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authorEric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>2015-05-04 09:04:59 -0600
committerMarkus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>2015-05-05 18:38:59 +0200
commite790e666518e68134ca0570b6b4a707169ea3cb1 (patch)
tree4f470afd7ee044cc9068089f692cd21028d3ec4d /docs/qmp
parent6fb55451728e6dc74ae4e67e4f5ab557468f084e (diff)
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qapi: Document type-safety considerations
Go into more details about the various types of valid expressions in a qapi schema, including tweaks to document fixes being done later in the current patch series. Also fix some stale and missing documentation in the QMP specification. Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Reviewed-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Markus Armbruster <armbru@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/qmp')
-rw-r--r--docs/qmp/qmp-spec.txt107
1 files changed, 81 insertions, 26 deletions
diff --git a/docs/qmp/qmp-spec.txt b/docs/qmp/qmp-spec.txt
index cb1600a..4c28cd9 100644
--- a/docs/qmp/qmp-spec.txt
+++ b/docs/qmp/qmp-spec.txt
@@ -11,8 +11,11 @@ later. See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
1. Introduction
===============
-This document specifies the QEMU Machine Protocol (QMP), a JSON-based protocol
-which is available for applications to operate QEMU at the machine-level.
+This document specifies the QEMU Machine Protocol (QMP), a JSON-based
+protocol which is available for applications to operate QEMU at the
+machine-level. It is also in use by the QEMU Guest Agent (QGA), which
+is available for host applications to interact with the guest
+operating system.
2. Protocol Specification
=========================
@@ -26,14 +29,27 @@ following format:
json-DATA-STRUCTURE-NAME
-Where DATA-STRUCTURE-NAME is any valid JSON data structure, as defined by
-the JSON standard:
+Where DATA-STRUCTURE-NAME is any valid JSON data structure, as defined
+by the JSON standard:
-http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt
+http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc7159.txt
-For convenience, json-object members and json-array elements mentioned in
-this document will be in a certain order. However, in real protocol usage
-they can be in ANY order, thus no particular order should be assumed.
+The protocol is always encoded in UTF-8 except for synchronization
+bytes (documented below); although thanks to json-string escape
+sequences, the server will reply using only the strict ASCII subset.
+
+For convenience, json-object members mentioned in this document will
+be in a certain order. However, in real protocol usage they can be in
+ANY order, thus no particular order should be assumed. On the other
+hand, use of json-array elements presumes that preserving order is
+important unless specifically documented otherwise. Repeating a key
+within a json-object gives unpredictable results.
+
+Also for convenience, the server will accept an extension of
+'single-quoted' strings in place of the usual "double-quoted"
+json-string, and both input forms of strings understand an additional
+escape sequence of "\'" for a single quote. The server will only use
+double quoting on output.
2.1 General Definitions
-----------------------
@@ -60,7 +76,16 @@ The greeting message format is:
- The "version" member contains the Server's version information (the format
is the same of the query-version command)
- The "capabilities" member specify the availability of features beyond the
- baseline specification
+ baseline specification; the order of elements in this array has no
+ particular significance, so a client must search the entire array
+ when looking for a particular capability
+
+2.2.1 Capabilities
+------------------
+
+As of the date this document was last revised, no server or client
+capability strings have been defined.
+
2.3 Issuing Commands
--------------------
@@ -73,10 +98,14 @@ The format for command execution is:
- The "execute" member identifies the command to be executed by the Server
- The "arguments" member is used to pass any arguments required for the
- execution of the command, it is optional when no arguments are required
+ execution of the command, it is optional when no arguments are
+ required. Each command documents what contents will be considered
+ valid when handling the json-argument
- The "id" member is a transaction identification associated with the
command execution, it is optional and will be part of the response if
- provided
+ provided. The "id" member can be any json-value, although most
+ clients merely use a json-number incremented for each successive
+ command
2.4 Commands Responses
----------------------
@@ -89,13 +118,15 @@ of a command execution: success or error.
The format of a success response is:
-{ "return": json-object, "id": json-value }
+{ "return": json-value, "id": json-value }
Where,
-- The "return" member contains the command returned data, which is defined
- in a per-command basis or an empty json-object if the command does not
- return data
+- The "return" member contains the data returned by the command, which
+ is defined on a per-command basis (usually a json-object or
+ json-array of json-objects, but sometimes a json-number, json-string,
+ or json-array of json-strings); it is an empty json-object if the
+ command does not return data
- The "id" member contains the transaction identification associated
with the command execution if issued by the Client
@@ -122,7 +153,8 @@ if provided by the client.
-----------------------
As a result of state changes, the Server may send messages unilaterally
-to the Client at any time. They are called "asynchronous events".
+to the Client at any time, when not in the middle of any other
+response. They are called "asynchronous events".
The format of asynchronous events is:
@@ -134,13 +166,27 @@ The format of asynchronous events is:
- The "event" member contains the event's name
- The "data" member contains event specific data, which is defined in a
per-event basis, it is optional
-- The "timestamp" member contains the exact time of when the event occurred
- in the Server. It is a fixed json-object with time in seconds and
- microseconds
+- The "timestamp" member contains the exact time of when the event
+ occurred in the Server. It is a fixed json-object with time in
+ seconds and microseconds relative to the Unix Epoch (1 Jan 1970); if
+ there is a failure to retrieve host time, both members of the
+ timestamp will be set to -1.
For a listing of supported asynchronous events, please, refer to the
qmp-events.txt file.
+2.5 QGA Synchronization
+-----------------------
+
+When using QGA, an additional synchronization feature is built into
+the protocol. If the Client sends a raw 0xFF sentinel byte (not valid
+JSON), then the Server will reset its state and discard all pending
+data prior to the sentinel. Conversely, if the Client makes use of
+the 'guest-sync-delimited' command, the Server will send a raw 0xFF
+sentinel byte prior to its response, to aid the Client in discarding
+any data prior to the sentinel.
+
+
3. QMP Examples
===============
@@ -153,32 +199,37 @@ This section provides some examples of real QMP usage, in all of them
S: { "QMP": { "version": { "qemu": { "micro": 50, "minor": 6, "major": 1 },
"package": ""}, "capabilities": []}}
-3.2 Simple 'stop' execution
+3.2 Client QMP negotiation
+--------------------------
+C: { "execute": "qmp_capabilities" }
+S: { "return": {}}
+
+3.3 Simple 'stop' execution
---------------------------
C: { "execute": "stop" }
S: { "return": {} }
-3.3 KVM information
+3.4 KVM information
-------------------
C: { "execute": "query-kvm", "id": "example" }
S: { "return": { "enabled": true, "present": true }, "id": "example"}
-3.4 Parsing error
+3.5 Parsing error
------------------
C: { "execute": }
S: { "error": { "class": "GenericError", "desc": "Invalid JSON syntax" } }
-3.5 Powerdown event
+3.6 Powerdown event
-------------------
S: { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1258551470, "microseconds": 802384 },
"event": "POWERDOWN" }
4. Capabilities Negotiation
-----------------------------
+===========================
When a Client successfully establishes a connection, the Server is in
Capabilities Negotiation mode.
@@ -197,7 +248,7 @@ effect, all commands (except qmp_capabilities) are allowed and asynchronous
messages are delivered.
5 Compatibility Considerations
-------------------------------
+==============================
All protocol changes or new features which modify the protocol format in an
incompatible way are disabled by default and will be advertised by the
@@ -221,12 +272,16 @@ However, Clients must not assume any particular:
- Amount of errors generated by a command, that is, new errors can be added
to any existing command in newer versions of the Server
+Any command or field name beginning with "x-" is deemed experimental,
+and may be withdrawn or changed in an incompatible manner in a future
+release.
+
Of course, the Server does guarantee to send valid JSON. But apart from
this, a Client should be "conservative in what they send, and liberal in
what they accept".
6. Downstream extension of QMP
-------------------------------
+==============================
We recommend that downstream consumers of QEMU do *not* modify QMP.
Management tools should be able to support both upstream and downstream