Mea culpa. Dan's patch wound up with the wrong import path because I
re-ordered my most recent pull request and missed that this needed a fix
on rebase.
Fixes: 43912529
Reported-by: Kashyap Chamarthy <kchamart@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Kashyap Chamarthy <kchamart@redhat.com>
Message-id: 20220225170828.3418305-1-jsnow@redhat.com
Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
With the current 'qmp-shell' tool developers must first spawn QEMU with
a suitable -qmp arg and then spawn qmp-shell in a separate terminal
pointing to the right socket.
With 'qmp-shell-wrap' developers can ignore QMP sockets entirely and
just pass the QEMU command and arguments they want. The program will
listen on a UNIX socket and tell QEMU to connect QMP to that.
For example, this:
# qmp-shell-wrap -- qemu-system-x86_64 -display none
Is roughly equivalent of running:
# qemu-system-x86_64 -display none -qmp qmp-shell-1234 &
# qmp-shell qmp-shell-1234
Except that 'qmp-shell-wrap' switches the socket peers around so that
it is the UNIX socket server and QEMU is the socket client. This makes
QEMU reliably go away when qmp-shell-wrap exits, closing the server
socket.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrangé <berrange@redhat.com>
Message-id: 20220128161157.36261-2-berrange@redhat.com
[Edited for rebase. --js]
Signed-off-by: John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>