This document describes all commands currently supported by QMP.
Most of the time their usage is exactly the same as in the user Monitor, this means that any other document which also describe commands (the manpage, QEMU’s manual, etc) can and should be consulted.
QMP has two types of commands: regular and query commands. Regular commands usually change the Virtual Machine’s state someway, while query commands just return information. The sections below are divided accordingly.
It’s important to observe that all communication examples are formatted in a reader-friendly way, so that they’re easier to understand. However, in real protocol usage, they’re emitted as a single line.
Also, the following notation is used to denote data flow:
Example:
-> data issued by the Client
<- Server data response
Please, refer to the QMP specification (docs/qmp-spec.txt) for detailed information on the Server command and response formats.
The current QMP command set (described in this file) may be useful for a number of use cases, however it’s limited and several commands have bad defined semantics, specially with regard to command completion.
These problems are going to be solved incrementally in the next QEMU releases and we’re going to establish a deprecation policy for badly defined commands.
If you’re planning to adopt QMP, please observe the following:
QEMU error classes
Values:
GenericErrorthis is used for errors that don’t require a specific error class. This should be the default case for most errors
CommandNotFoundthe requested command has not been found
DeviceEncryptedthe requested operation can’t be fulfilled because the selected device is encrypted
DeviceNotActivea device has failed to be become active
DeviceNotFoundthe requested device has not been found
KVMMissingCapthe requested operation can’t be fulfilled because a required KVM capability is missing
Since: 1.2
A three-part version number.
Members:
major: intThe major version number.
minor: intThe minor version number.
micro: intThe micro version number.
Since: 2.4
A description of QEMU’s version.
Members:
qemu: VersionTripleThe version of QEMU. By current convention, a micro version of 50 signifies a development branch. A micro version greater than or equal to 90 signifies a release candidate for the next minor version. A micro version of less than 50 signifies a stable release.
package: stringQEMU will always set this field to an empty string. Downstream versions of QEMU should set this to a non-empty string. The exact format depends on the downstream however it highly recommended that a unique name is used.
Since: 0.14.0
Returns the current version of QEMU.
Returns:
A VersionInfo object describing the current version of QEMU.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-version" }
<- {
"return":{
"qemu":{
"major":0,
"minor":11,
"micro":5
},
"package":""
}
}
Information about a QMP command
Members:
name: stringThe command name
Since: 0.14.0
Return a list of supported QMP commands by this server
Returns:
A list of CommandInfo for all supported commands
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-commands" }
<- {
"return":[
{
"name":"query-balloon"
},
{
"name":"system_powerdown"
}
]
}
Note: This example has been shortened as the real response is too long.
An enumeration of three options: on, off, and auto
Values:
autoQEMU selects the value between on and off
onEnabled
offDisabled
Since: 2.2
An enumeration of three values: on, off, and split
Values:
onEnabled
offDisabled
splitMixed
Since: 2.6
The type of network endpoint that will be using the credentials. Most types of credential require different setup / structures depending on whether they will be used in a server versus a client.
Values:
clientthe network endpoint is acting as the client
serverthe network endpoint is acting as the server
Since: 2.5
The data format that the secret is provided in
Values:
rawraw bytes. When encoded in JSON only valid UTF-8 sequences can be used
base64arbitrary base64 encoded binary data
Since: 2.6
The supported algorithms for computing content digests
Values:
md5MD5. Should not be used in any new code, legacy compat only
sha1SHA-1. Should not be used in any new code, legacy compat only
sha224SHA-224. (since 2.7)
sha256SHA-256. Current recommended strong hash.
sha384SHA-384. (since 2.7)
sha512SHA-512. (since 2.7)
ripemd160RIPEMD-160. (since 2.7)
Since: 2.6
The supported algorithms for content encryption ciphers
Values:
aes-128AES with 128 bit / 16 byte keys
aes-192AES with 192 bit / 24 byte keys
aes-256AES with 256 bit / 32 byte keys
des-rfbRFB specific variant of single DES. Do not use except in VNC.
3des3DES(EDE) with 192 bit / 24 byte keys (since 2.9)
cast5-128Cast5 with 128 bit / 16 byte keys
serpent-128Serpent with 128 bit / 16 byte keys
serpent-192Serpent with 192 bit / 24 byte keys
serpent-256Serpent with 256 bit / 32 byte keys
twofish-128Twofish with 128 bit / 16 byte keys
twofish-192Twofish with 192 bit / 24 byte keys
twofish-256Twofish with 256 bit / 32 byte keys
Since: 2.6
The supported modes for content encryption ciphers
Values:
ecbElectronic Code Book
cbcCipher Block Chaining
xtsXEX with tweaked code book and ciphertext stealing
ctrCounter (Since 2.8)
Since: 2.6
The supported algorithms for generating initialization vectors for full disk encryption. The ’plain’ generator should not be used for disks with sector numbers larger than 2^32, except where compatibility with pre-existing Linux dm-crypt volumes is required.
Values:
plain64-bit sector number truncated to 32-bits
plain6464-bit sector number
essiv64-bit sector number encrypted with a hash of the encryption key
Since: 2.6
The supported full disk encryption formats
Values:
qcowQCow/QCow2 built-in AES-CBC encryption. Use only for liberating data from old images.
luksLUKS encryption format. Recommended for new images
Since: 2.6
The common options that apply to all full disk encryption formats
Members:
format: QCryptoBlockFormatthe encryption format
Since: 2.6
The options that apply to QCow/QCow2 AES-CBC encryption format
Members:
key-secret: string (optional)the ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the decryption key. Mandatory except when probing image for metadata only.
Since: 2.6
The options that apply to LUKS encryption format
Members:
key-secret: string (optional)the ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the decryption key. Mandatory except when probing image for metadata only.
Since: 2.6
The options that apply to LUKS encryption format initialization
Members:
cipher-alg: QCryptoCipherAlgorithm (optional)the cipher algorithm for data encryption Currently defaults to ’aes’.
cipher-mode: QCryptoCipherMode (optional)the cipher mode for data encryption Currently defaults to ’cbc’
ivgen-alg: QCryptoIVGenAlgorithm (optional)the initialization vector generator Currently defaults to ’essiv’
ivgen-hash-alg: QCryptoHashAlgorithm (optional)the initialization vector generator hash Currently defaults to ’sha256’
hash-alg: QCryptoHashAlgorithm (optional)the master key hash algorithm Currently defaults to ’sha256’
iter-time: int (optional)number of milliseconds to spend in PBKDF passphrase processing. Currently defaults to 2000. (since 2.8)
QCryptoBlockOptionsLUKSSince: 2.6
The options that are available for all encryption formats when opening an existing volume
Members:
QCryptoBlockOptionsBaseQCryptoBlockOptionsQCow when format is "qcow"QCryptoBlockOptionsLUKS when format is "luks"Since: 2.6
The options that are available for all encryption formats when initializing a new volume
Members:
QCryptoBlockOptionsBaseQCryptoBlockOptionsQCow when format is "qcow"QCryptoBlockCreateOptionsLUKS when format is "luks"Since: 2.6
The common information that applies to all full disk encryption formats
Members:
format: QCryptoBlockFormatthe encryption format
Since: 2.7
Information about the LUKS block encryption key slot options
Members:
active: booleanwhether the key slot is currently in use
key-offset: intoffset to the key material in bytes
iters: int (optional)number of PBKDF2 iterations for key material
stripes: int (optional)number of stripes for splitting key material
Since: 2.7
Information about the LUKS block encryption options
Members:
cipher-alg: QCryptoCipherAlgorithmthe cipher algorithm for data encryption
cipher-mode: QCryptoCipherModethe cipher mode for data encryption
ivgen-alg: QCryptoIVGenAlgorithmthe initialization vector generator
ivgen-hash-alg: QCryptoHashAlgorithm (optional)the initialization vector generator hash
hash-alg: QCryptoHashAlgorithmthe master key hash algorithm
payload-offset: intoffset to the payload data in bytes
master-key-iters: intnumber of PBKDF2 iterations for key material
uuid: stringunique identifier for the volume
slots: array of QCryptoBlockInfoLUKSSlotinformation about each key slot
Since: 2.7
Information about the QCow block encryption options
Since: 2.7
Information about the block encryption options
Members:
QCryptoBlockInfoBaseQCryptoBlockInfoQCow when format is "qcow"QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS when format is "luks"Since: 2.7
Members:
id: stringunique snapshot id
name: stringuser chosen name
vm-state-size: intsize of the VM state
date-sec: intUTC date of the snapshot in seconds
date-nsec: intfractional part in nano seconds to be used with date-sec
vm-clock-sec: intVM clock relative to boot in seconds
vm-clock-nsec: intfractional part in nano seconds to be used with vm-clock-sec
Since: 1.3
Members:
compat: stringcompatibility level
lazy-refcounts: boolean (optional)on or off; only valid for compat >= 1.1
corrupt: boolean (optional)true if the image has been marked corrupt; only valid for compat >= 1.1 (since 2.2)
refcount-bits: intwidth of a refcount entry in bits (since 2.3)
Since: 1.7
Members:
create-type: stringThe create type of VMDK image
cid: intContent id of image
parent-cid: intParent VMDK image’s cid
extents: array of ImageInfoList of extent files
Since: 1.7
A discriminated record of image format specific information structures.
Members:
typeOne of "qcow2", "vmdk", "luks"
data: ImageInfoSpecificQCow2 when type is "qcow2"data: ImageInfoSpecificVmdk when type is "vmdk"data: QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS when type is "luks"Since: 1.7
Information about a QEMU image file
Members:
filename: stringname of the image file
format: stringformat of the image file
virtual-size: intmaximum capacity in bytes of the image
actual-size: int (optional)actual size on disk in bytes of the image
dirty-flag: boolean (optional)true if image is not cleanly closed
cluster-size: int (optional)size of a cluster in bytes
encrypted: boolean (optional)true if the image is encrypted
compressed: boolean (optional)true if the image is compressed (Since 1.7)
backing-filename: string (optional)name of the backing file
full-backing-filename: string (optional)full path of the backing file
backing-filename-format: string (optional)the format of the backing file
snapshots: array of SnapshotInfo (optional)list of VM snapshots
backing-image: ImageInfo (optional)info of the backing image (since 1.6)
format-specific: ImageInfoSpecific (optional)structure supplying additional format-specific information (since 1.7)
Since: 1.3
Information about a QEMU image file check
Members:
filename: stringname of the image file checked
format: stringformat of the image file checked
check-errors: intnumber of unexpected errors occurred during check
image-end-offset: int (optional)offset (in bytes) where the image ends, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
corruptions: int (optional)number of corruptions found during the check if any
leaks: int (optional)number of leaks found during the check if any
corruptions-fixed: int (optional)number of corruptions fixed during the check if any
leaks-fixed: int (optional)number of leaks fixed during the check if any
total-clusters: int (optional)total number of clusters, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
allocated-clusters: int (optional)total number of allocated clusters, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
fragmented-clusters: int (optional)total number of fragmented clusters, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
compressed-clusters: int (optional)total number of compressed clusters, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
Since: 1.4
Mapping information from a virtual block range to a host file range
Members:
start: intthe start byte of the mapped virtual range
length: intthe number of bytes of the mapped virtual range
data: booleanwhether the mapped range has data
zero: booleanwhether the virtual blocks are zeroed
depth: intthe depth of the mapping
offset: int (optional)the offset in file that the virtual sectors are mapped to
filename: string (optional)filename that is referred to by offset
Since: 2.6
Cache mode information for a block device
Members:
writeback: booleantrue if writeback mode is enabled
direct: booleantrue if the host page cache is bypassed (O_DIRECT)
no-flush: booleantrue if flush requests are ignored for the device
Since: 2.3
Information about the backing device for a block device.
Members:
file: stringthe filename of the backing device
node-name: string (optional)the name of the block driver node (Since 2.0)
ro: booleantrue if the backing device was open read-only
drv: stringthe name of the block format used to open the backing device. As of 0.14.0 this can be: ’blkdebug’, ’bochs’, ’cloop’, ’cow’, ’dmg’, ’file’, ’file’, ’ftp’, ’ftps’, ’host_cdrom’, ’host_device’, ’http’, ’https’, ’luks’, ’nbd’, ’parallels’, ’qcow’, ’qcow2’, ’raw’, ’vdi’, ’vmdk’, ’vpc’, ’vvfat’ 2.2: ’archipelago’ added, ’cow’ dropped 2.3: ’host_floppy’ deprecated 2.5: ’host_floppy’ dropped 2.6: ’luks’ added 2.8: ’replication’ added, ’tftp’ dropped 2.9: ’archipelago’ dropped
backing_file: string (optional)the name of the backing file (for copy-on-write)
backing_file_depth: intnumber of files in the backing file chain (since: 1.2)
encrypted: booleantrue if the backing device is encrypted
encryption_key_missing: booleantrue if the backing device is encrypted but an valid encryption key is missing
detect_zeroes: BlockdevDetectZeroesOptionsdetect and optimize zero writes (Since 2.1)
bps: inttotal throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
bps_rd: intread throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
bps_wr: intwrite throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
iops: inttotal I/O operations per second is specified
iops_rd: intread I/O operations per second is specified
iops_wr: intwrite I/O operations per second is specified
image: ImageInfothe info of image used (since: 1.6)
bps_max: int (optional)total throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
bps_rd_max: int (optional)read throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
bps_wr_max: int (optional)write throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
iops_max: int (optional)total I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
iops_rd_max: int (optional)read I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
iops_wr_max: int (optional)write I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
bps_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the bps_max burst
period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
bps_rd_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the bps_rd_max
burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
bps_wr_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the bps_wr_max
burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
iops_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the iops burst
period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
iops_rd_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the iops_rd_max
burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
iops_wr_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the iops_wr_max
burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
iops_size: int (optional)an I/O size in bytes (Since 1.7)
group: string (optional)throttle group name (Since 2.4)
cache: BlockdevCacheInfothe cache mode used for the block device (since: 2.3)
write_threshold: intconfigured write threshold for the device. 0 if disabled. (Since 2.3)
Since: 0.14.0
An enumeration of block device I/O status.
Values:
okThe last I/O operation has succeeded
failedThe last I/O operation has failed
nospaceThe last I/O operation has failed due to a no-space condition
Since: 1.0
Entry in the metadata map of the device (returned by "qemu-img map")
Members:
start: intOffset in the image of the first byte described by this entry (in bytes)
length: intLength of the range described by this entry (in bytes)
depth: intNumber of layers (0 = top image, 1 = top image’s backing file, etc.) before reaching one for which the range is allocated. The value is in the range 0 to the depth of the image chain - 1.
zero: booleanthe sectors in this range read as zeros
data: booleanreading the image will actually read data from a file (in particular,
if offset is present this means that the sectors are not simply
preallocated, but contain actual data in raw format)
offset: int (optional)if present, the image file stores the data for this range in raw format at the given offset.
Since: 1.7
An enumeration of possible states that a dirty bitmap can report to the user.
Values:
frozenThe bitmap is currently in-use by a backup operation or block job, and is immutable.
disabledThe bitmap is currently in-use by an internal operation and is read-only. It can still be deleted.
activeThe bitmap is actively monitoring for new writes, and can be cleared, deleted, or used for backup operations.
Since: 2.4
Block dirty bitmap information.
Members:
name: string (optional)the name of the dirty bitmap (Since 2.4)
count: intnumber of dirty bytes according to the dirty bitmap
granularity: intgranularity of the dirty bitmap in bytes (since 1.4)
status: DirtyBitmapStatuscurrent status of the dirty bitmap (since 2.4)
Since: 1.3
Block device information. This structure describes a virtual device and the backing device associated with it.
Members:
device: stringThe device name associated with the virtual device.
type: stringThis field is returned only for compatibility reasons, it should not be used (always returns ’unknown’)
removable: booleanTrue if the device supports removable media.
locked: booleanTrue if the guest has locked this device from having its media removed
tray_open: boolean (optional)True if the device’s tray is open (only present if it has a tray)
dirty-bitmaps: array of BlockDirtyInfo (optional)dirty bitmaps information (only present if the driver has one or more dirty bitmaps) (Since 2.0)
io-status: BlockDeviceIoStatus (optional)BlockDeviceIoStatus. Only present if the device
supports it and the VM is configured to stop on errors
(supported device models: virtio-blk, ide, scsi-disk)
inserted: BlockDeviceInfo (optional)BlockDeviceInfo describing the device if media is
present
Since: 0.14.0
Get a list of BlockInfo for all virtual block devices.
Returns:
a list of BlockInfo describing each virtual block device
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-block" }
<- {
"return":[
{
"io-status": "ok",
"device":"ide0-hd0",
"locked":false,
"removable":false,
"inserted":{
"ro":false,
"drv":"qcow2",
"encrypted":false,
"file":"disks/test.qcow2",
"backing_file_depth":1,
"bps":1000000,
"bps_rd":0,
"bps_wr":0,
"iops":1000000,
"iops_rd":0,
"iops_wr":0,
"bps_max": 8000000,
"bps_rd_max": 0,
"bps_wr_max": 0,
"iops_max": 0,
"iops_rd_max": 0,
"iops_wr_max": 0,
"iops_size": 0,
"detect_zeroes": "on",
"write_threshold": 0,
"image":{
"filename":"disks/test.qcow2",
"format":"qcow2",
"virtual-size":2048000,
"backing_file":"base.qcow2",
"full-backing-filename":"disks/base.qcow2",
"backing-filename-format":"qcow2",
"snapshots":[
{
"id": "1",
"name": "snapshot1",
"vm-state-size": 0,
"date-sec": 10000200,
"date-nsec": 12,
"vm-clock-sec": 206,
"vm-clock-nsec": 30
}
],
"backing-image":{
"filename":"disks/base.qcow2",
"format":"qcow2",
"virtual-size":2048000
}
}
},
"type":"unknown"
},
{
"io-status": "ok",
"device":"ide1-cd0",
"locked":false,
"removable":true,
"type":"unknown"
},
{
"device":"floppy0",
"locked":false,
"removable":true,
"type":"unknown"
},
{
"device":"sd0",
"locked":false,
"removable":true,
"type":"unknown"
}
]
}
Statistics of a block device during a given interval of time.
Members:
interval_length: intInterval used for calculating the statistics, in seconds.
min_rd_latency_ns: intMinimum latency of read operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
min_wr_latency_ns: intMinimum latency of write operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
min_flush_latency_ns: intMinimum latency of flush operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
max_rd_latency_ns: intMaximum latency of read operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
max_wr_latency_ns: intMaximum latency of write operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
max_flush_latency_ns: intMaximum latency of flush operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
avg_rd_latency_ns: intAverage latency of read operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
avg_wr_latency_ns: intAverage latency of write operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
avg_flush_latency_ns: intAverage latency of flush operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
avg_rd_queue_depth: numberAverage number of pending read operations in the defined interval.
avg_wr_queue_depth: numberAverage number of pending write operations in the defined interval.
Since: 2.5
Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device.
Members:
rd_bytes: intThe number of bytes read by the device.
wr_bytes: intThe number of bytes written by the device.
rd_operations: intThe number of read operations performed by the device.
wr_operations: intThe number of write operations performed by the device.
flush_operations: intThe number of cache flush operations performed by the device (since 0.15.0)
flush_total_time_ns: intTotal time spend on cache flushes in nano-seconds (since 0.15.0).
wr_total_time_ns: intTotal time spend on writes in nano-seconds (since 0.15.0).
rd_total_time_ns: intTotal_time_spend on reads in nano-seconds (since 0.15.0).
wr_highest_offset: intThe offset after the greatest byte written to the device. The intended use of this information is for growable sparse files (like qcow2) that are used on top of a physical device.
rd_merged: intNumber of read requests that have been merged into another request (Since 2.3).
wr_merged: intNumber of write requests that have been merged into another request (Since 2.3).
idle_time_ns: int (optional)Time since the last I/O operation, in nanoseconds. If the field is absent it means that there haven’t been any operations yet (Since 2.5).
failed_rd_operations: intThe number of failed read operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
failed_wr_operations: intThe number of failed write operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
failed_flush_operations: intThe number of failed flush operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
invalid_rd_operations: intThe number of invalid read operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
invalid_wr_operations: intThe number of invalid write operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
invalid_flush_operations: intThe number of invalid flush operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
account_invalid: booleanWhether invalid operations are included in the last access statistics (Since 2.5)
account_failed: booleanWhether failed operations are included in the latency and last access statistics (Since 2.5)
timed_stats: array of BlockDeviceTimedStatsStatistics specific to the set of previously defined intervals of time (Since 2.5)
Since: 0.14.0
Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device.
Members:
device: string (optional)If the stats are for a virtual block device, the name corresponding to the virtual block device.
node-name: string (optional)The node name of the device. (Since 2.3)
stats: BlockDeviceStatsA BlockDeviceStats for the device.
parent: BlockStats (optional)This describes the file block device if it has one. Contains recursively the statistics of the underlying protocol (e.g. the host file for a qcow2 image). If there is no underlying protocol, this field is omitted
backing: BlockStats (optional)This describes the backing block device if it has one. (Since 2.0)
Since: 0.14.0
Query the BlockStats for all virtual block devices.
Arguments:
query-nodes: boolean (optional)If true, the command will query all the block nodes that have a node name, in a list which will include "parent" information, but not "backing". If false or omitted, the behavior is as before - query all the device backends, recursively including their "parent" and "backing". (Since 2.3)
Returns:
A list of BlockStats for each virtual block devices.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-blockstats" }
<- {
"return":[
{
"device":"ide0-hd0",
"parent":{
"stats":{
"wr_highest_offset":3686448128,
"wr_bytes":9786368,
"wr_operations":751,
"rd_bytes":122567168,
"rd_operations":36772
"wr_total_times_ns":313253456
"rd_total_times_ns":3465673657
"flush_total_times_ns":49653
"flush_operations":61,
"rd_merged":0,
"wr_merged":0,
"idle_time_ns":2953431879,
"account_invalid":true,
"account_failed":false
}
},
"stats":{
"wr_highest_offset":2821110784,
"wr_bytes":9786368,
"wr_operations":692,
"rd_bytes":122739200,
"rd_operations":36604
"flush_operations":51,
"wr_total_times_ns":313253456
"rd_total_times_ns":3465673657
"flush_total_times_ns":49653,
"rd_merged":0,
"wr_merged":0,
"idle_time_ns":2953431879,
"account_invalid":true,
"account_failed":false
}
},
{
"device":"ide1-cd0",
"stats":{
"wr_highest_offset":0,
"wr_bytes":0,
"wr_operations":0,
"rd_bytes":0,
"rd_operations":0
"flush_operations":0,
"wr_total_times_ns":0
"rd_total_times_ns":0
"flush_total_times_ns":0,
"rd_merged":0,
"wr_merged":0,
"account_invalid":false,
"account_failed":false
}
},
{
"device":"floppy0",
"stats":{
"wr_highest_offset":0,
"wr_bytes":0,
"wr_operations":0,
"rd_bytes":0,
"rd_operations":0
"flush_operations":0,
"wr_total_times_ns":0
"rd_total_times_ns":0
"flush_total_times_ns":0,
"rd_merged":0,
"wr_merged":0,
"account_invalid":false,
"account_failed":false
}
},
{
"device":"sd0",
"stats":{
"wr_highest_offset":0,
"wr_bytes":0,
"wr_operations":0,
"rd_bytes":0,
"rd_operations":0
"flush_operations":0,
"wr_total_times_ns":0
"rd_total_times_ns":0
"flush_total_times_ns":0,
"rd_merged":0,
"wr_merged":0,
"account_invalid":false,
"account_failed":false
}
}
]
}
An enumeration of possible behaviors for errors on I/O operations. The exact meaning depends on whether the I/O was initiated by a guest or by a block job
Values:
reportfor guest operations, report the error to the guest; for jobs, cancel the job
ignoreignore the error, only report a QMP event (BLOCK_IO_ERROR or BLOCK_JOB_ERROR)
enospcsame as stop on ENOSPC, same as report otherwise.
stopfor guest operations, stop the virtual machine; for jobs, pause the job
autoinherit the error handling policy of the backend (since: 2.7)
Since: 1.3
An enumeration of possible behaviors for the initial synchronization phase of storage mirroring.
Values:
topcopies data in the topmost image to the destination
fullcopies data from all images to the destination
noneonly copy data written from now on
incrementalonly copy data described by the dirty bitmap. Since: 2.4
Since: 1.3
Type of a block job.
Values:
commitblock commit job type, see "block-commit"
streamblock stream job type, see "block-stream"
mirrordrive mirror job type, see "drive-mirror"
backupdrive backup job type, see "drive-backup"
Since: 1.7
Information about a long-running block device operation.
Members:
type: stringthe job type (’stream’ for image streaming)
device: stringThe job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
len: intthe maximum progress value
busy: booleanfalse if the job is known to be in a quiescent state, with no pending I/O. Since 1.3.
paused: booleanwhether the job is paused or, if busy is true, will
pause itself as soon as possible. Since 1.3.
offset: intthe current progress value
speed: intthe rate limit, bytes per second
io-status: BlockDeviceIoStatusthe status of the job (since 1.3)
ready: booleantrue if the job may be completed (since 2.2)
Since: 1.1
Return information about long-running block device operations.
Returns:
a list of BlockJobInfo for each active block job
Since: 1.1
This command sets the password of a block device that has not been open with a password and requires one.
The two cases where this can happen are a block device is created through
QEMU’s initial command line or a block device is changed through the legacy
change interface.
In the event that the block device is created through the initial command
line, the VM will start in the stopped state regardless of whether ’-S’ is
used. The intention is for a management tool to query the block devices to
determine which ones are encrypted, set the passwords with this command, and
then start the guest with the cont command.
Either device or node-name must be set but not both.
Arguments:
device: string (optional)the name of the block backend device to set the password on
node-name: string (optional)graph node name to set the password on (Since 2.0)
password: stringthe password to use for the device
Returns:
nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
If device is not encrypted, DeviceNotEncrypted
Notes: Not all block formats support encryption and some that do are not able to validate that a password is correct. Disk corruption may occur if an invalid password is specified.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "block_passwd", "arguments": { "device": "ide0-hd0",
"password": "12345" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Resize a block image while a guest is running.
Either device or node-name must be set but not both.
Arguments:
device: string (optional)the name of the device to get the image resized
node-name: string (optional)graph node name to get the image resized (Since 2.0)
size: intnew image size in bytes
Returns:
nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "block_resize",
"arguments": { "device": "scratch", "size": 1073741824 } }
<- { "return": {} }
An enumeration that tells QEMU how to set the backing file path in a new image file.
Values:
existingQEMU should look for an existing image file.
absolute-pathsQEMU should create a new image with absolute paths for the backing file. If there is no backing file available, the new image will not be backed either.
Since: 1.1
Either device or node-name must be set but not both.
Members:
device: string (optional)the name of the device to generate the snapshot from.
node-name: string (optional)graph node name to generate the snapshot from (Since 2.0)
snapshot-file: stringthe target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it is a device, the snapshot will be created in the existing file/device. Otherwise, a new file will be created.
snapshot-node-name: string (optional)the graph node name of the new image (Since 2.0)
format: string (optional)the format of the snapshot image, default is ’qcow2’.
mode: NewImageMode (optional)whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is ’absolute-paths’.
Members:
node: stringdevice or node name that will have a snapshot created.
overlay: stringreference to the existing block device that will become
the overlay of node, as part of creating the snapshot.
It must not have a current backing file (this can be
achieved by passing "backing": "" to blockdev-add).
Since: 2.5
Members:
job-id: string (optional)identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
device: stringthe device name or node-name of a root node which should be copied.
target: stringthe target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it is a device, the existing file/device will be used as the new destination. If it does not exist, a new file will be created.
format: string (optional)the format of the new destination, default is to
probe if mode is ’existing’, else the format of the source
sync: MirrorSyncModewhat parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, from a dirty bitmap, or only new I/O).
mode: NewImageMode (optional)whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is ’absolute-paths’.
speed: int (optional)the maximum speed, in bytes per second
bitmap: string (optional)the name of dirty bitmap if sync is "incremental". Must be present if sync is "incremental", must NOT be present otherwise. (Since 2.4)
compress: boolean (optional)true to compress data, if the target format supports it. (default: false) (since 2.8)
on-source-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error on the source, default ’report’. ’stop’ and ’enospc’ can only be used if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo).
on-target-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error on the target,
default ’report’ (no limitations, since this applies to
a different block device than device).
Note:
on-source-error and on-target-error only affect background
I/O. If an error occurs during a guest write request, the device’s
rerror/werror actions will be used.
Since: 1.6
Members:
job-id: string (optional)identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
device: stringthe device name or node-name of a root node which should be copied.
target: stringthe device name or node-name of the backup target node.
sync: MirrorSyncModewhat parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or only new I/O).
speed: int (optional)the maximum speed, in bytes per second. The default is 0, for unlimited.
compress: boolean (optional)true to compress data, if the target format supports it. (default: false) (since 2.8)
on-source-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error on the source, default ’report’. ’stop’ and ’enospc’ can only be used if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo).
on-target-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error on the target,
default ’report’ (no limitations, since this applies to
a different block device than device).
Note:
on-source-error and on-target-error only affect background
I/O. If an error occurs during a guest write request, the device’s
rerror/werror actions will be used.
Since: 2.3
Generates a synchronous snapshot of a block device.
For the arguments, see the documentation of BlockdevSnapshotSync.
Returns:
nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot-sync",
"arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
"snapshot-file":
"/some/place/my-image",
"format": "qcow2" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Generates a snapshot of a block device.
Create a snapshot, by installing ’node’ as the backing image of ’overlay’. Additionally, if ’node’ is associated with a block device, the block device changes to using ’overlay’ as its new active image.
For the arguments, see the documentation of BlockdevSnapshot.
Since: 2.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
"arguments": { "options": { "driver": "qcow2",
"node-name": "node1534",
"file": { "driver": "file",
"filename": "hd1.qcow2" },
"backing": "" } } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot",
"arguments": { "node": "ide-hd0",
"overlay": "node1534" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Change the backing file in the image file metadata. This does not cause QEMU to reopen the image file to reparse the backing filename (it may, however, perform a reopen to change permissions from r/o -> r/w -> r/o, if needed). The new backing file string is written into the image file metadata, and the QEMU internal strings are updated.
Arguments:
image-node-name: stringThe name of the block driver state node of the image to modify. The "device" argument is used to verify "image-node-name" is in the chain described by "device".
device: stringThe device name or node-name of the root node that owns image-node-name.
backing-file: stringThe string to write as the backing file. This string is not validated, so care should be taken when specifying the string or the image chain may not be able to be reopened again.
Returns: Nothing on success
If "device" does not exist or cannot be determined, DeviceNotFound
Since: 2.1
Live commit of data from overlay image nodes into backing nodes - i.e., writes data between ’top’ and ’base’ into ’base’.
Arguments:
job-id: string (optional)identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
device: stringthe device name or node-name of a root node
base: string (optional)The file name of the backing image to write data into. If not specified, this is the deepest backing image.
top: string (optional)The file name of the backing image within the image chain, which contains the topmost data to be committed down. If not specified, this is the active layer.
backing-file: string (optional)The backing file string to write into the overlay image of ’top’. If ’top’ is the active layer, specifying a backing file string is an error. This filename is not validated.
If a pathname string is such that it cannot be resolved by QEMU, that means that subsequent QMP or HMP commands must use node-names for the image in question, as filename lookup methods will fail.
If not specified, QEMU will automatically determine the backing file string to use, or error out if there is no obvious choice. Care should be taken when specifying the string, to specify a valid filename or protocol. (Since 2.1)
If top == base, that is an error. If top == active, the job will not be completed by itself, user needs to complete the job with the block-job-complete command after getting the ready event. (Since 2.0)
If the base image is smaller than top, then the base image will be resized to be the same size as top. If top is smaller than the base image, the base will not be truncated. If you want the base image size to match the size of the smaller top, you can safely truncate it yourself once the commit operation successfully completes.
speed: int (optional)the maximum speed, in bytes per second
filter-node-name: string (optional)the node name that should be assigned to the
filter driver that the commit job inserts into the graph
above top. If this option is not given, a node name is
autogenerated. (Since: 2.9)
Returns:
Nothing on success
If commit or stream is already active on this device, DeviceInUse
If device does not exist, DeviceNotFound
If image commit is not supported by this device, NotSupported
If base or top is invalid, a generic error is returned
If speed is invalid, InvalidParameter
Since: 1.3
Example:
-> { "execute": "block-commit",
"arguments": { "device": "virtio0",
"top": "/tmp/snap1.qcow2" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Start a point-in-time copy of a block device to a new destination. The status of ongoing drive-backup operations can be checked with query-block-jobs where the BlockJobInfo.type field has the value ’backup’. The operation can be stopped before it has completed using the block-job-cancel command.
Arguments: the members of DriveBackup
Returns:
nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, GenericError
Since: 1.6
Example:
-> { "execute": "drive-backup",
"arguments": { "device": "drive0",
"sync": "full",
"target": "backup.img" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Start a point-in-time copy of a block device to a new destination. The status of ongoing blockdev-backup operations can be checked with query-block-jobs where the BlockJobInfo.type field has the value ’backup’. The operation can be stopped before it has completed using the block-job-cancel command.
Arguments: the members of BlockdevBackup
Returns:
nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
Since: 2.3
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-backup",
"arguments": { "device": "src-id",
"sync": "full",
"target": "tgt-id" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Get the named block driver list
Returns: the list of BlockDeviceInfo
Since: 2.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-named-block-nodes" }
<- { "return": [ { "ro":false,
"drv":"qcow2",
"encrypted":false,
"file":"disks/test.qcow2",
"node-name": "my-node",
"backing_file_depth":1,
"bps":1000000,
"bps_rd":0,
"bps_wr":0,
"iops":1000000,
"iops_rd":0,
"iops_wr":0,
"bps_max": 8000000,
"bps_rd_max": 0,
"bps_wr_max": 0,
"iops_max": 0,
"iops_rd_max": 0,
"iops_wr_max": 0,
"iops_size": 0,
"write_threshold": 0,
"image":{
"filename":"disks/test.qcow2",
"format":"qcow2",
"virtual-size":2048000,
"backing_file":"base.qcow2",
"full-backing-filename":"disks/base.qcow2",
"backing-filename-format":"qcow2",
"snapshots":[
{
"id": "1",
"name": "snapshot1",
"vm-state-size": 0,
"date-sec": 10000200,
"date-nsec": 12,
"vm-clock-sec": 206,
"vm-clock-nsec": 30
}
],
"backing-image":{
"filename":"disks/base.qcow2",
"format":"qcow2",
"virtual-size":2048000
}
} } ] }
Start mirroring a block device’s writes to a new destination. target specifies the target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it is a device, it will be used as the new destination for writes. If it does not exist, a new file will be created. format specifies the format of the mirror image, default is to probe if mode=’existing’, else the format of the source.
Arguments: the members of DriveMirror
Returns:
nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, GenericError
Since: 1.3
Example:
-> { "execute": "drive-mirror",
"arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
"target": "/some/place/my-image",
"sync": "full",
"format": "qcow2" } }
<- { "return": {} }
A set of parameters describing drive mirror setup.
Members:
job-id: string (optional)identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
device: stringthe device name or node-name of a root node whose writes should be mirrored.
target: stringthe target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it is a device, the existing file/device will be used as the new destination. If it does not exist, a new file will be created.
format: string (optional)the format of the new destination, default is to
probe if mode is ’existing’, else the format of the source
node-name: string (optional)the new block driver state node name in the graph (Since 2.1)
replaces: string (optional)with sync=full graph node name to be replaced by the new image when a whole image copy is done. This can be used to repair broken Quorum files. (Since 2.1)
mode: NewImageMode (optional)whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is ’absolute-paths’.
speed: int (optional)the maximum speed, in bytes per second
sync: MirrorSyncModewhat parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or only new I/O).
granularity: int (optional)granularity of the dirty bitmap, default is 64K if the image format doesn’t have clusters, 4K if the clusters are smaller than that, else the cluster size. Must be a power of 2 between 512 and 64M (since 1.4).
buf-size: int (optional)maximum amount of data in flight from source to target (since 1.4).
on-source-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error on the source, default ’report’. ’stop’ and ’enospc’ can only be used if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo).
on-target-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error on the target,
default ’report’ (no limitations, since this applies to
a different block device than device).
unmap: boolean (optional)Whether to try to unmap target sectors where source has only zero. If true, and target unallocated sectors will read as zero, target image sectors will be unmapped; otherwise, zeroes will be written. Both will result in identical contents. Default is true. (Since 2.4)
Since: 1.3
Members:
node: stringname of device/node which the bitmap is tracking
name: stringname of the dirty bitmap
Since: 2.4
Members:
node: stringname of device/node which the bitmap is tracking
name: stringname of the dirty bitmap
granularity: int (optional)the bitmap granularity, default is 64k for block-dirty-bitmap-add
Since: 2.4
Create a dirty bitmap with a name on the node, and start tracking the writes.
Returns:
nothing on success
If node is not a valid block device or node, DeviceNotFound
If name is already taken, GenericError with an explanation
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-add",
"arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Stop write tracking and remove the dirty bitmap that was created with block-dirty-bitmap-add.
Returns:
nothing on success
If node is not a valid block device or node, DeviceNotFound
If name is not found, GenericError with an explanation
if name is frozen by an operation, GenericError
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-remove",
"arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Clear (reset) a dirty bitmap on the device, so that an incremental backup from this point in time forward will only backup clusters modified after this clear operation.
Returns:
nothing on success
If node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
If name is not found, GenericError with an explanation
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-clear",
"arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Start mirroring a block device’s writes to a new destination.
Arguments:
job-id: string (optional)identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
device: stringThe device name or node-name of a root node whose writes should be mirrored.
target: stringthe id or node-name of the block device to mirror to. This mustn’t be attached to guest.
replaces: string (optional)with sync=full graph node name to be replaced by the new image when a whole image copy is done. This can be used to repair broken Quorum files.
speed: int (optional)the maximum speed, in bytes per second
sync: MirrorSyncModewhat parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or only new I/O).
granularity: int (optional)granularity of the dirty bitmap, default is 64K if the image format doesn’t have clusters, 4K if the clusters are smaller than that, else the cluster size. Must be a power of 2 between 512 and 64M
buf-size: int (optional)maximum amount of data in flight from source to target
on-source-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error on the source, default ’report’. ’stop’ and ’enospc’ can only be used if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo).
on-target-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error on the target,
default ’report’ (no limitations, since this applies to
a different block device than device).
filter-node-name: string (optional)the node name that should be assigned to the
filter driver that the mirror job inserts into the graph
above device. If this option is not given, a node name is
autogenerated. (Since: 2.9)
Returns: nothing on success.
Since: 2.6
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-mirror",
"arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
"target": "target0",
"sync": "full" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Change I/O throttle limits for a block drive.
Since QEMU 2.4, each device with I/O limits is member of a throttle group.
If two or more devices are members of the same group, the limits will apply to the combined I/O of the whole group in a round-robin fashion. Therefore, setting new I/O limits to a device will affect the whole group.
The name of the group can be specified using the ’group’ parameter. If the parameter is unset, it is assumed to be the current group of that device. If it’s not in any group yet, the name of the device will be used as the name for its group.
The ’group’ parameter can also be used to move a device to a different group. In this case the limits specified in the parameters will be applied to the new group only.
I/O limits can be disabled by setting all of them to 0. In this case the device will be removed from its group and the rest of its members will not be affected. The ’group’ parameter is ignored.
Arguments: the members of BlockIOThrottle
Returns:
Nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
Since: 1.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "block_set_io_throttle",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0",
"bps": 1000000,
"bps_rd": 0,
"bps_wr": 0,
"iops": 0,
"iops_rd": 0,
"iops_wr": 0,
"bps_max": 8000000,
"bps_rd_max": 0,
"bps_wr_max": 0,
"iops_max": 0,
"iops_rd_max": 0,
"iops_wr_max": 0,
"bps_max_length": 60,
"iops_size": 0 } }
<- { "return": {} }
A set of parameters describing block throttling.
Members:
device: string (optional)Block device name (deprecated, use id instead)
id: string (optional)The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
bps: inttotal throughput limit in bytes per second
bps_rd: intread throughput limit in bytes per second
bps_wr: intwrite throughput limit in bytes per second
iops: inttotal I/O operations per second
iops_rd: intread I/O operations per second
iops_wr: intwrite I/O operations per second
bps_max: int (optional)total throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
bps_rd_max: int (optional)read throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
bps_wr_max: int (optional)write throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
iops_max: int (optional)total I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
iops_rd_max: int (optional)read I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
iops_wr_max: int (optional)write I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
bps_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the bps_max burst
period, in seconds. It must only
be set if bps_max is set as well.
Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
bps_rd_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the bps_rd_max
burst period, in seconds. It must only
be set if bps_rd_max is set as well.
Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
bps_wr_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the bps_wr_max
burst period, in seconds. It must only
be set if bps_wr_max is set as well.
Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
iops_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the iops burst
period, in seconds. It must only
be set if iops_max is set as well.
Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
iops_rd_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the iops_rd_max
burst period, in seconds. It must only
be set if iops_rd_max is set as well.
Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
iops_wr_max_length: int (optional)maximum length of the iops_wr_max
burst period, in seconds. It must only
be set if iops_wr_max is set as well.
Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
iops_size: int (optional)an I/O size in bytes (Since 1.7)
group: string (optional)throttle group name (Since 2.4)
Since: 1.1
Copy data from a backing file into a block device.
The block streaming operation is performed in the background until the entire backing file has been copied. This command returns immediately once streaming has started. The status of ongoing block streaming operations can be checked with query-block-jobs. The operation can be stopped before it has completed using the block-job-cancel command.
The node that receives the data is called the top image, can be located in any part of the chain (but always above the base image; see below) and can be specified using its device or node name. Earlier qemu versions only allowed ’device’ to name the top level node; presence of the ’base-node’ parameter during introspection can be used as a witness of the enhanced semantics of ’device’.
If a base file is specified then sectors are not copied from that base file and its backing chain. When streaming completes the image file will have the base file as its backing file. This can be used to stream a subset of the backing file chain instead of flattening the entire image.
On successful completion the image file is updated to drop the backing file and the BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED event is emitted.
Arguments:
job-id: string (optional)identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
device: stringthe device or node name of the top image
base: string (optional)the common backing file name.
It cannot be set if base-node is also set.
base-node: string (optional)the node name of the backing file.
It cannot be set if base is also set. (Since 2.8)
backing-file: string (optional)The backing file string to write into the top image. This filename is not validated.
If a pathname string is such that it cannot be resolved by QEMU, that means that subsequent QMP or HMP commands must use node-names for the image in question, as filename lookup methods will fail.
If not specified, QEMU will automatically determine the backing file string to use, or error out if there is no obvious choice. Care should be taken when specifying the string, to specify a valid filename or protocol. (Since 2.1)
speed: int (optional)the maximum speed, in bytes per second
on-error: BlockdevOnError (optional)the action to take on an error (default report). ’stop’ and ’enospc’ can only be used if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo). Since 1.3.
Returns:
Nothing on success. If device does not exist, DeviceNotFound.
Since: 1.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "block-stream",
"arguments": { "device": "virtio0",
"base": "/tmp/master.qcow2" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Set maximum speed for a background block operation.
This command can only be issued when there is an active block job.
Throttling can be disabled by setting the speed to 0.
Arguments:
device: stringThe job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have other values.
speed: intthe maximum speed, in bytes per second, or 0 for unlimited. Defaults to 0.
Returns: Nothing on success If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
Since: 1.1
Stop an active background block operation.
This command returns immediately after marking the active background block operation for cancellation. It is an error to call this command if no operation is in progress.
The operation will cancel as soon as possible and then emit the BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED event. Before that happens the job is still visible when enumerated using query-block-jobs.
For streaming, the image file retains its backing file unless the streaming operation happens to complete just as it is being cancelled. A new streaming operation can be started at a later time to finish copying all data from the backing file.
Arguments:
device: stringThe job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have other values.
force: boolean (optional)whether to allow cancellation of a paused job (default false). Since 1.3.
Returns: Nothing on success If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
Since: 1.1
Pause an active background block operation.
This command returns immediately after marking the active background block operation for pausing. It is an error to call this command if no operation is in progress. Pausing an already paused job has no cumulative effect; a single block-job-resume command will resume the job.
The operation will pause as soon as possible. No event is emitted when the operation is actually paused. Cancelling a paused job automatically resumes it.
Arguments:
device: stringThe job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have other values.
Returns: Nothing on success If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
Since: 1.3
Resume an active background block operation.
This command returns immediately after resuming a paused background block operation. It is an error to call this command if no operation is in progress. Resuming an already running job is not an error.
This command also clears the error status of the job.
Arguments:
device: stringThe job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have other values.
Returns: Nothing on success If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
Since: 1.3
Manually trigger completion of an active background block operation. This is supported for drive mirroring, where it also switches the device to write to the target path only. The ability to complete is signaled with a BLOCK_JOB_READY event.
This command completes an active background block operation synchronously. The ordering of this command’s return with the BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED event is not defined. Note that if an I/O error occurs during the processing of this command: 1) the command itself will fail; 2) the error will be processed according to the rerror/werror arguments that were specified when starting the operation.
A cancelled or paused job cannot be completed.
Arguments:
device: stringThe job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have other values.
Returns: Nothing on success If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
Since: 1.3
Determines how to handle discard requests.
Values:
ignoreIgnore the request
unmapForward as an unmap request
Since: 2.9
Describes the operation mode for the automatic conversion of plain zero writes by the OS to driver specific optimized zero write commands.
Values:
offDisabled (default)
onEnabled
unmapEnabled and even try to unmap blocks if possible. This requires
also that BlockdevDiscardOptions is set to unmap for this device.
Since: 2.1
Selects the AIO backend to handle I/O requests
Values:
threadsUse qemu’s thread pool
nativeUse native AIO backend (only Linux and Windows)
Since: 2.9
Includes cache-related options for block devices
Members:
direct: boolean (optional)enables use of O_DIRECT (bypass the host page cache; default: false)
no-flush: boolean (optional)ignore any flush requests for the device (default: false)
Since: 2.9
Drivers that are supported in block device operations.
Values:
blkdebugNot documented
blkverifyNot documented
bochsNot documented
cloopNot documented
dmgNot documented
fileNot documented
ftpNot documented
ftpsNot documented
glusterNot documented
host_cdromNot documented
host_deviceNot documented
httpNot documented
httpsNot documented
iscsiNot documented
luksNot documented
nbdNot documented
nfsNot documented
null-aioNot documented
null-coNot documented
parallelsNot documented
qcowNot documented
qcow2Not documented
qedNot documented
quorumNot documented
rawNot documented
rbdNot documented
replicationNot documented
sheepdogNot documented
sshNot documented
vdiNot documented
vhdxNot documented
vmdkNot documented
vpcNot documented
vvfatNot documented
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for the file backend.
Members:
filename: stringpath to the image file
aio: BlockdevAioOptions (optional)AIO backend (default: threads) (since: 2.8)
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for the null backend.
Members:
size: int (optional)size of the device in bytes.
latency-ns: int (optional)emulated latency (in nanoseconds) in processing requests. Default to zero which completes requests immediately. (Since 2.4)
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for the vvfat protocol.
Members:
dir: stringdirectory to be exported as FAT image
fat-type: int (optional)FAT type: 12, 16 or 32
floppy: boolean (optional)whether to export a floppy image (true) or partitioned hard disk (false; default)
label: string (optional)set the volume label, limited to 11 bytes. FAT16 and FAT32 traditionally have some restrictions on labels, which are ignored by most operating systems. Defaults to "QEMU VVFAT". (since 2.4)
rw: boolean (optional)whether to allow write operations (default: false)
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for image format that have no option besides their data source.
Members:
file: BlockdevRefreference to or definition of the data source block device
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for LUKS.
Members:
key-secret: string (optional)the ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the decryption key (since 2.6). Mandatory except when doing a metadata-only probe of the image.
BlockdevOptionsGenericFormatSince: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for image format that have no option besides their data source and an optional backing file.
Members:
backing: BlockdevRef (optional)reference to or definition of the backing file block device (if missing, taken from the image file content). It is allowed to pass an empty string here in order to disable the default backing file.
BlockdevOptionsGenericFormatSince: 2.9
General overlap check modes.
Values:
noneDo not perform any checks
constantPerform only checks which can be done in constant time and without reading anything from disk
cachedPerform only checks which can be done without reading anything from disk
allPerform all available overlap checks
Since: 2.9
Structure of flags for each metadata structure. Setting a field to ’true’ makes qemu guard that structure against unintended overwriting. The default value is chosen according to the template given.
Members:
template: Qcow2OverlapCheckMode (optional)Specifies a template mode which can be adjusted using the other flags, defaults to ’cached’
main-header: boolean (optional)Not documented
active-l1: boolean (optional)Not documented
active-l2: boolean (optional)Not documented
refcount-table: boolean (optional)Not documented
refcount-block: boolean (optional)Not documented
snapshot-table: boolean (optional)Not documented
inactive-l1: boolean (optional)Not documented
inactive-l2: boolean (optional)Not documented
Since: 2.9
Specifies which metadata structures should be guarded against unintended overwriting.
Members:
flags: Qcow2OverlapCheckFlagsset of flags for separate specification of each metadata structure type
mode: Qcow2OverlapCheckModenamed mode which chooses a specific set of flags
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for qcow2.
Members:
lazy-refcounts: boolean (optional)whether to enable the lazy refcounts feature (default is taken from the image file)
pass-discard-request: boolean (optional)whether discard requests to the qcow2 device should be forwarded to the data source
pass-discard-snapshot: boolean (optional)whether discard requests for the data source should be issued when a snapshot operation (e.g. deleting a snapshot) frees clusters in the qcow2 file
pass-discard-other: boolean (optional)whether discard requests for the data source should be issued on other occasions where a cluster gets freed
overlap-check: Qcow2OverlapChecks (optional)which overlap checks to perform for writes to the image, defaults to ’cached’ (since 2.2)
cache-size: int (optional)the maximum total size of the L2 table and refcount block caches in bytes (since 2.2)
l2-cache-size: int (optional)the maximum size of the L2 table cache in bytes (since 2.2)
refcount-cache-size: int (optional)the maximum size of the refcount block cache in bytes (since 2.2)
cache-clean-interval: int (optional)clean unused entries in the L2 and refcount caches. The interval is in seconds. The default value is 0 and it disables this feature (since 2.5)
BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormatSince: 2.9
Members:
server: InetSocketAddresshost address
path: stringpath to the image on the host
user: string (optional)user as which to connect, defaults to current local user name
TODO: Expose the host_key_check option in QMP
Since: 2.9
Trigger events supported by blkdebug.
Values:
l1_updateNot documented
l1_grow_alloc_tableNot documented
l1_grow_write_tableNot documented
l1_grow_activate_tableNot documented
l2_loadNot documented
l2_updateNot documented
l2_update_compressedNot documented
l2_alloc_cow_readNot documented
l2_alloc_writeNot documented
read_aioNot documented
read_backing_aioNot documented
read_compressedNot documented
write_aioNot documented
write_compressedNot documented
vmstate_loadNot documented
vmstate_saveNot documented
cow_readNot documented
cow_writeNot documented
reftable_loadNot documented
reftable_growNot documented
reftable_updateNot documented
refblock_loadNot documented
refblock_updateNot documented
refblock_update_partNot documented
refblock_allocNot documented
refblock_alloc_hookupNot documented
refblock_alloc_writeNot documented
refblock_alloc_write_blocksNot documented
refblock_alloc_write_tableNot documented
refblock_alloc_switch_tableNot documented
cluster_allocNot documented
cluster_alloc_bytesNot documented
cluster_freeNot documented
flush_to_osNot documented
flush_to_diskNot documented
pwritev_rmw_headNot documented
pwritev_rmw_after_headNot documented
pwritev_rmw_tailNot documented
pwritev_rmw_after_tailNot documented
pwritevNot documented
pwritev_zeroNot documented
pwritev_doneNot documented
empty_image_prepareNot documented
Since: 2.9
Describes a single error injection for blkdebug.
Members:
event: BlkdebugEventtrigger event
state: int (optional)the state identifier blkdebug needs to be in to actually trigger the event; defaults to "any"
errno: int (optional)error identifier (errno) to be returned; defaults to EIO
sector: int (optional)specifies the sector index which has to be affected in order to actually trigger the event; defaults to "any sector"
once: boolean (optional)disables further events after this one has been triggered; defaults to false
immediately: boolean (optional)fail immediately; defaults to false
Since: 2.9
Describes a single state-change event for blkdebug.
Members:
event: BlkdebugEventtrigger event
state: int (optional)the current state identifier blkdebug needs to be in; defaults to "any"
new_state: intthe state identifier blkdebug is supposed to assume if this event is triggered
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for blkdebug.
Members:
image: BlockdevRefunderlying raw block device (or image file)
config: string (optional)filename of the configuration file
align: int (optional)required alignment for requests in bytes, must be power of 2, or 0 for default
inject-error: array of BlkdebugInjectErrorOptions (optional)array of error injection descriptions
set-state: array of BlkdebugSetStateOptions (optional)array of state-change descriptions
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for blkverify.
Members:
test: BlockdevRefblock device to be tested
raw: BlockdevRefraw image used for verification
Since: 2.9
An enumeration of quorum read patterns.
Values:
quorumread all the children and do a quorum vote on reads
fiforead only from the first child that has not failed
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for Quorum
Members:
blkverify: boolean (optional)true if the driver must print content mismatch set to false by default
children: array of BlockdevRefthe children block devices to use
vote-threshold: intthe vote limit under which a read will fail
rewrite-corrupted: boolean (optional)rewrite corrupted data when quorum is reached (Since 2.1)
read-pattern: QuorumReadPattern (optional)choose read pattern and set to quorum by default (Since 2.2)
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for Gluster
Members:
volume: stringname of gluster volume where VM image resides
path: stringabsolute path to image file in gluster volume
server: array of SocketAddressFlatgluster servers description
debug: int (optional)libgfapi log level (default ’4’ which is Error) (Since 2.8)
logfile: string (optional)libgfapi log file (default /dev/stderr) (Since 2.8)
Since: 2.9
An enumeration of libiscsi transport types
Values:
tcpNot documented
iserNot documented
Since: 2.9
An enumeration of header digests supported by libiscsi
Values:
crc32cNot documented
noneNot documented
crc32c-noneNot documented
none-crc32cNot documented
Since: 2.9
Members:
transport: IscsiTransportThe iscsi transport type
portal: stringThe address of the iscsi portal
target: stringThe target iqn name
lun: int (optional)LUN to connect to. Defaults to 0.
user: string (optional)User name to log in with. If omitted, no CHAP authentication is performed.
password-secret: string (optional)The ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing
the password for the login. This option is required if
user is specified.
initiator-name: string (optional)The iqn name we want to identify to the target as. If this option is not specified, an initiator name is generated automatically.
header-digest: IscsiHeaderDigest (optional)The desired header digest. Defaults to none-crc32c.
timeout: int (optional)Timeout in seconds after which a request will timeout. 0 means no timeout and is the default.
Driver specific block device options for iscsi
Since: 2.9
Members:
pool: stringCeph pool name.
image: stringImage name in the Ceph pool.
conf: string (optional)path to Ceph configuration file. Values in the configuration file will be overridden by options specified via QAPI.
snapshot: string (optional)Ceph snapshot name.
user: string (optional)Ceph id name.
server: array of InetSocketAddressBase (optional)Monitor host address and port. This maps to the "mon_host" Ceph option.
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for sheepdog
Members:
vdi: stringVirtual disk image name
server: SocketAddressFlatThe Sheepdog server to connect to
snap-id: int (optional)Snapshot ID
tag: string (optional)Snapshot tag name
Only one of snap-id and tag may be present.
Since: 2.9
An enumeration of replication modes.
Values:
primaryPrimary mode, the vm’s state will be sent to secondary QEMU.
secondarySecondary mode, receive the vm’s state from primary QEMU.
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for replication
Members:
mode: ReplicationModethe replication mode
top-id: string (optional)In secondary mode, node name or device ID of the root node who owns the replication node chain. Must not be given in primary mode.
BlockdevOptionsGenericFormatSince: 2.9
An enumeration of NFS transport types
Values:
inetTCP transport
Since: 2.9
Captures the address of the socket
Members:
type: NFSTransporttransport type used for NFS (only TCP supported)
host: stringhost address for NFS server
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device option for NFS
Members:
server: NFSServerhost address
path: stringpath of the image on the host
user: int (optional)UID value to use when talking to the server (defaults to 65534 on Windows and getuid() on unix)
group: int (optional)GID value to use when talking to the server (defaults to 65534 on Windows and getgid() in unix)
tcp-syn-count: int (optional)number of SYNs during the session establishment (defaults to libnfs default)
readahead-size: int (optional)set the readahead size in bytes (defaults to libnfs default)
page-cache-size: int (optional)set the pagecache size in bytes (defaults to libnfs default)
debug: int (optional)set the NFS debug level (max 2) (defaults to libnfs default)
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options shared by all protocols supported by the curl backend.
Members:
url: stringURL of the image file
readahead: int (optional)Size of the read-ahead cache; must be a multiple of 512 (defaults to 256 kB)
timeout: int (optional)Timeout for connections, in seconds (defaults to 5)
username: string (optional)Username for authentication (defaults to none)
password-secret: string (optional)ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a password for authentication (defaults to no password)
proxy-username: string (optional)Username for proxy authentication (defaults to none)
proxy-password-secret: string (optional)ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a password for proxy authentication (defaults to no password)
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for HTTP connections over the curl backend. URLs must start with "http://".
Members:
cookie: string (optional)List of cookies to set; format is "name1=content1; name2=content2;" as explained by CURLOPT_COOKIE(3). Defaults to no cookies.
BlockdevOptionsCurlBaseSince: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for HTTPS connections over the curl backend. URLs must start with "https://".
Members:
cookie: string (optional)List of cookies to set; format is "name1=content1; name2=content2;" as explained by CURLOPT_COOKIE(3). Defaults to no cookies.
sslverify: boolean (optional)Whether to verify the SSL certificate’s validity (defaults to true)
BlockdevOptionsCurlBaseSince: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for FTP connections over the curl backend. URLs must start with "ftp://".
Members:
BlockdevOptionsCurlBaseSince: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for FTPS connections over the curl backend. URLs must start with "ftps://".
Members:
sslverify: boolean (optional)Whether to verify the SSL certificate’s validity (defaults to true)
BlockdevOptionsCurlBaseSince: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for NBD.
Members:
server: SocketAddressFlatNBD server address
export: string (optional)export name
tls-creds: string (optional)TLS credentials ID
Since: 2.9
Driver specific block device options for the raw driver.
Members:
offset: int (optional)position where the block device starts
size: int (optional)the assumed size of the device
BlockdevOptionsGenericFormatSince: 2.9
Options for creating a block device. Many options are available for all block devices, independent of the block driver:
Members:
driver: BlockdevDriverblock driver name
node-name: string (optional)the node name of the new node (Since 2.0). This option is required on the top level of blockdev-add.
discard: BlockdevDiscardOptions (optional)discard-related options (default: ignore)
cache: BlockdevCacheOptions (optional)cache-related options
read-only: boolean (optional)whether the block device should be read-only (default: false)
detect-zeroes: BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions (optional)detect and optimize zero writes (Since 2.1) (default: off)
BlockdevOptionsBlkdebug when driver is "blkdebug"BlockdevOptionsBlkverify when driver is "blkverify"BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat when driver is "bochs"BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat when driver is "cloop"BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat when driver is "dmg"BlockdevOptionsFile when driver is "file"BlockdevOptionsCurlFtp when driver is "ftp"BlockdevOptionsCurlFtps when driver is "ftps"BlockdevOptionsGluster when driver is "gluster"BlockdevOptionsFile when driver is "host_cdrom"BlockdevOptionsFile when driver is "host_device"BlockdevOptionsCurlHttp when driver is "http"BlockdevOptionsCurlHttps when driver is "https"BlockdevOptionsIscsi when driver is "iscsi"BlockdevOptionsLUKS when driver is "luks"BlockdevOptionsNbd when driver is "nbd"BlockdevOptionsNfs when driver is "nfs"BlockdevOptionsNull when driver is "null-aio"BlockdevOptionsNull when driver is "null-co"BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat when driver is "parallels"BlockdevOptionsQcow2 when driver is "qcow2"BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat when driver is "qcow"BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat when driver is "qed"BlockdevOptionsQuorum when driver is "quorum"BlockdevOptionsRaw when driver is "raw"BlockdevOptionsRbd when driver is "rbd"BlockdevOptionsReplication when driver is "replication"BlockdevOptionsSheepdog when driver is "sheepdog"BlockdevOptionsSsh when driver is "ssh"BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat when driver is "vdi"BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat when driver is "vhdx"BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat when driver is "vmdk"BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat when driver is "vpc"BlockdevOptionsVVFAT when driver is "vvfat"Remaining options are determined by the block driver.
Since: 2.9
Reference to a block device.
Members:
definition: BlockdevOptionsdefines a new block device inline
reference: stringreferences the ID of an existing block device. An empty string means that no block device should be referenced.
Since: 2.9
Creates a new block device. If the id option is given at the top level, a
BlockBackend will be created; otherwise, node-name is mandatory at the top
level and no BlockBackend will be created.
Arguments: the members of BlockdevOptions
Since: 2.9
Example:
1.
-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
"arguments": {
"driver": "qcow2",
"node-name": "test1",
"file": {
"driver": "file",
"filename": "test.qcow2"
}
}
}
<- { "return": {} }
2.
-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
"arguments": {
"driver": "qcow2",
"node-name": "node0",
"discard": "unmap",
"cache": {
"direct": true
},
"file": {
"driver": "file",
"filename": "/tmp/test.qcow2"
},
"backing": {
"driver": "raw",
"file": {
"driver": "file",
"filename": "/dev/fdset/4"
}
}
}
}
<- { "return": {} }
Deletes a block device that has been added using blockdev-add. The command will fail if the node is attached to a device or is otherwise being used.
Arguments:
node-name: stringName of the graph node to delete.
Since: 2.9
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
"arguments": {
"driver": "qcow2",
"node-name": "node0",
"file": {
"driver": "file",
"filename": "test.qcow2"
}
}
}
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute": "blockdev-del",
"arguments": { "node-name": "node0" }
}
<- { "return": {} }
Opens a block device’s tray. If there is a block driver state tree inserted as a medium, it will become inaccessible to the guest (but it will remain associated to the block device, so closing the tray will make it accessible again).
If the tray was already open before, this will be a no-op.
Once the tray opens, a DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED event is emitted. There are cases in which no such event will be generated, these include:
force is false and the guest does not
respond to the eject request
device does not have a guest device attached
to it
Arguments:
device: string (optional)Block device name (deprecated, use id instead)
id: string (optional)The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
force: boolean (optional)if false (the default), an eject request will be sent to the guest if it has locked the tray (and the tray will not be opened immediately); if true, the tray will be opened regardless of whether it is locked
Since: 2.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-open-tray",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
<- { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1418751016,
"microseconds": 716996 },
"event": "DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED",
"data": { "device": "ide1-cd0",
"id": "ide0-1-0",
"tray-open": true } }
<- { "return": {} }
Closes a block device’s tray. If there is a block driver state tree associated with the block device (which is currently ejected), that tree will be loaded as the medium.
If the tray was already closed before, this will be a no-op.
Arguments:
device: string (optional)Block device name (deprecated, use id instead)
id: string (optional)The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
Since: 2.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-close-tray",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
<- { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1418751345,
"microseconds": 272147 },
"event": "DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED",
"data": { "device": "ide1-cd0",
"id": "ide0-1-0",
"tray-open": false } }
<- { "return": {} }
Removes a medium (a block driver state tree) from a block device. That block device’s tray must currently be open (unless there is no attached guest device).
If the tray is open and there is no medium inserted, this will be a no-op.
Arguments:
device: string (optional)Block device name (deprecated, use id instead)
id: string (optional)The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
Note: This command is still a work in progress and is considered experimental. Stay away from it unless you want to help with its development.
Since: 2.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "x-blockdev-remove-medium",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
<- { "error": { "class": "GenericError",
"desc": "Tray of device 'ide0-1-0' is not open" } }
-> { "execute": "blockdev-open-tray",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
<- { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1418751627,
"microseconds": 549958 },
"event": "DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED",
"data": { "device": "ide1-cd0",
"id": "ide0-1-0",
"tray-open": true } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute": "x-blockdev-remove-medium",
"arguments": { "device": "ide0-1-0" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Inserts a medium (a block driver state tree) into a block device. That block device’s tray must currently be open (unless there is no attached guest device) and there must be no medium inserted already.
Arguments:
device: string (optional)Block device name (deprecated, use id instead)
id: string (optional)The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
node-name: stringname of a node in the block driver state graph
Note: This command is still a work in progress and is considered experimental. Stay away from it unless you want to help with its development.
Since: 2.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
"arguments": {
"options": { "node-name": "node0",
"driver": "raw",
"file": { "driver": "file",
"filename": "fedora.iso" } } } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute": "x-blockdev-insert-medium",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0",
"node-name": "node0" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Specifies the new read-only mode of a block device subject to the
blockdev-change-medium command.
Values:
retainRetains the current read-only mode
read-onlyMakes the device read-only
read-writeMakes the device writable
Since: 2.3
Changes the medium inserted into a block device by ejecting the current medium and loading a new image file which is inserted as the new medium (this command combines blockdev-open-tray, x-blockdev-remove-medium, x-blockdev-insert-medium and blockdev-close-tray).
Arguments:
device: string (optional)Block device name (deprecated, use id instead)
id: string (optional)The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
filename: stringfilename of the new image to be loaded
format: string (optional)format to open the new image with (defaults to the probed format)
read-only-mode: BlockdevChangeReadOnlyMode (optional)change the read-only mode of the device; defaults to ’retain’
Since: 2.5
Examples:
1. Change a removable medium
-> { "execute": "blockdev-change-medium",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0",
"filename": "/srv/images/Fedora-12-x86_64-DVD.iso",
"format": "raw" } }
<- { "return": {} }
2. Load a read-only medium into a writable drive
-> { "execute": "blockdev-change-medium",
"arguments": { "id": "floppyA",
"filename": "/srv/images/ro.img",
"format": "raw",
"read-only-mode": "retain" } }
<- { "error":
{ "class": "GenericError",
"desc": "Could not open '/srv/images/ro.img': Permission denied" } }
-> { "execute": "blockdev-change-medium",
"arguments": { "id": "floppyA",
"filename": "/srv/images/ro.img",
"format": "raw",
"read-only-mode": "read-only" } }
<- { "return": {} }
An enumeration of action that has been taken when a DISK I/O occurs
Values:
ignoreerror has been ignored
reporterror has been reported to the device
stoperror caused VM to be stopped
Since: 2.1
Emitted when a disk image is being marked corrupt. The image can be identified by its device or node name. The ’device’ field is always present for compatibility reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the image does not have a device name associated.
Arguments:
device: stringdevice name. This is always present for compatibility reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the image does not have a device name associated.
node-name: string (optional)node name (Since: 2.4)
msg: stringinformative message for human consumption, such as the kind of corruption being detected. It should not be parsed by machine as it is not guaranteed to be stable
offset: int (optional)if the corruption resulted from an image access, this is the host’s access offset into the image
size: int (optional)if the corruption resulted from an image access, this is the access size
fatal: booleanif set, the image is marked corrupt and therefore unusable after this event and must be repaired (Since 2.2; before, every BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED event was fatal)
Note: If action is "stop", a STOP event will eventually follow the BLOCK_IO_ERROR event.
Example:
<- { "event": "BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED",
"data": { "device": "ide0-hd0", "node-name": "node0",
"msg": "Prevented active L1 table overwrite", "offset": 196608,
"size": 65536 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1378126126, "microseconds": 966463 } }
Since: 1.7
Emitted when a disk I/O error occurs
Arguments:
device: stringdevice name. This is always present for compatibility reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the image does not have a device name associated.
node-name: stringnode name. Note that errors may be reported for the root node that is directly attached to a guest device rather than for the node where the error occurred. (Since: 2.8)
operation: IoOperationTypeI/O operation
action: BlockErrorActionaction that has been taken
nospace: boolean (optional)true if I/O error was caused due to a no-space condition. This key is only present if query-block’s io-status is present, please see query-block documentation for more information (since: 2.2)
reason: stringhuman readable string describing the error cause. (This field is a debugging aid for humans, it should not be parsed by applications) (since: 2.2)
Note: If action is "stop", a STOP event will eventually follow the BLOCK_IO_ERROR event
Since: 0.13.0
Example:
<- { "event": "BLOCK_IO_ERROR",
"data": { "device": "ide0-hd1",
"node-name": "#block212",
"operation": "write",
"action": "stop" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
Emitted when a block job has completed
Arguments:
type: BlockJobTypejob type
device: stringThe job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
len: intmaximum progress value
offset: intcurrent progress value. On success this is equal to len. On failure this is less than len
speed: intrate limit, bytes per second
error: string (optional)error message. Only present on failure. This field contains a human-readable error message. There are no semantics other than that streaming has failed and clients should not try to interpret the error string
Since: 1.1
Example:
<- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED",
"data": { "type": "stream", "device": "virtio-disk0",
"len": 10737418240, "offset": 10737418240,
"speed": 0 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267061043, "microseconds": 959568 } }
Emitted when a block job has been cancelled
Arguments:
type: BlockJobTypejob type
device: stringThe job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
len: intmaximum progress value
offset: intcurrent progress value. On success this is equal to len. On failure this is less than len
speed: intrate limit, bytes per second
Since: 1.1
Example:
<- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED",
"data": { "type": "stream", "device": "virtio-disk0",
"len": 10737418240, "offset": 134217728,
"speed": 0 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267061043, "microseconds": 959568 } }
Emitted when a block job encounters an error
Arguments:
device: stringThe job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
operation: IoOperationTypeI/O operation
action: BlockErrorActionaction that has been taken
Since: 1.3
Example:
<- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_ERROR",
"data": { "device": "ide0-hd1",
"operation": "write",
"action": "stop" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
Emitted when a block job is ready to complete
Arguments:
type: BlockJobTypejob type
device: stringThe job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
len: intmaximum progress value
offset: intcurrent progress value. On success this is equal to len. On failure this is less than len
speed: intrate limit, bytes per second
Note:
The "ready to complete" status is always reset by a BLOCK_JOB_ERROR
event
Since: 1.3
Example:
<- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_READY",
"data": { "device": "drive0", "type": "mirror", "speed": 0,
"len": 2097152, "offset": 2097152 }
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
Preallocation mode of QEMU image file
Values:
offno preallocation
metadatapreallocate only for metadata
falloclike full preallocation but allocate disk space by
posix_fallocate() rather than writing zeros.
fullpreallocate all data by writing zeros to device to ensure disk
space is really available. full preallocation also sets up
metadata correctly.
Since: 2.2
Emitted when writes on block device reaches or exceeds the configured write threshold. For thin-provisioned devices, this means the device should be extended to avoid pausing for disk exhaustion. The event is one shot. Once triggered, it needs to be re-registered with another block-set-threshold command.
Arguments:
node-name: stringgraph node name on which the threshold was exceeded.
amount-exceeded: intamount of data which exceeded the threshold, in bytes.
write-threshold: intlast configured threshold, in bytes.
Since: 2.3
Change the write threshold for a block drive. An event will be delivered if a write to this block drive crosses the configured threshold. The threshold is an offset, thus must be non-negative. Default is no write threshold. Setting the threshold to zero disables it.
This is useful to transparently resize thin-provisioned drives without the guest OS noticing.
Arguments:
node-name: stringgraph node name on which the threshold must be set.
write-threshold: intconfigured threshold for the block device, bytes. Use 0 to disable the threshold.
Since: 2.3
Example:
-> { "execute": "block-set-write-threshold",
"arguments": { "node-name": "mydev",
"write-threshold": 17179869184 } }
<- { "return": {} }
Dynamically reconfigure the block driver state graph. It can be used to add, remove, insert or replace a graph node. Currently only the Quorum driver implements this feature to add or remove its child. This is useful to fix a broken quorum child.
If node is specified, it will be inserted under parent. child
may not be specified in this case. If both parent and child are
specified but node is not, child will be detached from parent.
Arguments:
parent: stringthe id or name of the parent node.
child: string (optional)the name of a child under the given parent node.
node: string (optional)the name of the node that will be added.
Note: this command is experimental, and its API is not stable. It does not support all kinds of operations, all kinds of children, nor all block drivers.
Warning: The data in a new quorum child MUST be consistent with that of the rest of the array.
Since: 2.7
Example:
1. Add a new node to a quorum
-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
"arguments": {
"options": { "driver": "raw",
"node-name": "new_node",
"file": { "driver": "file",
"filename": "test.raw" } } } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute": "x-blockdev-change",
"arguments": { "parent": "disk1",
"node": "new_node" } }
<- { "return": {} }
2. Delete a quorum's node
-> { "execute": "x-blockdev-change",
"arguments": { "parent": "disk1",
"child": "children.1" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Policy that BIOS should use to interpret cylinder/head/sector addresses. Note that Bochs BIOS and SeaBIOS will not actually translate logical CHS to physical; instead, they will use logical block addressing.
Values:
autoIf cylinder/heads/sizes are passed, choose between none and LBA depending on the size of the disk. If they are not passed, choose none if QEMU can guess that the disk had 16 or fewer heads, large if QEMU can guess that the disk had 131072 or fewer tracks across all heads (i.e. cylinders*heads<131072), otherwise LBA.
noneThe physical disk geometry is equal to the logical geometry.
lbaAssume 63 sectors per track and one of 16, 32, 64, 128 or 255 heads (if fewer than 255 are enough to cover the whole disk with 1024 cylinders/head). The number of cylinders/head is then computed based on the number of sectors and heads.
largeThe number of cylinders per head is scaled down to 1024 by correspondingly scaling up the number of heads.
rechsSame as large, but first convert a 16-head geometry to
15-head, by proportionally scaling up the number of
cylinders/head.
Since: 2.0
Type of Floppy drive to be emulated by the Floppy Disk Controller.
Values:
1441.44MB 3.5" drive
2882.88MB 3.5" drive
1201.2MB 5.25" drive
noneNo drive connected
autoAutomatically determined by inserted media at boot
Since: 2.6
Members:
device: stringthe device name or node-name of a root node to generate the snapshot from
name: stringthe name of the internal snapshot to be created
Notes:
In transaction, if name is empty, or any snapshot matching name
exists, the operation will fail. Only some image formats support it,
for example, qcow2, rbd, and sheepdog.
Since: 1.7
Synchronously take an internal snapshot of a block device, when the format of the image used supports it. If the name is an empty string, or a snapshot with name already exists, the operation will fail.
For the arguments, see the documentation of BlockdevSnapshotInternal.
Returns: nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, GenericError
If any snapshot matching name exists, or name is empty,
GenericError
If the format of the image used does not support it, BlockFormatFeatureNotSupported
Since: 1.7
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot-internal-sync",
"arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
"name": "snapshot0" }
}
<- { "return": {} }
Synchronously delete an internal snapshot of a block device, when the format of the image used support it. The snapshot is identified by name or id or both. One of the name or id is required. Return SnapshotInfo for the successfully deleted snapshot.
Arguments:
device: stringthe device name or node-name of a root node to delete the snapshot from
id: string (optional)optional the snapshot’s ID to be deleted
name: string (optional)optional the snapshot’s name to be deleted
Returns:
SnapshotInfo on success
If device is not a valid block device, GenericError
If snapshot not found, GenericError
If the format of the image used does not support it,
BlockFormatFeatureNotSupported
If id and name are both not specified, GenericError
Since: 1.7
Example:
-> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot-delete-internal-sync",
"arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
"name": "snapshot0" }
}
<- { "return": {
"id": "1",
"name": "snapshot0",
"vm-state-size": 0,
"date-sec": 1000012,
"date-nsec": 10,
"vm-clock-sec": 100,
"vm-clock-nsec": 20
}
}
Ejects a device from a removable drive.
Arguments:
device: string (optional)Block device name (deprecated, use id instead)
id: string (optional)The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
force: boolean (optional)If true, eject regardless of whether the drive is locked. If not specified, the default value is false.
Returns: Nothing on success
If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
Notes: Ejecting a device with no media results in success
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "eject", "arguments": { "device": "ide1-0-1" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Start an NBD server listening on the given host and port. Block
devices can then be exported using nbd-server-add. The NBD
server will present them as named exports; for example, another
QEMU instance could refer to them as "nbd:HOST:PORT:exportname=NAME".
Arguments:
addr: SocketAddressAddress on which to listen.
tls-creds: string (optional)(optional) ID of the TLS credentials object. Since 2.6
Returns: error if the server is already running.
Since: 1.3.0
Export a block node to QEMU’s embedded NBD server.
Arguments:
device: stringThe device name or node name of the node to be exported
writable: boolean (optional)Whether clients should be able to write to the device via the NBD connection (default false).
Returns: error if the device is already marked for export.
Since: 1.3.0
Stop QEMU’s embedded NBD server, and unregister all devices previously
added via nbd-server-add.
Since: 1.3.0
Emitted whenever the tray of a removable device is moved by the guest or by HMP/QMP commands
Arguments:
device: stringBlock device name. This is always present for compatibility reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the image does not have a device name associated.
id: stringThe name or QOM path of the guest device (since 2.8)
tray-open: booleantrue if the tray has been opened or false if it has been closed
Since: 1.1
Example:
<- { "event": "DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED",
"data": { "device": "ide1-cd0",
"id": "/machine/unattached/device[22]",
"tray-open": true
},
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
An enumeration of the quorum operation types
Values:
readread operation
writewrite operation
flushflush operation
Since: 2.6
Emitted when the virtual machine has shut down, indicating that qemu is about to exit.
Note: If the command-line option "-no-shutdown" has been specified, qemu will not exit, and a STOP event will eventually follow the SHUTDOWN event
Since: 0.12.0
Example:
<- { "event": "SHUTDOWN",
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267040730, "microseconds": 682951 } }
Emitted when the virtual machine is powered down through the power control system, such as via ACPI.
Since: 0.12.0
Example:
<- { "event": "POWERDOWN",
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267040730, "microseconds": 682951 } }
Emitted when the virtual machine is reset
Since: 0.12.0
Example:
<- { "event": "RESET",
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267041653, "microseconds": 9518 } }
Emitted when the virtual machine is stopped
Since: 0.12.0
Example:
<- { "event": "STOP",
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267041730, "microseconds": 281295 } }
Emitted when the virtual machine resumes execution
Since: 0.12.0
Example:
<- { "event": "RESUME",
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1271770767, "microseconds": 582542 } }
Emitted when guest enters a hardware suspension state, for example, S3 state, which is sometimes called standby state
Since: 1.1
Example:
<- { "event": "SUSPEND",
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1344456160, "microseconds": 309119 } }
Emitted when guest enters a hardware suspension state with data saved on disk, for example, S4 state, which is sometimes called hibernate state
Note:
QEMU shuts down (similar to event SHUTDOWN) when entering this state
Since: 1.2
Example:
<- { "event": "SUSPEND_DISK",
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1344456160, "microseconds": 309119 } }
Emitted when the guest has woken up from suspend state and is running
Since: 1.1
Example:
<- { "event": "WAKEUP",
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1344522075, "microseconds": 745528 } }
Emitted when the guest changes the RTC time.
Arguments:
offset: intoffset between base RTC clock (as specified by -rtc base), and new RTC clock value
Note: This event is rate-limited.
Since: 0.13.0
Example:
<- { "event": "RTC_CHANGE",
"data": { "offset": 78 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267020223, "microseconds": 435656 } }
Emitted when the watchdog device’s timer is expired
Arguments:
action: WatchdogExpirationActionaction that has been taken
Note: If action is "reset", "shutdown", or "pause" the WATCHDOG event is followed respectively by the RESET, SHUTDOWN, or STOP events
Note: This event is rate-limited.
Since: 0.13.0
Example:
<- { "event": "WATCHDOG",
"data": { "action": "reset" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267061043, "microseconds": 959568 } }
Emitted whenever the device removal completion is acknowledged by the guest. At this point, it’s safe to reuse the specified device ID. Device removal can be initiated by the guest or by HMP/QMP commands.
Arguments:
device: string (optional)device name
path: stringdevice path
Since: 1.5
Example:
<- { "event": "DEVICE_DELETED",
"data": { "device": "virtio-net-pci-0",
"path": "/machine/peripheral/virtio-net-pci-0" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
Emitted once until the ’query-rx-filter’ command is executed, the first event will always be emitted
Arguments:
name: string (optional)net client name
path: stringdevice path
Since: 1.6
Example:
<- { "event": "NIC_RX_FILTER_CHANGED",
"data": { "name": "vnet0",
"path": "/machine/peripheral/vnet0/virtio-backend" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1368697518, "microseconds": 326866 } }
}
Emitted when a VNC client establishes a connection
Arguments:
server: VncServerInfoserver information
client: VncBasicInfoclient information
Note: This event is emitted before any authentication takes place, thus the authentication ID is not provided
Since: 0.13.0
Example:
<- { "event": "VNC_CONNECTED",
"data": {
"server": { "auth": "sasl", "family": "ipv4",
"service": "5901", "host": "0.0.0.0" },
"client": { "family": "ipv4", "service": "58425",
"host": "127.0.0.1" } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1262976601, "microseconds": 975795 } }
Emitted after authentication takes place (if any) and the VNC session is made active
Arguments:
server: VncServerInfoserver information
client: VncClientInfoclient information
Since: 0.13.0
Example:
<- { "event": "VNC_INITIALIZED",
"data": {
"server": { "auth": "sasl", "family": "ipv4",
"service": "5901", "host": "0.0.0.0"},
"client": { "family": "ipv4", "service": "46089",
"host": "127.0.0.1", "sasl_username": "luiz" } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1263475302, "microseconds": 150772 } }
Emitted when the connection is closed
Arguments:
server: VncServerInfoserver information
client: VncClientInfoclient information
Since: 0.13.0
Example:
<- { "event": "VNC_DISCONNECTED",
"data": {
"server": { "auth": "sasl", "family": "ipv4",
"service": "5901", "host": "0.0.0.0" },
"client": { "family": "ipv4", "service": "58425",
"host": "127.0.0.1", "sasl_username": "luiz" } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1262976601, "microseconds": 975795 } }
Emitted when a SPICE client establishes a connection
Arguments:
server: SpiceBasicInfoserver information
client: SpiceBasicInfoclient information
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
<- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 1290688046, "microseconds": 388707},
"event": "SPICE_CONNECTED",
"data": {
"server": { "port": "5920", "family": "ipv4", "host": "127.0.0.1"},
"client": {"port": "52873", "family": "ipv4", "host": "127.0.0.1"}
}}
Emitted after initial handshake and authentication takes place (if any) and the SPICE channel is up and running
Arguments:
server: SpiceServerInfoserver information
client: SpiceChannelclient information
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
<- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 1290688046, "microseconds": 417172},
"event": "SPICE_INITIALIZED",
"data": {"server": {"auth": "spice", "port": "5921",
"family": "ipv4", "host": "127.0.0.1"},
"client": {"port": "49004", "family": "ipv4", "channel-type": 3,
"connection-id": 1804289383, "host": "127.0.0.1",
"channel-id": 0, "tls": true}
}}
Emitted when the SPICE connection is closed
Arguments:
server: SpiceBasicInfoserver information
client: SpiceBasicInfoclient information
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
<- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 1290688046, "microseconds": 388707},
"event": "SPICE_DISCONNECTED",
"data": {
"server": { "port": "5920", "family": "ipv4", "host": "127.0.0.1"},
"client": {"port": "52873", "family": "ipv4", "host": "127.0.0.1"}
}}
Emitted when SPICE migration has completed
Since: 1.3
Example:
<- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 1290688046, "microseconds": 417172},
"event": "SPICE_MIGRATE_COMPLETED" }
Emitted when a migration event happens
Arguments:
status: MigrationStatusMigrationStatus describing the current migration status.
Since: 2.4
Example:
<- {"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432121972, "microseconds": 744001},
"event": "MIGRATION",
"data": {"status": "completed"} }
Emitted from the source side of a migration at the start of each pass (when it syncs the dirty bitmap)
Arguments:
pass: intAn incrementing count (starting at 1 on the first pass)
Since: 2.6
Example:
{ "timestamp": {"seconds": 1449669631, "microseconds": 239225},
"event": "MIGRATION_PASS", "data": {"pass": 2} }
Emitted when guest executes ACPI _OST method.
Arguments:
info: ACPIOSTInfoACPIOSTInfo type as described in qapi-schema.json
Since: 2.1
Example:
<- { "event": "ACPI_DEVICE_OST",
"data": { "device": "d1", "slot": "0",
"slot-type": "DIMM", "source": 1, "status": 0 } }
Emitted when the guest changes the actual BALLOON level. This value is
equivalent to the actual field return by the ’query-balloon’ command
Arguments:
actual: intactual level of the guest memory balloon in bytes
Note: this event is rate-limited.
Since: 1.2
Example:
<- { "event": "BALLOON_CHANGE",
"data": { "actual": 944766976 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267020223, "microseconds": 435656 } }
Emitted when guest OS panic is detected
Arguments:
action: GuestPanicActionaction that has been taken, currently always "pause"
info: GuestPanicInformation (optional)information about a panic (since 2.9)
Since: 1.5
Example:
<- { "event": "GUEST_PANICKED",
"data": { "action": "pause" } }
Emitted by the Quorum block driver if it fails to establish a quorum
Arguments:
reference: stringdevice name if defined else node name
sector-num: intnumber of the first sector of the failed read operation
sectors-count: intfailed read operation sector count
Note: This event is rate-limited.
Since: 2.0
Example:
<- { "event": "QUORUM_FAILURE",
"data": { "reference": "usr1", "sector-num": 345435, "sectors-count": 5 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1344522075, "microseconds": 745528 } }
Emitted to report a corruption of a Quorum file
Arguments:
type: QuorumOpTypequorum operation type (Since 2.6)
error: string (optional)error message. Only present on failure. This field contains a human-readable error message. There are no semantics other than that the block layer reported an error and clients should not try to interpret the error string.
node-name: stringthe graph node name of the block driver state
sector-num: intnumber of the first sector of the failed read operation
sectors-count: intfailed read operation sector count
Note: This event is rate-limited.
Since: 2.0
Example:
1. Read operation
{ "event": "QUORUM_REPORT_BAD",
"data": { "node-name": "node0", "sector-num": 345435, "sectors-count": 5,
"type": "read" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1344522075, "microseconds": 745528 } }
2. Flush operation
{ "event": "QUORUM_REPORT_BAD",
"data": { "node-name": "node0", "sector-num": 0, "sectors-count": 2097120,
"type": "flush", "error": "Broken pipe" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1456406829, "microseconds": 291763 } }
Emitted when the guest opens or closes a virtio-serial port.
Arguments:
id: stringdevice identifier of the virtio-serial port
open: booleantrue if the guest has opened the virtio-serial port
Since: 2.1
Example:
<- { "event": "VSERPORT_CHANGE",
"data": { "id": "channel0", "open": true },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1401385907, "microseconds": 422329 } }
Emitted when memory hot unplug error occurs.
Arguments:
device: stringdevice name
msg: stringInformative message
Since: 2.4
Example:
<- { "event": "MEM_UNPLUG_ERROR"
"data": { "device": "dimm1",
"msg": "acpi: device unplug for unsupported device"
},
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
Emitted when background dump has completed
Arguments:
result: DumpQueryResultDumpQueryResult type described in qapi-schema.json.
error: string (optional)human-readable error string that provides hint on why dump failed. Only presents on failure. The user should not try to interpret the error string.
Since: 2.6
Example:
{ "event": "DUMP_COMPLETED",
"data": {"result": {"total": 1090650112, "status": "completed",
"completed": 1090650112} } }
State of a tracing event.
Values:
unavailableThe event is statically disabled.
disabledThe event is dynamically disabled.
enabledThe event is dynamically enabled.
Since: 2.2
Information of a tracing event.
Members:
name: stringEvent name.
state: TraceEventStateTracing state.
vcpu: booleanWhether this is a per-vCPU event (since 2.7).
An event is per-vCPU if it has the "vcpu" property in the "trace-events" files.
Since: 2.2
Query the state of events.
Arguments:
name: stringEvent name pattern (case-sensitive glob).
vcpu: int (optional)The vCPU to query (any by default; since 2.7).
Returns:
a list of TraceEventInfo for the matching events
An event is returned if:
name pattern, and
vcpu is given, the event has the "vcpu" property.
Therefore, if vcpu is given, the operation will only match per-vCPU events,
returning their state on the specified vCPU. Special case: if name is an
exact match, vcpu is given and the event does not have the "vcpu" property,
an error is returned.
Since: 2.2
Example:
-> { "execute": "trace-event-get-state",
"arguments": { "name": "qemu_memalign" } }
<- { "return": [ { "name": "qemu_memalign", "state": "disabled" } ] }
Set the dynamic tracing state of events.
Arguments:
name: stringEvent name pattern (case-sensitive glob).
enable: booleanWhether to enable tracing.
ignore-unavailable: boolean (optional)Do not match unavailable events with name.
vcpu: int (optional)The vCPU to act upon (all by default; since 2.7).
An event’s state is modified if:
name pattern, and
vcpu is given, the event has the "vcpu" property.
Therefore, if vcpu is given, the operation will only match per-vCPU events,
setting their state on the specified vCPU. Special case: if name is an exact
match, vcpu is given and the event does not have the "vcpu" property, an
error is returned.
Since: 2.2
Example:
-> { "execute": "trace-event-set-state",
"arguments": { "name": "qemu_memalign", "enable": "true" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Command query-qmp-schema exposes the QMP wire ABI as an array of SchemaInfo. This lets QMP clients figure out what commands and events are available in this QEMU, and their parameters and results.
However, the SchemaInfo can’t reflect all the rules and restrictions that apply to QMP. It’s interface introspection (figuring out what’s there), not interface specification. The specification is in the QAPI schema.
Furthermore, while we strive to keep the QMP wire format backwards-compatible across qemu versions, the introspection output is not guaranteed to have the same stability. For example, one version of qemu may list an object member as an optional non-variant, while another lists the same member only through the object’s variants; or the type of a member may change from a generic string into a specific enum or from one specific type into an alternate that includes the original type alongside something else.
Returns:
array of SchemaInfo, where each element describes an
entity in the ABI: command, event, type, ...
The order of the various SchemaInfo is unspecified; however, all names are guaranteed to be unique (no name will be duplicated with different meta-types).
Note: the QAPI schema is also used to help define internal interfaces, by defining QAPI types. These are not part of the QMP wire ABI, and therefore not returned by this command.
Since: 2.5
This is a SchemaInfo’s meta type, i.e. the kind of entity it
describes.
Values:
builtina predefined type such as ’int’ or ’bool’.
enuman enumeration type
arrayan array type
objectan object type (struct or union)
alternatean alternate type
commanda QMP command
eventa QMP event
Since: 2.5
Members:
name: stringthe entity’s name, inherited from base.
The SchemaInfo is always referenced by this name.
Commands and events have the name defined in the QAPI schema.
Unlike command and event names, type names are not part of
the wire ABI. Consequently, type names are meaningless
strings here, although they are still guaranteed unique
regardless of meta-type.
meta-type: SchemaMetaTypethe entity’s meta type, inherited from base.
SchemaInfoBuiltin when meta-type is "builtin"SchemaInfoEnum when meta-type is "enum"SchemaInfoArray when meta-type is "array"SchemaInfoObject when meta-type is "object"SchemaInfoAlternate when meta-type is "alternate"SchemaInfoCommand when meta-type is "command"SchemaInfoEvent when meta-type is "event"Additional members depend on the value of meta-type.
Since: 2.5
Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type ’builtin’.
Members:
json-type: JSONTypethe JSON type used for this type on the wire.
Since: 2.5
The four primitive and two structured types according to RFC 7159 section 1, plus ’int’ (split off ’number’), plus the obvious top type ’value’.
Values:
stringNot documented
numberNot documented
intNot documented
booleanNot documented
nullNot documented
objectNot documented
arrayNot documented
valueNot documented
Since: 2.5
Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type ’enum’.
Members:
values: array of stringthe enumeration type’s values, in no particular order.
Values of this type are JSON string on the wire.
Since: 2.5
Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type ’array’.
Members:
element-type: stringthe array type’s element type.
Values of this type are JSON array on the wire.
Since: 2.5
Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type ’object’.
Members:
members: array of SchemaInfoObjectMemberthe object type’s (non-variant) members, in no particular order.
tag: string (optional)the name of the member serving as type tag.
An element of members with this name must exist.
variants: array of SchemaInfoObjectVariant (optional)variant members, i.e. additional members that
depend on the type tag’s value. Present exactly when
tag is present. The variants are in no particular order,
and may even differ from the order of the values of the
enum type of the tag.
Values of this type are JSON object on the wire.
Since: 2.5
An object member.
Members:
name: stringthe member’s name, as defined in the QAPI schema.
type: stringthe name of the member’s type.
default: value (optional)default when used as command parameter. If absent, the parameter is mandatory. If present, the value must be null. The parameter is optional, and behavior when it’s missing is not specified here. Future extension: if present and non-null, the parameter is optional, and defaults to this value.
Since: 2.5
The variant members for a value of the type tag.
Members:
case: stringa value of the type tag.
type: stringthe name of the object type that provides the variant members
when the type tag has value case.
Since: 2.5
Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type ’alternate’.
Members:
members: array of SchemaInfoAlternateMemberthe alternate type’s members, in no particular order. The members’ wire encoding is distinct, see docs/qapi-code-gen.txt section Alternate types.
On the wire, this can be any of the members.
Since: 2.5
An alternate member.
Members:
type: stringthe name of the member’s type.
Since: 2.5
Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type ’command’.
Members:
arg-type: stringthe name of the object type that provides the command’s parameters.
ret-type: stringthe name of the command’s result type.
TODO:
success-response (currently irrelevant, because it’s QGA, not QMP)
Since: 2.5
Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type ’event’.
Members:
arg-type: stringthe name of the object type that provides the event’s parameters.
Since: 2.5
Enable QMP capabilities.
Arguments: None.
Example:
-> { "execute": "qmp_capabilities" }
<- { "return": {} }
Notes: This command is valid exactly when first connecting: it must be issued before any other command will be accepted, and will fail once the monitor is accepting other commands. (see qemu docs/qmp-spec.txt)
Since: 0.13
Policy for handling lost ticks in timer devices.
Values:
discardthrow away the missed tick(s) and continue with future injection normally. Guest time may be delayed, unless the OS has explicit handling of lost ticks
delaycontinue to deliver ticks at the normal rate. Guest time will be delayed due to the late tick
mergemerge the missed tick(s) into one tick and inject. Guest time may be delayed, depending on how the OS reacts to the merging of ticks
slewdeliver ticks at a higher rate to catch up with the missed tick. The guest time should not be delayed once catchup is complete.
Since: 2.0
Allow client connections for VNC, Spice and socket based character devices to be passed in to QEMU via SCM_RIGHTS.
Arguments:
protocol: stringprotocol name. Valid names are "vnc", "spice" or the name of a character device (eg. from -chardev id=XXXX)
fdname: stringfile descriptor name previously passed via ’getfd’ command
skipauth: boolean (optional)whether to skip authentication. Only applies to "vnc" and "spice" protocols
tls: boolean (optional)whether to perform TLS. Only applies to the "spice" protocol
Returns: nothing on success.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "add_client", "arguments": { "protocol": "vnc",
"fdname": "myclient" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Guest name information.
Members:
name: string (optional)The name of the guest
Since: 0.14.0
Return the name information of a guest.
Returns:
NameInfo of the guest
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-name" }
<- { "return": { "name": "qemu-name" } }
Information about support for KVM acceleration
Members:
enabled: booleantrue if KVM acceleration is active
present: booleantrue if KVM acceleration is built into this executable
Since: 0.14.0
Returns information about KVM acceleration
Returns:
KvmInfo
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-kvm" }
<- { "return": { "enabled": true, "present": true } }
An enumeration of VM run states.
Values:
debugQEMU is running on a debugger
finish-migrateguest is paused to finish the migration process
inmigrateguest is paused waiting for an incoming migration. Note that this state does not tell whether the machine will start at the end of the migration. This depends on the command-line -S option and any invocation of ’stop’ or ’cont’ that has happened since QEMU was started.
internal-errorAn internal error that prevents further guest execution has occurred
io-errorthe last IOP has failed and the device is configured to pause on I/O errors
pausedguest has been paused via the ’stop’ command
postmigrateguest is paused following a successful ’migrate’
prelaunchQEMU was started with -S and guest has not started
restore-vmguest is paused to restore VM state
runningguest is actively running
save-vmguest is paused to save the VM state
shutdownguest is shut down (and -no-shutdown is in use)
suspendedguest is suspended (ACPI S3)
watchdogthe watchdog action is configured to pause and has been triggered
guest-panickedguest has been panicked as a result of guest OS panic
cologuest is paused to save/restore VM state under colo checkpoint, VM can not get into this state unless colo capability is enabled for migration. (since 2.8)
Information about VCPU run state
Members:
running: booleantrue if all VCPUs are runnable, false if not runnable
singlestep: booleantrue if VCPUs are in single-step mode
status: RunStatethe virtual machine RunState
Since: 0.14.0
Notes:
singlestep is enabled through the GDB stub
Query the run status of all VCPUs
Returns:
StatusInfo reflecting all VCPUs
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-status" }
<- { "return": { "running": true,
"singlestep": false,
"status": "running" } }
Guest UUID information (Universally Unique Identifier).
Members:
UUID: stringthe UUID of the guest
Since: 0.14.0
Notes: If no UUID was specified for the guest, a null UUID is returned.
Query the guest UUID information.
Returns:
The UuidInfo for the guest
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-uuid" }
<- { "return": { "UUID": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000" } }
Information about a character device.
Members:
label: stringthe label of the character device
filename: stringthe filename of the character device
frontend-open: booleanshows whether the frontend device attached to this backend (eg. with the chardev=... option) is in open or closed state (since 2.1)
Notes:
filename is encoded using the QEMU command line character device
encoding. See the QEMU man page for details.
Since: 0.14.0
Returns information about current character devices.
Returns:
a list of ChardevInfo
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-chardev" }
<- {
"return": [
{
"label": "charchannel0",
"filename": "unix:/var/lib/libvirt/qemu/seabios.rhel6.agent,server",
"frontend-open": false
},
{
"label": "charmonitor",
"filename": "unix:/var/lib/libvirt/qemu/seabios.rhel6.monitor,server",
"frontend-open": true
},
{
"label": "charserial0",
"filename": "pty:/dev/pts/2",
"frontend-open": true
}
]
}
Information about a character device backend
Members:
name: stringThe backend name
Since: 2.0
Returns information about character device backends.
Returns:
a list of ChardevBackendInfo
Since: 2.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-chardev-backends" }
<- {
"return":[
{
"name":"udp"
},
{
"name":"tcp"
},
{
"name":"unix"
},
{
"name":"spiceport"
}
]
}
An enumeration of data format.
Values:
utf8Data is a UTF-8 string (RFC 3629)
base64Data is Base64 encoded binary (RFC 3548)
Since: 1.4
Write to a ring buffer character device.
Arguments:
device: stringthe ring buffer character device name
data: stringdata to write
format: DataFormat (optional)data encoding (default ’utf8’).
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 1.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "ringbuf-write",
"arguments": { "device": "foo",
"data": "abcdefgh",
"format": "utf8" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Read from a ring buffer character device.
Arguments:
device: stringthe ring buffer character device name
size: inthow many bytes to read at most
format: DataFormat (optional)data encoding (default ’utf8’).
Returns: data read from the device
Since: 1.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "ringbuf-read",
"arguments": { "device": "foo",
"size": 1000,
"format": "utf8" } }
<- { "return": "abcdefgh" }
Information about a QMP event
Members:
name: stringThe event name
Since: 1.2.0
Return a list of supported QMP events by this server
Returns:
A list of EventInfo for all supported events
Since: 1.2.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-events" }
<- {
"return": [
{
"name":"SHUTDOWN"
},
{
"name":"RESET"
}
]
}
Note: This example has been shortened as the real response is too long.
Detailed migration status.
Members:
transferred: intamount of bytes already transferred to the target VM
remaining: intamount of bytes remaining to be transferred to the target VM
total: inttotal amount of bytes involved in the migration process
duplicate: intnumber of duplicate (zero) pages (since 1.2)
skipped: intnumber of skipped zero pages (since 1.5)
normal: intnumber of normal pages (since 1.2)
normal-bytes: intnumber of normal bytes sent (since 1.2)
dirty-pages-rate: intnumber of pages dirtied by second by the guest (since 1.3)
mbps: numberthroughput in megabits/sec. (since 1.6)
dirty-sync-count: intnumber of times that dirty ram was synchronized (since 2.1)
postcopy-requests: intThe number of page requests received from the destination (since 2.7)
Since: 0.14.0
Detailed XBZRLE migration cache statistics
Members:
cache-size: intXBZRLE cache size
bytes: intamount of bytes already transferred to the target VM
pages: intamount of pages transferred to the target VM
cache-miss: intnumber of cache miss
cache-miss-rate: numberrate of cache miss (since 2.1)
overflow: intnumber of overflows
Since: 1.2
An enumeration of migration status.
Values:
noneno migration has ever happened.
setupmigration process has been initiated.
cancellingin the process of cancelling migration.
cancelledcancelling migration is finished.
activein the process of doing migration.
postcopy-activelike active, but now in postcopy mode. (since 2.5)
completedmigration is finished.
failedsome error occurred during migration process.
coloVM is in the process of fault tolerance, VM can not get into this state unless colo capability is enabled for migration. (since 2.8)
Since: 2.3
Information about current migration process.
Members:
status: MigrationStatus (optional)MigrationStatus describing the current migration status.
If this field is not returned, no migration process
has been initiated
ram: MigrationStats (optional)MigrationStats containing detailed migration
status, only returned if status is ’active’ or
’completed’(since 1.2)
disk: MigrationStats (optional)MigrationStats containing detailed disk migration
status, only returned if status is ’active’ and it is a block
migration
xbzrle-cache: XBZRLECacheStats (optional)XBZRLECacheStats containing detailed XBZRLE
migration statistics, only returned if XBZRLE feature is on and
status is ’active’ or ’completed’ (since 1.2)
total-time: int (optional)total amount of milliseconds since migration started. If migration has ended, it returns the total migration time. (since 1.2)
downtime: int (optional)only present when migration finishes correctly total downtime in milliseconds for the guest. (since 1.3)
expected-downtime: int (optional)only present while migration is active expected downtime in milliseconds for the guest in last walk of the dirty bitmap. (since 1.3)
setup-time: int (optional)amount of setup time in milliseconds before the iterations begin but after the QMP command is issued. This is designed to provide an accounting of any activities (such as RDMA pinning) which may be expensive, but do not actually occur during the iterative migration rounds themselves. (since 1.6)
cpu-throttle-percentage: int (optional)percentage of time guest cpus are being throttled during auto-converge. This is only present when auto-converge has started throttling guest cpus. (Since 2.7)
error-desc: string (optional)the human readable error description string, when
status is ’failed’. Clients should not attempt to parse the
error strings. (Since 2.7)
Since: 0.14.0
Returns information about current migration process. If migration is active there will be another json-object with RAM migration status and if block migration is active another one with block migration status.
Returns:
MigrationInfo
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
1. Before the first migration
-> { "execute": "query-migrate" }
<- { "return": {} }
2. Migration is done and has succeeded
-> { "execute": "query-migrate" }
<- { "return": {
"status": "completed",
"ram":{
"transferred":123,
"remaining":123,
"total":246,
"total-time":12345,
"setup-time":12345,
"downtime":12345,
"duplicate":123,
"normal":123,
"normal-bytes":123456,
"dirty-sync-count":15
}
}
}
3. Migration is done and has failed
-> { "execute": "query-migrate" }
<- { "return": { "status": "failed" } }
4. Migration is being performed and is not a block migration:
-> { "execute": "query-migrate" }
<- {
"return":{
"status":"active",
"ram":{
"transferred":123,
"remaining":123,
"total":246,
"total-time":12345,
"setup-time":12345,
"expected-downtime":12345,
"duplicate":123,
"normal":123,
"normal-bytes":123456,
"dirty-sync-count":15
}
}
}
5. Migration is being performed and is a block migration:
-> { "execute": "query-migrate" }
<- {
"return":{
"status":"active",
"ram":{
"total":1057024,
"remaining":1053304,
"transferred":3720,
"total-time":12345,
"setup-time":12345,
"expected-downtime":12345,
"duplicate":123,
"normal":123,
"normal-bytes":123456,
"dirty-sync-count":15
},
"disk":{
"total":20971520,
"remaining":20880384,
"transferred":91136
}
}
}
6. Migration is being performed and XBZRLE is active:
-> { "execute": "query-migrate" }
<- {
"return":{
"status":"active",
"capabilities" : [ { "capability": "xbzrle", "state" : true } ],
"ram":{
"total":1057024,
"remaining":1053304,
"transferred":3720,
"total-time":12345,
"setup-time":12345,
"expected-downtime":12345,
"duplicate":10,
"normal":3333,
"normal-bytes":3412992,
"dirty-sync-count":15
},
"xbzrle-cache":{
"cache-size":67108864,
"bytes":20971520,
"pages":2444343,
"cache-miss":2244,
"cache-miss-rate":0.123,
"overflow":34434
}
}
}
Migration capabilities enumeration
Values:
xbzrleMigration supports xbzrle (Xor Based Zero Run Length Encoding). This feature allows us to minimize migration traffic for certain work loads, by sending compressed difference of the pages
rdma-pin-allControls whether or not the entire VM memory footprint is mlock()’d on demand or all at once. Refer to docs/rdma.txt for usage. Disabled by default. (since 2.0)
zero-blocksDuring storage migration encode blocks of zeroes efficiently. This essentially saves 1MB of zeroes per block on the wire. Enabling requires source and target VM to support this feature. To enable it is sufficient to enable the capability on the source VM. The feature is disabled by default. (since 1.6)
compressUse multiple compression threads to accelerate live migration. This feature can help to reduce the migration traffic, by sending compressed pages. Please note that if compress and xbzrle are both on, compress only takes effect in the ram bulk stage, after that, it will be disabled and only xbzrle takes effect, this can help to minimize migration traffic. The feature is disabled by default. (since 2.4 )
eventsgenerate events for each migration state change (since 2.4 )
auto-convergeIf enabled, QEMU will automatically throttle down the guest to speed up convergence of RAM migration. (since 1.6)
postcopy-ramStart executing on the migration target before all of RAM has been migrated, pulling the remaining pages along as needed. NOTE: If the migration fails during postcopy the VM will fail. (since 2.6)
x-coloIf enabled, migration will never end, and the state of the VM on the primary side will be migrated continuously to the VM on secondary side, this process is called COarse-Grain LOck Stepping (COLO) for Non-stop Service. (since 2.8)
release-ramif enabled, qemu will free the migrated ram pages on the source during postcopy-ram migration. (since 2.9)
Since: 1.2
Migration capability information
Members:
capability: MigrationCapabilitycapability enum
state: booleancapability state bool
Since: 1.2
Enable/Disable the following migration capabilities (like xbzrle)
Arguments:
capabilities: array of MigrationCapabilityStatusjson array of capability modifications to make
Since: 1.2
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate-set-capabilities" , "arguments":
{ "capabilities": [ { "capability": "xbzrle", "state": true } ] } }
Returns information about the current migration capabilities status
Returns:
MigrationCapabilitiesStatus
Since: 1.2
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-migrate-capabilities" }
<- { "return": [
{"state": false, "capability": "xbzrle"},
{"state": false, "capability": "rdma-pin-all"},
{"state": false, "capability": "auto-converge"},
{"state": false, "capability": "zero-blocks"},
{"state": false, "capability": "compress"},
{"state": true, "capability": "events"},
{"state": false, "capability": "postcopy-ram"},
{"state": false, "capability": "x-colo"}
]}
Migration parameters enumeration
Values:
compress-levelSet the compression level to be used in live migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 9, where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression speed, and 9 means best compression ratio which will consume more CPU.
compress-threadsSet compression thread count to be used in live migration, the compression thread count is an integer between 1 and 255.
decompress-threadsSet decompression thread count to be used in live migration, the decompression thread count is an integer between 1 and 255. Usually, decompression is at least 4 times as fast as compression, so set the decompress-threads to the number about 1/4 of compress-threads is adequate.
cpu-throttle-initialInitial percentage of time guest cpus are throttled when migration auto-converge is activated. The default value is 20. (Since 2.7)
cpu-throttle-incrementthrottle percentage increase each time auto-converge detects that migration is not making progress. The default value is 10. (Since 2.7)
tls-credsID of the ’tls-creds’ object that provides credentials for establishing a TLS connection over the migration data channel. On the outgoing side of the migration, the credentials must be for a ’client’ endpoint, while for the incoming side the credentials must be for a ’server’ endpoint. Setting this will enable TLS for all migrations. The default is unset, resulting in unsecured migration at the QEMU level. (Since 2.7)
tls-hostnamehostname of the target host for the migration. This is required when using x509 based TLS credentials and the migration URI does not already include a hostname. For example if using fd: or exec: based migration, the hostname must be provided so that the server’s x509 certificate identity can be validated. (Since 2.7)
max-bandwidthto set maximum speed for migration. maximum speed in bytes per second. (Since 2.8)
downtime-limitset maximum tolerated downtime for migration. maximum downtime in milliseconds (Since 2.8)
x-checkpoint-delayThe delay time (in ms) between two COLO checkpoints in periodic mode. (Since 2.8)
Since: 2.4
Set various migration parameters.
Arguments: the members of MigrationParameters
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate-set-parameters" ,
"arguments": { "compress-level": 1 } }
Optional members can be omitted on input (’migrate-set-parameters’) but most members will always be present on output (’query-migrate-parameters’), with the exception of tls-creds and tls-hostname.
Members:
compress-level: int (optional)compression level
compress-threads: int (optional)compression thread count
decompress-threads: int (optional)decompression thread count
cpu-throttle-initial: int (optional)Initial percentage of time guest cpus are throttledwhen migration auto-converge is activated. The default value is 20. (Since 2.7)
cpu-throttle-increment: int (optional)throttle percentage increase each time auto-converge detects that migration is not making progress. The default value is 10. (Since 2.7)
tls-creds: string (optional)ID of the ’tls-creds’ object that provides credentials for establishing a TLS connection over the migration data channel. On the outgoing side of the migration, the credentials must be for a ’client’ endpoint, while for the incoming side the credentials must be for a ’server’ endpoint. Setting this will enable TLS for all migrations. The default is unset, resulting in unsecured migration at the QEMU level. (Since 2.7) An empty string means that QEMU will use plain text mode for migration, rather than TLS (Since 2.9)
tls-hostname: string (optional)hostname of the target host for the migration. This is required when using x509 based TLS credentials and the migration URI does not already include a hostname. For example if using fd: or exec: based migration, the hostname must be provided so that the server’s x509 certificate identity can be validated. (Since 2.7) An empty string means that QEMU will use the hostname associated with the migration URI, if any. (Since 2.9)
max-bandwidth: int (optional)to set maximum speed for migration. maximum speed in bytes per second. (Since 2.8)
downtime-limit: int (optional)set maximum tolerated downtime for migration. maximum downtime in milliseconds (Since 2.8)
x-checkpoint-delay: int (optional)the delay time between two COLO checkpoints. (Since 2.8)
Since: 2.4
Returns information about the current migration parameters
Returns:
MigrationParameters
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-migrate-parameters" }
<- { "return": {
"decompress-threads": 2,
"cpu-throttle-increment": 10,
"compress-threads": 8,
"compress-level": 1,
"cpu-throttle-initial": 20,
"max-bandwidth": 33554432,
"downtime-limit": 300
}
}
Set migration information for remote display. This makes the server ask the client to automatically reconnect using the new parameters once migration finished successfully. Only implemented for SPICE.
Arguments:
protocol: stringmust be "spice"
hostname: stringmigration target hostname
port: int (optional)spice tcp port for plaintext channels
tls-port: int (optional)spice tcp port for tls-secured channels
cert-subject: string (optional)server certificate subject
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "client_migrate_info",
"arguments": { "protocol": "spice",
"hostname": "virt42.lab.kraxel.org",
"port": 1234 } }
<- { "return": {} }
Followup to a migration command to switch the migration to postcopy mode. The postcopy-ram capability must be set before the original migration command.
Since: 2.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate-start-postcopy" }
<- { "return": {} }
The message transmission between Primary side and Secondary side.
Values:
checkpoint-readySecondary VM (SVM) is ready for checkpointing
checkpoint-requestPrimary VM (PVM) tells SVM to prepare for checkpointing
checkpoint-replySVM gets PVM’s checkpoint request
vmstate-sendVM’s state will be sent by PVM.
vmstate-sizeThe total size of VMstate.
vmstate-receivedVM’s state has been received by SVM.
vmstate-loadedVM’s state has been loaded by SVM.
Since: 2.8
The colo mode
Values:
unknownunknown mode
primarymaster side
secondaryslave side
Since: 2.8
An enumeration of COLO failover status
Values:
noneno failover has ever happened
requiregot failover requirement but not handled
activein the process of doing failover
completedfinish the process of failover
relaunchrestart the failover process, from ’none’ -> ’completed’ (Since 2.9)
Since: 2.8
Tell qemu that heartbeat is lost, request it to do takeover procedures. If this command is sent to the PVM, the Primary side will exit COLO mode. If sent to the Secondary, the Secondary side will run failover work, then takes over server operation to become the service VM.
Since: 2.8
Example:
-> { "execute": "x-colo-lost-heartbeat" }
<- { "return": {} }
Information about a mouse device.
Members:
name: stringthe name of the mouse device
index: intthe index of the mouse device
current: booleantrue if this device is currently receiving mouse events
absolute: booleantrue if this device supports absolute coordinates as input
Since: 0.14.0
Returns information about each active mouse device
Returns:
a list of MouseInfo for each device
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-mice" }
<- { "return": [
{
"name":"QEMU Microsoft Mouse",
"index":0,
"current":false,
"absolute":false
},
{
"name":"QEMU PS/2 Mouse",
"index":1,
"current":true,
"absolute":true
}
]
}
An enumeration of cpu types that enable additional information during
query-cpus.
Values:
x86Not documented
sparcNot documented
ppcNot documented
mipsNot documented
tricoreNot documented
otherNot documented
Since: 2.6
Information about a virtual CPU
Members:
CPU: intthe index of the virtual CPU
current: booleanthis only exists for backwards compatibility and should be ignored
halted: booleantrue if the virtual CPU is in the halt state. Halt usually refers to a processor specific low power mode.
qom_path: stringpath to the CPU object in the QOM tree (since 2.4)
thread_id: intID of the underlying host thread
arch: CpuInfoArcharchitecture of the cpu, which determines which additional fields will be listed (since 2.6)
CpuInfoX86 when arch is "x86"CpuInfoSPARC when arch is "sparc"CpuInfoPPC when arch is "ppc"CpuInfoMIPS when arch is "mips"CpuInfoTricore when arch is "tricore"CpuInfoOther when arch is "other"Since: 0.14.0
Notes:
halted is a transient state that changes frequently. By the time the
data is sent to the client, the guest may no longer be halted.
Additional information about a virtual i386 or x86_64 CPU
Members:
pc: intthe 64-bit instruction pointer
Since: 2.6
Additional information about a virtual SPARC CPU
Members:
pc: intthe PC component of the instruction pointer
npc: intthe NPC component of the instruction pointer
Since: 2.6
Additional information about a virtual PPC CPU
Members:
nip: intthe instruction pointer
Since: 2.6
Additional information about a virtual MIPS CPU
Members:
PC: intthe instruction pointer
Since: 2.6
Additional information about a virtual Tricore CPU
Members:
PC: intthe instruction pointer
Since: 2.6
No additional information is available about the virtual CPU
Since: 2.6
Returns a list of information about each virtual CPU.
Returns:
a list of CpuInfo for each virtual CPU
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-cpus" }
<- { "return": [
{
"CPU":0,
"current":true,
"halted":false,
"qom_path":"/machine/unattached/device[0]",
"arch":"x86",
"pc":3227107138,
"thread_id":3134
},
{
"CPU":1,
"current":false,
"halted":true,
"qom_path":"/machine/unattached/device[2]",
"arch":"x86",
"pc":7108165,
"thread_id":3135
}
]
}
Information about an iothread
Members:
id: stringthe identifier of the iothread
thread-id: intID of the underlying host thread
poll-max-ns: intmaximum polling time in ns, 0 means polling is disabled (since 2.9)
poll-grow: inthow many ns will be added to polling time, 0 means that it’s not configured (since 2.9)
poll-shrink: inthow many ns will be removed from polling time, 0 means that it’s not configured (since 2.9)
Since: 2.0
Returns a list of information about each iothread.
Note: this list excludes the QEMU main loop thread, which is not declared using the -object iothread command-line option. It is always the main thread of the process.
Returns:
a list of IOThreadInfo for each iothread
Since: 2.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-iothreads" }
<- { "return": [
{
"id":"iothread0",
"thread-id":3134
},
{
"id":"iothread1",
"thread-id":3135
}
]
}
The network address family
Values:
ipv4IPV4 family
ipv6IPV6 family
unixunix socket
vsockvsock family (since 2.8)
unknownotherwise
Since: 2.1
The basic information for vnc network connection
Members:
host: stringIP address
service: stringThe service name of the vnc port. This may depend on the host system’s service database so symbolic names should not be relied on.
family: NetworkAddressFamilyaddress family
websocket: booleantrue in case the socket is a websocket (since 2.3).
Since: 2.1
The network connection information for server
Members:
auth: string (optional)authentication method used for the plain (non-websocket) VNC server
VncBasicInfoSince: 2.1
Information about a connected VNC client.
Members:
x509_dname: string (optional)If x509 authentication is in use, the Distinguished Name of the client.
sasl_username: string (optional)If SASL authentication is in use, the SASL username used for authentication.
VncBasicInfoSince: 0.14.0
Information about the VNC session.
Members:
enabled: booleantrue if the VNC server is enabled, false otherwise
host: string (optional)The hostname the VNC server is bound to. This depends on the name resolution on the host and may be an IP address.
family: NetworkAddressFamily (optional)’ipv6’ if the host is listening for IPv6 connections ’ipv4’ if the host is listening for IPv4 connections ’unix’ if the host is listening on a unix domain socket ’unknown’ otherwise
service: string (optional)The service name of the server’s port. This may depends on the host system’s service database so symbolic names should not be relied on.
auth: string (optional)the current authentication type used by the server ’none’ if no authentication is being used ’vnc’ if VNC authentication is being used ’vencrypt+plain’ if VEncrypt is used with plain text authentication ’vencrypt+tls+none’ if VEncrypt is used with TLS and no authentication ’vencrypt+tls+vnc’ if VEncrypt is used with TLS and VNC authentication ’vencrypt+tls+plain’ if VEncrypt is used with TLS and plain text auth ’vencrypt+x509+none’ if VEncrypt is used with x509 and no auth ’vencrypt+x509+vnc’ if VEncrypt is used with x509 and VNC auth ’vencrypt+x509+plain’ if VEncrypt is used with x509 and plain text auth ’vencrypt+tls+sasl’ if VEncrypt is used with TLS and SASL auth ’vencrypt+x509+sasl’ if VEncrypt is used with x509 and SASL auth
clients: array of VncClientInfo (optional)a list of VncClientInfo of all currently connected clients
Since: 0.14.0
vnc primary authentication method.
Values:
noneNot documented
vncNot documented
ra2Not documented
ra2neNot documented
tightNot documented
ultraNot documented
tlsNot documented
vencryptNot documented
saslNot documented
Since: 2.3
vnc sub authentication method with vencrypt.
Values:
plainNot documented
tls-noneNot documented
x509-noneNot documented
tls-vncNot documented
x509-vncNot documented
tls-plainNot documented
x509-plainNot documented
tls-saslNot documented
x509-saslNot documented
Since: 2.3
The network connection information for server
Members:
auth: VncPrimaryAuthThe current authentication type used by the servers
vencrypt: VncVencryptSubAuth (optional)The vencrypt sub authentication type used by the servers, only specified in case auth == vencrypt.
VncBasicInfoSince: 2.9
Information about a vnc server
Members:
id: stringvnc server name.
server: array of VncServerInfo2A list of VncBasincInfo describing all listening sockets.
The list can be empty (in case the vnc server is disabled).
It also may have multiple entries: normal + websocket,
possibly also ipv4 + ipv6 in the future.
clients: array of VncClientInfoA list of VncClientInfo of all currently connected clients.
The list can be empty, for obvious reasons.
auth: VncPrimaryAuthThe current authentication type used by the non-websockets servers
vencrypt: VncVencryptSubAuth (optional)The vencrypt authentication type used by the servers, only specified in case auth == vencrypt.
display: string (optional)The display device the vnc server is linked to.
Since: 2.3
Returns information about the current VNC server
Returns:
VncInfo
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-vnc" }
<- { "return": {
"enabled":true,
"host":"0.0.0.0",
"service":"50402",
"auth":"vnc",
"family":"ipv4",
"clients":[
{
"host":"127.0.0.1",
"service":"50401",
"family":"ipv4"
}
]
}
}
Returns a list of vnc servers. The list can be empty.
Returns:
a list of VncInfo2
Since: 2.3
The basic information for SPICE network connection
Members:
host: stringIP address
port: stringport number
family: NetworkAddressFamilyaddress family
Since: 2.1
Information about a SPICE server
Members:
auth: string (optional)authentication method
SpiceBasicInfoSince: 2.1
Information about a SPICE client channel.
Members:
connection-id: intSPICE connection id number. All channels with the same id belong to the same SPICE session.
channel-type: intSPICE channel type number. "1" is the main control channel, filter for this one if you want to track spice sessions only
channel-id: intSPICE channel ID number. Usually "0", might be different when multiple channels of the same type exist, such as multiple display channels in a multihead setup
tls: booleantrue if the channel is encrypted, false otherwise.
SpiceBasicInfoSince: 0.14.0
An enumeration of Spice mouse states.
Values:
clientMouse cursor position is determined by the client.
serverMouse cursor position is determined by the server.
unknownNo information is available about mouse mode used by the spice server.
Note: spice/enums.h has a SpiceMouseMode already, hence the name.
Since: 1.1
Information about the SPICE session.
Members:
enabled: booleantrue if the SPICE server is enabled, false otherwise
migrated: booleantrue if the last guest migration completed and spice migration had completed as well. false otherwise. (since 1.4)
host: string (optional)The hostname the SPICE server is bound to. This depends on the name resolution on the host and may be an IP address.
port: int (optional)The SPICE server’s port number.
compiled-version: string (optional)SPICE server version.
tls-port: int (optional)The SPICE server’s TLS port number.
auth: string (optional)the current authentication type used by the server ’none’ if no authentication is being used ’spice’ uses SASL or direct TLS authentication, depending on command line options
mouse-mode: SpiceQueryMouseModeThe mode in which the mouse cursor is displayed currently. Can be determined by the client or the server, or unknown if spice server doesn’t provide this information. (since: 1.1)
channels: array of SpiceChannel (optional)a list of SpiceChannel for each active spice channel
Since: 0.14.0
Returns information about the current SPICE server
Returns:
SpiceInfo
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-spice" }
<- { "return": {
"enabled": true,
"auth": "spice",
"port": 5920,
"tls-port": 5921,
"host": "0.0.0.0",
"channels": [
{
"port": "54924",
"family": "ipv4",
"channel-type": 1,
"connection-id": 1804289383,
"host": "127.0.0.1",
"channel-id": 0,
"tls": true
},
{
"port": "36710",
"family": "ipv4",
"channel-type": 4,
"connection-id": 1804289383,
"host": "127.0.0.1",
"channel-id": 0,
"tls": false
},
[ ... more channels follow ... ]
]
}
}
Information about the guest balloon device.
Members:
actual: intthe number of bytes the balloon currently contains
Since: 0.14.0
Return information about the balloon device.
Returns:
BalloonInfo on success
If the balloon driver is enabled but not functional because the KVM kernel module cannot support it, KvmMissingCap
If no balloon device is present, DeviceNotActive
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-balloon" }
<- { "return": {
"actual": 1073741824,
}
}
A PCI device memory region
Members:
base: intthe starting address (guest physical)
limit: intthe ending address (guest physical)
Since: 0.14.0
Information about a PCI device I/O region.
Members:
bar: intthe index of the Base Address Register for this region
type: string’io’ if the region is a PIO region ’memory’ if the region is a MMIO region
size: intmemory size
prefetch: boolean (optional)if type is ’memory’, true if the memory is prefetchable
mem_type_64: boolean (optional)if type is ’memory’, true if the BAR is 64-bit
address: intNot documented
Since: 0.14.0
Information about a bus of a PCI Bridge device
Members:
number: intprimary bus interface number. This should be the number of the bus the device resides on.
secondary: intsecondary bus interface number. This is the number of the main bus for the bridge
subordinate: intThis is the highest number bus that resides below the bridge.
io_range: PciMemoryRangeThe PIO range for all devices on this bridge
memory_range: PciMemoryRangeThe MMIO range for all devices on this bridge
prefetchable_range: PciMemoryRangeThe range of prefetchable MMIO for all devices on this bridge
Since: 2.4
Information about a PCI Bridge device
Members:
bus: PciBusInfoinformation about the bus the device resides on
devices: array of PciDeviceInfo (optional)a list of PciDeviceInfo for each device on this bridge
Since: 0.14.0
Information about the Class of a PCI device
Members:
desc: string (optional)a string description of the device’s class
class: intthe class code of the device
Since: 2.4
Information about the Id of a PCI device
Members:
device: intthe PCI device id
vendor: intthe PCI vendor id
Since: 2.4
Information about a PCI device
Members:
bus: intthe bus number of the device
slot: intthe slot the device is located in
function: intthe function of the slot used by the device
class_info: PciDeviceClassthe class of the device
id: PciDeviceIdthe PCI device id
irq: int (optional)if an IRQ is assigned to the device, the IRQ number
qdev_id: stringthe device name of the PCI device
pci_bridge: PciBridgeInfo (optional)if the device is a PCI bridge, the bridge information
regions: array of PciMemoryRegiona list of the PCI I/O regions associated with the device
Notes:
the contents of class_info.desc are not stable and should only be
treated as informational.
Since: 0.14.0
Information about a PCI bus
Members:
bus: intthe bus index
devices: array of PciDeviceInfoa list of devices on this bus
Since: 0.14.0
Return information about the PCI bus topology of the guest.
Returns:
a list of PciInfo for each PCI bus. Each bus is
represented by a json-object, which has a key with a json-array of
all PCI devices attached to it. Each device is represented by a
json-object.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-pci" }
<- { "return": [
{
"bus": 0,
"devices": [
{
"bus": 0,
"qdev_id": "",
"slot": 0,
"class_info": {
"class": 1536,
"desc": "Host bridge"
},
"id": {
"device": 32902,
"vendor": 4663
},
"function": 0,
"regions": [
]
},
{
"bus": 0,
"qdev_id": "",
"slot": 1,
"class_info": {
"class": 1537,
"desc": "ISA bridge"
},
"id": {
"device": 32902,
"vendor": 28672
},
"function": 0,
"regions": [
]
},
{
"bus": 0,
"qdev_id": "",
"slot": 1,
"class_info": {
"class": 257,
"desc": "IDE controller"
},
"id": {
"device": 32902,
"vendor": 28688
},
"function": 1,
"regions": [
{
"bar": 4,
"size": 16,
"address": 49152,
"type": "io"
}
]
},
{
"bus": 0,
"qdev_id": "",
"slot": 2,
"class_info": {
"class": 768,
"desc": "VGA controller"
},
"id": {
"device": 4115,
"vendor": 184
},
"function": 0,
"regions": [
{
"prefetch": true,
"mem_type_64": false,
"bar": 0,
"size": 33554432,
"address": 4026531840,
"type": "memory"
},
{
"prefetch": false,
"mem_type_64": false,
"bar": 1,
"size": 4096,
"address": 4060086272,
"type": "memory"
},
{
"prefetch": false,
"mem_type_64": false,
"bar": 6,
"size": 65536,
"address": -1,
"type": "memory"
}
]
},
{
"bus": 0,
"qdev_id": "",
"irq": 11,
"slot": 4,
"class_info": {
"class": 1280,
"desc": "RAM controller"
},
"id": {
"device": 6900,
"vendor": 4098
},
"function": 0,
"regions": [
{
"bar": 0,
"size": 32,
"address": 49280,
"type": "io"
}
]
}
]
}
]
}
Note: This example has been shortened as the real response is too long.
This command will cause the QEMU process to exit gracefully. While every attempt is made to send the QMP response before terminating, this is not guaranteed. When using this interface, a premature EOF would not be unexpected.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "quit" }
<- { "return": {} }
Stop all guest VCPU execution.
Since: 0.14.0
Notes: This function will succeed even if the guest is already in the stopped state. In "inmigrate" state, it will ensure that the guest remains paused once migration finishes, as if the -S option was passed on the command line.
Example:
-> { "execute": "stop" }
<- { "return": {} }
Performs a hard reset of a guest.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "system_reset" }
<- { "return": {} }
Requests that a guest perform a powerdown operation.
Since: 0.14.0
Notes: A guest may or may not respond to this command. This command returning does not indicate that a guest has accepted the request or that it has shut down. Many guests will respond to this command by prompting the user in some way.
Example:
-> { "execute": "system_powerdown" }
<- { "return": {} }
This command is a nop that is only provided for the purposes of compatibility.
Arguments:
index: intNot documented
Since: 0.14.0
Notes: Do not use this command.
Adds CPU with specified ID
Arguments:
id: intID of CPU to be created, valid values [0..max_cpus)
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 1.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "cpu-add", "arguments": { "id": 2 } }
<- { "return": {} }
Save a portion of guest memory to a file.
Arguments:
val: intthe virtual address of the guest to start from
size: intthe size of memory region to save
filename: stringthe file to save the memory to as binary data
cpu-index: int (optional)the index of the virtual CPU to use for translating the virtual address (defaults to CPU 0)
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 0.14.0
Notes: Errors were not reliably returned until 1.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "memsave",
"arguments": { "val": 10,
"size": 100,
"filename": "/tmp/virtual-mem-dump" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Save a portion of guest physical memory to a file.
Arguments:
val: intthe physical address of the guest to start from
size: intthe size of memory region to save
filename: stringthe file to save the memory to as binary data
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 0.14.0
Notes: Errors were not reliably returned until 1.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "pmemsave",
"arguments": { "val": 10,
"size": 100,
"filename": "/tmp/physical-mem-dump" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Resume guest VCPU execution.
Since: 0.14.0
Returns: If successful, nothing If QEMU was started with an encrypted block device and a key has not yet been set, DeviceEncrypted.
Notes: This command will succeed if the guest is currently running. It will also succeed if the guest is in the "inmigrate" state; in this case, the effect of the command is to make sure the guest starts once migration finishes, removing the effect of the -S command line option if it was passed.
Example:
-> { "execute": "cont" }
<- { "return": {} }
Wakeup guest from suspend. Does nothing in case the guest isn’t suspended.
Since: 1.1
Returns: nothing.
Example:
-> { "execute": "system_wakeup" }
<- { "return": {} }
Injects a Non-Maskable Interrupt into the default CPU (x86/s390) or all CPUs (ppc64). The command fails when the guest doesn’t support injecting.
Returns: If successful, nothing
Since: 0.14.0
Note: prior to 2.1, this command was only supported for x86 and s390 VMs
Example:
-> { "execute": "inject-nmi" }
<- { "return": {} }
Sets the link status of a virtual network adapter.
Arguments:
name: stringthe device name of the virtual network adapter
up: booleantrue to set the link status to be up
Returns:
Nothing on success
If name is not a valid network device, DeviceNotFound
Since: 0.14.0
Notes: Not all network adapters support setting link status. This command will succeed even if the network adapter does not support link status notification.
Example:
-> { "execute": "set_link",
"arguments": { "name": "e1000.0", "up": false } }
<- { "return": {} }
Request the balloon driver to change its balloon size.
Arguments:
value: intthe target size of the balloon in bytes
Returns: Nothing on success If the balloon driver is enabled but not functional because the KVM kernel module cannot support it, KvmMissingCap If no balloon device is present, DeviceNotActive
Notes: This command just issues a request to the guest. When it returns, the balloon size may not have changed. A guest can change the balloon size independent of this command.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "balloon", "arguments": { "value": 536870912 } }
<- { "return": {} }
This action can be used to test transaction failure.
Since: 1.6
An enumeration of Transactional completion modes.
Values:
individualDo not attempt to cancel any other Actions if any Actions fail after the Transaction request succeeds. All Actions that can complete successfully will do so without waiting on others. This is the default.
groupedIf any Action fails after the Transaction succeeds, cancel all Actions. Actions do not complete until all Actions are ready to complete. May be rejected by Actions that do not support this completion mode.
Since: 2.5
A discriminated record of operations that can be performed with
transaction. Action type can be:
abort: since 1.6
block-dirty-bitmap-add: since 2.5
block-dirty-bitmap-clear: since 2.5
blockdev-backup: since 2.3
blockdev-snapshot: since 2.5
blockdev-snapshot-internal-sync: since 1.7
blockdev-snapshot-sync: since 1.1
drive-backup: since 1.6
Members:
typeOne of "abort", "block-dirty-bitmap-add", "block-dirty-bitmap-clear", "blockdev-backup", "blockdev-snapshot", "blockdev-snapshot-internal-sync", "blockdev-snapshot-sync", "drive-backup"
data: Abort when type is "abort"data: BlockDirtyBitmapAdd when type is "block-dirty-bitmap-add"data: BlockDirtyBitmap when type is "block-dirty-bitmap-clear"data: BlockdevBackup when type is "blockdev-backup"data: BlockdevSnapshot when type is "blockdev-snapshot"data: BlockdevSnapshotInternal when type is "blockdev-snapshot-internal-sync"data: BlockdevSnapshotSync when type is "blockdev-snapshot-sync"data: DriveBackup when type is "drive-backup"Since: 1.1
Optional arguments to modify the behavior of a Transaction.
Members:
completion-mode: ActionCompletionMode (optional)Controls how jobs launched asynchronously by
Actions will complete or fail as a group.
See ActionCompletionMode for details.
Since: 2.5
Executes a number of transactionable QMP commands atomically. If any operation fails, then the entire set of actions will be abandoned and the appropriate error returned.
For external snapshots, the dictionary contains the device, the file to use for the new snapshot, and the format. The default format, if not specified, is qcow2.
Each new snapshot defaults to being created by QEMU (wiping any contents if the file already exists), but it is also possible to reuse an externally-created file. In the latter case, you should ensure that the new image file has the same contents as the current one; QEMU cannot perform any meaningful check. Typically this is achieved by using the current image file as the backing file for the new image.
On failure, the original disks pre-snapshot attempt will be used.
For internal snapshots, the dictionary contains the device and the snapshot’s name. If an internal snapshot matching name already exists, the request will be rejected. Only some image formats support it, for example, qcow2, rbd, and sheepdog.
On failure, qemu will try delete the newly created internal snapshot in the transaction. When an I/O error occurs during deletion, the user needs to fix it later with qemu-img or other command.
Arguments:
actions: array of TransactionActionList of TransactionAction;
information needed for the respective operations.
properties: TransactionProperties (optional)structure of additional options to control the
execution of the transaction. See TransactionProperties
for additional detail.
Returns: nothing on success
Errors depend on the operations of the transaction
Note: The transaction aborts on the first failure. Therefore, there will be information on only one failed operation returned in an error condition, and subsequent actions will not have been attempted.
Since: 1.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "transaction",
"arguments": { "actions": [
{ "type": "blockdev-snapshot-sync", "data" : { "device": "ide-hd0",
"snapshot-file": "/some/place/my-image",
"format": "qcow2" } },
{ "type": "blockdev-snapshot-sync", "data" : { "node-name": "myfile",
"snapshot-file": "/some/place/my-image2",
"snapshot-node-name": "node3432",
"mode": "existing",
"format": "qcow2" } },
{ "type": "blockdev-snapshot-sync", "data" : { "device": "ide-hd1",
"snapshot-file": "/some/place/my-image2",
"mode": "existing",
"format": "qcow2" } },
{ "type": "blockdev-snapshot-internal-sync", "data" : {
"device": "ide-hd2",
"name": "snapshot0" } } ] } }
<- { "return": {} }
Execute a command on the human monitor and return the output.
Arguments:
command-line: stringthe command to execute in the human monitor
cpu-index: int (optional)The CPU to use for commands that require an implicit CPU
Returns: the output of the command as a string
Since: 0.14.0
Notes: This command only exists as a stop-gap. Its use is highly discouraged. The semantics of this command are not guaranteed: this means that command names, arguments and responses can change or be removed at ANY time. Applications that rely on long term stability guarantees should NOT use this command.
Known limitations:
Example:
-> { "execute": "human-monitor-command",
"arguments": { "command-line": "info kvm" } }
<- { "return": "kvm support: enabled\r\n" }
Cancel the current executing migration process.
Returns: nothing on success
Notes: This command succeeds even if there is no migration process running.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate_cancel" }
<- { "return": {} }
Set maximum tolerated downtime for migration.
Arguments:
value: numbermaximum downtime in seconds
Returns: nothing on success
Notes: This command is deprecated in favor of ’migrate-set-parameters’
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate_set_downtime", "arguments": { "value": 0.1 } }
<- { "return": {} }
Set maximum speed for migration.
Arguments:
value: intmaximum speed in bytes per second.
Returns: nothing on success
Notes: This command is deprecated in favor of ’migrate-set-parameters’
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate_set_speed", "arguments": { "value": 1024 } }
<- { "return": {} }
Set cache size to be used by XBZRLE migration
Arguments:
value: intcache size in bytes
The size will be rounded down to the nearest power of 2. The cache size can be modified before and during ongoing migration
Returns: nothing on success
Since: 1.2
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate-set-cache-size",
"arguments": { "value": 536870912 } }
<- { "return": {} }
Query migration XBZRLE cache size
Returns: XBZRLE cache size in bytes
Since: 1.2
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-migrate-cache-size" }
<- { "return": 67108864 }
Members:
name: stringthe name of the property
type: stringthe type of the property. This will typically come in one of four forms:
1) A primitive type such as ’u8’, ’u16’, ’bool’, ’str’, or ’double’. These types are mapped to the appropriate JSON type.
2) A child type in the form ’child<subtype>’ where subtype is a qdev device type name. Child properties create the composition tree.
3) A link type in the form ’link<subtype>’ where subtype is a qdev device type name. Link properties form the device model graph.
Since: 1.2
This command will list any properties of a object given a path in the object model.
Arguments:
path: stringthe path within the object model. See qom-get for a description of
this parameter.
Returns:
a list of ObjectPropertyInfo that describe the properties of the
object.
Since: 1.2
This command will get a property from a object model path and return the value.
Arguments:
path: stringThe path within the object model. There are two forms of supported paths–absolute and partial paths.
Absolute paths are derived from the root object and can follow child<> or link<> properties. Since they can follow link<> properties, they can be arbitrarily long. Absolute paths look like absolute filenames and are prefixed with a leading slash.
Partial paths look like relative filenames. They do not begin with a prefix. The matching rules for partial paths are subtle but designed to make specifying objects easy. At each level of the composition tree, the partial path is matched as an absolute path. The first match is not returned. At least two matches are searched for. A successful result is only returned if only one match is found. If more than one match is found, a flag is return to indicate that the match was ambiguous.
property: stringThe property name to read
Returns: The property value. The type depends on the property type. child<> and link<> properties are returned as #str pathnames. All integer property types (u8, u16, etc) are returned as #int.
Since: 1.2
This command will set a property from a object model path.
Arguments:
path: stringsee qom-get for a description of this parameter
property: stringthe property name to set
value: valuea value who’s type is appropriate for the property type. See qom-get
for a description of type mapping.
Since: 1.2
Sets the password of a remote display session.
Arguments:
protocol: string‘vnc’ to modify the VNC server password ‘spice’ to modify the Spice server password
password: stringthe new password
connected: string (optional)how to handle existing clients when changing the password. If nothing is specified, defaults to ‘keep’ ‘fail’ to fail the command if clients are connected ‘disconnect’ to disconnect existing clients ‘keep’ to maintain existing clients
Returns: Nothing on success If Spice is not enabled, DeviceNotFound
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "set_password", "arguments": { "protocol": "vnc",
"password": "secret" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Expire the password of a remote display server.
Arguments:
protocol: stringthe name of the remote display protocol ‘vnc’ or ‘spice’
time: stringwhen to expire the password. ‘now’ to expire the password immediately ‘never’ to cancel password expiration ‘+INT’ where INT is the number of seconds from now (integer) ‘INT’ where INT is the absolute time in seconds
Returns:
Nothing on success
If protocol is ‘spice’ and Spice is not active, DeviceNotFound
Since: 0.14.0
Notes:
Time is relative to the server and currently there is no way to
coordinate server time with client time. It is not recommended to
use the absolute time version of the time parameter unless you’re
sure you are on the same machine as the QEMU instance.
Example:
-> { "execute": "expire_password", "arguments": { "protocol": "vnc",
"time": "+60" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Change the VNC server password.
Arguments:
password: stringthe new password to use with VNC authentication
Since: 1.1
Notes: An empty password in this command will set the password to the empty string. Existing clients are unaffected by executing this command.
This command is multiple commands multiplexed together.
Arguments:
device: stringThis is normally the name of a block device but it may also be ’vnc’.
when it’s ’vnc’, then sub command depends on target
target: stringIf device is a block device, then this is the new filename.
If device is ’vnc’, then if the value ’password’ selects the vnc
change password command. Otherwise, this specifies a new server URI
address to listen to for VNC connections.
arg: string (optional)If device is a block device, then this is an optional format to open
the device with.
If device is ’vnc’ and target is ’password’, this is the new VNC
password to set. If this argument is an empty string, then no future
logins will be allowed.
Returns:
Nothing on success.
If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
If the new block device is encrypted, DeviceEncrypted. Note that
if this error is returned, the device has been opened successfully
and an additional call to block_passwd is required to set the
device’s password. The behavior of reads and writes to the block
device between when these calls are executed is undefined.
Notes: This interface is deprecated, and it is strongly recommended that you avoid using it. For changing block devices, use blockdev-change-medium; for changing VNC parameters, use change-vnc-password.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
1. Change a removable medium
-> { "execute": "change",
"arguments": { "device": "ide1-cd0",
"target": "/srv/images/Fedora-12-x86_64-DVD.iso" } }
<- { "return": {} }
2. Change VNC password
-> { "execute": "change",
"arguments": { "device": "vnc", "target": "password",
"arg": "foobar1" } }
<- { "return": {} }
This structure describes a search result from qom-list-types
Members:
name: stringthe type name found in the search
Since: 1.1
Notes: This command is experimental and may change syntax in future releases.
This command will return a list of types given search parameters
Arguments:
implements: string (optional)if specified, only return types that implement this type name
abstract: boolean (optional)if true, include abstract types in the results
Returns:
a list of ObjectTypeInfo or an empty list if no results are found
Since: 1.1
Information about device properties.
Members:
name: stringthe name of the property
type: stringthe typename of the property
description: string (optional)if specified, the description of the property. (since 2.2)
Since: 1.2
List properties associated with a device.
Arguments:
typename: stringthe type name of a device
Returns: a list of DevicePropertyInfo describing a devices properties
Since: 1.2
Migrates the current running guest to another Virtual Machine.
Arguments:
uri: stringthe Uniform Resource Identifier of the destination VM
blk: boolean (optional)do block migration (full disk copy)
inc: boolean (optional)incremental disk copy migration
detach: boolean (optional)this argument exists only for compatibility reasons and is ignored by QEMU
Returns: nothing on success
Since: 0.14.0
Notes:
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate", "arguments": { "uri": "tcp:0:4446" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Start an incoming migration, the qemu must have been started with -incoming defer
Arguments:
uri: stringThe Uniform Resource Identifier identifying the source or address to listen on
Returns: nothing on success
Since: 2.3
Notes:
Example:
-> { "execute": "migrate-incoming",
"arguments": { "uri": "tcp::4446" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Save the state of all devices to file. The RAM and the block devices of the VM are not saved by this command.
Arguments:
filename: stringthe file to save the state of the devices to as binary data. See xen-save-devices-state.txt for a description of the binary format.
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 1.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "xen-save-devices-state",
"arguments": { "filename": "/tmp/save" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Enable or disable the global dirty log mode.
Arguments:
enable: booleantrue to enable, false to disable.
Returns: nothing
Since: 1.3
Example:
-> { "execute": "xen-set-global-dirty-log",
"arguments": { "enable": true } }
<- { "return": {} }
Arguments:
driver: stringthe name of the new device’s driver
bus: string (optional)the device’s parent bus (device tree path)
id: string (optional)the device’s ID, must be unique
Additional arguments depend on the type.
Add a device.
Notes:
Example:
-> { "execute": "device_add",
"arguments": { "driver": "e1000", "id": "net1",
"bus": "pci.0",
"mac": "52:54:00:12:34:56" } }
<- { "return": {} }
TODO: This command effectively bypasses QAPI completely due to its "additional arguments" business. It shouldn’t have been added to the schema in this form. It should be qapified properly, or replaced by a properly qapified command.
Since: 0.13
Remove a device from a guest
Arguments:
id: stringthe device’s ID or QOM path
Returns:
Nothing on success
If id is not a valid device, DeviceNotFound
Notes: When this command completes, the device may not be removed from the guest. Hot removal is an operation that requires guest cooperation. This command merely requests that the guest begin the hot removal process. Completion of the device removal process is signaled with a DEVICE_DELETED event. Guest reset will automatically complete removal for all devices.
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "device_del",
"arguments": { "id": "net1" } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute": "device_del",
"arguments": { "id": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[0]" } }
<- { "return": {} }
An enumeration of guest-memory-dump’s format.
Values:
elfelf format
kdump-zlibkdump-compressed format with zlib-compressed
kdump-lzokdump-compressed format with lzo-compressed
kdump-snappykdump-compressed format with snappy-compressed
Since: 2.0
Dump guest’s memory to vmcore. It is a synchronous operation that can take very long depending on the amount of guest memory.
Arguments:
paging: booleanif true, do paging to get guest’s memory mapping. This allows using gdb to process the core file.
IMPORTANT: this option can make QEMU allocate several gigabytes of RAM. This can happen for a large guest, or a malicious guest pretending to be large.
Also, paging=true has the following limitations:
protocol: stringthe filename or file descriptor of the vmcore. The supported protocols are:
detach: boolean (optional)if true, QMP will return immediately rather than waiting for the dump to finish. The user can track progress using "query-dump". (since 2.6).
begin: int (optional)if specified, the starting physical address.
length: int (optional)if specified, the memory size, in bytes. If you don’t
want to dump all guest’s memory, please specify the start begin
and length
format: DumpGuestMemoryFormat (optional)if specified, the format of guest memory dump. But non-elf
format is conflict with paging and filter, ie. paging, begin and
length is not allowed to be specified with non-elf format at the
same time (since 2.0)
Note: All boolean arguments default to false
Returns: nothing on success
Since: 1.2
Example:
-> { "execute": "dump-guest-memory",
"arguments": { "protocol": "fd:dump" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Describe the status of a long-running background guest memory dump.
Values:
noneno dump-guest-memory has started yet.
activethere is one dump running in background.
completedthe last dump has finished successfully.
failedthe last dump has failed.
Since: 2.6
The result format for ’query-dump’.
Members:
status: DumpStatusenum of DumpStatus, which shows current dump status
completed: intbytes written in latest dump (uncompressed)
total: inttotal bytes to be written in latest dump (uncompressed)
Since: 2.6
Query latest dump status.
Returns:
A DumpStatus object showing the dump status.
Since: 2.6
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-dump" }
<- { "return": { "status": "active", "completed": 1024000,
"total": 2048000 } }
A list of the available formats for dump-guest-memory
Members:
formats: array of DumpGuestMemoryFormatNot documented
Since: 2.0
Returns the available formats for dump-guest-memory
Returns:
A DumpGuestMemoryCapability object listing available formats for
dump-guest-memory
Since: 2.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-dump-guest-memory-capability" }
<- { "return": { "formats":
["elf", "kdump-zlib", "kdump-lzo", "kdump-snappy"] }
Dump guest’s storage keys
Arguments:
filename: stringthe path to the file to dump to
This command is only supported on s390 architecture.
Since: 2.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "dump-skeys",
"arguments": { "filename": "/tmp/skeys" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Add a network backend.
Arguments:
type: stringthe type of network backend. Current valid values are ’user’, ’tap’, ’vde’, ’socket’, ’dump’ and ’bridge’
id: stringthe name of the new network backend
Additional arguments depend on the type.
TODO: This command effectively bypasses QAPI completely due to its "additional arguments" business. It shouldn’t have been added to the schema in this form. It should be qapified properly, or replaced by a properly qapified command.
Since: 0.14.0
Returns:
Nothing on success
If type is not a valid network backend, DeviceNotFound
Example:
-> { "execute": "netdev_add",
"arguments": { "type": "user", "id": "netdev1",
"dnssearch": "example.org" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Remove a network backend.
Arguments:
id: stringthe name of the network backend to remove
Returns:
Nothing on success
If id is not a valid network backend, DeviceNotFound
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "netdev_del", "arguments": { "id": "netdev1" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Create a QOM object.
Arguments:
qom-type: stringthe class name for the object to be created
id: stringthe name of the new object
props: value (optional)a dictionary of properties to be passed to the backend
Returns:
Nothing on success
Error if qom-type is not a valid class name
Since: 2.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "object-add",
"arguments": { "qom-type": "rng-random", "id": "rng1",
"props": { "filename": "/dev/hwrng" } } }
<- { "return": {} }
Remove a QOM object.
Arguments:
id: stringthe name of the QOM object to remove
Returns:
Nothing on success
Error if id is not a valid id for a QOM object
Since: 2.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "object-del", "arguments": { "id": "rng1" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Use it alone to have zero network devices.
Since: 1.2
Create a new Network Interface Card.
Members:
netdev: string (optional)id of -netdev to connect to
macaddr: string (optional)MAC address
model: string (optional)device model (e1000, rtl8139, virtio etc.)
addr: string (optional)PCI device address
vectors: int (optional)number of MSI-x vectors, 0 to disable MSI-X
Since: 1.2
A fat type wrapping ’str’, to be embedded in lists.
Members:
str: stringNot documented
Since: 1.2
Use the user mode network stack which requires no administrator privilege to run.
Members:
hostname: string (optional)client hostname reported by the builtin DHCP server
restrict: boolean (optional)isolate the guest from the host
ipv4: boolean (optional)whether to support IPv4, default true for enabled (since 2.6)
ipv6: boolean (optional)whether to support IPv6, default true for enabled (since 2.6)
ip: string (optional)legacy parameter, use net= instead
net: string (optional)IP network address that the guest will see, in the form addr[/netmask] The netmask is optional, and can be either in the form a.b.c.d or as a number of valid top-most bits. Default is 10.0.2.0/24.
host: string (optional)guest-visible address of the host
tftp: string (optional)root directory of the built-in TFTP server
bootfile: string (optional)BOOTP filename, for use with tftp=
dhcpstart: string (optional)the first of the 16 IPs the built-in DHCP server can assign
dns: string (optional)guest-visible address of the virtual nameserver
dnssearch: array of String (optional)list of DNS suffixes to search, passed as DHCP option to the guest
ipv6-prefix: string (optional)IPv6 network prefix (default is fec0::) (since 2.6). The network prefix is given in the usual hexadecimal IPv6 address notation.
ipv6-prefixlen: int (optional)IPv6 network prefix length (default is 64) (since 2.6)
ipv6-host: string (optional)guest-visible IPv6 address of the host (since 2.6)
ipv6-dns: string (optional)guest-visible IPv6 address of the virtual nameserver (since 2.6)
smb: string (optional)root directory of the built-in SMB server
smbserver: string (optional)IP address of the built-in SMB server
hostfwd: array of String (optional)redirect incoming TCP or UDP host connections to guest endpoints
guestfwd: array of String (optional)forward guest TCP connections
Since: 1.2
Connect the host TAP network interface name to the VLAN.
Members:
ifname: string (optional)interface name
fd: string (optional)file descriptor of an already opened tap
fds: string (optional)multiple file descriptors of already opened multiqueue capable tap
script: string (optional)script to initialize the interface
downscript: string (optional)script to shut down the interface
br: string (optional)bridge name (since 2.8)
helper: string (optional)command to execute to configure bridge
sndbuf: int (optional)send buffer limit. Understands [TGMKkb] suffixes.
vnet_hdr: boolean (optional)enable the IFF_VNET_HDR flag on the tap interface
vhost: boolean (optional)enable vhost-net network accelerator
vhostfd: string (optional)file descriptor of an already opened vhost net device
vhostfds: string (optional)file descriptors of multiple already opened vhost net devices
vhostforce: boolean (optional)vhost on for non-MSIX virtio guests
queues: int (optional)number of queues to be created for multiqueue capable tap
poll-us: int (optional)maximum number of microseconds that could be spent on busy polling for tap (since 2.7)
Since: 1.2
Connect the VLAN to a remote VLAN in another QEMU virtual machine using a TCP socket connection.
Members:
fd: string (optional)file descriptor of an already opened socket
listen: string (optional)port number, and optional hostname, to listen on
connect: string (optional)port number, and optional hostname, to connect to
mcast: string (optional)UDP multicast address and port number
localaddr: string (optional)source address and port for multicast and udp packets
udp: string (optional)UDP unicast address and port number
Since: 1.2
Connect the VLAN to Ethernet over L2TPv3 Static tunnel
Members:
src: stringsource address
dst: stringdestination address
srcport: string (optional)source port - mandatory for udp, optional for ip
dstport: string (optional)destination port - mandatory for udp, optional for ip
ipv6: boolean (optional)force the use of ipv6
udp: boolean (optional)use the udp version of l2tpv3 encapsulation
cookie64: boolean (optional)use 64 bit coookies
counter: boolean (optional)have sequence counter
pincounter: boolean (optional)pin sequence counter to zero - workaround for buggy implementations or networks with packet reorder
txcookie: int (optional)32 or 64 bit transmit cookie
rxcookie: int (optional)32 or 64 bit receive cookie
txsession: int32 bit transmit session
rxsession: int (optional)32 bit receive session - if not specified set to the same value as transmit
offset: int (optional)additional offset - allows the insertion of additional application-specific data before the packet payload
Since: 2.1
Connect the VLAN to a vde switch running on the host.
Members:
sock: string (optional)socket path
port: int (optional)port number
group: string (optional)group owner of socket
mode: int (optional)permissions for socket
Since: 1.2
Dump VLAN network traffic to a file.
Members:
len: int (optional)per-packet size limit (64k default). Understands [TGMKkb] suffixes.
file: string (optional)dump file path (default is qemu-vlan0.pcap)
Since: 1.2
Connect a host TAP network interface to a host bridge device.
Members:
br: string (optional)bridge name
helper: string (optional)command to execute to configure bridge
Since: 1.2
Connect two or more net clients through a software hub.
Members:
hubid: inthub identifier number
Since: 1.2
Connect a client to a netmap-enabled NIC or to a VALE switch port
Members:
ifname: stringEither the name of an existing network interface supported by netmap, or the name of a VALE port (created on the fly). A VALE port name is in the form ’valeXXX:YYY’, where XXX and YYY are non-negative integers. XXX identifies a switch and YYY identifies a port of the switch. VALE ports having the same XXX are therefore connected to the same switch.
devname: string (optional)path of the netmap device (default: ’/dev/netmap’).
Since: 2.0
Vhost-user network backend
Members:
chardev: stringname of a unix socket chardev
vhostforce: boolean (optional)vhost on for non-MSIX virtio guests (default: false).
queues: int (optional)number of queues to be created for multiqueue vhost-user (default: 1) (Since 2.5)
Since: 2.1
Available netdev drivers.
Values:
noneNot documented
nicNot documented
userNot documented
tapNot documented
l2tpv3Not documented
socketNot documented
vdeNot documented
dumpNot documented
bridgeNot documented
hubportNot documented
netmapNot documented
vhost-userNot documented
Since: 2.7
Captures the configuration of a network device.
Members:
id: stringidentifier for monitor commands.
type: NetClientDriverSpecify the driver used for interpreting remaining arguments.
NetdevNoneOptions when type is "none"NetLegacyNicOptions when type is "nic"NetdevUserOptions when type is "user"NetdevTapOptions when type is "tap"NetdevL2TPv3Options when type is "l2tpv3"NetdevSocketOptions when type is "socket"NetdevVdeOptions when type is "vde"NetdevDumpOptions when type is "dump"NetdevBridgeOptions when type is "bridge"NetdevHubPortOptions when type is "hubport"NetdevNetmapOptions when type is "netmap"NetdevVhostUserOptions when type is "vhost-user"Since: 1.2
’l2tpv3’ - since 2.1
Captures the configuration of a network device; legacy.
Members:
vlan: int (optional)vlan number
id: string (optional)identifier for monitor commands
name: string (optional)identifier for monitor commands, ignored if id is present
opts: NetLegacyOptionsdevice type specific properties (legacy)
Since: 1.2
Values:
noneNot documented
nicNot documented
userNot documented
tapNot documented
l2tpv3Not documented
socketNot documented
vdeNot documented
dumpNot documented
bridgeNot documented
netmapNot documented
vhost-userNot documented
Since: 1.2
Like Netdev, but for use only by the legacy command line options
Members:
type: NetLegacyOptionsTypeNot documented
NetdevNoneOptions when type is "none"NetLegacyNicOptions when type is "nic"NetdevUserOptions when type is "user"NetdevTapOptions when type is "tap"NetdevL2TPv3Options when type is "l2tpv3"NetdevSocketOptions when type is "socket"NetdevVdeOptions when type is "vde"NetdevDumpOptions when type is "dump"NetdevBridgeOptions when type is "bridge"NetdevNetmapOptions when type is "netmap"NetdevVhostUserOptions when type is "vhost-user"Since: 1.2
Indicates whether a netfilter is attached to a netdev’s transmit queue or receive queue or both.
Values:
allthe filter is attached both to the receive and the transmit queue of the netdev (default).
rxthe filter is attached to the receive queue of the netdev, where it will receive packets sent to the netdev.
txthe filter is attached to the transmit queue of the netdev, where it will receive packets sent by the netdev.
Since: 2.5
Members:
host: stringhost part of the address
port: stringport part of the address
Captures a socket address or address range in the Internet namespace.
Members:
numeric: boolean (optional)true if the host/port are guaranteed to be numeric, false if name resolution should be attempted. Defaults to false. (Since 2.9)
to: int (optional)If present, this is range of possible addresses, with port
between port and to.
ipv4: boolean (optional)whether to accept IPv4 addresses, default try both IPv4 and IPv6
ipv6: boolean (optional)whether to accept IPv6 addresses, default try both IPv4 and IPv6
InetSocketAddressBaseSince: 1.3
Captures a socket address in the local ("Unix socket") namespace.
Members:
path: stringfilesystem path to use
Since: 1.3
Captures a socket address in the vsock namespace.
Members:
cid: stringunique host identifier
port: stringport
Note: string types are used to allow for possible future hostname or service resolution support.
Since: 2.8
Captures the address of a socket, which could also be a named file descriptor
Members:
typeOne of "inet", "unix", "vsock", "fd"
data: InetSocketAddress when type is "inet"data: UnixSocketAddress when type is "unix"data: VsockSocketAddress when type is "vsock"data: String when type is "fd"Since: 1.3
Available SocketAddressFlat types
Values:
inetInternet address
unixUnix domain socket
vsockNot documented
fdNot documented
Since: 2.9
Captures the address of a socket
Members:
type: SocketAddressFlatTypeTransport type
InetSocketAddress when type is "inet"UnixSocketAddress when type is "unix"VsockSocketAddress when type is "vsock"String when type is "fd"This is just like SocketAddress, except it’s a flat union rather than a simple union. Nicer because it avoids nesting on the wire, i.e. this form has fewer {}.
Since: 2.9
Receive a file descriptor via SCM rights and assign it a name
Arguments:
fdname: stringfile descriptor name
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 0.14.0
Notes:
If fdname already exists, the file descriptor assigned to
it will be closed and replaced by the received file
descriptor.
The ’closefd’ command can be used to explicitly close the file descriptor when it is no longer needed.
Example:
-> { "execute": "getfd", "arguments": { "fdname": "fd1" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Close a file descriptor previously passed via SCM rights
Arguments:
fdname: stringfile descriptor name
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "closefd", "arguments": { "fdname": "fd1" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Information describing a machine.
Members:
name: stringthe name of the machine
alias: string (optional)an alias for the machine name
is-default: boolean (optional)whether the machine is default
cpu-max: intmaximum number of CPUs supported by the machine type (since 1.5.0)
hotpluggable-cpus: booleancpu hotplug via -device is supported (since 2.7.0)
Since: 1.2.0
Return a list of supported machines
Returns: a list of MachineInfo
Since: 1.2.0
Virtual CPU definition.
Members:
name: stringthe name of the CPU definition
migration-safe: boolean (optional)whether a CPU definition can be safely used for migration in combination with a QEMU compatibility machine when migrating between different QMU versions and between hosts with different sets of (hardware or software) capabilities. If not provided, information is not available and callers should not assume the CPU definition to be migration-safe. (since 2.8)
static: booleanwhether a CPU definition is static and will not change depending on QEMU version, machine type, machine options and accelerator options. A static model is always migration-safe. (since 2.8)
unavailable-features: array of string (optional)List of properties that prevent the CPU model from running in the current host. (since 2.8)
typename: stringType name that can be used as argument to device-list-properties,
to introspect properties configurable using -cpu or -global.
(since 2.9)
unavailable-features is a list of QOM property names that
represent CPU model attributes that prevent the CPU from running.
If the QOM property is read-only, that means there’s no known
way to make the CPU model run in the current host. Implementations
that choose not to provide specific information return the
property name "type".
If the property is read-write, it means that it MAY be possible
to run the CPU model in the current host if that property is
changed. Management software can use it as hints to suggest or
choose an alternative for the user, or just to generate meaningful
error messages explaining why the CPU model can’t be used.
If unavailable-features is an empty list, the CPU model is
runnable using the current host and machine-type.
If unavailable-features is not present, runnability
information for the CPU is not available.
Since: 1.2.0
Return a list of supported virtual CPU definitions
Returns: a list of CpuDefInfo
Since: 1.2.0
Virtual CPU model.
A CPU model consists of the name of a CPU definition, to which delta changes are applied (e.g. features added/removed). Most magic values that an architecture might require should be hidden behind the name. However, if required, architectures can expose relevant properties.
Members:
name: stringthe name of the CPU definition the model is based on
props: value (optional)a dictionary of QOM properties to be applied
Since: 2.8.0
An enumeration of CPU model expansion types.
Values:
staticExpand to a static CPU model, a combination of a static base model name and property delta changes. As the static base model will never change, the expanded CPU model will be the same, independant of independent of QEMU version, machine type, machine options, and accelerator options. Therefore, the resulting model can be used by tooling without having to specify a compatibility machine - e.g. when displaying the "host" model. static CPU models are migration-safe.
fullExpand all properties. The produced model is not guaranteed to be migration-safe, but allows tooling to get an insight and work with model details.
Note:
When a non-migration-safe CPU model is expanded in static mode, some
features enabled by the CPU model may be omitted, because they can’t be
implemented by a static CPU model definition (e.g. cache info passthrough and
PMU passthrough in x86). If you need an accurate representation of the
features enabled by a non-migration-safe CPU model, use full. If you need a
static representation that will keep ABI compatibility even when changing QEMU
version or machine-type, use static (but keep in mind that some features may
be omitted).
Since: 2.8.0
The result of a cpu model expansion.
Members:
model: CpuModelInfothe expanded CpuModelInfo.
Since: 2.8.0
Expands a given CPU model (or a combination of CPU model + additional options) to different granularities, allowing tooling to get an understanding what a specific CPU model looks like in QEMU under a certain configuration.
This interface can be used to query the "host" CPU model.
The data returned by this command may be affected by:
Some architectures may not support all expansion types. s390x supports "full" and "static".
Arguments:
type: CpuModelExpansionTypeNot documented
model: CpuModelInfoNot documented
Returns: a CpuModelExpansionInfo. Returns an error if expanding CPU models is not supported, if the model cannot be expanded, if the model contains an unknown CPU definition name, unknown properties or properties with a wrong type. Also returns an error if an expansion type is not supported.
Since: 2.8.0
An enumeration of CPU model comparation results. The result is usually calculated using e.g. CPU features or CPU generations.
Values:
incompatibleIf model A is incompatible to model B, model A is not guaranteed to run where model B runs and the other way around.
identicalIf model A is identical to model B, model A is guaranteed to run where model B runs and the other way around.
supersetIf model A is a superset of model B, model B is guaranteed to run where model A runs. There are no guarantees about the other way.
subsetIf model A is a subset of model B, model A is guaranteed to run where model B runs. There are no guarantees about the other way.
Since: 2.8.0
The result of a CPU model comparison.
Members:
result: CpuModelCompareResultThe result of the compare operation.
responsible-properties: array of stringList of properties that led to the comparison result not being identical.
responsible-properties is a list of QOM property names that led to
both CPUs not being detected as identical. For identical models, this
list is empty.
If a QOM property is read-only, that means there’s no known way to make the
CPU models identical. If the special property name "type" is included, the
models are by definition not identical and cannot be made identical.
Since: 2.8.0
Compares two CPU models, returning how they compare in a specific configuration. The results indicates how both models compare regarding runnability. This result can be used by tooling to make decisions if a certain CPU model will run in a certain configuration or if a compatible CPU model has to be created by baselining.
Usually, a CPU model is compared against the maximum possible CPU model of a certain configuration (e.g. the "host" model for KVM). If that CPU model is identical or a subset, it will run in that configuration.
The result returned by this command may be affected by:
Some architectures may not support comparing CPU models. s390x supports comparing CPU models.
Arguments:
modela: CpuModelInfoNot documented
modelb: CpuModelInfoNot documented
Returns: a CpuModelBaselineInfo. Returns an error if comparing CPU models is not supported, if a model cannot be used, if a model contains an unknown cpu definition name, unknown properties or properties with wrong types.
Since: 2.8.0
The result of a CPU model baseline.
Members:
model: CpuModelInfothe baselined CpuModelInfo.
Since: 2.8.0
Baseline two CPU models, creating a compatible third model. The created model will always be a static, migration-safe CPU model (see "static" CPU model expansion for details).
This interface can be used by tooling to create a compatible CPU model out two CPU models. The created CPU model will be identical to or a subset of both CPU models when comparing them. Therefore, the created CPU model is guaranteed to run where the given CPU models run.
The result returned by this command may be affected by:
Some architectures may not support baselining CPU models. s390x supports baselining CPU models.
Arguments:
modela: CpuModelInfoNot documented
modelb: CpuModelInfoNot documented
Returns: a CpuModelBaselineInfo. Returns an error if baselining CPU models is not supported, if a model cannot be used, if a model contains an unknown cpu definition name, unknown properties or properties with wrong types.
Since: 2.8.0
Information about a file descriptor that was added to an fd set.
Members:
fdset-id: intThe ID of the fd set that fd was added to.
fd: intThe file descriptor that was received via SCM rights and added to the fd set.
Since: 1.2.0
Add a file descriptor, that was passed via SCM rights, to an fd set.
Arguments:
fdset-id: int (optional)The ID of the fd set to add the file descriptor to.
opaque: string (optional)A free-form string that can be used to describe the fd.
Returns:
AddfdInfo on success
If file descriptor was not received, FdNotSupplied
If fdset-id is a negative value, InvalidParameterValue
Notes: The list of fd sets is shared by all monitor connections.
If fdset-id is not specified, a new fd set will be created.
Since: 1.2.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "add-fd", "arguments": { "fdset-id": 1 } }
<- { "return": { "fdset-id": 1, "fd": 3 } }
Remove a file descriptor from an fd set.
Arguments:
fdset-id: intThe ID of the fd set that the file descriptor belongs to.
fd: int (optional)The file descriptor that is to be removed.
Returns:
Nothing on success
If fdset-id or fd is not found, FdNotFound
Since: 1.2.0
Notes: The list of fd sets is shared by all monitor connections.
If fd is not specified, all file descriptors in fdset-id
will be removed.
Example:
-> { "execute": "remove-fd", "arguments": { "fdset-id": 1, "fd": 3 } }
<- { "return": {} }
Information about a file descriptor that belongs to an fd set.
Members:
fd: intThe file descriptor value.
opaque: string (optional)A free-form string that can be used to describe the fd.
Since: 1.2.0
Information about an fd set.
Members:
fdset-id: intThe ID of the fd set.
fds: array of FdsetFdInfoA list of file descriptors that belong to this fd set.
Since: 1.2.0
Return information describing all fd sets.
Returns:
A list of FdsetInfo
Since: 1.2.0
Note: The list of fd sets is shared by all monitor connections.
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-fdsets" }
<- { "return": [
{
"fds": [
{
"fd": 30,
"opaque": "rdonly:/path/to/file"
},
{
"fd": 24,
"opaque": "rdwr:/path/to/file"
}
],
"fdset-id": 1
},
{
"fds": [
{
"fd": 28
},
{
"fd": 29
}
],
"fdset-id": 0
}
]
}
Information describing the QEMU target.
Members:
arch: stringthe target architecture (eg "x86_64", "i386", etc)
Since: 1.2.0
Return information about the target for this QEMU
Returns: TargetInfo
Since: 1.2.0
An enumeration of key name.
This is used by the send-key command.
Values:
unmappedsince 2.0
pausesince 2.0
rosince 2.4
kp_commasince 2.4
kp_equalssince 2.6
powersince 2.6
hiraganasince 2.9
henkansince 2.9
yensince 2.9
shiftNot documented
shift_rNot documented
altNot documented
alt_rNot documented
altgrNot documented
altgr_rNot documented
ctrlNot documented
ctrl_rNot documented
menuNot documented
escNot documented
1Not documented
2Not documented
3Not documented
4Not documented
5Not documented
6Not documented
7Not documented
8Not documented
9Not documented
0Not documented
minusNot documented
equalNot documented
backspaceNot documented
tabNot documented
qNot documented
wNot documented
eNot documented
rNot documented
tNot documented
yNot documented
uNot documented
iNot documented
oNot documented
pNot documented
bracket_leftNot documented
bracket_rightNot documented
retNot documented
aNot documented
sNot documented
dNot documented
fNot documented
gNot documented
hNot documented
jNot documented
kNot documented
lNot documented
semicolonNot documented
apostropheNot documented
grave_accentNot documented
backslashNot documented
zNot documented
xNot documented
cNot documented
vNot documented
bNot documented
nNot documented
mNot documented
commaNot documented
dotNot documented
slashNot documented
asteriskNot documented
spcNot documented
caps_lockNot documented
f1Not documented
f2Not documented
f3Not documented
f4Not documented
f5Not documented
f6Not documented
f7Not documented
f8Not documented
f9Not documented
f10Not documented
num_lockNot documented
scroll_lockNot documented
kp_divideNot documented
kp_multiplyNot documented
kp_subtractNot documented
kp_addNot documented
kp_enterNot documented
kp_decimalNot documented
sysrqNot documented
kp_0Not documented
kp_1Not documented
kp_2Not documented
kp_3Not documented
kp_4Not documented
kp_5Not documented
kp_6Not documented
kp_7Not documented
kp_8Not documented
kp_9Not documented
lessNot documented
f11Not documented
f12Not documented
printNot documented
homeNot documented
pgupNot documented
pgdnNot documented
endNot documented
leftNot documented
upNot documented
downNot documented
rightNot documented
insertNot documented
deleteNot documented
stopNot documented
againNot documented
propsNot documented
undoNot documented
frontNot documented
copyNot documented
openNot documented
pasteNot documented
findNot documented
cutNot documented
lfNot documented
helpNot documented
meta_lNot documented
meta_rNot documented
composeNot documented
Since: 1.3.0
Represents a keyboard key.
Members:
typeOne of "number", "qcode"
data: int when type is "number"data: QKeyCode when type is "qcode"Since: 1.3.0
Send keys to guest.
Arguments:
keys: array of KeyValueAn array of KeyValue elements. All KeyValues in this array are
simultaneously sent to the guest. A KeyValue.number value is sent
directly to the guest, while KeyValue.qcode must be a valid
QKeyCode value
hold-time: int (optional)time to delay key up events, milliseconds. Defaults to 100
Returns: Nothing on success If key is unknown or redundant, InvalidParameter
Since: 1.3.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "send-key",
"arguments": { "keys": [ { "type": "qcode", "data": "ctrl" },
{ "type": "qcode", "data": "alt" },
{ "type": "qcode", "data": "delete" } ] } }
<- { "return": {} }
Write a PPM of the VGA screen to a file.
Arguments:
filename: stringthe path of a new PPM file to store the image
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 0.14.0
Example:
-> { "execute": "screendump",
"arguments": { "filename": "/tmp/image" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Configuration shared across all chardev backends
Members:
logfile: string (optional)The name of a logfile to save output
logappend: boolean (optional)true to append instead of truncate (default to false to truncate)
Since: 2.6
Configuration info for file chardevs.
Members:
in: string (optional)The name of the input file
out: stringThe name of the output file
append: boolean (optional)Open the file in append mode (default false to truncate) (Since 2.6)
ChardevCommonSince: 1.4
Configuration info for device and pipe chardevs.
Members:
device: stringThe name of the special file for the device, i.e. /dev/ttyS0 on Unix or COM1: on Windows
ChardevCommonSince: 1.4
Configuration info for (stream) socket chardevs.
Members:
addr: SocketAddresssocket address to listen on (server=true) or connect to (server=false)
tls-creds: string (optional)the ID of the TLS credentials object (since 2.6)
server: boolean (optional)create server socket (default: true)
wait: boolean (optional)wait for incoming connection on server sockets (default: false).
nodelay: boolean (optional)set TCP_NODELAY socket option (default: false)
telnet: boolean (optional)enable telnet protocol on server sockets (default: false)
reconnect: int (optional)For a client socket, if a socket is disconnected, then attempt a reconnect after the given number of seconds. Setting this to zero disables this function. (default: 0) (Since: 2.2)
ChardevCommonSince: 1.4
Configuration info for datagram socket chardevs.
Members:
remote: SocketAddressremote address
local: SocketAddress (optional)local address
ChardevCommonSince: 1.5
Configuration info for mux chardevs.
Members:
chardev: stringname of the base chardev.
ChardevCommonSince: 1.5
Configuration info for stdio chardevs.
Members:
signal: boolean (optional)Allow signals (such as SIGINT triggered by ^C) be delivered to qemu. Default: true in -nographic mode, false otherwise.
ChardevCommonSince: 1.5
Configuration info for spice vm channel chardevs.
Members:
type: stringkind of channel (for example vdagent).
ChardevCommonSince: 1.5
Configuration info for spice port chardevs.
Members:
fqdn: stringname of the channel (see docs/spice-port-fqdn.txt)
ChardevCommonSince: 1.5
Configuration info for virtual console chardevs.
Members:
width: int (optional)console width, in pixels
height: int (optional)console height, in pixels
cols: int (optional)console width, in chars
rows: int (optional)console height, in chars
ChardevCommonSince: 1.5
Configuration info for ring buffer chardevs.
Members:
size: int (optional)ring buffer size, must be power of two, default is 65536
ChardevCommonSince: 1.5
Configuration info for the new chardev backend.
Members:
typeOne of "file", "serial", "parallel", "pipe", "socket", "udp", "pty", "null", "mux", "msmouse", "wctablet", "braille", "testdev", "stdio", "console", "spicevmc", "spiceport", "vc", "ringbuf", "memory"
data: ChardevFile when type is "file"data: ChardevHostdev when type is "serial"data: ChardevHostdev when type is "parallel"data: ChardevHostdev when type is "pipe"data: ChardevSocket when type is "socket"data: ChardevUdp when type is "udp"data: ChardevCommon when type is "pty"data: ChardevCommon when type is "null"data: ChardevMux when type is "mux"data: ChardevCommon when type is "msmouse"data: ChardevCommon when type is "wctablet"data: ChardevCommon when type is "braille"data: ChardevCommon when type is "testdev"data: ChardevStdio when type is "stdio"data: ChardevCommon when type is "console"data: ChardevSpiceChannel when type is "spicevmc"data: ChardevSpicePort when type is "spiceport"data: ChardevVC when type is "vc"data: ChardevRingbuf when type is "ringbuf"data: ChardevRingbuf when type is "memory"Since: 1.4 (testdev since 2.2, wctablet since 2.9)
Return info about the chardev backend just created.
Members:
pty: string (optional)name of the slave pseudoterminal device, present if and only if a chardev of type ’pty’ was created
Since: 1.4
Add a character device backend
Arguments:
id: stringthe chardev’s ID, must be unique
backend: ChardevBackendbackend type and parameters
Returns: ChardevReturn.
Since: 1.4
Example:
-> { "execute" : "chardev-add",
"arguments" : { "id" : "foo",
"backend" : { "type" : "null", "data" : {} } } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute" : "chardev-add",
"arguments" : { "id" : "bar",
"backend" : { "type" : "file",
"data" : { "out" : "/tmp/bar.log" } } } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute" : "chardev-add",
"arguments" : { "id" : "baz",
"backend" : { "type" : "pty", "data" : {} } } }
<- { "return": { "pty" : "/dev/pty/42" } }
Remove a character device backend
Arguments:
id: stringthe chardev’s ID, must exist and not be in use
Returns: Nothing on success
Since: 1.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "chardev-remove", "arguments": { "id" : "foo" } }
<- { "return": {} }
An enumeration of TPM models
Values:
tpm-tisTPM TIS model
Since: 1.5
Return a list of supported TPM models
Returns: a list of TpmModel
Since: 1.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-tpm-models" }
<- { "return": [ "tpm-tis" ] }
An enumeration of TPM types
Values:
passthroughTPM passthrough type
Since: 1.5
Return a list of supported TPM types
Returns: a list of TpmType
Since: 1.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-tpm-types" }
<- { "return": [ "passthrough" ] }
Information about the TPM passthrough type
Members:
path: string (optional)string describing the path used for accessing the TPM device
cancel-path: string (optional)string showing the TPM’s sysfs cancel file for cancellation of TPM commands while they are executing
Since: 1.5
A union referencing different TPM backend types’ configuration options
Members:
type’passthrough’ The configuration options for the TPM passthrough type
data: TPMPassthroughOptions when type is "passthrough"Since: 1.5
Information about the TPM
Members:
id: stringThe Id of the TPM
model: TpmModelThe TPM frontend model
options: TpmTypeOptionsThe TPM (backend) type configuration options
Since: 1.5
Return information about the TPM device
Returns:
TPMInfo on success
Since: 1.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-tpm" }
<- { "return":
[
{ "model": "tpm-tis",
"options":
{ "type": "passthrough",
"data":
{ "cancel-path": "/sys/class/misc/tpm0/device/cancel",
"path": "/dev/tpm0"
}
},
"id": "tpm0"
}
]
}
Specify an ACPI table on the command line to load.
At most one of file and data can be specified. The list of files specified
by any one of them is loaded and concatenated in order. If both are omitted,
data is implied.
Other fields / optargs can be used to override fields of the generic ACPI
table header; refer to the ACPI specification 5.0, section 5.2.6 System
Description Table Header. If a header field is not overridden, then the
corresponding value from the concatenated blob is used (in case of file), or
it is filled in with a hard-coded value (in case of data).
String fields are copied into the matching ACPI member from lowest address upwards, and silently truncated / NUL-padded to length.
Members:
sig: string (optional)table signature / identifier (4 bytes)
rev: int (optional)table revision number (dependent on signature, 1 byte)
oem_id: string (optional)OEM identifier (6 bytes)
oem_table_id: string (optional)OEM table identifier (8 bytes)
oem_rev: int (optional)OEM-supplied revision number (4 bytes)
asl_compiler_id: string (optional)identifier of the utility that created the table (4 bytes)
asl_compiler_rev: int (optional)revision number of the utility that created the table (4 bytes)
file: string (optional)colon (:) separated list of pathnames to load and
concatenate as table data. The resultant binary blob is expected to
have an ACPI table header. At least one file is required. This field
excludes data.
data: string (optional)colon (:) separated list of pathnames to load and
concatenate as table data. The resultant binary blob must not have an
ACPI table header. At least one file is required. This field excludes
file.
Since: 1.5
Possible types for an option parameter.
Values:
stringaccepts a character string
booleanaccepts "on" or "off"
numberaccepts a number
sizeaccepts a number followed by an optional suffix (K)ilo, (M)ega, (G)iga, (T)era
Since: 1.5
Details about a single parameter of a command line option.
Members:
name: stringparameter name
type: CommandLineParameterTypeparameter CommandLineParameterType
help: string (optional)human readable text string, not suitable for parsing.
default: string (optional)default value string (since 2.1)
Since: 1.5
Details about a command line option, including its list of parameter details
Members:
option: stringoption name
parameters: array of CommandLineParameterInfoan array of CommandLineParameterInfo
Since: 1.5
Query command line option schema.
Arguments:
option: string (optional)option name
Returns:
list of CommandLineOptionInfo for all options (or for the given
option). Returns an error if the given option doesn’t exist.
Since: 1.5
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-command-line-options",
"arguments": { "option": "option-rom" } }
<- { "return": [
{
"parameters": [
{
"name": "romfile",
"type": "string"
},
{
"name": "bootindex",
"type": "number"
}
],
"option": "option-rom"
}
]
}
A X86 32-bit register
Values:
EAXNot documented
EBXNot documented
ECXNot documented
EDXNot documented
ESPNot documented
EBPNot documented
ESINot documented
EDINot documented
Since: 1.5
Information about a X86 CPU feature word
Members:
cpuid-input-eax: intInput EAX value for CPUID instruction for that feature word
cpuid-input-ecx: int (optional)Input ECX value for CPUID instruction for that feature word
cpuid-register: X86CPURegister32Output register containing the feature bits
features: intvalue of output register, containing the feature bits
Since: 1.5
Not used by QMP; hack to let us use X86CPUFeatureWordInfoList internally
Members:
unused: array of X86CPUFeatureWordInfoNot documented
Since: 2.5
Packets receiving state
Values:
normalfilter assigned packets according to the mac-table
nonedon’t receive any assigned packet
allreceive all assigned packets
Since: 1.6
Rx-filter information for a NIC.
Members:
name: stringnet client name
promiscuous: booleanwhether promiscuous mode is enabled
multicast: RxStatemulticast receive state
unicast: RxStateunicast receive state
vlan: RxStatevlan receive state (Since 2.0)
broadcast-allowed: booleanwhether to receive broadcast
multicast-overflow: booleanmulticast table is overflowed or not
unicast-overflow: booleanunicast table is overflowed or not
main-mac: stringthe main macaddr string
vlan-table: array of inta list of active vlan id
unicast-table: array of stringa list of unicast macaddr string
multicast-table: array of stringa list of multicast macaddr string
Since: 1.6
Return rx-filter information for all NICs (or for the given NIC).
Arguments:
name: string (optional)net client name
Returns:
list of RxFilterInfo for all NICs (or for the given NIC).
Returns an error if the given name doesn’t exist, or given
NIC doesn’t support rx-filter querying, or given net client
isn’t a NIC.
Since: 1.6
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-rx-filter", "arguments": { "name": "vnet0" } }
<- { "return": [
{
"promiscuous": true,
"name": "vnet0",
"main-mac": "52:54:00:12:34:56",
"unicast": "normal",
"vlan": "normal",
"vlan-table": [
4,
0
],
"unicast-table": [
],
"multicast": "normal",
"multicast-overflow": false,
"unicast-overflow": false,
"multicast-table": [
"01:00:5e:00:00:01",
"33:33:00:00:00:01",
"33:33:ff:12:34:56"
],
"broadcast-allowed": false
}
]
}
Button of a pointer input device (mouse, tablet).
Values:
sidefront side button of a 5-button mouse (since 2.9)
extrarear side button of a 5-button mouse (since 2.9)
leftNot documented
middleNot documented
rightNot documented
wheel-upNot documented
wheel-downNot documented
Since: 2.0
Position axis of a pointer input device (mouse, tablet).
Values:
xNot documented
yNot documented
Since: 2.0
Keyboard input event.
Members:
key: KeyValueWhich key this event is for.
down: booleanTrue for key-down and false for key-up events.
Since: 2.0
Pointer button input event.
Members:
button: InputButtonWhich button this event is for.
down: booleanTrue for key-down and false for key-up events.
Since: 2.0
Pointer motion input event.
Members:
axis: InputAxisWhich axis is referenced by value.
value: intPointer position. For absolute coordinates the valid range is 0 -> 0x7ffff
Since: 2.0
Input event union.
Members:
typethe input type, one of:
data: InputKeyEvent when type is "key"data: InputBtnEvent when type is "btn"data: InputMoveEvent when type is "rel"data: InputMoveEvent when type is "abs"Since: 2.0
Send input event(s) to guest.
Arguments:
device: string (optional)display device to send event(s) to.
head: int (optional)head to send event(s) to, in case the display device supports multiple scanouts.
events: array of InputEventList of InputEvent union.
Returns: Nothing on success.
The device and head parameters can be used to send the input event
to specific input devices in case (a) multiple input devices of the
same kind are added to the virtual machine and (b) you have
configured input routing (see docs/multiseat.txt) for those input
devices. The parameters work exactly like the device and head
properties of input devices. If device is missing, only devices
that have no input routing config are admissible. If device is
specified, both input devices with and without input routing config
are admissible, but devices with input routing config take
precedence.
Since: 2.6
Note: The consoles are visible in the qom tree, under /backend/console[$index]. They have a device link and head property, so it is possible to map which console belongs to which device and display.
Example:
1. Press left mouse button.
-> { "execute": "input-send-event",
"arguments": { "device": "video0",
"events": [ { "type": "btn",
"data" : { "down": true, "button": "left" } } ] } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute": "input-send-event",
"arguments": { "device": "video0",
"events": [ { "type": "btn",
"data" : { "down": false, "button": "left" } } ] } }
<- { "return": {} }
2. Press ctrl-alt-del.
-> { "execute": "input-send-event",
"arguments": { "events": [
{ "type": "key", "data" : { "down": true,
"key": {"type": "qcode", "data": "ctrl" } } },
{ "type": "key", "data" : { "down": true,
"key": {"type": "qcode", "data": "alt" } } },
{ "type": "key", "data" : { "down": true,
"key": {"type": "qcode", "data": "delete" } } } ] } }
<- { "return": {} }
3. Move mouse pointer to absolute coordinates (20000, 400).
-> { "execute": "input-send-event" ,
"arguments": { "events": [
{ "type": "abs", "data" : { "axis": "x", "value" : 20000 } },
{ "type": "abs", "data" : { "axis": "y", "value" : 400 } } ] } }
<- { "return": {} }
Values:
nodeNot documented
Since: 2.1
A discriminated record of NUMA options. (for OptsVisitor)
Members:
type: NumaOptionsTypeNot documented
NumaNodeOptions when type is "node"Since: 2.1
Create a guest NUMA node. (for OptsVisitor)
Members:
nodeid: int (optional)NUMA node ID (increase by 1 from 0 if omitted)
cpus: array of int (optional)VCPUs belonging to this node (assign VCPUS round-robin if omitted)
mem: int (optional)memory size of this node; mutually exclusive with memdev.
Equally divide total memory among nodes if both mem and memdev are
omitted.
memdev: string (optional)memory backend object. If specified for one node, it must be specified for all nodes.
Since: 2.1
Host memory policy types
Values:
defaultrestore default policy, remove any nondefault policy
preferredset the preferred host nodes for allocation
binda strict policy that restricts memory allocation to the host nodes specified
interleavememory allocations are interleaved across the set of host nodes specified
Since: 2.1
Information about memory backend
Members:
id: string (optional)backend’s ID if backend has ’id’ property (since 2.9)
size: intmemory backend size
merge: booleanenables or disables memory merge support
dump: booleanincludes memory backend’s memory in a core dump or not
prealloc: booleanenables or disables memory preallocation
host-nodes: array of inthost nodes for its memory policy
policy: HostMemPolicymemory policy of memory backend
Since: 2.1
Returns information for all memory backends.
Returns:
a list of Memdev.
Since: 2.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-memdev" }
<- { "return": [
{
"id": "mem1",
"size": 536870912,
"merge": false,
"dump": true,
"prealloc": false,
"host-nodes": [0, 1],
"policy": "bind"
},
{
"size": 536870912,
"merge": false,
"dump": true,
"prealloc": true,
"host-nodes": [2, 3],
"policy": "preferred"
}
]
}
PCDIMMDevice state information
Members:
id: string (optional)device’s ID
addr: intphysical address, where device is mapped
size: intsize of memory that the device provides
slot: intslot number at which device is plugged in
node: intNUMA node number where device is plugged in
memdev: stringmemory backend linked with device
hotplugged: booleantrue if device was hotplugged
hotpluggable: booleantrue if device if could be added/removed while machine is running
Since: 2.1
Union containing information about a memory device
Members:
typeOne of "dimm"
data: PCDIMMDeviceInfo when type is "dimm"Since: 2.1
Lists available memory devices and their state
Since: 2.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-memory-devices" }
<- { "return": [ { "data":
{ "addr": 5368709120,
"hotpluggable": true,
"hotplugged": true,
"id": "d1",
"memdev": "/objects/memX",
"node": 0,
"size": 1073741824,
"slot": 0},
"type": "dimm"
} ] }
Values:
DIMMmemory slot
CPUlogical CPU slot (since 2.7)
OSPM Status Indication for a device
For description of possible values of source and status fields
see "_OST (OSPM Status Indication)" chapter of ACPI5.0 spec.
Members:
device: string (optional)device ID associated with slot
slot: stringslot ID, unique per slot of a given slot-type
slot-type: ACPISlotTypetype of the slot
source: intan integer containing the source event
status: intan integer containing the status code
Since: 2.1
Return a list of ACPIOSTInfo for devices that support status reporting via ACPI _OST method.
Since: 2.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-acpi-ospm-status" }
<- { "return": [ { "device": "d1", "slot": "0", "slot-type": "DIMM", "source": 1, "status": 0},
{ "slot": "1", "slot-type": "DIMM", "source": 0, "status": 0},
{ "slot": "2", "slot-type": "DIMM", "source": 0, "status": 0},
{ "slot": "3", "slot-type": "DIMM", "source": 0, "status": 0}
]}
An enumeration of the actions taken when the watchdog device’s timer is expired
Values:
resetsystem resets
shutdownsystem shutdown, note that it is similar to powerdown, which
tries to set to system status and notify guest
poweroffsystem poweroff, the emulator program exits
pausesystem pauses, similar to stop
debugsystem enters debug state
nonenothing is done
inject-nmia non-maskable interrupt is injected into the first VCPU (all VCPUS on x86) (since 2.4)
Since: 2.1
An enumeration of the I/O operation types
Values:
readread operation
writewrite operation
Since: 2.1
An enumeration of the actions taken when guest OS panic is detected
Values:
pausesystem pauses
poweroffNot documented
Since: 2.1 (poweroff since 2.8)
An enumeration of the guest panic information types
Values:
hyper-vNot documented
Since: 2.9
Information about a guest panic
Members:
type: GuestPanicInformationTypeNot documented
GuestPanicInformationHyperV when type is "hyper-v"Since: 2.9
Hyper-V specific guest panic information (HV crash MSRs)
Members:
arg1: intNot documented
arg2: intNot documented
arg3: intNot documented
arg4: intNot documented
arg5: intNot documented
Since: 2.9
This command will reset the RTC interrupt reinjection backlog. Can be used if another mechanism to synchronize guest time is in effect, for example QEMU guest agent’s guest-set-time command.
Since: 2.1
Example:
-> { "execute": "rtc-reset-reinjection" }
<- { "return": {} }
Rocker switch information.
Members:
name: stringswitch name
id: intswitch ID
ports: intnumber of front-panel ports
Since: 2.4
Return rocker switch information.
Arguments:
name: stringNot documented
Returns:
Rocker information
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-rocker", "arguments": { "name": "sw1" } }
<- { "return": {"name": "sw1", "ports": 2, "id": 1327446905938}}
An eumeration of port duplex states.
Values:
halfhalf duplex
fullfull duplex
Since: 2.4
An eumeration of port autoneg states.
Values:
offautoneg is off
onautoneg is on
Since: 2.4
Rocker switch port information.
Members:
name: stringport name
enabled: booleanport is enabled for I/O
link-up: booleanphysical link is UP on port
speed: intport link speed in Mbps
duplex: RockerPortDuplexport link duplex
autoneg: RockerPortAutonegport link autoneg
Since: 2.4
Return rocker switch port information.
Arguments:
name: stringNot documented
Returns:
a list of RockerPort information
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-rocker-ports", "arguments": { "name": "sw1" } }
<- { "return": [ {"duplex": "full", "enabled": true, "name": "sw1.1",
"autoneg": "off", "link-up": true, "speed": 10000},
{"duplex": "full", "enabled": true, "name": "sw1.2",
"autoneg": "off", "link-up": true, "speed": 10000}
]}
Rocker switch OF-DPA flow key
Members:
priority: intkey priority, 0 being lowest priority
tbl-id: intflow table ID
in-pport: int (optional)physical input port
tunnel-id: int (optional)tunnel ID
vlan-id: int (optional)VLAN ID
eth-type: int (optional)Ethernet header type
eth-src: string (optional)Ethernet header source MAC address
eth-dst: string (optional)Ethernet header destination MAC address
ip-proto: int (optional)IP Header protocol field
ip-tos: int (optional)IP header TOS field
ip-dst: string (optional)IP header destination address
Note: optional members may or may not appear in the flow key depending if they’re relevant to the flow key.
Since: 2.4
Rocker switch OF-DPA flow mask
Members:
in-pport: int (optional)physical input port
tunnel-id: int (optional)tunnel ID
vlan-id: int (optional)VLAN ID
eth-src: string (optional)Ethernet header source MAC address
eth-dst: string (optional)Ethernet header destination MAC address
ip-proto: int (optional)IP Header protocol field
ip-tos: int (optional)IP header TOS field
Note: optional members may or may not appear in the flow mask depending if they’re relevant to the flow mask.
Since: 2.4
Rocker switch OF-DPA flow action
Members:
goto-tbl: int (optional)next table ID
group-id: int (optional)group ID
tunnel-lport: int (optional)tunnel logical port ID
vlan-id: int (optional)VLAN ID
new-vlan-id: int (optional)new VLAN ID
out-pport: int (optional)physical output port
Note: optional members may or may not appear in the flow action depending if they’re relevant to the flow action.
Since: 2.4
Rocker switch OF-DPA flow
Members:
cookie: intflow unique cookie ID
hits: intcount of matches (hits) on flow
key: RockerOfDpaFlowKeyflow key
mask: RockerOfDpaFlowMaskflow mask
action: RockerOfDpaFlowActionflow action
Since: 2.4
Return rocker OF-DPA flow information.
Arguments:
name: stringswitch name
tbl-id: int (optional)flow table ID. If tbl-id is not specified, returns flow information for all tables.
Returns: rocker OF-DPA flow information
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-rocker-of-dpa-flows",
"arguments": { "name": "sw1" } }
<- { "return": [ {"key": {"in-pport": 0, "priority": 1, "tbl-id": 0},
"hits": 138,
"cookie": 0,
"action": {"goto-tbl": 10},
"mask": {"in-pport": 4294901760}
},
{...more...},
]}
Rocker switch OF-DPA group
Members:
id: intgroup unique ID
type: intgroup type
vlan-id: int (optional)VLAN ID
pport: int (optional)physical port number
index: int (optional)group index, unique with group type
out-pport: int (optional)output physical port number
group-id: int (optional)next group ID
set-vlan-id: int (optional)VLAN ID to set
pop-vlan: int (optional)pop VLAN headr from packet
group-ids: array of int (optional)list of next group IDs
set-eth-src: string (optional)set source MAC address in Ethernet header
set-eth-dst: string (optional)set destination MAC address in Ethernet header
ttl-check: int (optional)perform TTL check
Note: optional members may or may not appear in the group depending if they’re relevant to the group type.
Since: 2.4
Return rocker OF-DPA group information.
Arguments:
name: stringswitch name
type: int (optional)group type. If type is not specified, returns group information for all group types.
Returns: rocker OF-DPA group information
Since: 2.4
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-rocker-of-dpa-groups",
"arguments": { "name": "sw1" } }
<- { "return": [ {"type": 0, "out-pport": 2,
"pport": 2, "vlan-id": 3841,
"pop-vlan": 1, "id": 251723778},
{"type": 0, "out-pport": 0,
"pport": 0, "vlan-id": 3841,
"pop-vlan": 1, "id": 251723776},
{"type": 0, "out-pport": 1,
"pport": 1, "vlan-id": 3840,
"pop-vlan": 1, "id": 251658241},
{"type": 0, "out-pport": 0,
"pport": 0, "vlan-id": 3840,
"pop-vlan": 1, "id": 251658240}
]}
Mode of the replay subsystem.
Values:
nonenormal execution mode. Replay or record are not enabled.
recordrecord mode. All non-deterministic data is written into the replay log.
playreplay mode. Non-deterministic data required for system execution is read from the log.
Since: 2.5
Load the state of all devices from file. The RAM and the block devices of the VM are not loaded by this command.
Arguments:
filename: stringthe file to load the state of the devices from as binary data. See xen-save-devices-state.txt for a description of the binary format.
Since: 2.7
Example:
-> { "execute": "xen-load-devices-state",
"arguments": { "filename": "/tmp/resume" } }
<- { "return": {} }
Enable or disable replication.
Arguments:
enable: booleantrue to enable, false to disable.
primary: booleantrue for primary or false for secondary.
failover: boolean (optional)true to do failover, false to stop. but cannot be specified if ’enable’ is true. default value is false.
Returns: nothing.
Example:
-> { "execute": "xen-set-replication",
"arguments": {"enable": true, "primary": false} }
<- { "return": {} }
Since: 2.9
The result format for ’query-xen-replication-status’.
Members:
error: booleantrue if an error happened, false if replication is normal.
desc: string (optional)the human readable error description string, when
error is ’true’.
Since: 2.9
Query replication status while the vm is running.
Returns:
A ReplicationResult object showing the status.
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-xen-replication-status" }
<- { "return": { "error": false } }
Since: 2.9
Xen uses this command to notify replication to trigger a checkpoint.
Returns: nothing.
Example:
-> { "execute": "xen-colo-do-checkpoint" }
<- { "return": {} }
Since: 2.9
The struct describes capability for a specific GIC (Generic Interrupt Controller) version. These bits are not only decided by QEMU/KVM software version, but also decided by the hardware that the program is running upon.
Members:
version: intversion of GIC to be described. Currently, only 2 and 3 are supported.
emulated: booleanwhether current QEMU/hardware supports emulated GIC device in user space.
kernel: booleanwhether current QEMU/hardware supports hardware accelerated GIC device in kernel.
Since: 2.6
This command is ARM-only. It will return a list of GICCapability objects that describe its capability bits.
Returns: a list of GICCapability objects.
Since: 2.6
Example:
-> { "execute": "query-gic-capabilities" }
<- { "return": [{ "version": 2, "emulated": true, "kernel": false },
{ "version": 3, "emulated": false, "kernel": true } ] }
List of properties to be used for hotplugging a CPU instance, it should be passed by management with device_add command when a CPU is being hotplugged.
Members:
node-id: int (optional)NUMA node ID the CPU belongs to
socket-id: int (optional)socket number within node/board the CPU belongs to
core-id: int (optional)core number within socket the CPU belongs to
thread-id: int (optional)thread number within core the CPU belongs to
Note: currently there are 4 properties that could be present but management should be prepared to pass through other properties with device_add command to allow for future interface extension. This also requires the filed names to be kept in sync with the properties passed to -device/device_add.
Since: 2.7
Members:
type: stringCPU object type for usage with device_add command
props: CpuInstancePropertieslist of properties to be used for hotplugging CPU
vcpus-count: intnumber of logical VCPU threads HotpluggableCPU provides
qom-path: string (optional)link to existing CPU object if CPU is present or omitted if CPU is not present.
Since: 2.7
Returns: a list of HotpluggableCPU objects.
Since: 2.7
Example:
For pseries machine type started with -smp 2,cores=2,maxcpus=4 -cpu POWER8:
-> { "execute": "query-hotpluggable-cpus" }
<- {"return": [
{ "props": { "core": 8 }, "type": "POWER8-spapr-cpu-core",
"vcpus-count": 1 },
{ "props": { "core": 0 }, "type": "POWER8-spapr-cpu-core",
"vcpus-count": 1, "qom-path": "/machine/unattached/device[0]"}
]}'
For pc machine type started with -smp 1,maxcpus=2:
-> { "execute": "query-hotpluggable-cpus" }
<- {"return": [
{
"type": "qemu64-x86_64-cpu", "vcpus-count": 1,
"props": {"core-id": 0, "socket-id": 1, "thread-id": 0}
},
{
"qom-path": "/machine/unattached/device[0]",
"type": "qemu64-x86_64-cpu", "vcpus-count": 1,
"props": {"core-id": 0, "socket-id": 0, "thread-id": 0}
}
]}
GUID information.
Members:
guid: stringthe globally unique identifier
Since: 2.9
Show Virtual Machine Generation ID
Since 2.9
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