qemu/QMP
Daniel P. Berrange 973603a813 Add event notification for guest balloon changes
After setting a balloon target value, applications have to
continually poll 'query-balloon' to determine whether the
guest has reacted to this request. The virtio-balloon backend
knows exactly when the guest has reacted though, and thus it
is possible to emit a JSON event to tell the mgmt application
whenever the guest balloon changes.

This introduces a new 'qemu_balloon_changed()' API which is
to be called by balloon driver backends, whenever they have
a change in balloon value. This takes the 'actual' balloon
value, as would be found in the BalloonInfo struct.

The qemu_balloon_change API emits a JSON monitor event which
looks like:

  {"timestamp": {"seconds": 1337162462, "microseconds": 814521},
   "event": "BALLOON_CHANGE", "data": {"actual": 944766976}}

* balloon.c, balloon.h: Introduce qemu_balloon_changed() for
  emitting balloon change events on the monitor
* hw/virtio-balloon.c: Invoke qemu_balloon_changed() whenever
  the guest changes the balloon actual value
* monitor.c, monitor.h: Define QEVENT_BALLOON_CHANGE

Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
Acked-by: Amit Shah <amit.shah@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Luiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com>
2012-06-15 13:34:50 -03:00
..
qmp
qmp-events.txt Add event notification for guest balloon changes 2012-06-15 13:34:50 -03:00
qmp-shell
qmp-spec.txt qmp: document strict parsing 2012-03-27 09:15:52 -03:00
qmp.py
qom-fuse qom: quick and dirty QOM filesystem based on FUSE 2012-04-26 13:14:57 -05:00
qom-get qom: add test tools 2012-02-22 12:18:26 -06:00
qom-list qom: add test tools 2012-02-22 12:18:26 -06:00
qom-set qom: add test tools 2012-02-22 12:18:26 -06:00
README

                          QEMU Monitor Protocol
                          =====================

Introduction
-------------

The QEMU Monitor Protocol (QMP) allows applications to communicate with
QEMU's Monitor.

QMP is JSON[1] based and currently has the following features:

- Lightweight, text-based, easy to parse data format
- Asynchronous messages support (ie. events)
- Capabilities Negotiation

For detailed information on QMP's usage, please, refer to the following files:

o qmp-spec.txt      QEMU Monitor Protocol current specification
o qmp-commands.txt  QMP supported commands (auto-generated at build-time)
o qmp-events.txt    List of available asynchronous events

There is also a simple Python script called 'qmp-shell' available.

IMPORTANT: It's strongly recommended to read the 'Stability Considerations'
section in the qmp-commands.txt file before making any serious use of QMP.


[1] http://www.json.org

Usage
-----

To enable QMP, you need a QEMU monitor instance in "control mode". There are
two ways of doing this.

The simplest one is using the '-qmp' command-line option. The following
example makes QMP available on localhost port 4444:

  $ qemu [...] -qmp tcp:localhost:4444,server

However, in order to have more complex combinations, like multiple monitors,
the '-mon' command-line option should be used along with the '-chardev' one.
For instance, the following example creates one user monitor on stdio and one
QMP monitor on localhost port 4444.

   $ qemu [...] -chardev stdio,id=mon0 -mon chardev=mon0,mode=readline \
                -chardev socket,id=mon1,host=localhost,port=4444,server \
                -mon chardev=mon1,mode=control

Please, refer to QEMU's manpage for more information.

Simple Testing
--------------

To manually test QMP one can connect with telnet and issue commands by hand:

$ telnet localhost 4444
Trying 127.0.0.1...
Connected to localhost.
Escape character is '^]'.
{"QMP": {"version": {"qemu": {"micro": 50, "minor": 13, "major": 0}, "package": ""}, "capabilities": []}}
{ "execute": "qmp_capabilities" }
{"return": {}}
{ "execute": "query-version" }
{"return": {"qemu": {"micro": 50, "minor": 13, "major": 0}, "package": ""}}

Development Process
-------------------

When changing QMP's interface (by adding new commands, events or modifying
existing ones) it's mandatory to update the relevant documentation, which is
one (or more) of the files listed in the 'Introduction' section*.

Also, it's strongly recommended to send the documentation patch first, before
doing any code change. This is so because:

  1. Avoids the code dictating the interface

  2. Review can improve your interface.  Letting that happen before
     you implement it can save you work.

* The qmp-commands.txt file is generated from the qmp-commands.hx one, which
  is the file that should be edited.

Homepage
--------

http://wiki.qemu.org/QMP