` which is the actual procedural macro. The former's name is the same as the latter with the ``_or_error`` suffix. The code for the latter is more @@ -351,18 +361,19 @@ from the type after ``as`` in the invocation of ``parse_macro_input!``:: #[proc_macro_derive(Object)] pub fn derive_object(input: TokenStream) -> TokenStream { let input = parse_macro_input!(input as DeriveInput); - let expanded = derive_object_or_error(input).unwrap_or_else(Into::into); - TokenStream::from(expanded) + derive_object_or_error(input) + .unwrap_or_else(syn::Error::into_compile_error) + .into() } The ``qemu_api_macros`` crate has utility functions to examine a ``DeriveInput`` and perform common checks (e.g. looking for a struct -with named fields). These functions return ``Result<..., MacroError>`` +with named fields). These functions return ``Result<..., syn::Error>`` and can be used easily in the procedural macro function:: fn derive_object_or_error(input: DeriveInput) -> - Result<proc_macro2::TokenStream, MacroError> + Result<proc_macro2::TokenStream, Error> { is_c_repr(&input, "#[derive(Object)]")?; diff --git a/docs/devel/submitting-a-patch.rst b/docs/devel/submitting-a-patch.rst index 65c6407..dd1cf32 100644 --- a/docs/devel/submitting-a-patch.rst +++ b/docs/devel/submitting-a-patch.rst @@ -235,6 +235,38 @@ to another list.) ``git send-email`` (`step-by-step setup guide works best for delivering the patch without mangling it, but attachments can be used as a last resort on a first-time submission. +.. _use_b4: + +Use B4 +~~~~~~ + +The `b4`_ tool, used for Linux kernel development, can also be used for QEMU +development. It is packaged in most distros and PyPi. The QEMU source tree +includes a ``b4`` project configuration file at the root: ``.b4-config``. + +Example workflow to prepare a patch series: + +1. Start with a clean checkout of the ``master`` branch. +2. Create a new series with a topical branch name using ``b4 prep -n descriptive-name``. + ``b4`` will create a ``b4/descriptive-name`` branch and switch to it. +3. Commit your changes, following this page's guidelines about proper commit messages etc. +4. Write a descriptive cover letter with ``b4 prep --edit-cover``. +5. Add maintainer and reviewer CCs with ``b4 prep --auto-to-cc``. You can make + changes to Cc: and To: recipients by editing the cover letter. +6. Run patch checks with ``b4 prep --check``. +7. Optionally review the patches with ``b4 send --dry-run`` which will print the + raw patches in standard output. + +To send the patches, you can: + +- Setup ``git-send-email`` and use ``b4 send``, or +- Export the patches to files using ``b4 send -o OUTPUT_DIR`` and send them manually. + +For more details, consult the `b4 documentation`_. + +.. _b4 documentation: https://b4.docs.kernel.org/ +.. _b4: https://github.com/mricon/b4/ + .. _use_git_publish: Use git-publish @@ -344,28 +376,9 @@ Patch emails must include a ``Signed-off-by:`` line Your patches **must** include a Signed-off-by: line. This is a hard requirement because it's how you say "I'm legally okay to contribute -this and happy for it to go into QEMU". The process is modelled after -the `Linux kernel -<http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/SubmittingPatches?id=f6f94e2ab1b33f0082ac22d71f66385a60d8157f#n297>`__ -policy. - -If you wrote the patch, make sure your "From:" and "Signed-off-by:" -lines use the same spelling. It's okay if you subscribe or contribute to -the list via more than one address, but using multiple addresses in one -commit just confuses things. If someone else wrote the patch, git will -include a "From:" line in the body of the email (different from your -envelope From:) that will give credit to the correct author; but again, -that author's Signed-off-by: line is mandatory, with the same spelling. - -The name used with "Signed-off-by" does not need to be your legal name, -nor birth name, nor appear on any government ID. It is the identity you -choose to be known by in the community, but should not be anonymous, -nor misrepresent whom you are. - -There are various tooling options for automatically adding these tags -include using ``git commit -s`` or ``git format-patch -s``. For more -information see `SubmittingPatches 1.12 -<http://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/torvalds/linux.git/tree/Documentation/SubmittingPatches?id=f6f94e2ab1b33f0082ac22d71f66385a60d8157f#n297>`__. +this and happy for it to go into QEMU". For full guidance, read the +:ref:`code-provenance` documentation. + .. _include_a_meaningful_cover_letter: @@ -437,7 +450,7 @@ Retrieve an existing series --------------------------- If you want to apply an existing series on top of your tree, you can simply use -`b4 <https://github.com/mricon/b4>`__. +`b4`_. :: @@ -552,7 +565,11 @@ summary belongs. The `git-publish <https://github.com/stefanha/git-publish>`__ script can help with tracking a good summary across versions. Also, the `git-backport-diff <https://github.com/codyprime/git-scripts>`__ script can help focus -reviewers on what changed between revisions. +reviewers on what changed between revisions. The ``b4`` tool automatically +generates a version history section in the cover letter, including links to the +previous versions on `Lore`_. + +.. _Lore: https://lore.kernel.org/ .. _tips_and_tricks: diff --git a/docs/devel/testing/functional.rst b/docs/devel/testing/functional.rst index 9e56dd1..3728bab 100644 --- a/docs/devel/testing/functional.rst +++ b/docs/devel/testing/functional.rst @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ directory should be your build folder. For example:: The test framework will automatically purge any scratch files created during the tests. If needing to debug a failed test, it is possible to keep these -files around on disk by setting ```QEMU_TEST_KEEP_SCRATCH=1``` as an env +files around on disk by setting ``QEMU_TEST_KEEP_SCRATCH=1`` as an env variable. Any preserved files will be deleted the next time the test is run without this variable set. diff --git a/docs/devel/testing/main.rst b/docs/devel/testing/main.rst index 6b18ed8..2b5cb0c 100644 --- a/docs/devel/testing/main.rst +++ b/docs/devel/testing/main.rst @@ -604,9 +604,9 @@ below steps to debug it: 2. Add "V=1" to the command line, try again, to see the verbose output. 3. Further add "DEBUG=1" to the command line. This will pause in a shell prompt in the container right before testing starts. You could either manually - build QEMU and run tests from there, or press Ctrl-D to let the Docker + build QEMU and run tests from there, or press :kbd:`Ctrl+d` to let the Docker testing continue. -4. If you press Ctrl-D, the same building and testing procedure will begin, and +4. If you press :kbd:`Ctrl+d`, the same building and testing procedure will begin, and will hopefully run into the error again. After that, you will be dropped to the prompt for debug. diff --git a/docs/devel/tracing.rst b/docs/devel/tracing.rst index 043bed7..f4557ee 100644 --- a/docs/devel/tracing.rst +++ b/docs/devel/tracing.rst @@ -76,7 +76,7 @@ The "io/trace.h" file must be created manually with an #include of the corresponding "trace/trace-<subdir>.h" file that will be generated in the builddir:: - $ echo '#include "trace/trace-io.h"' >io/trace.h + $ (echo '/* SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0-or-later */' ; echo '#include "trace/trace-io.h"') >io/trace.h While it is possible to include a trace.h file from outside a source file's own sub-directory, this is discouraged in general. It is strongly preferred that |