Scroll to navigation

QEMU-QMP-REF(7) QEMU QEMU-QMP-REF(7)

NAME

qemu-qmp-ref - QEMU QMP Reference Manual

Contents

QEMU QMP Reference Manual
Introduction
This document describes all commands currently supported by QMP.

QMP errors
QapiErrorClass (Enum)

Common data types
  • IoOperationType (Enum)
  • OnOffAuto (Enum)
  • OnOffSplit (Enum)
  • String (Object)
  • StrOrNull (Alternate)
  • OffAutoPCIBAR (Enum)
  • PCIELinkSpeed (Enum)
  • PCIELinkWidth (Enum)
  • HostMemPolicy (Enum)
  • NetFilterDirection (Enum)
  • GrabToggleKeys (Enum)
  • HumanReadableText (Object)

Socket data types
  • NetworkAddressFamily (Enum)
  • InetSocketAddressBase (Object)
  • InetSocketAddress (Object)
  • UnixSocketAddress (Object)
  • VsockSocketAddress (Object)
  • InetSocketAddressWrapper (Object)
  • UnixSocketAddressWrapper (Object)
  • VsockSocketAddressWrapper (Object)
  • StringWrapper (Object)
  • SocketAddressLegacy (Object)
  • SocketAddressType (Enum)
  • SocketAddress (Object)

VM run state
  • RunState (Enum)
  • ShutdownCause (Enum)
  • StatusInfo (Object)
  • query-status (Command)
  • SHUTDOWN (Event)
  • POWERDOWN (Event)
  • RESET (Event)
  • STOP (Event)
  • RESUME (Event)
  • SUSPEND (Event)
  • SUSPEND_DISK (Event)
  • WAKEUP (Event)
  • WATCHDOG (Event)
  • WatchdogAction (Enum)
  • RebootAction (Enum)
  • ShutdownAction (Enum)
  • PanicAction (Enum)
  • watchdog-set-action (Command)
  • set-action (Command)
  • GUEST_PANICKED (Event)
  • GUEST_CRASHLOADED (Event)
  • GuestPanicAction (Enum)
  • GuestPanicInformationType (Enum)
  • GuestPanicInformation (Object)
  • GuestPanicInformationHyperV (Object)
  • S390CrashReason (Enum)
  • GuestPanicInformationS390 (Object)
  • MEMORY_FAILURE (Event)
  • MemoryFailureRecipient (Enum)
  • MemoryFailureAction (Enum)
  • MemoryFailureFlags (Object)
  • NotifyVmexitOption (Enum)

Cryptography
  • QCryptoTLSCredsEndpoint (Enum)
  • QCryptoSecretFormat (Enum)
  • QCryptoHashAlgorithm (Enum)
  • QCryptoCipherAlgorithm (Enum)
  • QCryptoCipherMode (Enum)
  • QCryptoIVGenAlgorithm (Enum)
  • QCryptoBlockFormat (Enum)
  • QCryptoBlockOptionsBase (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockOptionsQCow (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockOptionsLUKS (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockCreateOptionsLUKS (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockOpenOptions (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockCreateOptions (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockInfoBase (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockInfoLUKSSlot (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockInfo (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockLUKSKeyslotState (Enum)
  • QCryptoBlockAmendOptionsLUKS (Object)
  • QCryptoBlockAmendOptions (Object)
  • SecretCommonProperties (Object)
  • SecretProperties (Object)
  • SecretKeyringProperties (Object)
  • TlsCredsProperties (Object)
  • TlsCredsAnonProperties (Object)
  • TlsCredsPskProperties (Object)
  • TlsCredsX509Properties (Object)
  • QCryptoAkCipherAlgorithm (Enum)
  • QCryptoAkCipherKeyType (Enum)
  • QCryptoRSAPaddingAlgorithm (Enum)
  • QCryptoAkCipherOptionsRSA (Object)
  • QCryptoAkCipherOptions (Object)

Background jobs
  • JobType (Enum)
  • JobStatus (Enum)
  • JobVerb (Enum)
  • JOB_STATUS_CHANGE (Event)
  • job-pause (Command)
  • job-resume (Command)
  • job-cancel (Command)
  • job-complete (Command)
  • job-dismiss (Command)
  • job-finalize (Command)
  • JobInfo (Object)
  • query-jobs (Command)

Block devices
  • Block core (VM unrelated)
  • Additional block stuff (VM related)
  • Block device exports

Character devices
  • ChardevInfo (Object)
  • query-chardev (Command)
  • ChardevBackendInfo (Object)
  • query-chardev-backends (Command)
  • DataFormat (Enum)
  • ringbuf-write (Command)
  • ringbuf-read (Command)
  • ChardevCommon (Object)
  • ChardevFile (Object)
  • ChardevHostdev (Object)
  • ChardevSocket (Object)
  • ChardevUdp (Object)
  • ChardevMux (Object)
  • ChardevStdio (Object)
  • ChardevSpiceChannel (Object)
  • ChardevSpicePort (Object)
  • ChardevDBus (Object)
  • ChardevVC (Object)
  • ChardevRingbuf (Object)
  • ChardevQemuVDAgent (Object)
  • ChardevBackendKind (Enum)
  • ChardevFileWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevHostdevWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevSocketWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevUdpWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevCommonWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevMuxWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevStdioWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevSpiceChannelWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevSpicePortWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevQemuVDAgentWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevDBusWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevVCWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevRingbufWrapper (Object)
  • ChardevBackend (Object)
  • ChardevReturn (Object)
  • chardev-add (Command)
  • chardev-change (Command)
  • chardev-remove (Command)
  • chardev-send-break (Command)
  • VSERPORT_CHANGE (Event)

Dump guest memory
  • DumpGuestMemoryFormat (Enum)
  • dump-guest-memory (Command)
  • DumpStatus (Enum)
  • DumpQueryResult (Object)
  • query-dump (Command)
  • DUMP_COMPLETED (Event)
  • DumpGuestMemoryCapability (Object)
  • query-dump-guest-memory-capability (Command)

Net devices
  • set_link (Command)
  • netdev_add (Command)
  • netdev_del (Command)
  • NetLegacyNicOptions (Object)
  • NetdevUserOptions (Object)
  • NetdevTapOptions (Object)
  • NetdevSocketOptions (Object)
  • NetdevL2TPv3Options (Object)
  • NetdevVdeOptions (Object)
  • NetdevBridgeOptions (Object)
  • NetdevHubPortOptions (Object)
  • NetdevNetmapOptions (Object)
  • AFXDPMode (Enum)
  • NetdevAFXDPOptions (Object)
  • NetdevVhostUserOptions (Object)
  • NetdevVhostVDPAOptions (Object)
  • NetdevVmnetHostOptions (Object)
  • NetdevVmnetSharedOptions (Object)
  • NetdevVmnetBridgedOptions (Object)
  • NetdevStreamOptions (Object)
  • NetdevDgramOptions (Object)
  • NetClientDriver (Enum)
  • Netdev (Object)
  • RxState (Enum)
  • RxFilterInfo (Object)
  • query-rx-filter (Command)
  • NIC_RX_FILTER_CHANGED (Event)
  • AnnounceParameters (Object)
  • announce-self (Command)
  • FAILOVER_NEGOTIATED (Event)
  • NETDEV_STREAM_CONNECTED (Event)
  • NETDEV_STREAM_DISCONNECTED (Event)

RDMA device
RDMA_GID_STATUS_CHANGED (Event)

Rocker switch device
  • RockerSwitch (Object)
  • query-rocker (Command)
  • RockerPortDuplex (Enum)
  • RockerPortAutoneg (Enum)
  • RockerPort (Object)
  • query-rocker-ports (Command)
  • RockerOfDpaFlowKey (Object)
  • RockerOfDpaFlowMask (Object)
  • RockerOfDpaFlowAction (Object)
  • RockerOfDpaFlow (Object)
  • query-rocker-of-dpa-flows (Command)
  • RockerOfDpaGroup (Object)
  • query-rocker-of-dpa-groups (Command)

TPM (trusted platform module) devices
  • TpmModel (Enum)
  • query-tpm-models (Command)
  • TpmType (Enum)
  • query-tpm-types (Command)
  • TPMPassthroughOptions (Object)
  • TPMEmulatorOptions (Object)
  • TPMPassthroughOptionsWrapper (Object)
  • TPMEmulatorOptionsWrapper (Object)
  • TpmTypeOptions (Object)
  • TPMInfo (Object)
  • query-tpm (Command)

Remote desktop
  • DisplayProtocol (Enum)
  • SetPasswordAction (Enum)
  • SetPasswordOptions (Object)
  • SetPasswordOptionsVnc (Object)
  • set_password (Command)
  • ExpirePasswordOptions (Object)
  • ExpirePasswordOptionsVnc (Object)
  • expire_password (Command)
  • ImageFormat (Enum)
  • screendump (Command)
  • Spice
  • VNC

Input
  • MouseInfo (Object)
  • query-mice (Command)
  • QKeyCode (Enum)
  • KeyValueKind (Enum)
  • IntWrapper (Object)
  • QKeyCodeWrapper (Object)
  • KeyValue (Object)
  • send-key (Command)
  • InputButton (Enum)
  • InputAxis (Enum)
  • InputMultiTouchType (Enum)
  • InputKeyEvent (Object)
  • InputBtnEvent (Object)
  • InputMoveEvent (Object)
  • InputMultiTouchEvent (Object)
  • InputEventKind (Enum)
  • InputKeyEventWrapper (Object)
  • InputBtnEventWrapper (Object)
  • InputMoveEventWrapper (Object)
  • InputMultiTouchEventWrapper (Object)
  • InputEvent (Object)
  • input-send-event (Command)
  • DisplayGTK (Object)
  • DisplayEGLHeadless (Object)
  • DisplayDBus (Object)
  • DisplayGLMode (Enum)
  • DisplayCurses (Object)
  • DisplayCocoa (Object)
  • HotKeyMod (Enum)
  • DisplaySDL (Object)
  • DisplayType (Enum)
  • DisplayOptions (Object)
  • query-display-options (Command)
  • DisplayReloadType (Enum)
  • DisplayReloadOptionsVNC (Object)
  • DisplayReloadOptions (Object)
  • display-reload (Command)
  • DisplayUpdateType (Enum)
  • DisplayUpdateOptionsVNC (Object)
  • DisplayUpdateOptions (Object)
  • display-update (Command)
  • client_migrate_info (Command)

User authorization
  • QAuthZListPolicy (Enum)
  • QAuthZListFormat (Enum)
  • QAuthZListRule (Object)
  • AuthZListProperties (Object)
  • AuthZListFileProperties (Object)
  • AuthZPAMProperties (Object)
  • AuthZSimpleProperties (Object)

Migration
  • MigrationStats (Object)
  • XBZRLECacheStats (Object)
  • CompressionStats (Object)
  • MigrationStatus (Enum)
  • VfioStats (Object)
  • MigrationInfo (Object)
  • query-migrate (Command)
  • MigrationCapability (Enum)
  • MigrationCapabilityStatus (Object)
  • migrate-set-capabilities (Command)
  • query-migrate-capabilities (Command)
  • MultiFDCompression (Enum)
  • MigMode (Enum)
  • BitmapMigrationBitmapAliasTransform (Object)
  • BitmapMigrationBitmapAlias (Object)
  • BitmapMigrationNodeAlias (Object)
  • MigrationParameter (Enum)
  • MigrateSetParameters (Object)
  • migrate-set-parameters (Command)
  • MigrationParameters (Object)
  • query-migrate-parameters (Command)
  • migrate-start-postcopy (Command)
  • MIGRATION (Event)
  • MIGRATION_PASS (Event)
  • COLOMessage (Enum)
  • COLOMode (Enum)
  • FailoverStatus (Enum)
  • COLO_EXIT (Event)
  • COLOExitReason (Enum)
  • x-colo-lost-heartbeat (Command)
  • migrate_cancel (Command)
  • migrate-continue (Command)
  • MigrationAddressType (Enum)
  • FileMigrationArgs (Object)
  • MigrationExecCommand (Object)
  • MigrationAddress (Object)
  • MigrationChannelType (Enum)
  • MigrationChannel (Object)
  • migrate (Command)
  • migrate-incoming (Command)
  • xen-save-devices-state (Command)
  • xen-set-global-dirty-log (Command)
  • xen-load-devices-state (Command)
  • xen-set-replication (Command)
  • ReplicationStatus (Object)
  • query-xen-replication-status (Command)
  • xen-colo-do-checkpoint (Command)
  • COLOStatus (Object)
  • query-colo-status (Command)
  • migrate-recover (Command)
  • migrate-pause (Command)
  • UNPLUG_PRIMARY (Event)
  • DirtyRateVcpu (Object)
  • DirtyRateStatus (Enum)
  • DirtyRateMeasureMode (Enum)
  • TimeUnit (Enum)
  • DirtyRateInfo (Object)
  • calc-dirty-rate (Command)
  • query-dirty-rate (Command)
  • DirtyLimitInfo (Object)
  • set-vcpu-dirty-limit (Command)
  • cancel-vcpu-dirty-limit (Command)
  • query-vcpu-dirty-limit (Command)
  • MigrationThreadInfo (Object)
  • query-migrationthreads (Command)
  • snapshot-save (Command)
  • snapshot-load (Command)
  • snapshot-delete (Command)

Transactions
  • Abort (Object)
  • ActionCompletionMode (Enum)
  • TransactionActionKind (Enum)
  • AbortWrapper (Object)
  • BlockDirtyBitmapAddWrapper (Object)
  • BlockDirtyBitmapWrapper (Object)
  • BlockDirtyBitmapMergeWrapper (Object)
  • BlockdevBackupWrapper (Object)
  • BlockdevSnapshotWrapper (Object)
  • BlockdevSnapshotInternalWrapper (Object)
  • BlockdevSnapshotSyncWrapper (Object)
  • DriveBackupWrapper (Object)
  • TransactionAction (Object)
  • TransactionProperties (Object)
  • transaction (Command)

Tracing
  • TraceEventState (Enum)
  • TraceEventInfo (Object)
  • trace-event-get-state (Command)
  • trace-event-set-state (Command)

Compatibility policy
  • CompatPolicyInput (Enum)
  • CompatPolicyOutput (Enum)
  • CompatPolicy (Object)

QMP monitor control
  • qmp_capabilities (Command)
  • QMPCapability (Enum)
  • VersionTriple (Object)
  • VersionInfo (Object)
  • query-version (Command)
  • CommandInfo (Object)
  • query-commands (Command)
  • quit (Command)
  • MonitorMode (Enum)
  • MonitorOptions (Object)

QMP introspection
  • query-qmp-schema (Command)
  • SchemaMetaType (Enum)
  • SchemaInfo (Object)
  • SchemaInfoBuiltin (Object)
  • JSONType (Enum)
  • SchemaInfoEnum (Object)
  • SchemaInfoEnumMember (Object)
  • SchemaInfoArray (Object)
  • SchemaInfoObject (Object)
  • SchemaInfoObjectMember (Object)
  • SchemaInfoObjectVariant (Object)
  • SchemaInfoAlternate (Object)
  • SchemaInfoAlternateMember (Object)
  • SchemaInfoCommand (Object)
  • SchemaInfoEvent (Object)

QEMU Object Model (QOM)
  • ObjectPropertyInfo (Object)
  • qom-list (Command)
  • qom-get (Command)
  • qom-set (Command)
  • ObjectTypeInfo (Object)
  • qom-list-types (Command)
  • qom-list-properties (Command)
  • CanHostSocketcanProperties (Object)
  • ColoCompareProperties (Object)
  • CryptodevBackendProperties (Object)
  • CryptodevVhostUserProperties (Object)
  • DBusVMStateProperties (Object)
  • NetfilterInsert (Enum)
  • NetfilterProperties (Object)
  • FilterBufferProperties (Object)
  • FilterDumpProperties (Object)
  • FilterMirrorProperties (Object)
  • FilterRedirectorProperties (Object)
  • FilterRewriterProperties (Object)
  • InputBarrierProperties (Object)
  • InputLinuxProperties (Object)
  • EventLoopBaseProperties (Object)
  • IothreadProperties (Object)
  • MainLoopProperties (Object)
  • MemoryBackendProperties (Object)
  • MemoryBackendFileProperties (Object)
  • MemoryBackendMemfdProperties (Object)
  • MemoryBackendEpcProperties (Object)
  • PrManagerHelperProperties (Object)
  • QtestProperties (Object)
  • RemoteObjectProperties (Object)
  • VfioUserServerProperties (Object)
  • IOMMUFDProperties (Object)
  • RngProperties (Object)
  • RngEgdProperties (Object)
  • RngRandomProperties (Object)
  • SevGuestProperties (Object)
  • ThreadContextProperties (Object)
  • ObjectType (Enum)
  • ObjectOptions (Object)
  • object-add (Command)
  • object-del (Command)

Device infrastructure (qdev)
  • device-list-properties (Command)
  • device_add (Command)
  • device_del (Command)
  • DEVICE_DELETED (Event)
  • DEVICE_UNPLUG_GUEST_ERROR (Event)

Machines S390 data types
CpuS390Entitlement (Enum)

Machines
  • SysEmuTarget (Enum)
  • CpuS390State (Enum)
  • CpuInfoS390 (Object)
  • CpuInfoFast (Object)
  • query-cpus-fast (Command)
  • MachineInfo (Object)
  • query-machines (Command)
  • CurrentMachineParams (Object)
  • query-current-machine (Command)
  • TargetInfo (Object)
  • query-target (Command)
  • UuidInfo (Object)
  • query-uuid (Command)
  • GuidInfo (Object)
  • query-vm-generation-id (Command)
  • system_reset (Command)
  • system_powerdown (Command)
  • system_wakeup (Command)
  • LostTickPolicy (Enum)
  • inject-nmi (Command)
  • KvmInfo (Object)
  • query-kvm (Command)
  • NumaOptionsType (Enum)
  • NumaOptions (Object)
  • NumaNodeOptions (Object)
  • NumaDistOptions (Object)
  • CXLFixedMemoryWindowOptions (Object)
  • CXLFMWProperties (Object)
  • X86CPURegister32 (Enum)
  • X86CPUFeatureWordInfo (Object)
  • DummyForceArrays (Object)
  • NumaCpuOptions (Object)
  • HmatLBMemoryHierarchy (Enum)
  • HmatLBDataType (Enum)
  • NumaHmatLBOptions (Object)
  • HmatCacheAssociativity (Enum)
  • HmatCacheWritePolicy (Enum)
  • NumaHmatCacheOptions (Object)
  • memsave (Command)
  • pmemsave (Command)
  • Memdev (Object)
  • query-memdev (Command)
  • CpuInstanceProperties (Object)
  • HotpluggableCPU (Object)
  • query-hotpluggable-cpus (Command)
  • set-numa-node (Command)
  • balloon (Command)
  • BalloonInfo (Object)
  • query-balloon (Command)
  • BALLOON_CHANGE (Event)
  • HvBalloonInfo (Object)
  • query-hv-balloon-status-report (Command)
  • HV_BALLOON_STATUS_REPORT (Event)
  • MemoryInfo (Object)
  • query-memory-size-summary (Command)
  • PCDIMMDeviceInfo (Object)
  • VirtioPMEMDeviceInfo (Object)
  • VirtioMEMDeviceInfo (Object)
  • SgxEPCDeviceInfo (Object)
  • HvBalloonDeviceInfo (Object)
  • MemoryDeviceInfoKind (Enum)
  • PCDIMMDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)
  • VirtioPMEMDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)
  • VirtioMEMDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)
  • SgxEPCDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)
  • HvBalloonDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)
  • MemoryDeviceInfo (Object)
  • SgxEPC (Object)
  • SgxEPCProperties (Object)
  • query-memory-devices (Command)
  • MEMORY_DEVICE_SIZE_CHANGE (Event)
  • MEM_UNPLUG_ERROR (Event)
  • BootConfiguration (Object)
  • SMPConfiguration (Object)
  • x-query-irq (Command)
  • x-query-jit (Command)
  • x-query-numa (Command)
  • x-query-opcount (Command)
  • x-query-ramblock (Command)
  • x-query-rdma (Command)
  • x-query-roms (Command)
  • x-query-usb (Command)
  • SmbiosEntryPointType (Enum)
  • MemorySizeConfiguration (Object)
  • dumpdtb (Command)
  • CpuModelInfo (Object)
  • CpuModelExpansionType (Enum)
  • CpuModelCompareResult (Enum)
  • CpuModelBaselineInfo (Object)
  • CpuModelCompareInfo (Object)
  • query-cpu-model-comparison (Command)
  • query-cpu-model-baseline (Command)
  • CpuModelExpansionInfo (Object)
  • query-cpu-model-expansion (Command)
  • CpuDefinitionInfo (Object)
  • query-cpu-definitions (Command)
  • CpuS390Polarization (Enum)
  • set-cpu-topology (Command)
  • CPU_POLARIZATION_CHANGE (Event)
  • CpuPolarizationInfo (Object)
  • query-s390x-cpu-polarization (Command)

Record/replay
  • ReplayMode (Enum)
  • ReplayInfo (Object)
  • query-replay (Command)
  • replay-break (Command)
  • replay-delete-break (Command)
  • replay-seek (Command)

Yank feature
  • YankInstanceType (Enum)
  • YankInstanceBlockNode (Object)
  • YankInstanceChardev (Object)
  • YankInstance (Object)
  • yank (Command)
  • query-yank (Command)

Miscellanea
  • add_client (Command)
  • NameInfo (Object)
  • query-name (Command)
  • IOThreadInfo (Object)
  • query-iothreads (Command)
  • stop (Command)
  • cont (Command)
  • x-exit-preconfig (Command)
  • human-monitor-command (Command)
  • getfd (Command)
  • get-win32-socket (Command)
  • closefd (Command)
  • AddfdInfo (Object)
  • add-fd (Command)
  • remove-fd (Command)
  • FdsetFdInfo (Object)
  • FdsetInfo (Object)
  • query-fdsets (Command)
  • CommandLineParameterType (Enum)
  • CommandLineParameterInfo (Object)
  • CommandLineOptionInfo (Object)
  • query-command-line-options (Command)
  • RTC_CHANGE (Event)
  • VFU_CLIENT_HANGUP (Event)
  • rtc-reset-reinjection (Command)
  • SevState (Enum)
  • SevInfo (Object)
  • query-sev (Command)
  • SevLaunchMeasureInfo (Object)
  • query-sev-launch-measure (Command)
  • SevCapability (Object)
  • query-sev-capabilities (Command)
  • sev-inject-launch-secret (Command)
  • SevAttestationReport (Object)
  • query-sev-attestation-report (Command)
  • dump-skeys (Command)
  • GICCapability (Object)
  • query-gic-capabilities (Command)
  • SGXEPCSection (Object)
  • SGXInfo (Object)
  • query-sgx (Command)
  • query-sgx-capabilities (Command)
  • EvtchnPortType (Enum)
  • EvtchnInfo (Object)
  • xen-event-list (Command)
  • xen-event-inject (Command)

Audio
  • AudiodevPerDirectionOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevGenericOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevAlsaPerDirectionOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevAlsaOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevSndioOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevCoreaudioPerDirectionOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevCoreaudioOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevDsoundOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevJackPerDirectionOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevJackOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevOssPerDirectionOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevOssOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevPaPerDirectionOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevPaOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevPipewirePerDirectionOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevPipewireOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevSdlPerDirectionOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevSdlOptions (Object)
  • AudiodevWavOptions (Object)
  • AudioFormat (Enum)
  • AudiodevDriver (Enum)
  • Audiodev (Object)
  • query-audiodevs (Command)

ACPI
  • AcpiTableOptions (Object)
  • ACPISlotType (Enum)
  • ACPIOSTInfo (Object)
  • query-acpi-ospm-status (Command)
  • ACPI_DEVICE_OST (Event)

PCI
  • PciMemoryRange (Object)
  • PciMemoryRegion (Object)
  • PciBusInfo (Object)
  • PciBridgeInfo (Object)
  • PciDeviceClass (Object)
  • PciDeviceId (Object)
  • PciDeviceInfo (Object)
  • PciInfo (Object)
  • query-pci (Command)

Statistics
  • StatsType (Enum)
  • StatsUnit (Enum)
  • StatsProvider (Enum)
  • StatsTarget (Enum)
  • StatsRequest (Object)
  • StatsVCPUFilter (Object)
  • StatsFilter (Object)
  • StatsValue (Alternate)
  • Stats (Object)
  • StatsResult (Object)
  • query-stats (Command)
  • StatsSchemaValue (Object)
  • StatsSchema (Object)
  • query-stats-schemas (Command)

Virtio devices
  • VirtioInfo (Object)
  • x-query-virtio (Command)
  • VhostStatus (Object)
  • VirtioStatus (Object)
  • x-query-virtio-status (Command)
  • VirtioDeviceStatus (Object)
  • VhostDeviceProtocols (Object)
  • VirtioDeviceFeatures (Object)
  • VirtQueueStatus (Object)
  • x-query-virtio-queue-status (Command)
  • VirtVhostQueueStatus (Object)
  • x-query-virtio-vhost-queue-status (Command)
  • VirtioRingDesc (Object)
  • VirtioRingAvail (Object)
  • VirtioRingUsed (Object)
  • VirtioQueueElement (Object)
  • x-query-virtio-queue-element (Command)
  • IOThreadVirtQueueMapping (Object)
  • DummyVirtioForceArrays (Object)

Cryptography devices
  • QCryptodevBackendAlgType (Enum)
  • QCryptodevBackendServiceType (Enum)
  • QCryptodevBackendType (Enum)
  • QCryptodevBackendClient (Object)
  • QCryptodevInfo (Object)
  • query-cryptodev (Command)

CXL devices
  • CxlEventLog (Enum)
  • cxl-inject-general-media-event (Command)
  • cxl-inject-dram-event (Command)
  • cxl-inject-memory-module-event (Command)
  • cxl-inject-poison (Command)
  • CxlUncorErrorType (Enum)
  • CXLUncorErrorRecord (Object)
  • cxl-inject-uncorrectable-errors (Command)
  • CxlCorErrorType (Enum)
  • cxl-inject-correctable-error (Command)



INTRODUCTION

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 QEMU Machine Protocol Specification for detailed information on the Server command and response formats.

QMP ERRORS

QapiErrorClass (Enum)

QEMU error classes

Values

this is used for errors that don't require a specific error class. This should be the default case for most errors
the requested command has not been found
a device has failed to be become active
the requested device has not been found
the requested operation can't be fulfilled because a required KVM capability is missing

Since

1.2

COMMON DATA TYPES

IoOperationType (Enum)

An enumeration of the I/O operation types

Values

read operation
write operation

Since

2.1

OnOffAuto (Enum)

An enumeration of three options: on, off, and auto

Values

QEMU selects the value between on and off
Enabled
Disabled

Since

2.2

OnOffSplit (Enum)

An enumeration of three values: on, off, and split

Values

Enabled
Disabled
Mixed

Since

2.6

String (Object)

A fat type wrapping 'str', to be embedded in lists.

Members

Not documented

Since

1.2

StrOrNull (Alternate)

This is a string value or the explicit lack of a string (null pointer in C). Intended for cases when 'optional absent' already has a different meaning.

Members

the string value
no string value

Since

2.10

OffAutoPCIBAR (Enum)

An enumeration of options for specifying a PCI BAR

Values

The specified feature is disabled
The PCI BAR for the feature is automatically selected
PCI BAR0 is used for the feature
PCI BAR1 is used for the feature
PCI BAR2 is used for the feature
PCI BAR3 is used for the feature
PCI BAR4 is used for the feature
PCI BAR5 is used for the feature

Since

2.12

PCIELinkSpeed (Enum)

An enumeration of PCIe link speeds in units of GT/s

Values

2_5
2.5GT/s
5
5.0GT/s
8
8.0GT/s
16
16.0GT/s

Since

4.0

PCIELinkWidth (Enum)

An enumeration of PCIe link width

Values

1
x1
2
x2
4
x4
8
x8
12
x12
16
x16
32
x32

Since

4.0

HostMemPolicy (Enum)

Host memory policy types

Values

restore default policy, remove any nondefault policy
set the preferred host nodes for allocation
a strict policy that restricts memory allocation to the host nodes specified
memory allocations are interleaved across the set of host nodes specified

Since

2.1

NetFilterDirection (Enum)

Indicates whether a netfilter is attached to a netdev's transmit queue or receive queue or both.

Values

the filter is attached both to the receive and the transmit queue of the netdev (default).
the filter is attached to the receive queue of the netdev, where it will receive packets sent to the netdev.
the filter is attached to the transmit queue of the netdev, where it will receive packets sent by the netdev.

Since

2.5

GrabToggleKeys (Enum)

Keys to toggle input-linux between host and guest.

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

4.0

HumanReadableText (Object)

Members

Formatted output intended for humans.

Since

6.2

SOCKET DATA TYPES

NetworkAddressFamily (Enum)

The network address family

Values

IPV4 family
IPV6 family
unix socket
vsock family (since 2.8)
otherwise

Since

2.1

InetSocketAddressBase (Object)

Members

host part of the address
port part of the address

InetSocketAddress (Object)

Captures a socket address or address range in the Internet namespace.

Members

true if the host/port are guaranteed to be numeric, false if name resolution should be attempted. Defaults to false. (Since 2.9)
If present, this is range of possible addresses, with port between port and to.
whether to accept IPv4 addresses, default try both IPv4 and IPv6
whether to accept IPv6 addresses, default try both IPv4 and IPv6
enable keep-alive when connecting to this socket. Not supported for passive sockets. (Since 4.2)
enable multi-path TCP. (Since 6.1)

Since

1.3

UnixSocketAddress (Object)

Captures a socket address in the local ("Unix socket") namespace.

Members

filesystem path to use
if true, this is a Linux abstract socket address. path will be prefixed by a null byte, and optionally padded with null bytes. Defaults to false. (Since 5.1)
if false, pad an abstract socket address with enough null bytes to make it fill struct sockaddr_un member sun_path. Defaults to true. (Since 5.1)

Since

1.3

VsockSocketAddress (Object)

Captures a socket address in the vsock namespace.

Members

unique host identifier
port

Note

string types are used to allow for possible future hostname or service resolution support.

Since

2.8

InetSocketAddressWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.3

UnixSocketAddressWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.3

VsockSocketAddressWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.8

StringWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.3

SocketAddressLegacy (Object)

Captures the address of a socket, which could also be a named file descriptor

Members


Note

This type is deprecated in favor of SocketAddress. The difference between SocketAddressLegacy and SocketAddress is that the latter has fewer {} on the wire.

Since

1.3

SocketAddressType (Enum)

Available SocketAddress types

Values

Internet address
Unix domain socket
VMCI address
decimal is for file descriptor number, otherwise a file descriptor name. Named file descriptors are permitted in monitor commands, in combination with the 'getfd' command. Decimal file descriptors are permitted at startup or other contexts where no monitor context is active.

Since

2.9

SocketAddress (Object)

Captures the address of a socket, which could also be a named file descriptor

Members


Since

2.9

VM RUN STATE

RunState (Enum)

An enumeration of VM run states.

Values

QEMU is running on a debugger
guest is paused to finish the migration process
guest 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.
An internal error that prevents further guest execution has occurred
the last IOP has failed and the device is configured to pause on I/O errors
guest has been paused via the 'stop' command
guest is paused following a successful 'migrate'
QEMU was started with -S and guest has not started
guest is paused to restore VM state
guest is actively running
guest is paused to save the VM state
guest is shut down (and -no-shutdown is in use)
guest is suspended (ACPI S3)
the watchdog action is configured to pause and has been triggered
guest has been panicked as a result of guest OS panic
guest 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)

ShutdownCause (Enum)

An enumeration of reasons for a Shutdown.

Values

No shutdown request pending
An error prevents further use of guest
Reaction to the QMP command 'quit'
Reaction to the QMP command 'system_reset'
Reaction to a signal, such as SIGINT
Reaction to a UI event, like window close
Guest shutdown/suspend request, via ACPI or other hardware-specific means
Guest reset request, and command line turns that into a shutdown
Guest panicked, and command line turns that into a shutdown
Partial guest reset that does not trigger QMP events and ignores --no-reboot. This is useful for sanitizing hypercalls on s390 that are used during kexec/kdump/boot
A snapshot is being loaded by the record & replay subsystem. This value is used only within QEMU. It doesn't occur in QMP. (since 7.2)

StatusInfo (Object)

Information about VCPU run state

Members

true if all VCPUs are runnable, false if not runnable
true if using TCG with one guest instruction per translation block
the virtual machine RunState

Features

Member 'singlestep' is deprecated (with no replacement).

Since

0.14

Notes

singlestep is enabled on the command line with '-accel tcg,one-insn-per-tb=on', or with the HMP 'one-insn-per-tb' command.

query-status (Command)

Query the run status of all VCPUs

Returns

StatusInfo reflecting all VCPUs

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "query-status" }
<- { "return": { "running": true,

"singlestep": false,
"status": "running" } }


SHUTDOWN (Event)

Emitted when the virtual machine has shut down, indicating that qemu is about to exit.

Arguments

If true, the shutdown was triggered by a guest request (such as a guest-initiated ACPI shutdown request or other hardware-specific action) rather than a host request (such as sending qemu a SIGINT). (since 2.10)
The ShutdownCause which resulted in the SHUTDOWN. (since 4.0)

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

Example

<- { "event": "SHUTDOWN",

"data": { "guest": true, "reason": "guest-shutdown" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267040730, "microseconds": 682951 } }


POWERDOWN (Event)

Emitted when the virtual machine is powered down through the power control system, such as via ACPI.

Since

0.12

Example

<- { "event": "POWERDOWN",

"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267040730, "microseconds": 682951 } }


RESET (Event)

Emitted when the virtual machine is reset

Arguments

If true, the reset was triggered by a guest request (such as a guest-initiated ACPI reboot request or other hardware-specific action) rather than a host request (such as the QMP command system_reset). (since 2.10)
The ShutdownCause of the RESET. (since 4.0)

Since

0.12

Example

<- { "event": "RESET",

"data": { "guest": false, "reason": "guest-reset" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267041653, "microseconds": 9518 } }


STOP (Event)

Emitted when the virtual machine is stopped

Since

0.12

Example

<- { "event": "STOP",

"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267041730, "microseconds": 281295 } }


RESUME (Event)

Emitted when the virtual machine resumes execution

Since

0.12

Example

<- { "event": "RESUME",

"timestamp": { "seconds": 1271770767, "microseconds": 582542 } }


SUSPEND (Event)

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 } }


SUSPEND_DISK (Event)

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 } }


WAKEUP (Event)

Emitted when the guest has woken up from suspend state and is running

Since

1.1

Example

<- { "event": "WAKEUP",

"timestamp": { "seconds": 1344522075, "microseconds": 745528 } }


WATCHDOG (Event)

Emitted when the watchdog device's timer is expired

Arguments

action 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

Example

<- { "event": "WATCHDOG",

"data": { "action": "reset" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267061043, "microseconds": 959568 } }


WatchdogAction (Enum)

An enumeration of the actions taken when the watchdog device's timer is expired

Values

system resets
system shutdown, note that it is similar to powerdown, which tries to set to system status and notify guest
system poweroff, the emulator program exits
system pauses, similar to stop
system enters debug state
nothing is done
a non-maskable interrupt is injected into the first VCPU (all VCPUS on x86) (since 2.4)

Since

2.1

RebootAction (Enum)

Possible QEMU actions upon guest reboot

Values

Reset the VM
Shutdown the VM and exit, according to the shutdown action

Since

6.0

ShutdownAction (Enum)

Possible QEMU actions upon guest shutdown

Values

Shutdown the VM and exit
pause the VM

Since

6.0

PanicAction (Enum)

Values

Continue VM execution
Pause the VM
Shutdown the VM and exit, according to the shutdown action
Shutdown the VM and exit with nonzero status (since 7.1)

Since

6.0

watchdog-set-action (Command)

Set watchdog action

Arguments

Not documented

Since

2.11

set-action (Command)

Set the actions that will be taken by the emulator in response to guest events.

Arguments

RebootAction action taken on guest reboot.
ShutdownAction action taken on guest shutdown.
PanicAction action taken on guest panic.
WatchdogAction action taken when watchdog timer expires .

Returns

Nothing on success.

Since

6.0

Example

-> { "execute": "set-action",

"arguments": { "reboot": "shutdown",
"shutdown" : "pause",
"panic": "pause",
"watchdog": "inject-nmi" } } <- { "return": {} }


GUEST_PANICKED (Event)

Emitted when guest OS panic is detected

Arguments

action that has been taken, currently always "pause"
information about a panic (since 2.9)

Since

1.5

Example

<- { "event": "GUEST_PANICKED",

"data": { "action": "pause" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1648245231, "microseconds": 900001 } }


GUEST_CRASHLOADED (Event)

Emitted when guest OS crash loaded is detected

Arguments

action that has been taken, currently always "run"
information about a panic

Since

5.0

Example

<- { "event": "GUEST_CRASHLOADED",

"data": { "action": "run" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1648245259, "microseconds": 893771 } }


GuestPanicAction (Enum)

An enumeration of the actions taken when guest OS panic is detected

Values

system pauses
system powers off (since 2.8)
system continues to run (since 5.0)

Since

2.1

GuestPanicInformationType (Enum)

An enumeration of the guest panic information types

Values

hyper-v guest panic information type
s390 guest panic information type (Since: 2.12)

Since

2.9

GuestPanicInformation (Object)

Information about a guest panic

Members


Since

2.9

GuestPanicInformationHyperV (Object)

Hyper-V specific guest panic information (HV crash MSRs)

Members

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.9

S390CrashReason (Enum)

Reason why the CPU is in a crashed state.

Values

no crash reason was set
the CPU has entered a disabled wait state
clock comparator or cpu timer interrupt with new PSW enabled for external interrupts
program interrupt with BAD new PSW
operation exception interrupt with invalid code at the program interrupt new PSW

Since

2.12

GuestPanicInformationS390 (Object)

S390 specific guest panic information (PSW)

Members

core id of the CPU that crashed
control fields of guest PSW
guest instruction address
guest crash reason

Since

2.12

MEMORY_FAILURE (Event)

Emitted when a memory failure occurs on host side.

Arguments

recipient is defined as MemoryFailureRecipient.
action that has been taken. action is defined as MemoryFailureAction.
flags for MemoryFailureAction. action is defined as MemoryFailureFlags.

Since

5.2

Example

<- { "event": "MEMORY_FAILURE",

"data": { "recipient": "hypervisor",
"action": "fatal",
"flags": { "action-required": false,
"recursive": false } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267061043, "microseconds": 959568 } }


MemoryFailureRecipient (Enum)

Hardware memory failure occurs, handled by recipient.

Values

memory failure at QEMU process address space. (none guest memory, but used by QEMU itself).
memory failure at guest memory,

Since

5.2

MemoryFailureAction (Enum)

Actions taken by QEMU in response to a hardware memory failure.

Values

the memory failure could be ignored. This will only be the case for action-optional failures.
memory failure occurred in guest memory, the guest enabled MCE handling mechanism, and QEMU could inject the MCE into the guest successfully.
the failure is unrecoverable. This occurs for action-required failures if the recipient is the hypervisor; QEMU will exit.
the failure is unrecoverable but confined to the guest. This occurs if the recipient is a guest guest which is not ready to handle memory failures.

Since

5.2

MemoryFailureFlags (Object)

Additional information on memory failures.

Members

whether a memory failure event is action-required or action-optional (e.g. a failure during memory scrub).
whether the failure occurred while the previous failure was still in progress.

Since

5.2

NotifyVmexitOption (Enum)

An enumeration of the options specified when enabling notify VM exit

Values

enable the feature, do nothing and continue if the notify VM exit happens.
enable the feature, raise a internal error if the notify VM exit happens.
disable the feature.

Since

7.2

CRYPTOGRAPHY

QCryptoTLSCredsEndpoint (Enum)

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

the network endpoint is acting as the client
the network endpoint is acting as the server

Since

2.5

QCryptoSecretFormat (Enum)

The data format that the secret is provided in

Values

raw bytes. When encoded in JSON only valid UTF-8 sequences can be used
arbitrary base64 encoded binary data

Since

2.6

QCryptoHashAlgorithm (Enum)

The supported algorithms for computing content digests

Values

MD5. Should not be used in any new code, legacy compat only
SHA-1. Should not be used in any new code, legacy compat only
SHA-224. (since 2.7)
SHA-256. Current recommended strong hash.
SHA-384. (since 2.7)
SHA-512. (since 2.7)
RIPEMD-160. (since 2.7)

Since

2.6

QCryptoCipherAlgorithm (Enum)

The supported algorithms for content encryption ciphers

Values

AES with 128 bit / 16 byte keys
AES with 192 bit / 24 byte keys
AES with 256 bit / 32 byte keys
DES with 56 bit / 8 byte keys. Do not use except in VNC. (since 6.1)
3des
3DES(EDE) with 192 bit / 24 byte keys (since 2.9)
Cast5 with 128 bit / 16 byte keys
Serpent with 128 bit / 16 byte keys
Serpent with 192 bit / 24 byte keys
Serpent with 256 bit / 32 byte keys
Twofish with 128 bit / 16 byte keys
Twofish with 192 bit / 24 byte keys
Twofish with 256 bit / 32 byte keys

Since

2.6

QCryptoCipherMode (Enum)

The supported modes for content encryption ciphers

Values

Electronic Code Book
Cipher Block Chaining
XEX with tweaked code book and ciphertext stealing
Counter (Since 2.8)

Since

2.6

QCryptoIVGenAlgorithm (Enum)

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

64-bit sector number truncated to 32-bits
64-bit sector number
64-bit sector number encrypted with a hash of the encryption key

Since

2.6

QCryptoBlockFormat (Enum)

The supported full disk encryption formats

Values

QCow/QCow2 built-in AES-CBC encryption. Use only for liberating data from old images.
LUKS encryption format. Recommended for new images

Since

2.6

QCryptoBlockOptionsBase (Object)

The common options that apply to all full disk encryption formats

Members

the encryption format

Since

2.6

QCryptoBlockOptionsQCow (Object)

The options that apply to QCow/QCow2 AES-CBC encryption format

Members

the ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the decryption key. Mandatory except when probing image for metadata only.

Since

2.6

QCryptoBlockOptionsLUKS (Object)

The options that apply to LUKS encryption format

Members

the ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the decryption key. Mandatory except when probing image for metadata only.

Since

2.6

QCryptoBlockCreateOptionsLUKS (Object)

The options that apply to LUKS encryption format initialization

Members

the cipher algorithm for data encryption Currently defaults to 'aes-256'.
the cipher mode for data encryption Currently defaults to 'xts'
the initialization vector generator Currently defaults to 'plain64'
the initialization vector generator hash Currently defaults to 'sha256'
the master key hash algorithm Currently defaults to 'sha256'
number of milliseconds to spend in PBKDF passphrase processing. Currently defaults to 2000. (since 2.8)

Since

2.6

QCryptoBlockOpenOptions (Object)

The options that are available for all encryption formats when opening an existing volume

Members


Since

2.6

QCryptoBlockCreateOptions (Object)

The options that are available for all encryption formats when initializing a new volume

Members


Since

2.6

QCryptoBlockInfoBase (Object)

The common information that applies to all full disk encryption formats

Members

the encryption format

Since

2.7

QCryptoBlockInfoLUKSSlot (Object)

Information about the LUKS block encryption key slot options

Members

whether the key slot is currently in use
offset to the key material in bytes
number of PBKDF2 iterations for key material
number of stripes for splitting key material

Since

2.7

QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS (Object)

Information about the LUKS block encryption options

Members

the cipher algorithm for data encryption
the cipher mode for data encryption
the initialization vector generator
the initialization vector generator hash
the master key hash algorithm
offset to the payload data in bytes
number of PBKDF2 iterations for key material
unique identifier for the volume
information about each key slot

Since

2.7

QCryptoBlockInfo (Object)

Information about the block encryption options

Members


Since

2.7

QCryptoBlockLUKSKeyslotState (Enum)

Defines state of keyslots that are affected by the update

Values

The slots contain the given password and marked as active
The slots are erased (contain garbage) and marked as inactive

Since

5.1

QCryptoBlockAmendOptionsLUKS (Object)

This struct defines the update parameters that activate/de-activate set of keyslots

Members

the desired state of the keyslots
The ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the password to be written into added active keyslots
Optional (for deactivation only) If given will deactivate all keyslots that match password located in QCryptoSecret with this ID
Optional (for activation only) Number of milliseconds to spend in PBKDF passphrase processing for the newly activated keyslot. Currently defaults to 2000.
Optional. ID of the keyslot to activate/deactivate. For keyslot activation, keyslot should not be active already (this is unsafe to update an active keyslot), but possible if 'force' parameter is given. If keyslot is not given, first free keyslot will be written.

For keyslot deactivation, this parameter specifies the exact keyslot to deactivate

Optional. The ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the password to use to retrieve current master key. Defaults to the same secret that was used to open the image

Since

5.1

QCryptoBlockAmendOptions (Object)

The options that are available for all encryption formats when amending encryption settings

Members


Since

5.1

SecretCommonProperties (Object)

Properties for objects of classes derived from secret-common.

Members

if true, the secret is loaded immediately when applying this option and will probably fail when processing the next option. Don't use; only provided for compatibility. (default: false)
the data format that the secret is provided in (default: raw)
the name of another secret that should be used to decrypt the provided data. If not present, the data is assumed to be unencrypted.
the random initialization vector used for encryption of this particular secret. Should be a base64 encrypted string of the 16-byte IV. Mandatory if keyid is given. Ignored if keyid is absent.

Features

Member loaded is deprecated. Setting true doesn't make sense, and false is already the default.

Since

2.6

SecretProperties (Object)

Properties for secret objects.

Either data or file must be provided, but not both.

Members

the associated with the secret from
the filename to load the data associated with the secret from

Since

2.6

SecretKeyringProperties (Object)

Properties for secret_keyring objects.

Members

serial number that identifies a key to get from the kernel

Since

5.1

TlsCredsProperties (Object)

Properties for objects of classes derived from tls-creds.

Members

if true the peer credentials will be verified once the handshake is completed. This is a no-op for anonymous credentials. (default: true)
the path of the directory that contains the credential files
whether the QEMU network backend that uses the credentials will be acting as a client or as a server (default: client)
a gnutls priority string as described at https://gnutls.org/manual/html_node/Priority-Strings.html

Since

2.5

TlsCredsAnonProperties (Object)

Properties for tls-creds-anon objects.

Members

if true, the credentials are loaded immediately when applying this option and will ignore options that are processed later. Don't use; only provided for compatibility. (default: false)

Features

Member loaded is deprecated. Setting true doesn't make sense, and false is already the default.

Since

2.5

TlsCredsPskProperties (Object)

Properties for tls-creds-psk objects.

Members

if true, the credentials are loaded immediately when applying this option and will ignore options that are processed later. Don't use; only provided for compatibility. (default: false)
the username which will be sent to the server. For clients only. If absent, "qemu" is sent and the property will read back as an empty string.

Features

Member loaded is deprecated. Setting true doesn't make sense, and false is already the default.

Since

3.0

TlsCredsX509Properties (Object)

Properties for tls-creds-x509 objects.

Members

if true, the credentials are loaded immediately when applying this option and will ignore options that are processed later. Don't use; only provided for compatibility. (default: false)
if true, perform some sanity checks before using the credentials (default: true)
For the server-key.pem and client-key.pem files which contain sensitive private keys, it is possible to use an encrypted version by providing the passwordid parameter. This provides the ID of a previously created secret object containing the password for decryption.

Features

Member loaded is deprecated. Setting true doesn't make sense, and false is already the default.

Since

2.5

QCryptoAkCipherAlgorithm (Enum)

The supported algorithms for asymmetric encryption ciphers

Values

RSA algorithm

Since

7.1

QCryptoAkCipherKeyType (Enum)

The type of asymmetric keys.

Values

Not documented
Not documented

Since

7.1

QCryptoRSAPaddingAlgorithm (Enum)

The padding algorithm for RSA.

Values

no padding used
pkcs1#v1.5

Since

7.1

QCryptoAkCipherOptionsRSA (Object)

Specific parameters for RSA algorithm.

Members

QCryptoHashAlgorithm
QCryptoRSAPaddingAlgorithm

Since

7.1

QCryptoAkCipherOptions (Object)

The options that are available for all asymmetric key algorithms when creating a new QCryptoAkCipher.

Members


Since

7.1

BACKGROUND JOBS

JobType (Enum)

Type of a background job.

Values

block commit job type, see "block-commit"
block stream job type, see "block-stream"
drive mirror job type, see "drive-mirror"
drive backup job type, see "drive-backup"
image creation job type, see "blockdev-create" (since 3.0)
image options amend job type, see "x-blockdev-amend" (since 5.1)
snapshot load job type, see "snapshot-load" (since 6.0)
snapshot save job type, see "snapshot-save" (since 6.0)
snapshot delete job type, see "snapshot-delete" (since 6.0)

Since

1.7

JobStatus (Enum)

Indicates the present state of a given job in its lifetime.

Values

Erroneous, default state. Should not ever be visible.
The job has been created, but not yet started.
The job is currently running.
The job is running, but paused. The pause may be requested by either the QMP user or by internal processes.
The job is running, but is ready for the user to signal completion. This is used for long-running jobs like mirror that are designed to run indefinitely.
The job is ready, but paused. This is nearly identical to paused. The job may return to ready or otherwise be canceled.
The job is waiting for other jobs in the transaction to converge to the waiting state. This status will likely not be visible for the last job in a transaction.
The job has finished its work, but has finalization steps that it needs to make prior to completing. These changes will require manual intervention via job-finalize if auto-finalize was set to false. These pending changes may still fail.
The job is in the process of being aborted, and will finish with an error. The job will afterwards report that it is concluded. This status may not be visible to the management process.
The job has finished all work. If auto-dismiss was set to false, the job will remain in the query list until it is dismissed via job-dismiss.
The job is in the process of being dismantled. This state should not ever be visible externally.

Since

2.12

JobVerb (Enum)

Represents command verbs that can be applied to a job.

Values

see job-cancel
see job-pause
see job-resume
see block-job-set-speed
see job-complete
see job-dismiss
see job-finalize
see block-job-change (since 8.2)

Since

2.12

JOB_STATUS_CHANGE (Event)

Emitted when a job transitions to a different status.

Arguments

The job identifier
The new job status

Since

3.0

job-pause (Command)

Pause an active job.

This command returns immediately after marking the active job for pausing. Pausing an already paused job is an error.

The job will pause as soon as possible, which means transitioning into the PAUSED state if it was RUNNING, or into STANDBY if it was READY. The corresponding JOB_STATUS_CHANGE event will be emitted.

Cancelling a paused job automatically resumes it.

Arguments

The job identifier.

Since

3.0

job-resume (Command)

Resume a paused job.

This command returns immediately after resuming a paused job. Resuming an already running job is an error.

Arguments

The job identifier.

Since

3.0

job-cancel (Command)

Instruct an active background job to cancel at the next opportunity. This command returns immediately after marking the active job for cancellation.

The job will cancel as soon as possible and then emit a JOB_STATUS_CHANGE event. Usually, the status will change to ABORTING, but it is possible that a job successfully completes (e.g. because it was almost done and there was no opportunity to cancel earlier than completing the job) and transitions to PENDING instead.

Arguments

The job identifier.

Since

3.0

job-complete (Command)

Manually trigger completion of an active job in the READY state.

Arguments

The job identifier.

Since

3.0

job-dismiss (Command)

Deletes a job that is in the CONCLUDED state. This command only needs to be run explicitly for jobs that don't have automatic dismiss enabled.

This command will refuse to operate on any job that has not yet reached its terminal state, JOB_STATUS_CONCLUDED. For jobs that make use of JOB_READY event, job-cancel or job-complete will still need to be used as appropriate.

Arguments

The job identifier.

Since

3.0

job-finalize (Command)

Instructs all jobs in a transaction (or a single job if it is not part of any transaction) to finalize any graph changes and do any necessary cleanup. This command requires that all involved jobs are in the PENDING state.

For jobs in a transaction, instructing one job to finalize will force ALL jobs in the transaction to finalize, so it is only necessary to instruct a single member job to finalize.

Arguments

The identifier of any job in the transaction, or of a job that is not part of any transaction.

Since

3.0

JobInfo (Object)

Information about a job.

Members

The job identifier
The kind of job that is being performed
Current job state/status
Progress made until now. The unit is arbitrary and the value can only meaningfully be used for the ratio of current-progress to total-progress. The value is monotonically increasing.
Estimated current-progress value at the completion of the job. This value can arbitrarily change while the job is running, in both directions.
If this field is present, the job failed; if it is still missing in the CONCLUDED state, this indicates successful completion.

The value is a human-readable error message to describe the reason for the job failure. It should not be parsed by applications.


Since

3.0

query-jobs (Command)

Return information about jobs.

Returns

a list with a JobInfo for each active job

Since

3.0

BLOCK DEVICES

Block core (VM unrelated)

SnapshotInfo (Object)

Members

unique snapshot id
user chosen name
size of the VM state
UTC date of the snapshot in seconds
fractional part in nano seconds to be used with date-sec
VM clock relative to boot in seconds
fractional part in nano seconds to be used with vm-clock-sec
Current instruction count. Appears when execution record/replay is enabled. Used for "time-traveling" to match the moment in the recorded execution with the snapshots. This counter may be obtained through query-replay command (since 5.2)

Since

1.3

ImageInfoSpecificQCow2EncryptionBase (Object)

Members


Since

2.10

ImageInfoSpecificQCow2Encryption (Object)

Members


Since

2.10

ImageInfoSpecificQCow2 (Object)

Members

compatibility level
the filename of the external data file that is stored in the image and used as a default for opening the image (since: 4.0)
True if the external data file must stay valid as a standalone (read-only) raw image without looking at qcow2 metadata (since: 4.0)
true if the image has extended L2 entries; only valid for compat >= 1.1 (since 5.2)
on or off; only valid for compat >= 1.1
true if the image has been marked corrupt; only valid for compat >= 1.1 (since 2.2)
width of a refcount entry in bits (since 2.3)
details about encryption parameters; only set if image is encrypted (since 2.10)
A list of qcow2 bitmap details (since 4.0)
the image cluster compression method (since 5.1)

Since

1.7

ImageInfoSpecificVmdk (Object)

Members

The create type of VMDK image
Content id of image
Parent VMDK image's cid
List of extent files

Since

1.7

VmdkExtentInfo (Object)

Information about a VMDK extent file

Members

Name of the extent file
Extent type (e.g. FLAT or SPARSE)
Number of bytes covered by this extent
Cluster size in bytes (for non-flat extents)
Whether this extent contains compressed data

Since

8.0

ImageInfoSpecificRbd (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

ImageInfoSpecificFile (Object)

Members

Extent size hint (if available)

Since

8.0

ImageInfoSpecificKind (Enum)

Values

Since 2.7
Since 6.1
Since 8.0
Not documented
Not documented

Since

1.7

ImageInfoSpecificQCow2Wrapper (Object)

Members


Since

1.7

ImageInfoSpecificVmdkWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

ImageInfoSpecificLUKSWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

2.7

ImageInfoSpecificRbdWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

ImageInfoSpecificFileWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

8.0

ImageInfoSpecific (Object)

A discriminated record of image format specific information structures.

Members


Since

1.7

BlockNodeInfo (Object)

Information about a QEMU image file

Members

name of the image file
format of the image file
maximum capacity in bytes of the image
actual size on disk in bytes of the image
true if image is not cleanly closed
size of a cluster in bytes
true if the image is encrypted
true if the image is compressed (Since 1.7)
name of the backing file
full path of the backing file
the format of the backing file
list of VM snapshots
structure supplying additional format-specific information (since 1.7)

Since

8.0

ImageInfo (Object)

Information about a QEMU image file, and potentially its backing image

Members


Since

1.3

BlockChildInfo (Object)

Information about all nodes in the block graph starting at some node, annotated with information about that node in relation to its parent.

Members

Child name of the root node in the BlockGraphInfo struct, in its role as the child of some undescribed parent node
Block graph information starting at this node

Since

8.0

BlockGraphInfo (Object)

Information about all nodes in a block (sub)graph in the form of BlockNodeInfo data. The base BlockNodeInfo struct contains the information for the (sub)graph's root node.

Members

Array of links to this node's child nodes' information

Since

8.0

ImageCheck (Object)

Information about a QEMU image file check

Members

name of the image file checked
format of the image file checked
number of unexpected errors occurred during check
offset (in bytes) where the image ends, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
number of corruptions found during the check if any
number of leaks found during the check if any
number of corruptions fixed during the check if any
number of leaks fixed during the check if any
total number of clusters, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
total number of allocated clusters, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
total number of fragmented clusters, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it
total number of compressed clusters, this field is present if the driver for the image format supports it

Since

1.4

MapEntry (Object)

Mapping information from a virtual block range to a host file range

Members

virtual (guest) offset of the first byte described by this entry
the number of bytes of the mapped virtual range
reading 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)
whether the virtual blocks read as zeroes
true if the data is stored compressed (since 8.2)
number of layers (0 = top image, 1 = top image's backing file, ..., n - 1 = bottom image (where n is the number of images in the chain)) before reaching one for which the range is allocated
true if this layer provides the data, false if adding a backing layer could impact this region (since 6.1)
if present, the image file stores the data for this range in raw format at the given (host) offset
filename that is referred to by offset

Since

2.6

BlockdevCacheInfo (Object)

Cache mode information for a block device

Members

true if writeback mode is enabled
true if the host page cache is bypassed (O_DIRECT)
true if flush requests are ignored for the device

Since

2.3

BlockDeviceInfo (Object)

Information about the backing device for a block device.

Members

the filename of the backing device
the name of the block driver node (Since 2.0)
true if the backing device was open read-only
the name of the block format used to open the backing device. As of 0.14 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
the name of the backing file (for copy-on-write)
number of files in the backing file chain (since: 1.2)
true if the backing device is encrypted
detect and optimize zero writes (Since 2.1)
total throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
read throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
write throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
total I/O operations per second is specified
read I/O operations per second is specified
write I/O operations per second is specified
the info of image used (since: 1.6)
total throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
read throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
write throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
total I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
read I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
write I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
maximum length of the bps_max burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
maximum length of the bps_rd_max burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
maximum length of the bps_wr_max burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
maximum length of the iops burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
maximum length of the iops_rd_max burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
maximum length of the iops_wr_max burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
an I/O size in bytes (Since 1.7)
throttle group name (Since 2.4)
the cache mode used for the block device (since: 2.3)
configured write threshold for the device. 0 if disabled. (Since 2.3)
dirty bitmaps information (only present if node has one or more dirty bitmaps) (Since 4.2)

Since

0.14

BlockDeviceIoStatus (Enum)

An enumeration of block device I/O status.

Values

The last I/O operation has succeeded
The last I/O operation has failed
The last I/O operation has failed due to a no-space condition

Since

1.0

BlockDirtyInfo (Object)

Block dirty bitmap information.

Members

the name of the dirty bitmap (Since 2.4)
number of dirty bytes according to the dirty bitmap
granularity of the dirty bitmap in bytes (since 1.4)
true if the bitmap is recording new writes from the guest. (since 4.0)
true if the bitmap is in-use by some operation (NBD or jobs) and cannot be modified via QMP or used by another operation. (since 4.0)
true if the bitmap was stored on disk, is scheduled to be stored on disk, or both. (since 4.0)
true if this is a persistent bitmap that was improperly stored. Implies persistent to be true; recording and busy to be false. This bitmap cannot be used. To remove it, use block-dirty-bitmap-remove. (Since 4.0)

Since

1.3

Qcow2BitmapInfoFlags (Enum)

An enumeration of flags that a bitmap can report to the user.

Values

This flag is set by any process actively modifying the qcow2 file, and cleared when the updated bitmap is flushed to the qcow2 image. The presence of this flag in an offline image means that the bitmap was not saved correctly after its last usage, and may contain inconsistent data.
The bitmap must reflect all changes of the virtual disk by any application that would write to this qcow2 file.

Since

4.0

Qcow2BitmapInfo (Object)

Qcow2 bitmap information.

Members

the name of the bitmap
granularity of the bitmap in bytes
flags of the bitmap

Since

4.0

BlockLatencyHistogramInfo (Object)

Block latency histogram.

Members

list of interval boundary values in nanoseconds, all greater than zero and in ascending order. For example, the list [10, 50, 100] produces the following histogram intervals: [0, 10), [10, 50), [50, 100), [100, +inf).
list of io request counts corresponding to histogram intervals, one more element than boundaries has. For the example above, bins may be something like [3, 1, 5, 2], and corresponding histogram looks like:

5|           *
4|           *
3| *         *
2| *         *    *
1| *    *    *    *

+------------------
10 50 100


Since

4.0

BlockInfo (Object)

Block device information. This structure describes a virtual device and the backing device associated with it.

Members

The device name associated with the virtual device.
The qdev ID, or if no ID is assigned, the QOM path of the block device. (since 2.10)
This field is returned only for compatibility reasons, it should not be used (always returns 'unknown')
True if the device supports removable media.
True if the guest has locked this device from having its media removed
True if the device's tray is open (only present if it has a tray)
BlockDeviceIoStatus. Only present if the device supports it and the VM is configured to stop on errors (supported device models: virtio-blk, IDE, SCSI except scsi-generic)
BlockDeviceInfo describing the device if media is present

Since

0.14

BlockMeasureInfo (Object)

Image file size calculation information. This structure describes the size requirements for creating a new image file.

The size requirements depend on the new image file format. File size always equals virtual disk size for the 'raw' format, even for sparse POSIX files. Compact formats such as 'qcow2' represent unallocated and zero regions efficiently so file size may be smaller than virtual disk size.

The values are upper bounds that are guaranteed to fit the new image file. Subsequent modification, such as internal snapshot or further bitmap creation, may require additional space and is not covered here.

Members

Size required for a new image file, in bytes, when copying just allocated guest-visible contents.
Image file size, in bytes, once data has been written to all sectors, when copying just guest-visible contents.
Additional size required if all the top-level bitmap metadata in the source image were to be copied to the destination, present only when source and destination both support persistent bitmaps. (since 5.1)

Since

2.10

query-block (Command)

Get a list of BlockInfo for all virtual block devices.

Returns

a list of BlockInfo describing each virtual block device. Filter nodes that were created implicitly are skipped over.

Since

0.14

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
}
}
},
"qdev": "ide_disk",
"type":"unknown"
},
{
"io-status": "ok",
"device":"ide1-cd0",
"locked":false,
"removable":true,
"qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[23]",
"tray_open": false,
"type":"unknown"
},
{
"device":"floppy0",
"locked":false,
"removable":true,
"qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[20]",
"type":"unknown"
},
{
"device":"sd0",
"locked":false,
"removable":true,
"type":"unknown"
}
]
}


BlockDeviceTimedStats (Object)

Statistics of a block device during a given interval of time.

Members

Interval used for calculating the statistics, in seconds.
Minimum latency of read operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Minimum latency of write operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Minimum latency of zone append operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds (since 8.1)
Minimum latency of flush operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Maximum latency of read operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Maximum latency of write operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Maximum latency of zone append operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds (since 8.1)
Maximum latency of flush operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Average latency of read operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Average latency of write operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Average latency of zone append operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds (since 8.1)
Average latency of flush operations in the defined interval, in nanoseconds.
Average number of pending read operations in the defined interval.
Average number of pending write operations in the defined interval.
Average number of pending zone append operations in the defined interval (since 8.1).

Since

2.5

BlockDeviceStats (Object)

Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device.

Members

The number of bytes read by the device.
The number of bytes written by the device.
The number of bytes appended by the zoned devices (since 8.1)
The number of bytes unmapped by the device (Since 4.2)
The number of read operations performed by the device.
The number of write operations performed by the device.
The number of zone append operations performed by the zoned devices (since 8.1)
The number of cache flush operations performed by the device (since 0.15)
The number of unmap operations performed by the device (Since 4.2)
Total time spent on reads in nanoseconds (since 0.15).
Total time spent on writes in nanoseconds (since 0.15).
Total time spent on zone append writes in nanoseconds (since 8.1)
Total time spent on cache flushes in nanoseconds (since 0.15).
Total time spent on unmap operations in nanoseconds (Since 4.2)
The 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.
Number of read requests that have been merged into another request (Since 2.3).
Number of write requests that have been merged into another request (Since 2.3).
Number of zone append requests that have been merged into another request (since 8.1)
Number of unmap requests that have been merged into another request (Since 4.2)
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).
The number of failed read operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
The number of failed write operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
The number of failed zone append write operations performed by the zoned devices (since 8.1)
The number of failed flush operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
The number of failed unmap operations performed by the device (Since 4.2)
The number of invalid read operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
The number of invalid write operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
The number of invalid zone append operations performed by the zoned device (since 8.1)
The number of invalid flush operations performed by the device (Since 2.5)
The number of invalid unmap operations performed by the device (Since 4.2)
Whether invalid operations are included in the last access statistics (Since 2.5)
Whether failed operations are included in the latency and last access statistics (Since 2.5)
Statistics specific to the set of previously defined intervals of time (Since 2.5)
BlockLatencyHistogramInfo. (Since 4.0)
BlockLatencyHistogramInfo. (Since 4.0)
BlockLatencyHistogramInfo. (since 8.1)
BlockLatencyHistogramInfo. (Since 4.0)

Since

0.14

BlockStatsSpecificFile (Object)

File driver statistics

Members

The number of successful discard operations performed by the driver.
The number of failed discard operations performed by the driver.
The number of bytes discarded by the driver.

Since

4.2

BlockStatsSpecificNvme (Object)

NVMe driver statistics

Members

The number of completion errors.
The number of aligned accesses performed by the driver.
The number of unaligned accesses performed by the driver.

Since

5.2

BlockStatsSpecific (Object)

Block driver specific statistics

Members


Since

4.2

BlockStats (Object)

Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device.

Members

If the stats are for a virtual block device, the name corresponding to the virtual block device.
The node name of the device. (Since 2.3)
The qdev ID, or if no ID is assigned, the QOM path of the block device. (since 3.0)
A BlockDeviceStats for the device.
Optional driver-specific stats. (Since 4.2)
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
This describes the backing block device if it has one. (Since 2.0)

Since

0.14

query-blockstats (Command)

Query the BlockStats for all virtual block devices.

Arguments

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". Filter nodes that were created implicitly are skipped over in this mode. (Since 2.3)

Returns

A list of BlockStats for each virtual block devices.

Since

0.14

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
},
"qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[23]"
},
{
"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
},
"qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[24]"
},
{
"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
},
"qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[16]"
},
{
"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
}
}
]
}


BlockdevOnError (Enum)

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

for guest operations, report the error to the guest; for jobs, cancel the job
ignore the error, only report a QMP event (BLOCK_IO_ERROR or BLOCK_JOB_ERROR). The backup, mirror and commit block jobs retry the failing request later and may still complete successfully. The stream block job continues to stream and will complete with an error.
same as stop on ENOSPC, same as report otherwise.
for guest operations, stop the virtual machine; for jobs, pause the job
inherit the error handling policy of the backend (since: 2.7)

Since

1.3

MirrorSyncMode (Enum)

An enumeration of possible behaviors for the initial synchronization phase of storage mirroring.

Values

copies data in the topmost image to the destination
copies data from all images to the destination
only copy data written from now on
only copy data described by the dirty bitmap. (since: 2.4)
only copy data described by the dirty bitmap. (since: 4.2) Behavior on completion is determined by the BitmapSyncMode.

Since

1.3

BitmapSyncMode (Enum)

An enumeration of possible behaviors for the synchronization of a bitmap when used for data copy operations.

Values

The bitmap is only synced when the operation is successful. This is the behavior always used for 'INCREMENTAL' backups.
The bitmap is never synchronized with the operation, and is treated solely as a read-only manifest of blocks to copy.
The bitmap is always synchronized with the operation, regardless of whether or not the operation was successful.

Since

4.2

MirrorCopyMode (Enum)

An enumeration whose values tell the mirror block job when to trigger writes to the target.

Values

copy data in background only.
when data is written to the source, write it (synchronously) to the target as well. In addition, data is copied in background just like in background mode.

Since

3.0

BlockJobInfoMirror (Object)

Information specific to mirror block jobs.

Members

Whether the source is actively synced to the target, i.e. same data and new writes are done synchronously to both.

Since 8.2

BlockJobInfo (Object)

Information about a long-running block device operation.

Members

the job type ('stream' for image streaming)
The job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
Estimated offset value at the completion of the job. This value can arbitrarily change while the job is running, in both directions.
Progress made until now. The unit is arbitrary and the value can only meaningfully be used for the ratio of offset to len. The value is monotonically increasing.
false if the job is known to be in a quiescent state, with no pending I/O. (Since 1.3)
whether the job is paused or, if busy is true, will pause itself as soon as possible. (Since 1.3)
the rate limit, bytes per second
the status of the job (since 1.3)
true if the job may be completed (since 2.2)
Current job state/status (since 2.12)
Job will finalize itself when PENDING, moving to the CONCLUDED state. (since 2.12)
Job will dismiss itself when CONCLUDED, moving to the NULL state and disappearing from the query list. (since 2.12)
Error information if the job did not complete successfully. Not set if the job completed successfully. (since 2.12.1)

Since

1.1

query-block-jobs (Command)

Return information about long-running block device operations.

Returns

a list of BlockJobInfo for each active block job

Since

1.1

block_resize (Command)

Resize a block image while a guest is running.

Either device or node-name must be set but not both.

Arguments

the name of the device to get the image resized
graph node name to get the image resized (Since 2.0)
new image size in bytes

Returns

  • nothing on success
  • If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "block_resize",

"arguments": { "device": "scratch", "size": 1073741824 } } <- { "return": {} }


NewImageMode (Enum)

An enumeration that tells QEMU how to set the backing file path in a new image file.

Values

QEMU should look for an existing image file.
QEMU 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

BlockdevSnapshotSync (Object)

Either device or node-name must be set but not both.

Members

the name of the device to take a snapshot of.
graph node name to generate the snapshot from (Since 2.0)
the target of the new overlay image. If the file exists, or if it is a device, the overlay will be created in the existing file/device. Otherwise, a new file will be created.
the graph node name of the new image (Since 2.0)
the format of the overlay image, default is 'qcow2'.
whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is 'absolute-paths'.

BlockdevSnapshot (Object)

Members

device or node name that will have a snapshot taken.
reference to the existing block device that will become the overlay of node, as part of taking the snapshot. It must not have a current backing file (this can be achieved by passing "backing": null to blockdev-add).

Since

2.5

BackupPerf (Object)

Optional parameters for backup. These parameters don't affect functionality, but may significantly affect performance.

Members

Use copy offloading. Default false.
Maximum number of parallel requests for the sustained background copying process. Doesn't influence copy-before-write operations. Default 64.
Maximum request length for the sustained background copying process. Doesn't influence copy-before-write operations. 0 means unlimited. If max-chunk is non-zero then it should not be less than job cluster size which is calculated as maximum of target image cluster size and 64k. Default 0.

Since

6.0

BackupCommon (Object)

Members

identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
the device name or node-name of a root node which should be copied.
what 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).
the maximum speed, in bytes per second. The default is 0, for unlimited.
The name of a dirty bitmap to use. Must be present if sync is "bitmap" or "incremental". Can be present if sync is "full" or "top". Must not be present otherwise. (Since 2.4 (drive-backup), 3.1 (blockdev-backup))
Specifies the type of data the bitmap should contain after the operation concludes. Must be present if a bitmap was provided, Must NOT be present otherwise. (Since 4.2)
true to compress data, if the target format supports it. (default: false) (since 2.8)
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).
the action to take on an error on the target, default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to a different block device than device).
When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has finished its work, waiting for block-job-finalize before making any block graph changes. When true, this job will automatically perform its abort or commit actions. Defaults to true. (Since 2.12)
When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it has completely ceased all work, and awaits block-job-dismiss. When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query list without user intervention. Defaults to true. (Since 2.12)
the node name that should be assigned to the filter driver that the backup job inserts into the graph above node specified by drive. If this option is not given, a node name is autogenerated. (Since: 4.2)
Performance options. (Since 6.0)

Features

Member x-perf is experimental.

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

4.2

DriveBackup (Object)

Members

the 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.
the format of the new destination, default is to probe if mode is 'existing', else the format of the source
whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is 'absolute-paths'.

Since

1.6

BlockdevBackup (Object)

Members

the device name or node-name of the backup target node.

Since

2.3

blockdev-snapshot-sync (Command)

Takes 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

Example

-> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot-sync",

"arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
"snapshot-file":
"/some/place/my-image",
"format": "qcow2" } } <- { "return": {} }


blockdev-snapshot (Command)

Takes a snapshot of a block device.

Take 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.

Features

If present, the check whether this operation is safe was relaxed so that it can be used to change backing file of a destination of a blockdev-mirror. (since 5.0)

Since

2.5

Example

-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",

"arguments": { "driver": "qcow2",
"node-name": "node1534",
"file": { "driver": "file",
"filename": "hd1.qcow2" },
"backing": null } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot",
"arguments": { "node": "ide-hd0",
"overlay": "node1534" } } <- { "return": {} }


change-backing-file (Command)

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

The 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".
The device name or node-name of the root node that owns image-node-name.
The 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

block-commit (Command)

Live commit of data from overlay image nodes into backing nodes - i.e., writes data between 'top' and 'base' into 'base'.

If top == base, that is an error. If top has no overlays on top of it, or if it is in use by a writer, the job will not be completed by itself. The 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.

Arguments

identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
the device name or node-name of a root node
The node name of the backing image to write data into. If not specified, this is the deepest backing image. (since: 3.1)
Same as base-node, except that it is a file name rather than a node name. This must be the exact filename string that was used to open the node; other strings, even if addressing the same file, are not accepted
The node 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. (since: 3.1)
Same as top-node, except that it is a file name rather than a node name. This must be the exact filename string that was used to open the node; other strings, even if addressing the same file, are not accepted
The backing file string to write into the overlay image of 'top'. If 'top' does not have an overlay image, or if 'top' is in use by a writer, 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)

the maximum speed, in bytes per second
the action to take on an error. 'ignore' means that the request should be retried. (default: report; Since: 5.0)
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)
When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has finished its work, waiting for block-job-finalize before making any block graph changes. When true, this job will automatically perform its abort or commit actions. Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it has completely ceased all work, and awaits block-job-dismiss. When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query list without user intervention. Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)

Features

Members base and top are deprecated. Use base-node and top-node instead.

Returns

  • Nothing on success
  • If device does not exist, DeviceNotFound
  • Any other error returns a GenericError.

Since

1.3

Example

-> { "execute": "block-commit",

"arguments": { "device": "virtio0",
"top": "/tmp/snap1.qcow2" } } <- { "return": {} }


drive-backup (Command)

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


Features

This command is deprecated. Use blockdev-backup instead.

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": {} }


blockdev-backup (Command)

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


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": {} }


query-named-block-nodes (Command)

Get the named block driver list

Arguments

Omit the nested data about backing image ("backing-image" key) if true. Default is false (Since 5.0)

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,
"detect_zeroes":"off",
"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
}
} } ] }


XDbgBlockGraphNodeType (Enum)

Values

corresponds to BlockBackend
corresponds to BlockJob
corresponds to BlockDriverState

Since

4.0

XDbgBlockGraphNode (Object)

Members

Block graph node identifier. This id is generated only for x-debug-query-block-graph and does not relate to any other identifiers in Qemu.
Type of graph node. Can be one of block-backend, block-job or block-driver-state.
Human readable name of the node. Corresponds to node-name for block-driver-state nodes; is not guaranteed to be unique in the whole graph (with block-jobs and block-backends).

Since

4.0

BlockPermission (Enum)

Enum of base block permissions.

Values

A user that has the "permission" of consistent reads is guaranteed that their view of the contents of the block device is complete and self-consistent, representing the contents of a disk at a specific point. For most block devices (including their backing files) this is true, but the property cannot be maintained in a few situations like for intermediate nodes of a commit block job.
This permission is required to change the visible disk contents.
This permission (which is weaker than BLK_PERM_WRITE) is both enough and required for writes to the block node when the caller promises that the visible disk content doesn't change. As the BLK_PERM_WRITE permission is strictly stronger, either is sufficient to perform an unchanging write.
This permission is required to change the size of a block node.

Since

4.0

XDbgBlockGraphEdge (Object)

Block Graph edge description for x-debug-query-block-graph.

Members

parent id
child id
name of the relation (examples are 'file' and 'backing')
granted permissions for the parent operating on the child
permissions that can still be granted to other users of the child while it is still attached to this parent

Since

4.0

XDbgBlockGraph (Object)

Block Graph - list of nodes and list of edges.

Members


Since

4.0

x-debug-query-block-graph (Command)

Get the block graph.

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Since

4.0

drive-mirror (Command)

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


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": {} }


DriveMirror (Object)

A set of parameters describing drive mirror setup.

Members

identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
the device name or node-name of a root node whose writes should be mirrored.
the 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.
the format of the new destination, default is to probe if mode is 'existing', else the format of the source
the new block driver state node name in the graph (Since 2.1)
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. By default, device is replaced, although implicitly created filters on it are kept. (Since 2.1)
whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is 'absolute-paths'.
the maximum speed, in bytes per second
what 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 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).
maximum amount of data in flight from source to target (since 1.4).
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).
the action to take on an error on the target, default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to a different block device than device).
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)
when to copy data to the destination; defaults to 'background' (Since: 3.0)
When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has finished its work, waiting for block-job-finalize before making any block graph changes. When true, this job will automatically perform its abort or commit actions. Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it has completely ceased all work, and awaits block-job-dismiss. When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query list without user intervention. Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)

Since

1.3

BlockDirtyBitmap (Object)

Members

name of device/node which the bitmap is tracking
name of the dirty bitmap

Since

2.4

BlockDirtyBitmapAdd (Object)

Members

name of device/node which the bitmap is tracking
name of the dirty bitmap (must be less than 1024 bytes)
the bitmap granularity, default is 64k for block-dirty-bitmap-add
the bitmap is persistent, i.e. it will be saved to the corresponding block device image file on its close. For now only Qcow2 disks support persistent bitmaps. Default is false for block-dirty-bitmap-add. (Since: 2.10)
the bitmap is created in the disabled state, which means that it will not track drive changes. The bitmap may be enabled with block-dirty-bitmap-enable. Default is false. (Since: 4.0)

Since

2.4

BlockDirtyBitmapOrStr (Alternate)

Members

name of the bitmap, attached to the same node as target bitmap.
bitmap with specified node

Since

4.1

BlockDirtyBitmapMerge (Object)

Members

name of device/node which the target bitmap is tracking
name of the destination dirty bitmap
name(s) of the source dirty bitmap(s) at node and/or fully specified BlockDirtyBitmap elements. The latter are supported since 4.1.

Since

4.0

block-dirty-bitmap-add (Command)

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": {} }


block-dirty-bitmap-remove (Command)

Stop write tracking and remove the dirty bitmap that was created with block-dirty-bitmap-add. If the bitmap is persistent, remove it from its storage too.

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": {} }


block-dirty-bitmap-clear (Command)

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": {} }


block-dirty-bitmap-enable (Command)

Enables a dirty bitmap so that it will begin tracking disk changes.

Returns

  • nothing on success
  • If node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
  • If name is not found, GenericError with an explanation

Since

4.0

Example

-> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-enable",

"arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } } <- { "return": {} }


block-dirty-bitmap-disable (Command)

Disables a dirty bitmap so that it will stop tracking disk changes.

Returns

  • nothing on success
  • If node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
  • If name is not found, GenericError with an explanation

Since

4.0

Example

-> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-disable",

"arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } } <- { "return": {} }


block-dirty-bitmap-merge (Command)

Merge dirty bitmaps listed in bitmaps to the target dirty bitmap. Dirty bitmaps in bitmaps will be unchanged, except if it also appears as the target bitmap. Any bits already set in target will still be set after the merge, i.e., this operation does not clear the target. On error, target is unchanged.

The resulting bitmap will count as dirty any clusters that were dirty in any of the source bitmaps. This can be used to achieve backup checkpoints, or in simpler usages, to copy bitmaps.

Returns

  • nothing on success
  • If node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
  • If any bitmap in bitmaps or target is not found, GenericError
  • If any of the bitmaps have different sizes or granularities, GenericError

Since

4.0

Example

-> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-merge",

"arguments": { "node": "drive0", "target": "bitmap0",
"bitmaps": ["bitmap1"] } } <- { "return": {} }


BlockDirtyBitmapSha256 (Object)

SHA256 hash of dirty bitmap data

Members

ASCII representation of SHA256 bitmap hash

Since

2.10

x-debug-block-dirty-bitmap-sha256 (Command)

Get bitmap SHA256.

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

  • BlockDirtyBitmapSha256 on success
  • If node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
  • If name is not found or if hashing has failed, GenericError with an explanation

Since

2.10

blockdev-mirror (Command)

Start mirroring a block device's writes to a new destination.

Arguments

identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
The device name or node-name of a root node whose writes should be mirrored.
the id or node-name of the block device to mirror to. This mustn't be attached to guest.
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. By default, device is replaced, although implicitly created filters on it are kept.
the maximum speed, in bytes per second
what 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 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
maximum amount of data in flight from source to target
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).
the action to take on an error on the target, default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to a different block device than device).
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)
when to copy data to the destination; defaults to 'background' (Since: 3.0)
When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has finished its work, waiting for block-job-finalize before making any block graph changes. When true, this job will automatically perform its abort or commit actions. Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it has completely ceased all work, and awaits block-job-dismiss. When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query list without user intervention. Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)

Returns

nothing on success.

Since

2.6

Example

-> { "execute": "blockdev-mirror",

"arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
"target": "target0",
"sync": "full" } } <- { "return": {} }


BlockIOThrottle (Object)

A set of parameters describing block throttling.

Members

Block device name
The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
total throughput limit in bytes per second
read throughput limit in bytes per second
write throughput limit in bytes per second
total I/O operations per second
read I/O operations per second
write I/O operations per second
total throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
read throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
write throughput limit during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
total I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
read I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
write I/O operations per second during bursts, in bytes (Since 1.7)
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)
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)
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)
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)
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)
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)
an I/O size in bytes (Since 1.7)
throttle group name (Since 2.4)

Features

Member device is deprecated. Use id instead.

Since

1.1

ThrottleLimits (Object)

Limit parameters for throttling. Since some limit combinations are illegal, limits should always be set in one transaction. All fields are optional. When setting limits, if a field is missing the current value is not changed.

Members

limit total I/O operations per second
I/O operations burst
length of the iops-total-max burst period, in seconds It must only be set if iops-total-max is set as well.
limit read operations per second
I/O operations read burst
length of the iops-read-max burst period, in seconds It must only be set if iops-read-max is set as well.
limit write operations per second
I/O operations write burst
length of the iops-write-max burst period, in seconds It must only be set if iops-write-max is set as well.
limit total bytes per second
total bytes burst
length of the bps-total-max burst period, in seconds. It must only be set if bps-total-max is set as well.
limit read bytes per second
total bytes read burst
length of the bps-read-max burst period, in seconds It must only be set if bps-read-max is set as well.
limit write bytes per second
total bytes write burst
length of the bps-write-max burst period, in seconds It must only be set if bps-write-max is set as well.
when limiting by iops max size of an I/O in bytes

Since

2.11

ThrottleGroupProperties (Object)

Properties for throttle-group objects.

Members


Features

All members starting with x- are aliases for the same key without x- in the limits object. This is not a stable interface and may be removed or changed incompatibly in the future. Use limits for a supported stable interface.

Since

2.11

block-stream (Command)

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. This can be used to stream a subset of the backing file chain instead of flattening the entire image. When streaming completes the image file will have the base file as its backing file, unless that node was changed while the job was running. In that case, base's parent's backing (or filtered, whichever exists) child (i.e., base at the beginning of the job) will be the new backing file.

On successful completion the image file is updated to drop the backing file and the BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED event is emitted.

In case device is a filter node, block-stream modifies the first non-filter overlay node below it to point to the new backing node instead of modifying device itself.

Arguments

identifier for the newly-created block job. If omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
the device or node name of the top image
the common backing file name. It cannot be set if base-node or bottom is also set.
the node name of the backing file. It cannot be set if base or bottom is also set. (Since 2.8)
the last node in the chain that should be streamed into top. It cannot be set if base or base-node is also set. It cannot be filter node. (Since 6.0)
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)

the maximum speed, in bytes per second
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)
the node name that should be assigned to the filter driver that the stream job inserts into the graph above device. If this option is not given, a node name is autogenerated. (Since: 6.0)
When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has finished its work, waiting for block-job-finalize before making any block graph changes. When true, this job will automatically perform its abort or commit actions. Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it has completely ceased all work, and awaits block-job-dismiss. When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query list without user intervention. Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)

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": {} }


block-job-set-speed (Command)

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

The 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.
the 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

block-job-cancel (Command)

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.

Note that if you issue 'block-job-cancel' after 'drive-mirror' has indicated (via the event BLOCK_JOB_READY) that the source and destination are synchronized, then the event triggered by this command changes to BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED, to indicate that the mirroring has ended and the destination now has a point-in-time copy tied to the time of the cancellation.

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

The 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.
If true, and the job has already emitted the event BLOCK_JOB_READY, abandon the job immediately (even if it is paused) instead of waiting for the destination to complete its final synchronization (since 1.3)

Returns

  • Nothing on success
  • If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive

Since

1.1

block-job-pause (Command)

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 or if the job is already paused.

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

The 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

block-job-resume (Command)

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 or if the job is not paused.

This command also clears the error status of the job.

Arguments

The 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

block-job-complete (Command)

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

The 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

block-job-dismiss (Command)

For jobs that have already concluded, remove them from the block-job-query list. This command only needs to be run for jobs which were started with QEMU 2.12+ job lifetime management semantics.

This command will refuse to operate on any job that has not yet reached its terminal state, JOB_STATUS_CONCLUDED. For jobs that make use of the BLOCK_JOB_READY event, block-job-cancel or block-job-complete will still need to be used as appropriate.

Arguments

The job identifier.

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

2.12

block-job-finalize (Command)

Once a job that has manual=true reaches the pending state, it can be instructed to finalize any graph changes and do any necessary cleanup via this command. For jobs in a transaction, instructing one job to finalize will force ALL jobs in the transaction to finalize, so it is only necessary to instruct a single member job to finalize.

Arguments

The job identifier.

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

2.12

BlockJobChangeOptionsMirror (Object)

Members

Switch to this copy mode. Currently, only the switch from 'background' to 'write-blocking' is implemented.

Since

8.2

BlockJobChangeOptions (Object)

Block job options that can be changed after job creation.

Members


Since 8.2

block-job-change (Command)

Change the block job's options.

Arguments


Since

8.2

BlockdevDiscardOptions (Enum)

Determines how to handle discard requests.

Values

Ignore the request
Forward as an unmap request

Since

2.9

BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions (Enum)

Describes the operation mode for the automatic conversion of plain zero writes by the OS to driver specific optimized zero write commands.

Values

Disabled (default)
Enabled
Enabled and even try to unmap blocks if possible. This requires also that BlockdevDiscardOptions is set to unmap for this device.

Since

2.1

BlockdevAioOptions (Enum)

Selects the AIO backend to handle I/O requests

Values

Use qemu's thread pool
Use native AIO backend (only Linux and Windows)
Use linux io_uring (since 5.0)

Since

2.9

BlockdevCacheOptions (Object)

Includes cache-related options for block devices

Members

enables use of O_DIRECT (bypass the host page cache; default: false)
ignore any flush requests for the device (default: false)

Since

2.9

BlockdevDriver (Enum)

Drivers that are supported in block device operations.

Values

Since 2.11
Since 2.12
Since 3.0
Since 3.0
Since 4.2
Since 5.0
Since 6.2
Since 7.0
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsFile (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the file backend.

Members

path to the image file
the id for the object that will handle persistent reservations for this device (default: none, forward the commands via SG_IO; since 2.11)
AIO backend (default: threads) (since: 2.8)
maximum number of requests to batch together into a single submission in the AIO backend. The smallest value between this and the aio-max-batch value of the IOThread object is chosen. 0 means that the AIO backend will handle it automatically. (default: 0, since 6.2)
whether to enable file locking. If set to 'auto', only enable when Open File Descriptor (OFD) locking API is available (default: auto, since 2.10)
invalidate page cache during live migration. This prevents stale data on the migration destination with cache.direct=off. Currently only supported on Linux hosts. (default: on, since: 4.0)
whether to check that page cache was dropped on live migration. May cause noticeable delays if the image file is large, do not use in production. (default: off) (since: 3.0)

Features

If present, enabled auto-read-only means that the driver will open the image read-only at first, dynamically reopen the image file read-write when the first writer is attached to the node and reopen read-only when the last writer is detached. This allows giving QEMU write permissions only on demand when an operation actually needs write access.
Member x-check-cache-dropped is meant for debugging.

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsNull (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the null backend.

Members

size of the device in bytes.
emulated latency (in nanoseconds) in processing requests. Default to zero which completes requests immediately. (Since 2.4)
if true, reads from the device produce zeroes; if false, the buffer is left unchanged. (default: false; since: 4.1)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsNVMe (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the NVMe backend.

Members

PCI controller address of the NVMe device in format hhhh:bb:ss.f (host:bus:slot.function)
namespace number of the device, starting from 1.

Note that the PCI device must have been unbound from any host kernel driver before instructing QEMU to add the blockdev.

Since

2.12

BlockdevOptionsVVFAT (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the vvfat protocol.

Members

directory to be exported as FAT image
FAT type: 12, 16 or 32
whether to export a floppy image (true) or partitioned hard disk (false; default)
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)
whether to allow write operations (default: false)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat (Object)

Driver specific block device options for image format that have no option besides their data source.

Members

reference to or definition of the data source block device

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsLUKS (Object)

Driver specific block device options for LUKS.

Members

the ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the decryption key (since 2.6). Mandatory except when doing a metadata-only probe of the image.

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat (Object)

Driver specific block device options for image format that have no option besides their data source and an optional backing file.

Members

reference to or definition of the backing file block device, null disables the backing file entirely. Defaults to the backing file stored the image file.

Since

2.9

Qcow2OverlapCheckMode (Enum)

General overlap check modes.

Values

Do not perform any checks
Perform only checks which can be done in constant time and without reading anything from disk
Perform only checks which can be done without reading anything from disk
Perform all available overlap checks

Since

2.9

Qcow2OverlapCheckFlags (Object)

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

Specifies a template mode which can be adjusted using the other flags, defaults to 'cached'
since 3.0
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.9

Qcow2OverlapChecks (Alternate)

Specifies which metadata structures should be guarded against unintended overwriting.

Members

set of flags for separate specification of each metadata structure type
named mode which chooses a specific set of flags

Since

2.9

BlockdevQcowEncryptionFormat (Enum)

Values

AES-CBC with plain64 initialization vectors

Since

2.10

BlockdevQcowEncryption (Object)

Members


Since

2.10

BlockdevOptionsQcow (Object)

Driver specific block device options for qcow.

Members

Image decryption options. Mandatory for encrypted images, except when doing a metadata-only probe of the image.

Since

2.10

BlockdevQcow2EncryptionFormat (Enum)

Values

AES-CBC with plain64 initialization vectors
Not documented

Since

2.10

BlockdevQcow2Encryption (Object)

Members


Since

2.10

BlockdevOptionsPreallocate (Object)

Filter driver intended to be inserted between format and protocol node and do preallocation in protocol node on write.

Members

on preallocation, align file length to this number, default 1048576 (1M)
how much to preallocate, default 134217728 (128M)

Since

6.0

BlockdevOptionsQcow2 (Object)

Driver specific block device options for qcow2.

Members

whether to enable the lazy refcounts feature (default is taken from the image file)
whether discard requests to the qcow2 device should be forwarded to the data source
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
whether discard requests for the data source should be issued on other occasions where a cluster gets freed
when enabled, data clusters will remain preallocated when they are no longer used, e.g. because they are discarded or converted to zero clusters. As usual, whether the old data is discarded or kept on the protocol level (i.e. in the image file) depends on the setting of the pass-discard-request option. Keeping the clusters preallocated prevents qcow2 fragmentation that would otherwise be caused by freeing and re-allocating them later. Besides potential performance degradation, such fragmentation can lead to increased allocation of clusters past the end of the image file, resulting in image files whose file length can grow much larger than their guest disk size would suggest. If image file length is of concern (e.g. when storing qcow2 images directly on block devices), you should consider enabling this option. (since 8.1)
which overlap checks to perform for writes to the image, defaults to 'cached' (since 2.2)
the maximum total size of the L2 table and refcount block caches in bytes (since 2.2)
the maximum size of the L2 table cache in bytes (since 2.2)
the size of each entry in the L2 cache in bytes. It must be a power of two between 512 and the cluster size. The default value is the cluster size (since 2.12)
the maximum size of the refcount block cache in bytes (since 2.2)
clean unused entries in the L2 and refcount caches. The interval is in seconds. The default value is 600 on supporting platforms, and 0 on other platforms. 0 disables this feature. (since 2.5)
Image decryption options. Mandatory for encrypted images, except when doing a metadata-only probe of the image. (since 2.10)
reference to or definition of the external data file. This may only be specified for images that require an external data file. If it is not specified for such an image, the data file name is loaded from the image file. (since 4.0)

Since

2.9

SshHostKeyCheckMode (Enum)

Values

Don't check the host key at all
Compare the host key with a given hash
Check the host key against the known_hosts file

Since

2.12

SshHostKeyCheckHashType (Enum)

Values

The given hash is an md5 hash
The given hash is an sha1 hash
The given hash is an sha256 hash

Since

2.12

SshHostKeyHash (Object)

Members

The hash algorithm used for the hash
The expected hash value

Since

2.12

SshHostKeyCheck (Object)

Members


Since

2.12

BlockdevOptionsSsh (Object)

Members

host address
path to the image on the host
user as which to connect, defaults to current local user name
Defines how and what to check the host key against (default: known_hosts)

Since

2.9

BlkdebugEvent (Enum)

Trigger events supported by blkdebug.

Values

write zeros to the l1 table to shrink image. (since 2.11)
discard the l2 tables. (since 2.11)
a write due to copy-on-read (since 2.11)
an allocation of file space for a cluster (since 4.1)
triggers once at creation of the blkdebug node (since 4.1)
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.9

BlkdebugIOType (Enum)

Kinds of I/O that blkdebug can inject errors in.

Values

.bdrv_co_preadv()
.bdrv_co_pwritev()
.bdrv_co_pwrite_zeroes()
.bdrv_co_pdiscard()
.bdrv_co_flush_to_disk()
.bdrv_co_block_status()

Since

4.1

BlkdebugInjectErrorOptions (Object)

Describes a single error injection for blkdebug.

Members

trigger event
the state identifier blkdebug needs to be in to actually trigger the event; defaults to "any"
the type of I/O operations on which this error should be injected; defaults to "all read, write, write-zeroes, discard, and flush operations" (since: 4.1)
error identifier (errno) to be returned; defaults to EIO
specifies the sector index which has to be affected in order to actually trigger the event; defaults to "any sector"
disables further events after this one has been triggered; defaults to false
fail immediately; defaults to false

Since

2.9

BlkdebugSetStateOptions (Object)

Describes a single state-change event for blkdebug.

Members

trigger event
the current state identifier blkdebug needs to be in; defaults to "any"
the state identifier blkdebug is supposed to assume if this event is triggered

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsBlkdebug (Object)

Driver specific block device options for blkdebug.

Members

underlying raw block device (or image file)
filename of the configuration file
required alignment for requests in bytes, must be positive power of 2, or 0 for default
maximum size for I/O transfers in bytes, must be positive multiple of align and of the underlying file's request alignment (but need not be a power of 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
preferred alignment for write zero requests in bytes, must be positive multiple of align and of the underlying file's request alignment (but need not be a power of 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
maximum size for write zero requests in bytes, must be positive multiple of align, of opt-write-zero, and of the underlying file's request alignment (but need not be a power of 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
preferred alignment for discard requests in bytes, must be positive multiple of align and of the underlying file's request alignment (but need not be a power of 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
maximum size for discard requests in bytes, must be positive multiple of align, of opt-discard, and of the underlying file's request alignment (but need not be a power of 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
array of error injection descriptions
array of state-change descriptions
Permissions to take on image in addition to what is necessary anyway (which depends on how the blkdebug node is used). Defaults to none. (since 5.0)
Permissions not to share on image in addition to what cannot be shared anyway (which depends on how the blkdebug node is used). Defaults to none. (since 5.0)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsBlklogwrites (Object)

Driver specific block device options for blklogwrites.

Members

block device
block device used to log writes to file
sector size used in logging writes to file, determines granularity of offsets and sizes of writes (default: 512)
append to an existing log (default: false)
interval of write requests after which the log super block is updated to disk (default: 4096)

Since

3.0

BlockdevOptionsBlkverify (Object)

Driver specific block device options for blkverify.

Members

block device to be tested
raw image used for verification

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsBlkreplay (Object)

Driver specific block device options for blkreplay.

Members

disk image which should be controlled with blkreplay

Since

4.2

QuorumReadPattern (Enum)

An enumeration of quorum read patterns.

Values

read all the children and do a quorum vote on reads
read only from the first child that has not failed

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsQuorum (Object)

Driver specific block device options for Quorum

Members

true if the driver must print content mismatch set to false by default
the children block devices to use
the vote limit under which a read will fail
rewrite corrupted data when quorum is reached (Since 2.1)
choose read pattern and set to quorum by default (Since 2.2)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsGluster (Object)

Driver specific block device options for Gluster

Members

name of gluster volume where VM image resides
absolute path to image file in gluster volume
gluster servers description
libgfapi log level (default '4' which is Error) (Since 2.8)
libgfapi log file (default /dev/stderr) (Since 2.8)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsIoUring (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the io_uring backend.

Members

path to the image file

Since

7.2

If

CONFIG_BLKIO

BlockdevOptionsNvmeIoUring (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the nvme-io_uring backend.

Members

path to the NVMe namespace's character device (e.g. /dev/ng0n1).

Since

7.2

If

CONFIG_BLKIO

BlockdevOptionsVirtioBlkVfioPci (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the virtio-blk-vfio-pci backend.

Members

path to the PCI device's sysfs directory (e.g. /sys/bus/pci/devices/0000:00:01.0).

Since

7.2

If

CONFIG_BLKIO

BlockdevOptionsVirtioBlkVhostUser (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the virtio-blk-vhost-user backend.

Members

path to the vhost-user UNIX domain socket.

Since

7.2

If

CONFIG_BLKIO

BlockdevOptionsVirtioBlkVhostVdpa (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the virtio-blk-vhost-vdpa backend.

Members

path to the vhost-vdpa character device.

Features

Member path supports the special "/dev/fdset/N" path (since 8.1)

Since

7.2

If

CONFIG_BLKIO

IscsiTransport (Enum)

An enumeration of libiscsi transport types

Values

Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.9

IscsiHeaderDigest (Enum)

An enumeration of header digests supported by libiscsi

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsIscsi (Object)

Members

The iscsi transport type
The address of the iscsi portal
The target iqn name
LUN to connect to. Defaults to 0.
User name to log in with. If omitted, no CHAP authentication is performed.
The ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the password for the login. This option is required if user is specified.
The iqn name we want to identify to the target as. If this option is not specified, an initiator name is generated automatically.
The desired header digest. Defaults to none-crc32c.
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

RbdAuthMode (Enum)

Values

Not documented
Not documented

Since

3.0

RbdImageEncryptionFormat (Enum)

Values

Used for opening either luks or luks2 (Since 8.0)
Not documented
Not documented

Since

6.1

RbdEncryptionOptionsLUKSBase (Object)

Members

ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a passphrase for unlocking the encryption

Since

6.1

RbdEncryptionCreateOptionsLUKSBase (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

RbdEncryptionOptionsLUKS (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

RbdEncryptionOptionsLUKS2 (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

RbdEncryptionOptionsLUKSAny (Object)

Members


Since

8.0

RbdEncryptionCreateOptionsLUKS (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

RbdEncryptionCreateOptionsLUKS2 (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

RbdEncryptionOptions (Object)

Members

Encryption format.
Parent image encryption options (for cloned images). Can be left unspecified if this cloned image is encrypted using the same format and secret as its parent image (i.e. not explicitly formatted) or if its parent image is not encrypted. (Since 8.0)

Since

6.1

RbdEncryptionCreateOptions (Object)

Members


Since

6.1

BlockdevOptionsRbd (Object)

Members

Ceph pool name.
Rados namespace name in the Ceph pool. (Since 5.0)
Image name in the Ceph pool.
path to Ceph configuration file. Values in the configuration file will be overridden by options specified via QAPI.
Ceph snapshot name.
Image encryption options. (Since 6.1)
Ceph id name.
Acceptable authentication modes. This maps to Ceph configuration option "auth_client_required". (Since 3.0)
ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a key for cephx authentication. This maps to Ceph configuration option "key". (Since 3.0)
Monitor host address and port. This maps to the "mon_host" Ceph option.

Since

2.9

ReplicationMode (Enum)

An enumeration of replication modes.

Values

Primary mode, the vm's state will be sent to secondary QEMU.
Secondary mode, receive the vm's state from primary QEMU.

Since

2.9

If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

BlockdevOptionsReplication (Object)

Driver specific block device options for replication

Members

the replication mode
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.

Since

2.9

If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

NFSTransport (Enum)

An enumeration of NFS transport types

Values

TCP transport

Since

2.9

NFSServer (Object)

Captures the address of the socket

Members

transport type used for NFS (only TCP supported)
host address for NFS server

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsNfs (Object)

Driver specific block device option for NFS

Members

host address
path of the image on the host
UID value to use when talking to the server (defaults to 65534 on Windows and getuid() on unix)
GID value to use when talking to the server (defaults to 65534 on Windows and getgid() in unix)
number of SYNs during the session establishment (defaults to libnfs default)
set the readahead size in bytes (defaults to libnfs default)
set the pagecache size in bytes (defaults to libnfs default)
set the NFS debug level (max 2) (defaults to libnfs default)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsCurlBase (Object)

Driver specific block device options shared by all protocols supported by the curl backend.

Members

URL of the image file
Size of the read-ahead cache; must be a multiple of 512 (defaults to 256 kB)
Timeout for connections, in seconds (defaults to 5)
Username for authentication (defaults to none)
ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a password for authentication (defaults to no password)
Username for proxy authentication (defaults to none)
ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a password for proxy authentication (defaults to no password)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsCurlHttp (Object)

Driver specific block device options for HTTP connections over the curl backend. URLs must start with "http://".

Members

List of cookies to set; format is "name1=content1; name2=content2;" as explained by CURLOPT_COOKIE(3). Defaults to no cookies.
ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the cookie data in a secure way. See cookie for the format. (since 2.10)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsCurlHttps (Object)

Driver specific block device options for HTTPS connections over the curl backend. URLs must start with "https://".

Members

List of cookies to set; format is "name1=content1; name2=content2;" as explained by CURLOPT_COOKIE(3). Defaults to no cookies.
Whether to verify the SSL certificate's validity (defaults to true)
ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the cookie data in a secure way. See cookie for the format. (since 2.10)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsCurlFtp (Object)

Driver specific block device options for FTP connections over the curl backend. URLs must start with "ftp://".

Members


Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsCurlFtps (Object)

Driver specific block device options for FTPS connections over the curl backend. URLs must start with "ftps://".

Members

Whether to verify the SSL certificate's validity (defaults to true)

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsNbd (Object)

Driver specific block device options for NBD.

Members

NBD server address
export name
TLS credentials ID
TLS hostname override for certificate validation (Since 7.0)
A metadata context name such as "qemu:dirty-bitmap:NAME" or "qemu:allocation-depth" to query in place of the traditional "base:allocation" block status (see NBD_OPT_LIST_META_CONTEXT in the NBD protocol; and yes, naming this option x-context would have made more sense) (since 3.0)
On an unexpected disconnect, the nbd client tries to connect again until succeeding or encountering a serious error. During the first reconnect-delay seconds, all requests are paused and will be rerun on a successful reconnect. After that time, any delayed requests and all future requests before a successful reconnect will immediately fail. Default 0 (Since 4.2)
In seconds. If zero, the nbd driver tries the connection only once, and fails to open if the connection fails. If non-zero, the nbd driver will repeat connection attempts until successful or until open-timeout seconds have elapsed. Default 0 (Since 7.0)

Features

Member x-dirty-bitmap is experimental.

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsRaw (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the raw driver.

Members

position where the block device starts
the assumed size of the device

Since

2.9

BlockdevOptionsThrottle (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the throttle driver

Members

the name of the throttle-group object to use. It must already exist.
reference to or definition of the data source block device

Since

2.11

BlockdevOptionsCor (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the copy-on-read driver.

Members

The name of a non-filter node (allocation-bearing layer) that limits the COR operations in the backing chain (inclusive), so that no data below this node will be copied by this filter. If option is absent, the limit is not applied, so that data from all backing layers may be copied.

Since

6.0

OnCbwError (Enum)

An enumeration of possible behaviors for copy-before-write operation failures.

Values

report the error to the guest. This way, the guest will not be able to overwrite areas that cannot be backed up, so the backup process remains valid.
continue guest write. Doing so will make the provided snapshot state invalid and any backup or export process based on it will finally fail.

Since

7.1

BlockdevOptionsCbw (Object)

Driver specific block device options for the copy-before-write driver, which does so called copy-before-write operations: when data is written to the filter, the filter first reads corresponding blocks from its file child and copies them to target child. After successfully copying, the write request is propagated to file child. If copying fails, the original write request is failed too and no data is written to file child.

Members

The target for copy-before-write operations.
If specified, copy-before-write filter will do copy-before-write operations only for dirty regions of the bitmap. Bitmap size must be equal to length of file and target child of the filter. Note also, that bitmap is used only to initialize internal bitmap of the process, so further modifications (or removing) of specified bitmap doesn't influence the filter. (Since 7.0)
Behavior on failure of copy-before-write operation. Default is break-guest-write. (Since 7.1)
Zero means no limit. Non-zero sets the timeout in seconds for copy-before-write operation. When a timeout occurs, the respective copy-before-write operation will fail, and the on-cbw-error parameter will decide how this failure is handled. Default 0. (Since 7.1)

Since

6.2

BlockdevOptions (Object)

Options for creating a block device. Many options are available for all block devices, independent of the block driver:

Members

block driver name
the node name of the new node (Since 2.0). This option is required on the top level of blockdev-add. Valid node names start with an alphabetic character and may contain only alphanumeric characters, '-', '.' and '_'. Their maximum length is 31 characters.
discard-related options (default: ignore)
cache-related options
whether the block device should be read-only (default: false). Note that some block drivers support only read-only access, either generally or in certain configurations. In this case, the default value does not work and the option must be specified explicitly.
if true and read-only is false, QEMU may automatically decide not to open the image read-write as requested, but fall back to read-only instead (and switch between the modes later), e.g. depending on whether the image file is writable or whether a writing user is attached to the node (default: false, since 3.1)
detect and optimize zero writes (Since 2.1) (default: off)
force share all permission on added nodes. Requires read-only=true. (Since 2.10)

Remaining options are determined by the block driver.

Since

2.9

BlockdevRef (Alternate)

Reference to a block device.

Members

defines a new block device inline
references the ID of an existing block device

Since

2.9

BlockdevRefOrNull (Alternate)

Reference to a block device.

Members

defines a new block device inline
references the ID of an existing block device. An empty string means that no block device should be referenced. Deprecated; use null instead.
No block device should be referenced (since 2.10)

Since

2.9

blockdev-add (Command)

Creates a new block device.

Arguments


Since

2.9

Examples

-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",

"arguments": {
"driver": "qcow2",
"node-name": "test1",
"file": {
"driver": "file",
"filename": "test.qcow2"
}
}
} <- { "return": {} } -> { "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": {} }


blockdev-reopen (Command)

Reopens one or more block devices using the given set of options. Any option not specified will be reset to its default value regardless of its previous status. If an option cannot be changed or a particular driver does not support reopening then the command will return an error. All devices in the list are reopened in one transaction, so if one of them fails then the whole transaction is cancelled.

The command receives a list of block devices to reopen. For each one of them, the top-level node-name option (from BlockdevOptions) must be specified and is used to select the block device to be reopened. Other node-name options must be either omitted or set to the current name of the appropriate node. This command won't change any node name and any attempt to do it will result in an error.

In the case of options that refer to child nodes, the behavior of this command depends on the value:

1.
A set of options (BlockdevOptions): the child is reopened with the specified set of options.
2.
A reference to the current child: the child is reopened using its existing set of options.
3.
A reference to a different node: the current child is replaced with the specified one.
4.
NULL: the current child (if any) is detached.



Options (1) and (2) are supported in all cases. Option (3) is supported for file and backing, and option (4) for backing only.

Unlike with blockdev-add, the backing option must always be present unless the node being reopened does not have a backing file and its image does not have a default backing file name as part of its metadata.

Arguments


Since

6.1

blockdev-del (Command)

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

Name 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": {} }


BlockdevCreateOptionsFile (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for file.

Members

Filename for the new image file
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off; allowed values: off, falloc (if CONFIG_POSIX_FALLOCATE), full (if CONFIG_POSIX))
Turn off copy-on-write (valid only on btrfs; default: off)
Extent size hint to add to the image file; 0 for not adding an extent size hint (default: 1 MB, since 5.1)

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsGluster (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for gluster.

Members

Where to store the new image file
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off; allowed values: off, falloc (if CONFIG_GLUSTERFS_FALLOCATE), full (if CONFIG_GLUSTERFS_ZEROFILL))

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsLUKS (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for LUKS.

Members

Node to create the image format on
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
Preallocation mode for the new image (since: 4.2) (default: off; allowed values: off, metadata, falloc, full)

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsNfs (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for NFS.

Members

Where to store the new image file
Size of the virtual disk in bytes

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsParallels (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for parallels.

Members

Node to create the image format on
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
Cluster size in bytes (default: 1 MB)

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsQcow (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for qcow.

Members

Node to create the image format on
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
File name of the backing file if a backing file should be used
Encryption options if the image should be encrypted

Since

2.12

BlockdevQcow2Version (Enum)

Values

The original QCOW2 format as introduced in qemu 0.10 (version 2)
The extended QCOW2 format as introduced in qemu 1.1 (version 3)

Since

2.12

Qcow2CompressionType (Enum)

Compression type used in qcow2 image file

Values

zlib compression, see <http://zlib.net/>
zstd compression, see <http://github.com/facebook/zstd>

Since

5.1

BlockdevCreateOptionsQcow2 (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for qcow2.

Members

Node to create the image format on
Node to use as an external data file in which all guest data is stored so that only metadata remains in the qcow2 file (since: 4.0)
True if the external data file must stay valid as a standalone (read-only) raw image without looking at qcow2 metadata (default: false; since: 4.0)
True to make the image have extended L2 entries (default: false; since 5.2)
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
Compatibility level (default: v3)
File name of the backing file if a backing file should be used
Name of the block driver to use for the backing file
Encryption options if the image should be encrypted
qcow2 cluster size in bytes (default: 65536)
Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off; allowed values: off, falloc, full, metadata)
True if refcounts may be updated lazily (default: off)
Width of reference counts in bits (default: 16)
The image cluster compression method (default: zlib, since 5.1)

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsQed (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for qed.

Members

Node to create the image format on
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
File name of the backing file if a backing file should be used
Name of the block driver to use for the backing file
Cluster size in bytes (default: 65536)
L1/L2 table size (in clusters)

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsRbd (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for rbd/Ceph.

Members

Where to store the new image file. This location cannot point to a snapshot.
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
RBD object size
Image encryption options. (Since 6.1)

Since

2.12

BlockdevVmdkSubformat (Enum)

Subformat options for VMDK images

Values

Single file image with sparse cluster allocation
Single flat data image and a descriptor file
Data is split into 2GB (per virtual LBA) sparse extent files, in addition to a descriptor file
Data is split into 2GB (per virtual LBA) flat extent files, in addition to a descriptor file
Single file image sparse cluster allocation, optimized for streaming over network.

Since

4.0

BlockdevVmdkAdapterType (Enum)

Adapter type info for VMDK images

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

4.0

BlockdevCreateOptionsVmdk (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for VMDK.

Members

Where to store the new image file. This refers to the image file for monolithcSparse and streamOptimized format, or the descriptor file for other formats.
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
Where to store the data extents. Required for monolithcFlat, twoGbMaxExtentSparse and twoGbMaxExtentFlat formats. For monolithicFlat, only one entry is required; for twoGbMaxExtent* formats, the number of entries required is calculated as extent_number = virtual_size / 2GB. Providing more extents than will be used is an error.
The subformat of the VMDK image. Default: "monolithicSparse".
The path of backing file. Default: no backing file is used.
The adapter type used to fill in the descriptor. Default: ide.
Hardware version. The meaningful options are "4" or "6". Default: "4".
VMware guest tools version. Default: "2147483647" (Since 6.2)
Whether to enable zeroed-grain feature for sparse subformats. Default: false.

Since

4.0

BlockdevCreateOptionsSsh (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for SSH.

Members

Where to store the new image file
Size of the virtual disk in bytes

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsVdi (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for VDI.

Members

Node to create the image format on
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off; allowed values: off, metadata)

Since

2.12

BlockdevVhdxSubformat (Enum)

Values

Growing image file
Preallocated fixed-size image file

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsVhdx (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for vhdx.

Members

Node to create the image format on
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
Log size in bytes, must be a multiple of 1 MB (default: 1 MB)
Block size in bytes, must be a multiple of 1 MB and not larger than 256 MB (default: automatically choose a block size depending on the image size)
vhdx subformat (default: dynamic)
Force use of payload blocks of type 'ZERO'. Non-standard, but default. Do not set to 'off' when using 'qemu-img convert' with subformat=dynamic.

Since

2.12

BlockdevVpcSubformat (Enum)

Values

Growing image file
Preallocated fixed-size image file

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptionsVpc (Object)

Driver specific image creation options for vpc (VHD).

Members

Node to create the image format on
Size of the virtual disk in bytes
vhdx subformat (default: dynamic)
Force use of the exact byte size instead of rounding to the next size that can be represented in CHS geometry (default: false)

Since

2.12

BlockdevCreateOptions (Object)

Options for creating an image format on a given node.

Members


Since

2.12

blockdev-create (Command)

Starts a job to create an image format on a given node. The job is automatically finalized, but a manual job-dismiss is required.

Arguments

Identifier for the newly created job.
Options for the image creation.

Since

3.0

BlockdevAmendOptionsLUKS (Object)

Driver specific image amend options for LUKS.

Members


Since

5.1

BlockdevAmendOptionsQcow2 (Object)

Driver specific image amend options for qcow2. For now, only encryption options can be amended

Members

Encryption options to be amended

Since

5.1

BlockdevAmendOptions (Object)

Options for amending an image format

Members


Since

5.1

x-blockdev-amend (Command)

Starts a job to amend format specific options of an existing open block device The job is automatically finalized, but a manual job-dismiss is required.

Arguments

Identifier for the newly created job.
Name of the block node to work on
Options (driver specific)
Allow unsafe operations, format specific For luks that allows erase of the last active keyslot (permanent loss of data), and replacement of an active keyslot (possible loss of data if IO error happens)

Features

This command is experimental.

Since

5.1

BlockErrorAction (Enum)

An enumeration of action that has been taken when a DISK I/O occurs

Values

error has been ignored
error has been reported to the device
error caused VM to be stopped

Since

2.1

BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED (Event)

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 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 (Since: 2.4)
informative 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
if the corruption resulted from an image access, this is the host's access offset into the image
if the corruption resulted from an image access, this is the access size
if 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": "", "node-name": "drive", "fatal": false,
"msg": "L2 table offset 0x2a2a2a00 unaligned (L1 index: 0)" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1648243240, "microseconds": 906060 } }


Since

1.7

BLOCK_IO_ERROR (Event)

Emitted when a disk I/O error occurs

Arguments

device 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. 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. The node name is not present if the drive is empty. (Since: 2.8)
I/O operation
action that has been taken
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)
human 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

Example

<- { "event": "BLOCK_IO_ERROR",

"data": { "device": "ide0-hd1",
"node-name": "#block212",
"operation": "write",
"action": "stop",
"reason": "No space left on device" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }


BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED (Event)

Emitted when a block job has completed

Arguments

job type
The job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
maximum progress value
current progress value. On success this is equal to len. On failure this is less than len
rate limit, bytes per second
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 } }


BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED (Event)

Emitted when a block job has been cancelled

Arguments

job type
The job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
maximum progress value
current progress value. On success this is equal to len. On failure this is less than len
rate 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 } }


BLOCK_JOB_ERROR (Event)

Emitted when a block job encounters an error

Arguments

The job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
I/O operation
action 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 } }


BLOCK_JOB_READY (Event)

Emitted when a block job is ready to complete

Arguments

job type
The job identifier. Originally the device name but other values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
maximum progress value
current progress value. On success this is equal to len. On failure this is less than len
rate 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 } }


BLOCK_JOB_PENDING (Event)

Emitted when a block job is awaiting explicit authorization to finalize graph changes via block-job-finalize. If this job is part of a transaction, it will not emit this event until the transaction has converged first.

Arguments

job type
The job identifier.

Since

2.12

Example

<- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_PENDING",

"data": { "type": "mirror", "id": "backup_1" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }


PreallocMode (Enum)

Preallocation mode of QEMU image file

Values

no preallocation
preallocate only for metadata
like full preallocation but allocate disk space by posix_fallocate() rather than writing data.
preallocate all data by writing it to the device to ensure disk space is really available. This data may or may not be zero, depending on the image format and storage. full preallocation also sets up metadata correctly.

Since

2.2

BLOCK_WRITE_THRESHOLD (Event)

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-write-threshold command.

Arguments

graph node name on which the threshold was exceeded.
amount of data which exceeded the threshold, in bytes.
last configured threshold, in bytes.

Since

2.3

block-set-write-threshold (Command)

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

graph node name on which the threshold must be set.
configured 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": {} }


x-blockdev-change (Command)

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

the id or name of the parent node.
the name of a child under the given parent node.
the name of the node that will be added.

Features

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.

FIXME Removing children from a quorum node means introducing gaps in the child indices. This cannot be represented in the 'children' list of BlockdevOptionsQuorum, as returned by .bdrv_refresh_filename().

Warning: The data in a new quorum child MUST be consistent with that of the rest of the array.


Since

2.7

Examples

1. Add a new node to a quorum
-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",

"arguments": {
"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": {} }


x-blockdev-set-iothread (Command)

Move node and its children into the iothread. If iothread is null then move node and its children into the main loop.

The node must not be attached to a BlockBackend.

Arguments

the name of the block driver node
the name of the IOThread object or null for the main loop
true if the node and its children should be moved when a BlockBackend is already attached

Features

This command is experimental and intended for test cases that need control over IOThreads only.

Since

2.12

Examples

1. Move a node into an IOThread
-> { "execute": "x-blockdev-set-iothread",

"arguments": { "node-name": "disk1",
"iothread": "iothread0" } } <- { "return": {} } 2. Move a node into the main loop -> { "execute": "x-blockdev-set-iothread",
"arguments": { "node-name": "disk1",
"iothread": null } } <- { "return": {} }


QuorumOpType (Enum)

An enumeration of the quorum operation types

Values

read operation
write operation
flush operation

Since

2.6

QUORUM_FAILURE (Event)

Emitted by the Quorum block driver if it fails to establish a quorum

Arguments

device name if defined else node name
number of the first sector of the failed read operation
failed 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 } }


QUORUM_REPORT_BAD (Event)

Emitted to report a corruption of a Quorum file

Arguments

quorum operation type (Since 2.6)
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.
the graph node name of the block driver state
number of the first sector of the failed read operation
failed read operation sector count

Note

This event is rate-limited.

Since

2.0

Examples

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 } }


BlockdevSnapshotInternal (Object)

Members

the device name or node-name of a root node to generate the snapshot from
the 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, and rbd.

Since

1.7

blockdev-snapshot-internal-sync (Command)

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, GenericError

Since

1.7

Example

-> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot-internal-sync",

"arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
"name": "snapshot0" }
} <- { "return": {} }


blockdev-snapshot-delete-internal-sync (Command)

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

the device name or node-name of a root node to delete the snapshot from
optional the snapshot's ID to be deleted
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, GenericError
  • 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,
"icount": 220414
}
}


DummyBlockCoreForceArrays (Object)

Not used by QMP; hack to let us use BlockGraphInfoList internally

Members


Since

8.0

Additional block stuff (VM related)

BiosAtaTranslation (Enum)

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

If 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.
The physical disk geometry is equal to the logical geometry.
Assume 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.
The number of cylinders per head is scaled down to 1024 by correspondingly scaling up the number of heads.
Same as large, but first convert a 16-head geometry to 15-head, by proportionally scaling up the number of cylinders/head.

Since

2.0

FloppyDriveType (Enum)

Type of Floppy drive to be emulated by the Floppy Disk Controller.

Values

144
1.44MB 3.5" drive
288
2.88MB 3.5" drive
120
1.2MB 5.25" drive
No drive connected
Automatically determined by inserted media at boot

Since

2.6

PRManagerInfo (Object)

Information about a persistent reservation manager

Members

the identifier of the persistent reservation manager
true if the persistent reservation manager is connected to the underlying storage or helper

Since

3.0

query-pr-managers (Command)

Returns a list of information about each persistent reservation manager.

Returns

a list of PRManagerInfo for each persistent reservation manager

Since

3.0

eject (Command)

Ejects the medium from a removable drive.

Arguments

Block device name
The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
If true, eject regardless of whether the drive is locked. If not specified, the default value is false.

Features

Member device is deprecated. Use id instead.

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

Example

-> { "execute": "eject", "arguments": { "id": "ide1-0-1" } }
<- { "return": {} }


blockdev-open-tray (Command)

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:

  • if the guest has locked the tray, force is false and the guest does not respond to the eject request
  • if the BlockBackend denoted by device does not have a guest device attached to it
  • if the guest device does not have an actual tray

Arguments

Block device name
The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
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

Features

Member device is deprecated. Use id instead.

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": {} }


blockdev-close-tray (Command)

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

Block device name
The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)

Features

Member device is deprecated. Use id instead.

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": {} }


blockdev-remove-medium (Command)

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

The name or QOM path of the guest device

Since

2.12

Example

-> { "execute": "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": "blockdev-remove-medium",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } } <- { "return": {} }


blockdev-insert-medium (Command)

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

The name or QOM path of the guest device
name of a node in the block driver state graph

Since

2.12

Example

-> { "execute": "blockdev-add",

"arguments": {
"node-name": "node0",
"driver": "raw",
"file": { "driver": "file",
"filename": "fedora.iso" } } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "blockdev-insert-medium",
"arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0",
"node-name": "node0" } } <- { "return": {} }


BlockdevChangeReadOnlyMode (Enum)

Specifies the new read-only mode of a block device subject to the blockdev-change-medium command.

Values

Retains the current read-only mode
Makes the device read-only
Makes the device writable

Since

2.3

blockdev-change-medium (Command)

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, blockdev-remove-medium, blockdev-insert-medium and blockdev-close-tray).

Arguments

Block device name
The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
filename of the new image to be loaded
format to open the new image with (defaults to the probed format)
change the read-only mode of the device; defaults to 'retain'
if false (the default), an eject request through blockdev-open-tray 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 7.1)

Features

Member device is deprecated. Use id instead.

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": {} }


DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED (Event)

Emitted whenever the tray of a removable device is moved by the guest or by HMP/QMP commands

Arguments

Block device name. This is always present for compatibility reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the image does not have a device name associated.
The name or QOM path of the guest device (since 2.8)
true 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 } }


PR_MANAGER_STATUS_CHANGED (Event)

Emitted whenever the connected status of a persistent reservation manager changes.

Arguments

The id of the PR manager object
true if the PR manager is connected to a backend

Since

3.0

Example

<- { "event": "PR_MANAGER_STATUS_CHANGED",

"data": { "id": "pr-helper0",
"connected": true
},
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1519840375, "microseconds": 450486 } }


block_set_io_throttle (Command)

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


Returns

  • Nothing on success
  • If device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound

Since

1.1

Examples

-> { "execute": "block_set_io_throttle",

"arguments": { "id": "virtio-blk-pci0/virtio-backend",
"bps": 0,
"bps_rd": 0,
"bps_wr": 0,
"iops": 512,
"iops_rd": 0,
"iops_wr": 0,
"bps_max": 0,
"bps_rd_max": 0,
"bps_wr_max": 0,
"iops_max": 0,
"iops_rd_max": 0,
"iops_wr_max": 0,
"bps_max_length": 0,
"iops_size": 0 } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "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": {} }


block-latency-histogram-set (Command)

Manage read, write and flush latency histograms for the device.

If only id parameter is specified, remove all present latency histograms for the device. Otherwise, add/reset some of (or all) latency histograms.

Arguments

The name or QOM path of the guest device.
list of interval boundary values (see description in BlockLatencyHistogramInfo definition). If specified, all latency histograms are removed, and empty ones created for all io types with intervals corresponding to boundaries (except for io types, for which specific boundaries are set through the following parameters).
list of interval boundary values for read latency histogram. If specified, old read latency histogram is removed, and empty one created with intervals corresponding to boundaries-read. The parameter has higher priority then boundaries.
list of interval boundary values for write latency histogram.
list of interval boundary values for zone append write latency histogram.
list of interval boundary values for flush latency histogram.

Returns

error if device is not found or any boundary arrays are invalid.

Since

4.0

Example

Set new histograms for all io types with intervals [0, 10), [10,
50), [50, 100), [100, +inf):
-> { "execute": "block-latency-histogram-set",

"arguments": { "id": "drive0",
"boundaries": [10, 50, 100] } } <- { "return": {} }


Example

Set new histogram only for write, other histograms will remain not
changed (or not created):
-> { "execute": "block-latency-histogram-set",

"arguments": { "id": "drive0",
"boundaries-write": [10, 50, 100] } } <- { "return": {} }


Example

Set new histograms with the following intervals:   read, flush: [0,
10), [10, 50), [50, 100), [100, +inf)   write: [0, 1000), [1000,
5000), [5000, +inf)
-> { "execute": "block-latency-histogram-set",

"arguments": { "id": "drive0",
"boundaries": [10, 50, 100],
"boundaries-write": [1000, 5000] } } <- { "return": {} }


Example

Remove all latency histograms:
-> { "execute": "block-latency-histogram-set",

"arguments": { "id": "drive0" } } <- { "return": {} }


Block device exports

NbdServerOptions (Object)

Keep this type consistent with the nbd-server-start arguments. The only intended difference is using SocketAddress instead of SocketAddressLegacy.

Members

Address on which to listen.
ID of the TLS credentials object (since 2.6).
ID of the QAuthZ authorization object used to validate the client's x509 distinguished name. This object is is only resolved at time of use, so can be deleted and recreated on the fly while the NBD server is active. If missing, it will default to denying access (since 4.0).
The maximum number of connections to allow at the same time, 0 for unlimited. Setting this to 1 also stops the server from advertising multiple client support (since 5.2; default: 0)

Since

4.2

nbd-server-start (Command)

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".

Keep this type consistent with the NbdServerOptions type. The only intended difference is using SocketAddressLegacy instead of SocketAddress.

Arguments

Address on which to listen.
ID of the TLS credentials object (since 2.6).
ID of the QAuthZ authorization object used to validate the client's x509 distinguished name. This object is is only resolved at time of use, so can be deleted and recreated on the fly while the NBD server is active. If missing, it will default to denying access (since 4.0).
The maximum number of connections to allow at the same time, 0 for unlimited. Setting this to 1 also stops the server from advertising multiple client support (since 5.2; default: 0).

Returns

error if the server is already running.

Since

1.3

BlockExportOptionsNbdBase (Object)

An NBD block export (common options shared between nbd-server-add and the NBD branch of block-export-add).

Members

Export name. If unspecified, the device parameter is used as the export name. (Since 2.12)
Free-form description of the export, up to 4096 bytes. (Since 5.0)

Since

5.0

BlockExportOptionsNbd (Object)

An NBD block export (distinct options used in the NBD branch of block-export-add).

Members

Also export each of the named dirty bitmaps reachable from device, so the NBD client can use NBD_OPT_SET_META_CONTEXT with the metadata context name "qemu:dirty-bitmap:BITMAP" to inspect each bitmap. Since 7.1 bitmap may be specified by node/name pair.
Also export the allocation depth map for device, so the NBD client can use NBD_OPT_SET_META_CONTEXT with the metadata context name "qemu:allocation-depth" to inspect allocation details. (since 5.2)

Since

5.2

BlockExportOptionsVhostUserBlk (Object)

A vhost-user-blk block export.

Members

The vhost-user socket on which to listen. Both 'unix' and 'fd' SocketAddress types are supported. Passed fds must be UNIX domain sockets.
Logical block size in bytes. Defaults to 512 bytes.
Number of request virtqueues. Must be greater than 0. Defaults to 1.

Since

5.2

FuseExportAllowOther (Enum)

Possible allow_other modes for FUSE exports.

Values

Do not pass allow_other as a mount option.
Pass allow_other as a mount option.
Try mounting with allow_other first, and if that fails, retry without allow_other.

Since

6.1

BlockExportOptionsFuse (Object)

Options for exporting a block graph node on some (file) mountpoint as a raw image.

Members

Path on which to export the block device via FUSE. This must point to an existing regular file.
Whether writes beyond the EOF should grow the block node accordingly. (default: false)
If this is off, only qemu's user is allowed access to this export. That cannot be changed even with chmod or chown. Enabling this option will allow other users access to the export with the FUSE mount option "allow_other". Note that using allow_other as a non-root user requires user_allow_other to be enabled in the global fuse.conf configuration file. In auto mode (the default), the FUSE export driver will first attempt to mount the export with allow_other, and if that fails, try again without. (since 6.1; default: auto)

Since

6.0

If

CONFIG_FUSE

BlockExportOptionsVduseBlk (Object)

A vduse-blk block export.

Members

the name of VDUSE device (must be unique across the host).
the number of virtqueues. Defaults to 1.
the size of virtqueue. Defaults to 256.
Logical block size in bytes. Range [512, PAGE_SIZE] and must be power of 2. Defaults to 512 bytes.
the serial number of virtio block device. Defaults to empty string.

Since

7.1

NbdServerAddOptions (Object)

An NBD block export, per legacy nbd-server-add command.

Members

The device name or node name of the node to be exported
Whether clients should be able to write to the device via the NBD connection (default false).
Also export a single dirty bitmap reachable from device, so the NBD client can use NBD_OPT_SET_META_CONTEXT with the metadata context name "qemu:dirty-bitmap:BITMAP" to inspect the bitmap (since 4.0).

Since

5.0

nbd-server-add (Command)

Export a block node to QEMU's embedded NBD server.

The export name will be used as the id for the resulting block export.

Arguments


Features

This command is deprecated. Use block-export-add instead.

Returns

error if the server is not running, or export with the same name already exists.

Since

1.3

BlockExportRemoveMode (Enum)

Mode for removing a block export.

Values

Remove export if there are no existing connections, fail otherwise.
Drop all connections immediately and remove export.

Potential additional modes to be added in the future:

hide: Just hide export from new clients, leave existing connections as is. Remove export after all clients are disconnected.

soft: Hide export from new clients, answer with ESHUTDOWN for all further requests from existing clients.

Since

2.12

nbd-server-remove (Command)

Remove NBD export by name.

Arguments

Block export id.
Mode of command operation. See BlockExportRemoveMode description. Default is 'safe'.

Features

This command is deprecated. Use block-export-del instead.

Returns

error if

  • the server is not running
  • export is not found
  • mode is 'safe' and there are existing connections

Since

2.12

nbd-server-stop (Command)

Stop QEMU's embedded NBD server, and unregister all devices previously added via nbd-server-add.

Since

1.3

BlockExportType (Enum)

An enumeration of block export types

Values

NBD export
vhost-user-blk export (since 5.2)
FUSE export (since: 6.0)
vduse-blk export (since 7.1)

Since

4.2

BlockExportOptions (Object)

Describes a block export, i.e. how single node should be exported on an external interface.

Members

A unique identifier for the block export (across all export types)
The node name of the block node to be exported (since: 5.2)
True if clients should be able to write to the export (default false)
If true, caches are flushed after every write request to the export before completion is signalled. (since: 5.2; default: false)
The name of the iothread object where the export will run. The default is to use the thread currently associated with the block node. (since: 5.2)
True prevents the block node from being moved to another thread while the export is active. If true and iothread is given, export creation fails if the block node cannot be moved to the iothread. The default is false. (since: 5.2)
Not documented

Since

4.2

block-export-add (Command)

Creates a new block export.

Arguments


Since

5.2

block-export-del (Command)

Request to remove a block export. This drops the user's reference to the export, but the export may still stay around after this command returns until the shutdown of the export has completed.

Arguments

Block export id.
Mode of command operation. See BlockExportRemoveMode description. Default is 'safe'.

Returns

Error if the export is not found or mode is 'safe' and the export is still in use (e.g. by existing client connections)

Since

5.2

BLOCK_EXPORT_DELETED (Event)

Emitted when a block export is removed and its id can be reused.

Arguments

Block export id.

Since

5.2

BlockExportInfo (Object)

Information about a single block export.

Members

The unique identifier for the block export
The block export type
The node name of the block node that is exported
True if the export is shutting down (e.g. after a block-export-del command, but before the shutdown has completed)

Since

5.2

query-block-exports (Command)

Returns

A list of BlockExportInfo describing all block exports

Since

5.2

CHARACTER DEVICES

ChardevInfo (Object)

Information about a character device.

Members

the label of the character device
the filename of the character device
shows whether the frontend device attached to this backend (e.g. 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

query-chardev (Command)

Returns information about current character devices.

Returns

a list of ChardevInfo

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "query-chardev" }
<- {

"return": [
{
"label": "charchannel0",
"filename": "unix:/var/lib/libvirt/qemu/seabios.rhel6.agent,server=on",
"frontend-open": false
},
{
"label": "charmonitor",
"filename": "unix:/var/lib/libvirt/qemu/seabios.rhel6.monitor,server=on",
"frontend-open": true
},
{
"label": "charserial0",
"filename": "pty:/dev/pts/2",
"frontend-open": true
}
]
}


ChardevBackendInfo (Object)

Information about a character device backend

Members

The backend name

Since

2.0

query-chardev-backends (Command)

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"
}
]
}


DataFormat (Enum)

An enumeration of data format.

Values

Data is a UTF-8 string (RFC 3629)
Data is Base64 encoded binary (RFC 3548)

Since

1.4

ringbuf-write (Command)

Write to a ring buffer character device.

Arguments

the ring buffer character device name
data to write
data encoding (default 'utf8').
  • base64: data must be base64 encoded text. Its binary decoding gets written.
  • utf8: data's UTF-8 encoding is written
  • data itself is always Unicode regardless of format, like any other string.


Returns

Nothing on success

Since

1.4

Example

-> { "execute": "ringbuf-write",

"arguments": { "device": "foo",
"data": "abcdefgh",
"format": "utf8" } } <- { "return": {} }


ringbuf-read (Command)

Read from a ring buffer character device.

Arguments

the ring buffer character device name
how many bytes to read at most
data encoding (default 'utf8').
  • base64: the data read is returned in base64 encoding.
  • utf8: the data read is interpreted as UTF-8. Bug: can screw up when the buffer contains invalid UTF-8 sequences, NUL characters, after the ring buffer lost data, and when reading stops because the size limit is reached.
  • The return value is always Unicode regardless of format, like any other string.


Returns

data read from the device

Since

1.4

Example

-> { "execute": "ringbuf-read",

"arguments": { "device": "foo",
"size": 1000,
"format": "utf8" } } <- { "return": "abcdefgh" }


ChardevCommon (Object)

Configuration shared across all chardev backends

Members

The name of a logfile to save output
true to append instead of truncate (default to false to truncate)

Since

2.6

ChardevFile (Object)

Configuration info for file chardevs.

Members

The name of the input file
The name of the output file
Open the file in append mode (default false to truncate) (Since 2.6)

Since

1.4

ChardevHostdev (Object)

Configuration info for device and pipe chardevs.

Members

The name of the special file for the device, i.e. /dev/ttyS0 on Unix or COM1: on Windows

Since

1.4

ChardevSocket (Object)

Configuration info for (stream) socket chardevs.

Members

socket address to listen on (server=true) or connect to (server=false)
the ID of the TLS credentials object (since 2.6)
the ID of the QAuthZ authorization object against which the client's x509 distinguished name will be validated. This object is only resolved at time of use, so can be deleted and recreated on the fly while the chardev server is active. If missing, it will default to denying access (since 4.0)
create server socket (default: true)
wait for incoming connection on server sockets (default: false). Silently ignored with server: false. This use is deprecated.
set TCP_NODELAY socket option (default: false)
enable telnet protocol on server sockets (default: false)
enable tn3270 protocol on server sockets (default: false) (Since: 2.10)
enable websocket protocol on server sockets (default: false) (Since: 3.1)
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)

Since

1.4

ChardevUdp (Object)

Configuration info for datagram socket chardevs.

Members


Since

1.5

ChardevMux (Object)

Configuration info for mux chardevs.

Members

name of the base chardev.

Since

1.5

ChardevStdio (Object)

Configuration info for stdio chardevs.

Members

Allow signals (such as SIGINT triggered by ^C) be delivered to qemu. Default: true.

Since

1.5

ChardevSpiceChannel (Object)

Configuration info for spice vm channel chardevs.

Members

kind of channel (for example vdagent).

Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_SPICE

ChardevSpicePort (Object)

Configuration info for spice port chardevs.

Members

name of the channel (see docs/spice-port-fqdn.txt)

Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_SPICE

ChardevDBus (Object)

Configuration info for DBus chardevs.

Members

name of the channel (following docs/spice-port-fqdn.txt)

Since

7.0

If

CONFIG_DBUS_DISPLAY

ChardevVC (Object)

Configuration info for virtual console chardevs.

Members

console width, in pixels
console height, in pixels
console width, in chars
console height, in chars

Note

the options are only effective when the VNC or SDL graphical display backend is active. They are ignored with the GTK, Spice, VNC and D-Bus display backends.

Since

1.5

ChardevRingbuf (Object)

Configuration info for ring buffer chardevs.

Members

ring buffer size, must be power of two, default is 65536

Since

1.5

ChardevQemuVDAgent (Object)

Configuration info for qemu vdagent implementation.

Members

enable/disable mouse, default is enabled.
enable/disable clipboard, default is disabled.

Since

6.1

If

CONFIG_SPICE_PROTOCOL

ChardevBackendKind (Enum)

Values

Since 1.5
Since 1.5
Since 1.5
Since 1.5
Since 2.9
Since 1.5
Since 2.2
Since 1.5
Since 1.5
Since 1.5
Since 1.5
Since 6.1
Since 7.0
v1.5
Since 1.6
Since 1.5
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

1.4

ChardevFileWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.4

ChardevHostdevWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.4

ChardevSocketWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.4

ChardevUdpWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.5

ChardevCommonWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.6

ChardevMuxWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.5

ChardevStdioWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.5

ChardevSpiceChannelWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_SPICE

ChardevSpicePortWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_SPICE

ChardevQemuVDAgentWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

6.1

If

CONFIG_SPICE_PROTOCOL

ChardevDBusWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

7.0

If

CONFIG_DBUS_DISPLAY

ChardevVCWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.5

ChardevRingbufWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.5

ChardevBackend (Object)

Configuration info for the new chardev backend.

Members


Since

1.4

ChardevReturn (Object)

Return info about the chardev backend just created.

Members

name of the slave pseudoterminal device, present if and only if a chardev of type 'pty' was created

Since

1.4

chardev-add (Command)

Add a character device backend

Arguments

the chardev's ID, must be unique
backend type and parameters

Returns

ChardevReturn.

Since

1.4

Examples

-> { "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" } }


chardev-change (Command)

Change a character device backend

Arguments

the chardev's ID, must exist
new backend type and parameters

Returns

ChardevReturn.

Since

2.10

Examples

-> { "execute" : "chardev-change",

"arguments" : { "id" : "baz",
"backend" : { "type" : "pty", "data" : {} } } } <- { "return": { "pty" : "/dev/pty/42" } } -> {"execute" : "chardev-change",
"arguments" : {
"id" : "charchannel2",
"backend" : {
"type" : "socket",
"data" : {
"addr" : {
"type" : "unix" ,
"data" : {
"path" : "/tmp/charchannel2.socket"
}
},
"server" : true,
"wait" : false }}}} <- {"return": {}}


chardev-remove (Command)

Remove a character device backend

Arguments

the 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": {} }


chardev-send-break (Command)

Send a break to a character device

Arguments

the chardev's ID, must exist

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

2.10

Example

-> { "execute": "chardev-send-break", "arguments": { "id" : "foo" } }
<- { "return": {} }


VSERPORT_CHANGE (Event)

Emitted when the guest opens or closes a virtio-serial port.

Arguments

device identifier of the virtio-serial port
true if the guest has opened the virtio-serial port

Note

This event is rate-limited.

Since

2.1

Example

<- { "event": "VSERPORT_CHANGE",

"data": { "id": "channel0", "open": true },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1401385907, "microseconds": 422329 } }


DUMP GUEST MEMORY

DumpGuestMemoryFormat (Enum)

An enumeration of guest-memory-dump's format.

Values

elf format
makedumpfile flattened, kdump-compressed format with zlib compression
makedumpfile flattened, kdump-compressed format with lzo compression
makedumpfile flattened, kdump-compressed format with snappy compression
raw assembled kdump-compressed format with zlib compression (since 8.2)
raw assembled kdump-compressed format with lzo compression (since 8.2)
raw assembled kdump-compressed format with snappy compression (since 8.2)
Windows full crashdump format, can be used instead of ELF converting (since 2.13)

Since

2.0

dump-guest-memory (Command)

Dump guest's memory to vmcore. It is a synchronous operation that can take very long depending on the amount of guest memory.

Arguments

if 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:

1.
The guest may be in a catastrophic state or can have corrupted memory, which cannot be trusted
2.
The guest can be in real-mode even if paging is enabled. For example, the guest uses ACPI to sleep, and ACPI sleep state goes in real-mode
3.
Currently only supported on i386 and x86_64.

the filename or file descriptor of the vmcore. The supported protocols are:
1.
file: the protocol starts with "file:", and the following string is the file's path.
2.
fd: the protocol starts with "fd:", and the following string is the fd's name.

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).
if specified, the starting physical address.
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
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": { "paging": false, "protocol": "fd:dump" } } <- { "return": {} }


DumpStatus (Enum)

Describe the status of a long-running background guest memory dump.

Values

no dump-guest-memory has started yet.
there is one dump running in background.
the last dump has finished successfully.
the last dump has failed.

Since

2.6

DumpQueryResult (Object)

The result format for 'query-dump'.

Members

enum of DumpStatus, which shows current dump status
bytes written in latest dump (uncompressed)
total bytes to be written in latest dump (uncompressed)

Since

2.6

query-dump (Command)

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 } }


DUMP_COMPLETED (Event)

Emitted when background dump has completed

Arguments

final dump status
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 } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1648244171, "microseconds": 950316 } }


DumpGuestMemoryCapability (Object)

A list of the available formats for dump-guest-memory

Members


Since

2.0

query-dump-guest-memory-capability (Command)

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"] } }


NET DEVICES

Sets the link status of a virtual network adapter.

Arguments

the device name of the virtual network adapter
true to set the link status to be up

Returns

Nothing on success If name is not a valid network device, DeviceNotFound

Since

0.14

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": {} }


netdev_add (Command)

Add a network backend.

Additional arguments depend on the type.

Arguments


Since

0.14

Returns

Nothing on success If type is not a valid network backend, DeviceNotFound

Example

-> { "execute": "netdev_add",

"arguments": { "type": "user", "id": "netdev1",
"dnssearch": [ { "str": "example.org" } ] } } <- { "return": {} }


netdev_del (Command)

Remove a network backend.

Arguments

the name of the network backend to remove

Returns

Nothing on success If id is not a valid network backend, DeviceNotFound

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "netdev_del", "arguments": { "id": "netdev1" } }
<- { "return": {} }


NetLegacyNicOptions (Object)

Create a new Network Interface Card.

Members

id of -netdev to connect to
MAC address
device model (e1000, rtl8139, virtio etc.)
PCI device address
number of MSI-x vectors, 0 to disable MSI-X

Since

1.2

NetdevUserOptions (Object)

Use the user mode network stack which requires no administrator privilege to run.

Members

client hostname reported by the builtin DHCP server
isolate the guest from the host
whether to support IPv4, default true for enabled (since 2.6)
whether to support IPv6, default true for enabled (since 2.6)
legacy parameter, use net= instead
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.
guest-visible address of the host
root directory of the built-in TFTP server
BOOTP filename, for use with tftp=
the first of the 16 IPs the built-in DHCP server can assign
guest-visible address of the virtual nameserver
list of DNS suffixes to search, passed as DHCP option to the guest
guest-visible domain name of the virtual nameserver (since 3.0)
IPv6 network prefix (default is fec0::) (since 2.6). The network prefix is given in the usual hexadecimal IPv6 address notation.
IPv6 network prefix length (default is 64) (since 2.6)
guest-visible IPv6 address of the host (since 2.6)
guest-visible IPv6 address of the virtual nameserver (since 2.6)
root directory of the built-in SMB server
IP address of the built-in SMB server
redirect incoming TCP or UDP host connections to guest endpoints
forward guest TCP connections
RFC2132 "TFTP server name" string (Since 3.1)

Since

1.2

NetdevTapOptions (Object)

Used to configure a host TAP network interface backend.

Members

interface name
file descriptor of an already opened tap
multiple file descriptors of already opened multiqueue capable tap
script to initialize the interface
script to shut down the interface
bridge name (since 2.8)
command to execute to configure bridge
send buffer limit. Understands [TGMKkb] suffixes.
enable the IFF_VNET_HDR flag on the tap interface
enable vhost-net network accelerator
file descriptor of an already opened vhost net device
file descriptors of multiple already opened vhost net devices
vhost on for non-MSIX virtio guests
number of queues to be created for multiqueue capable tap
maximum number of microseconds that could be spent on busy polling for tap (since 2.7)

Since

1.2

NetdevSocketOptions (Object)

Socket netdevs are used to establish a network connection to another QEMU virtual machine via a TCP socket.

Members

file descriptor of an already opened socket
port number, and optional hostname, to listen on
port number, and optional hostname, to connect to
UDP multicast address and port number
source address and port for multicast and udp packets
UDP unicast address and port number

Since

1.2

NetdevL2TPv3Options (Object)

Configure an Ethernet over L2TPv3 tunnel.

Members

source address
destination address
source port - mandatory for udp, optional for ip
destination port - mandatory for udp, optional for ip
force the use of ipv6
use the udp version of l2tpv3 encapsulation
use 64 bit cookies
have sequence counter
pin sequence counter to zero - workaround for buggy implementations or networks with packet reorder
32 or 64 bit transmit cookie
32 or 64 bit receive cookie
32 bit transmit session
32 bit receive session - if not specified set to the same value as transmit
additional offset - allows the insertion of additional application-specific data before the packet payload

Since

2.1

NetdevVdeOptions (Object)

Connect to a vde switch running on the host.

Members

socket path
port number
group owner of socket
permissions for socket

Since

1.2

NetdevBridgeOptions (Object)

Connect a host TAP network interface to a host bridge device.

Members

bridge name
command to execute to configure bridge

Since

1.2

NetdevHubPortOptions (Object)

Connect two or more net clients through a software hub.

Members

hub identifier number
used to connect hub to a netdev instead of a device (since 2.12)

Since

1.2

NetdevNetmapOptions (Object)

Connect a client to a netmap-enabled NIC or to a VALE switch port

Members

Either 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.
path of the netmap device (default: '/dev/netmap').

Since

2.0

AFXDPMode (Enum)

Attach mode for a default XDP program

Values

generic mode, no driver support necessary
DRV mode, program is attached to a driver, packets are passed to the socket without allocation of skb.

Since

8.2

If

CONFIG_AF_XDP

NetdevAFXDPOptions (Object)

AF_XDP network backend

Members

The name of an existing network interface.
Attach mode for a default XDP program. If not specified, then 'native' will be tried first, then 'skb'.
Force XDP copy mode even if device supports zero-copy. (default: false)
number of queues to be used for multiqueue interfaces (default: 1).
Use queues starting from this queue number (default: 0).
Don't load a default XDP program, use one already loaded to the interface (default: false). Requires sock-fds.
A colon (:) separated list of file descriptors for already open but not bound AF_XDP sockets in the queue order. One fd per queue. These descriptors should already be added into XDP socket map for corresponding queues. Requires inhibit.

Since

8.2

If

CONFIG_AF_XDP

NetdevVhostUserOptions (Object)

Vhost-user network backend

Members

name of a unix socket chardev
vhost on for non-MSIX virtio guests (default: false).
number of queues to be created for multiqueue vhost-user (default: 1) (Since 2.5)

Since

2.1

NetdevVhostVDPAOptions (Object)

Vhost-vdpa network backend

vDPA device is a device that uses a datapath which complies with the virtio specifications with a vendor specific control path.

Members

path of vhost-vdpa device (default:'/dev/vhost-vdpa-0')
file descriptor of an already opened vhost vdpa device
number of queues to be created for multiqueue vhost-vdpa (default: 1)
Start device with (experimental) shadow virtqueue. (Since 7.1) (default: false)

Features

Member x-svq is experimental.

Since

5.1

NetdevVmnetHostOptions (Object)

vmnet (host mode) network backend.

Allows the vmnet interface to communicate with other vmnet interfaces that are in host mode and also with the host.

Members

The starting IPv4 address to use for the interface. Must be in the private IP range (RFC 1918). Must be specified along with end-address and subnet-mask. This address is used as the gateway address. The subsequent address up to and including end-address are placed in the DHCP pool.
The DHCP IPv4 range end address to use for the interface. Must be in the private IP range (RFC 1918). Must be specified along with start-address and subnet-mask.
The IPv4 subnet mask to use on the interface. Must be specified along with start-address and subnet-mask.
Enable isolation for this interface. Interface isolation ensures that vmnet interface is not able to communicate with any other vmnet interfaces. Only communication with host is allowed. Requires at least macOS Big Sur 11.0.
The identifier (UUID) to uniquely identify the isolated network vmnet interface should be added to. If set, no DHCP service is provided for this interface and network communication is allowed only with other interfaces added to this network identified by the UUID. Requires at least macOS Big Sur 11.0.

Since

7.1

If

CONFIG_VMNET

NetdevVmnetSharedOptions (Object)

vmnet (shared mode) network backend.

Allows traffic originating from the vmnet interface to reach the Internet through a network address translator (NAT). The vmnet interface can communicate with the host and with other shared mode interfaces on the same subnet. If no DHCP settings, subnet mask and IPv6 prefix specified, the interface can communicate with any of other interfaces in shared mode.

Members

The starting IPv4 address to use for the interface. Must be in the private IP range (RFC 1918). Must be specified along with end-address and subnet-mask. This address is used as the gateway address. The subsequent address up to and including end-address are placed in the DHCP pool.
The DHCP IPv4 range end address to use for the interface. Must be in the private IP range (RFC 1918). Must be specified along with start-address and subnet-mask.
The IPv4 subnet mask to use on the interface. Must be specified along with start-address and subnet-mask.
Enable isolation for this interface. Interface isolation ensures that vmnet interface is not able to communicate with any other vmnet interfaces. Only communication with host is allowed. Requires at least macOS Big Sur 11.0.
The IPv6 prefix to use into guest network. Must be a unique local address i.e. start with fd00::/8 and have length of 64.

Since

7.1

If

CONFIG_VMNET

NetdevVmnetBridgedOptions (Object)

vmnet (bridged mode) network backend.

Bridges the vmnet interface with a physical network interface.

Members

The name of the physical interface to be bridged.
Enable isolation for this interface. Interface isolation ensures that vmnet interface is not able to communicate with any other vmnet interfaces. Only communication with host is allowed. Requires at least macOS Big Sur 11.0.

Since

7.1

If

CONFIG_VMNET

NetdevStreamOptions (Object)

Configuration info for stream socket netdev

Members

socket address to listen on (server=true) or connect to (server=false)
create server socket (default: false)
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 8.0)

Only SocketAddress types 'unix', 'inet' and 'fd' are supported.

Since

7.2

NetdevDgramOptions (Object)

Configuration info for datagram socket netdev.

Members


Only SocketAddress types 'unix', 'inet' and 'fd' are supported.

If remote address is present and it's a multicast address, local address is optional. Otherwise local address is required and remote address is optional.

Valid parameters combination table

remote local okay?
absent absent no
absent not fd no
absent fd yes
multicast absent yes
multicast present yes
not multicast absent no
not multicast present yes

Since

7.2

NetClientDriver (Enum)

Available netdev drivers.

Values

since 2.1
since 5.1
since 7.1
since 7.1
since 7.1
since 7.2
since 7.2
since 8.2
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.7

Netdev (Object)

Captures the configuration of a network device.

Members


Since

1.2

RxState (Enum)

Packets receiving state

Values

filter assigned packets according to the mac-table
don't receive any assigned packet
receive all assigned packets

Since

1.6

RxFilterInfo (Object)

Rx-filter information for a NIC.

Members

net client name
whether promiscuous mode is enabled
multicast receive state
unicast receive state
vlan receive state (Since 2.0)
whether to receive broadcast
multicast table is overflowed or not
unicast table is overflowed or not
the main macaddr string
a list of active vlan id
a list of unicast macaddr string
a list of multicast macaddr string

Since

1.6

query-rx-filter (Command)

Return rx-filter information for all NICs (or for the given NIC).

Arguments

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
}
]
}


NIC_RX_FILTER_CHANGED (Event)

Emitted once until the 'query-rx-filter' command is executed, the first event will always be emitted

Arguments

net client name
device path

Since

1.6

Example

<- { "event": "NIC_RX_FILTER_CHANGED",

"data": { "name": "vnet0",
"path": "/machine/peripheral/vnet0/virtio-backend" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1368697518, "microseconds": 326866 } }


AnnounceParameters (Object)

Parameters for self-announce timers

Members

Initial delay (in ms) before sending the first GARP/RARP announcement
Maximum delay (in ms) between GARP/RARP announcement packets
Number of self-announcement attempts
Delay increase (in ms) after each self-announcement attempt
An optional list of interface names, which restricts the announcement to the listed interfaces. (Since 4.1)
A name to be used to identify an instance of announce-timers and to allow it to modified later. Not for use as part of the migration parameters. (Since 4.1)

Since

4.0

announce-self (Command)

Trigger generation of broadcast RARP frames to update network switches. This can be useful when network bonds fail-over the active slave.

Arguments


Example

-> { "execute": "announce-self",

"arguments": {
"initial": 50, "max": 550, "rounds": 10, "step": 50,
"interfaces": ["vn2", "vn3"], "id": "bob" } } <- { "return": {} }


Since

4.0

FAILOVER_NEGOTIATED (Event)

Emitted when VIRTIO_NET_F_STANDBY was enabled during feature negotiation. Failover primary devices which were hidden (not hotplugged when requested) before will now be hotplugged by the virtio-net standby device.

Arguments

QEMU device id of the unplugged device

Since

4.2

Example

<- { "event": "FAILOVER_NEGOTIATED",

"data": { "device-id": "net1" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1368697518, "microseconds": 326866 } }


NETDEV_STREAM_CONNECTED (Event)

Emitted when the netdev stream backend is connected

Arguments

QEMU netdev id that is connected
The destination address

Since

7.2

Examples

<- { "event": "NETDEV_STREAM_CONNECTED",

"data": { "netdev-id": "netdev0",
"addr": { "port": "47666", "ipv6": true,
"host": "::1", "type": "inet" } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1666269863, "microseconds": 311222 } } <- { "event": "NETDEV_STREAM_CONNECTED",
"data": { "netdev-id": "netdev0",
"addr": { "path": "/tmp/qemu0", "type": "unix" } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1666269706, "microseconds": 413651 } }


NETDEV_STREAM_DISCONNECTED (Event)

Emitted when the netdev stream backend is disconnected

Arguments

QEMU netdev id that is disconnected

Since

7.2

Example

<- { 'event': 'NETDEV_STREAM_DISCONNECTED',

'data': {'netdev-id': 'netdev0'},
'timestamp': {'seconds': 1663330937, 'microseconds': 526695} }


RDMA DEVICE

RDMA_GID_STATUS_CHANGED (Event)

Emitted when guest driver adds/deletes GID to/from device

Arguments

RoCE Network Device name
Add or delete indication
Subnet Prefix
Interface ID

Since

4.0

Example

<- {"timestamp": {"seconds": 1541579657, "microseconds": 986760},

"event": "RDMA_GID_STATUS_CHANGED",
"data":
{"netdev": "bridge0",
"interface-id": 15880512517475447892,
"gid-status": true,
"subnet-prefix": 33022}}


ROCKER SWITCH DEVICE

RockerSwitch (Object)

Rocker switch information.

Members

switch name
switch ID
number of front-panel ports

Since

2.4

query-rocker (Command)

Return rocker switch information.

Arguments

Not documented

Returns

Rocker information

Since

2.4

Example

-> { "execute": "query-rocker", "arguments": { "name": "sw1" } }
<- { "return": {"name": "sw1", "ports": 2, "id": 1327446905938}}


RockerPortDuplex (Enum)

An eumeration of port duplex states.

Values

half duplex
full duplex

Since

2.4

RockerPortAutoneg (Enum)

An eumeration of port autoneg states.

Values

autoneg is off
autoneg is on

Since

2.4

RockerPort (Object)

Rocker switch port information.

Members

port name
port is enabled for I/O
physical link is UP on port
port link speed in Mbps
port link duplex
port link autoneg

Since

2.4

query-rocker-ports (Command)

Return rocker switch port information.

Arguments

Not 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}
]}


RockerOfDpaFlowKey (Object)

Rocker switch OF-DPA flow key

Members

key priority, 0 being lowest priority
flow table ID
physical input port
tunnel ID
VLAN ID
Ethernet header type
Ethernet header source MAC address
Ethernet header destination MAC address
IP Header protocol field
IP header TOS field
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

RockerOfDpaFlowMask (Object)

Rocker switch OF-DPA flow mask

Members

physical input port
tunnel ID
VLAN ID
Ethernet header source MAC address
Ethernet header destination MAC address
IP Header protocol field
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

RockerOfDpaFlowAction (Object)

Rocker switch OF-DPA flow action

Members


Note

optional members may or may not appear in the flow action depending if they're relevant to the flow action.

Since

2.4

RockerOfDpaFlow (Object)

Rocker switch OF-DPA flow

Members

flow unique cookie ID
count of matches (hits) on flow
flow key
flow mask
flow action

Since

2.4

query-rocker-of-dpa-flows (Command)

Return rocker OF-DPA flow information.

Arguments

switch name
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...},
]}


RockerOfDpaGroup (Object)

Rocker switch OF-DPA group

Members

group unique ID
group type
VLAN ID
physical port number
group index, unique with group type
output physical port number
next group ID
VLAN ID to set
pop VLAN headr from packet
list of next group IDs
set source MAC address in Ethernet header
set destination MAC address in Ethernet header
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

query-rocker-of-dpa-groups (Command)

Return rocker OF-DPA group information.

Arguments

switch name
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}
]}


TPM (TRUSTED PLATFORM MODULE) DEVICES

TpmModel (Enum)

An enumeration of TPM models

Values

TPM TIS model
TPM CRB model (since 2.12)
TPM SPAPR model (since 5.0)

Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_TPM

query-tpm-models (Command)

Return a list of supported TPM models

Returns

a list of TpmModel

Since

1.5

Example

-> { "execute": "query-tpm-models" }
<- { "return": [ "tpm-tis", "tpm-crb", "tpm-spapr" ] }


If

CONFIG_TPM

TpmType (Enum)

An enumeration of TPM types

Values

TPM passthrough type
Software Emulator TPM type (since 2.11)

Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_TPM

query-tpm-types (Command)

Return a list of supported TPM types

Returns

a list of TpmType

Since

1.5

Example

-> { "execute": "query-tpm-types" }
<- { "return": [ "passthrough", "emulator" ] }


If

CONFIG_TPM

TPMPassthroughOptions (Object)

Information about the TPM passthrough type

Members

string describing the path used for accessing the TPM device
string showing the TPM's sysfs cancel file for cancellation of TPM commands while they are executing

Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_TPM

TPMEmulatorOptions (Object)

Information about the TPM emulator type

Members

Name of a unix socket chardev

Since

2.11

If

CONFIG_TPM

TPMPassthroughOptionsWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_TPM

TPMEmulatorOptionsWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.11

If

CONFIG_TPM

TpmTypeOptions (Object)

A union referencing different TPM backend types' configuration options

Members

  • 'passthrough' The configuration options for the TPM passthrough type
  • 'emulator' The configuration options for TPM emulator backend type


Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_TPM

TPMInfo (Object)

Information about the TPM

Members

The Id of the TPM
The TPM frontend model
The TPM (backend) type configuration options

Since

1.5

If

CONFIG_TPM

query-tpm (Command)

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"
}
]
}


If

CONFIG_TPM

REMOTE DESKTOP

DisplayProtocol (Enum)

Display protocols which support changing password options.

Values

Not documented
Not documented

Since

7.0

SetPasswordAction (Enum)

An action to take on changing a password on a connection with active clients.

Values

maintain existing clients
fail the command if clients are connected
disconnect existing clients

Since

7.0

SetPasswordOptions (Object)

Options for set_password.

Members

  • 'vnc' to modify the VNC server password
  • 'spice' to modify the Spice server password

the new password
How to handle existing clients when changing the password. If nothing is specified, defaults to 'keep'. For VNC, only 'keep' is currently implemented.

Since

7.0

SetPasswordOptionsVnc (Object)

Options for set_password specific to the VNC procotol.

Members

The id of the display where the password should be changed. Defaults to the first.

Since

7.0

set_password (Command)

Set the password of a remote display server.

Arguments


Returns

  • Nothing on success
  • If Spice is not enabled, DeviceNotFound

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "set_password", "arguments": { "protocol": "vnc",

"password": "secret" } } <- { "return": {} }


ExpirePasswordOptions (Object)

General options for expire_password.

Members

  • 'vnc' to modify the VNC server expiration
  • 'spice' to modify the Spice server expiration

when 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


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.

Since

7.0

ExpirePasswordOptionsVnc (Object)

Options for expire_password specific to the VNC procotol.

Members

The id of the display where the expiration should be changed. Defaults to the first.

Since

7.0

expire_password (Command)

Expire the password of a remote display server.

Arguments


Returns

  • Nothing on success
  • If protocol is 'spice' and Spice is not active, DeviceNotFound

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "expire_password", "arguments": { "protocol": "vnc",

"time": "+60" } } <- { "return": {} }


ImageFormat (Enum)

Supported image format types.

Values

PNG format
PPM format

Since

7.1

screendump (Command)

Capture the contents of a screen and write it to a file.

Arguments

the path of a new file to store the image
ID of the display device that should be dumped. If this parameter is missing, the primary display will be used. (Since 2.12)
head to use in case the device supports multiple heads. If this parameter is missing, head #0 will be used. Also note that the head can only be specified in conjunction with the device ID. (Since 2.12)
image format for screendump. (default: ppm) (Since 7.1)

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "screendump",

"arguments": { "filename": "/tmp/image" } } <- { "return": {} }


If

CONFIG_PIXMAN

Spice

SpiceBasicInfo (Object)

The basic information for SPICE network connection

Members

IP address
port number
address family

Since

2.1

If

CONFIG_SPICE

SpiceServerInfo (Object)

Information about a SPICE server

Members


Since

2.1

If

CONFIG_SPICE

SpiceChannel (Object)

Information about a SPICE client channel.

Members

SPICE connection id number. All channels with the same id belong to the same SPICE session.
SPICE channel type number. "1" is the main control channel, filter for this one if you want to track spice sessions only
SPICE 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
true if the channel is encrypted, false otherwise.

Since

0.14

If

CONFIG_SPICE

SpiceQueryMouseMode (Enum)

An enumeration of Spice mouse states.

Values

Mouse cursor position is determined by the client.
Mouse cursor position is determined by the server.
No 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

If

CONFIG_SPICE

SpiceInfo (Object)

Information about the SPICE session.

Members

true if the SPICE server is enabled, false otherwise
true if the last guest migration completed and spice migration had completed as well. false otherwise. (since 1.4)
The hostname the SPICE server is bound to. This depends on the name resolution on the host and may be an IP address.
The SPICE server's port number.
SPICE server version.
The SPICE server's TLS port number.
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

The 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)
a list of SpiceChannel for each active spice channel

Since

0.14

If

CONFIG_SPICE

query-spice (Command)

Returns information about the current SPICE server

Returns

SpiceInfo

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "query-spice" }
<- { "return": {

"enabled": true,
"auth": "spice",
"port": 5920,
"migrated":false,
"tls-port": 5921,
"host": "0.0.0.0",
"mouse-mode":"client",
"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 ... ]
]
}
}


If

CONFIG_SPICE

SPICE_CONNECTED (Event)

Emitted when a SPICE client establishes a connection

Arguments

server information
client information

Since

0.14

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"}
}}


If

CONFIG_SPICE

SPICE_INITIALIZED (Event)

Emitted after initial handshake and authentication takes place (if any) and the SPICE channel is up and running

Arguments

server information
client information

Since

0.14

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}
}}


If

CONFIG_SPICE

SPICE_DISCONNECTED (Event)

Emitted when the SPICE connection is closed

Arguments

server information
client information

Since

0.14

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"}
}}


If

CONFIG_SPICE

SPICE_MIGRATE_COMPLETED (Event)

Emitted when SPICE migration has completed

Since

1.3

Example

<- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 1290688046, "microseconds": 417172},

"event": "SPICE_MIGRATE_COMPLETED" }


If

CONFIG_SPICE

VNC

VncBasicInfo (Object)

The basic information for vnc network connection

Members

IP address
The service name of the vnc port. This may depend on the host system's service database so symbolic names should not be relied on.
address family
true in case the socket is a websocket (since 2.3).

Since

2.1

If

CONFIG_VNC

VncServerInfo (Object)

The network connection information for server

Members

authentication method used for the plain (non-websocket) VNC server

Since

2.1

If

CONFIG_VNC

VncClientInfo (Object)

Information about a connected VNC client.

Members

If x509 authentication is in use, the Distinguished Name of the client.
If SASL authentication is in use, the SASL username used for authentication.

Since

0.14

If

CONFIG_VNC

VncInfo (Object)

Information about the VNC session.

Members

true if the VNC server is enabled, false otherwise
The hostname the VNC server is bound to. This depends on the name resolution on the host and may be an IP address.
  • '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

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.
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

a list of VncClientInfo of all currently connected clients

Since

0.14

If

CONFIG_VNC

VncPrimaryAuth (Enum)

vnc primary authentication method.

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.3

If

CONFIG_VNC

VncVencryptSubAuth (Enum)

vnc sub authentication method with vencrypt.

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.3

If

CONFIG_VNC

VncServerInfo2 (Object)

The network connection information for server

Members

The current authentication type used by the servers
The vencrypt sub authentication type used by the servers, only specified in case auth == vencrypt.

Since

2.9

If

CONFIG_VNC

VncInfo2 (Object)

Information about a vnc server

Members

vnc server name.
A 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.
A list of VncClientInfo of all currently connected clients. The list can be empty, for obvious reasons.
The current authentication type used by the non-websockets servers
The vencrypt authentication type used by the servers, only specified in case auth == vencrypt.
The display device the vnc server is linked to.

Since

2.3

If

CONFIG_VNC

query-vnc (Command)

Returns information about the current VNC server

Returns

VncInfo

Since

0.14

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",
"websocket":false
}
]
}
}


If

CONFIG_VNC

query-vnc-servers (Command)

Returns a list of vnc servers. The list can be empty.

Returns

a list of VncInfo2

Since

2.3

If

CONFIG_VNC

change-vnc-password (Command)

Change the VNC server password.

Arguments

the 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.

If

CONFIG_VNC

VNC_CONNECTED (Event)

Emitted when a VNC client establishes a connection

Arguments

server information
client information

Note

This event is emitted before any authentication takes place, thus the authentication ID is not provided

Since

0.13

Example

<- { "event": "VNC_CONNECTED",

"data": {
"server": { "auth": "sasl", "family": "ipv4", "websocket": false,
"service": "5901", "host": "0.0.0.0" },
"client": { "family": "ipv4", "service": "58425",
"host": "127.0.0.1", "websocket": false } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1262976601, "microseconds": 975795 } }


If

CONFIG_VNC

VNC_INITIALIZED (Event)

Emitted after authentication takes place (if any) and the VNC session is made active

Arguments

server information
client information

Since

0.13

Example

<-  { "event": "VNC_INITIALIZED",

"data": {
"server": { "auth": "sasl", "family": "ipv4", "websocket": false,
"service": "5901", "host": "0.0.0.0"},
"client": { "family": "ipv4", "service": "46089", "websocket": false,
"host": "127.0.0.1", "sasl_username": "luiz" } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1263475302, "microseconds": 150772 } }


If

CONFIG_VNC

VNC_DISCONNECTED (Event)

Emitted when the connection is closed

Arguments

server information
client information

Since

0.13

Example

<- { "event": "VNC_DISCONNECTED",

"data": {
"server": { "auth": "sasl", "family": "ipv4", "websocket": false,
"service": "5901", "host": "0.0.0.0" },
"client": { "family": "ipv4", "service": "58425", "websocket": false,
"host": "127.0.0.1", "sasl_username": "luiz" } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1262976601, "microseconds": 975795 } }


If

CONFIG_VNC

INPUT

MouseInfo (Object)

Information about a mouse device.

Members

the name of the mouse device
the index of the mouse device
true if this device is currently receiving mouse events
true if this device supports absolute coordinates as input

Since

0.14

query-mice (Command)

Returns information about each active mouse device

Returns

a list of MouseInfo for each device

Since

0.14

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
}
]
}


QKeyCode (Enum)

An enumeration of key name.

This is used by the send-key command.

Values

since 2.0
since 2.0
since 2.4
since 2.4
since 2.6
since 2.6
since 2.9
since 2.9
since 2.9
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.10
since 2.12
since 2.12
since 6.1
since 6.1
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
since 8.0
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
1
Not documented
2
Not documented
3
Not documented
4
Not documented
5
Not documented
6
Not documented
7
Not documented
8
Not documented
9
Not documented
0
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

'sysrq' was mistakenly added to hack around the fact that the ps2 driver was not generating correct scancodes sequences when 'alt+print' was pressed. This flaw is now fixed and the 'sysrq' key serves no further purpose. Any further use of 'sysrq' will be transparently changed to 'print', so they are effectively synonyms.

Since

1.3

KeyValueKind (Enum)

Values

Not documented
Not documented

Since

1.3

IntWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.3

QKeyCodeWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.3

KeyValue (Object)

Represents a keyboard key.

Members


Since

1.3

send-key (Command)

Send keys to guest.

Arguments

An 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
time to delay key up events, milliseconds. Defaults to 100

Returns

  • Nothing on success
  • If key is unknown or redundant, GenericError

Since

1.3

Example

-> { "execute": "send-key",

"arguments": { "keys": [ { "type": "qcode", "data": "ctrl" },
{ "type": "qcode", "data": "alt" },
{ "type": "qcode", "data": "delete" } ] } } <- { "return": {} }


InputButton (Enum)

Button of a pointer input device (mouse, tablet).

Values

front side button of a 5-button mouse (since 2.9)
rear side button of a 5-button mouse (since 2.9)
screen contact on a multi-touch device (since 8.1)
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.0

InputAxis (Enum)

Position axis of a pointer input device (mouse, tablet).

Values

Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.0

InputMultiTouchType (Enum)

Type of a multi-touch event.

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

8.1

InputKeyEvent (Object)

Keyboard input event.

Members

Which key this event is for.
True for key-down and false for key-up events.

Since

2.0

InputBtnEvent (Object)

Pointer button input event.

Members

Which button this event is for.
True for key-down and false for key-up events.

Since

2.0

InputMoveEvent (Object)

Pointer motion input event.

Members

Which axis is referenced by value.
Pointer position. For absolute coordinates the valid range is 0 -> 0x7ffff

Since

2.0

InputMultiTouchEvent (Object)

MultiTouch input event.

Members

Which slot has generated the event.
ID to correlate this event with previously generated events.
Which axis is referenced by value.
Contact position.
Not documented

Since

8.1

InputEventKind (Enum)

Values

a keyboard input event
a pointer button input event
a relative pointer motion input event
an absolute pointer motion input event
a multi-touch input event

Since

2.0

InputKeyEventWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.0

InputBtnEventWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.0

InputMoveEventWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.0

InputMultiTouchEventWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

8.1

InputEvent (Object)

Input event union.

Members


Since

2.0

input-send-event (Command)

Send input event(s) to guest.

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.

Arguments

display device to send event(s) to.
head to send event(s) to, in case the display device supports multiple scanouts.
List of InputEvent union.

Returns

Nothing on success.

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.

Examples

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": {} }


DisplayGTK (Object)

GTK display options.

Members

Grab keyboard input on mouse hover.
Zoom guest display to fit into the host window. When turned off the host window will be resized instead. In case the display device can notify the guest on window resizes (virtio-gpu) this will default to "on", assuming the guest will resize the display to match the window size then. Otherwise it defaults to "off". (Since 3.1)
Display the tab bar for switching between the various graphical interfaces (e.g. VGA and virtual console character devices) by default. (Since 7.1)
Display the main window menubar. Defaults to "on". (Since 8.0)

Since

2.12

DisplayEGLHeadless (Object)

EGL headless display options.

Members

Which DRM render node should be used. Default is the first available node on the host.

Since

3.1

DisplayDBus (Object)

DBus display options.

Members

The D-Bus bus address (default to the session bus).
Which DRM render node should be used. Default is the first available node on the host.
Whether to use peer-to-peer connections (accepted through add_client).
Use the specified DBus audiodev to export audio.

Since

7.0

DisplayGLMode (Enum)

Display OpenGL mode.

Values

Disable OpenGL (default).
Use OpenGL, pick context type automatically. Would better be named 'auto' but is called 'on' for backward compatibility with bool type.
Use OpenGL with Core (desktop) Context.
Use OpenGL with ES (embedded systems) Context.

Since

3.0

DisplayCurses (Object)

Curses display options.

Members

Font charset used by guest (default: CP437).

Since

4.0

DisplayCocoa (Object)

Cocoa display options.

Members

Enable/disable forwarding of left command key to guest. Allows command-tab window switching on the host without sending this key to the guest when "off". Defaults to "on"
Capture all key presses, including system combos. This requires accessibility permissions, since it performs a global grab on key events. (default: off) See https://support.apple.com/en-in/guide/mac-help/mh32356/mac
Swap the Option and Command keys so that their key codes match their position on non-Mac keyboards and you can use Meta/Super and Alt where you expect them. (default: off)
Zoom guest display to fit into the host window. When turned off the host window will be resized instead. Defaults to "off". (Since 8.2)

Since

7.0

HotKeyMod (Enum)

Set of modifier keys that need to be held for shortcut key actions.

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

7.1

DisplaySDL (Object)

SDL2 display options.

Members

Modifier keys that should be pressed together with the "G" key to release the mouse grab.

Since

7.1

DisplayType (Enum)

Display (user interface) type.

Values

The default user interface, selecting from the first available of gtk, sdl, cocoa, and vnc.
No user interface or video output display. The guest will still see an emulated graphics card, but its output will not be displayed to the QEMU user.
The GTK user interface.
The SDL user interface.
No user interface, offload GL operations to a local DRI device. Graphical display need to be paired with VNC or Spice. (Since 3.1)
Display video output via curses. For graphics device models which support a text mode, QEMU can display this output using a curses/ncurses interface. Nothing is displayed when the graphics device is in graphical mode or if the graphics device does not support a text mode. Generally only the VGA device models support text mode.
The Cocoa user interface.
Set up a Spice server and run the default associated application to connect to it. The server will redirect the serial console and QEMU monitors. (Since 4.0)
Start a D-Bus service for the display. (Since 7.0)

Since

2.12

DisplayOptions (Object)

Display (user interface) options.

Members


Since

2.12

query-display-options (Command)

Returns information about display configuration

Returns

DisplayOptions

Since

3.1

DisplayReloadType (Enum)

Available DisplayReload types.

Values

VNC display

Since

6.0

DisplayReloadOptionsVNC (Object)

Specify the VNC reload options.

Members

reload tls certs or not.

Since

6.0

DisplayReloadOptions (Object)

Options of the display configuration reload.

Members


Since

6.0

display-reload (Command)

Reload display configuration.

Arguments


Returns

Nothing on success.

Since

6.0

Example

-> { "execute": "display-reload",

"arguments": { "type": "vnc", "tls-certs": true } } <- { "return": {} }


DisplayUpdateType (Enum)

Available DisplayUpdate types.

Values

VNC display

Since

7.1

DisplayUpdateOptionsVNC (Object)

Specify the VNC reload options.

Members

If specified, change set of addresses to listen for connections. Addresses configured for websockets are not touched.

Since

7.1

DisplayUpdateOptions (Object)

Options of the display configuration reload.

Members


Since

7.1

display-update (Command)

Update display configuration.

Arguments


Returns

Nothing on success.

Since

7.1

Example

-> { "execute": "display-update",

"arguments": { "type": "vnc", "addresses":
[ { "type": "inet", "host": "0.0.0.0",
"port": "5901" } ] } } <- { "return": {} }


client_migrate_info (Command)

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

must be "spice"
migration target hostname
spice tcp port for plaintext channels
spice tcp port for tls-secured channels
server certificate subject

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "client_migrate_info",

"arguments": { "protocol": "spice",
"hostname": "virt42.lab.kraxel.org",
"port": 1234 } } <- { "return": {} }


USER AUTHORIZATION

QAuthZListPolicy (Enum)

The authorization policy result

Values

deny access
allow access

Since

4.0

QAuthZListFormat (Enum)

The authorization policy match format

Values

an exact string match
string with ? and * shell wildcard support

Since

4.0

QAuthZListRule (Object)

A single authorization rule.

Members

a string or glob to match against a user identity
the result to return if match evaluates to true
the format of the match rule (default 'exact')

Since

4.0

AuthZListProperties (Object)

Properties for authz-list objects.

Members

Default policy to apply when no rule matches (default: deny)
Authorization rules based on matching user

Since

4.0

AuthZListFileProperties (Object)

Properties for authz-listfile objects.

Members

File name to load the configuration from. The file must contain valid JSON for AuthZListProperties.
If true, inotify is used to monitor the file, automatically reloading changes. If an error occurs during reloading, all authorizations will fail until the file is next successfully loaded. (default: true if the binary was built with CONFIG_INOTIFY1, false otherwise)

Since

4.0

AuthZPAMProperties (Object)

Properties for authz-pam objects.

Members

PAM service name to use for authorization

Since

4.0

AuthZSimpleProperties (Object)

Properties for authz-simple objects.

Members

Identifies the allowed user. Its format depends on the network service that authorization object is associated with. For authorizing based on TLS x509 certificates, the identity must be the x509 distinguished name.

Since

4.0

MIGRATION

MigrationStats (Object)

Detailed migration status.

Members

amount of bytes already transferred to the target VM
amount of bytes remaining to be transferred to the target VM
total amount of bytes involved in the migration process
number of duplicate (zero) pages (since 1.2)
number of skipped zero pages. Always zero, only provided for compatibility (since 1.5)
number of normal pages (since 1.2)
number of normal bytes sent (since 1.2)
number of pages dirtied by second by the guest (since 1.3)
throughput in megabits/sec. (since 1.6)
number of times that dirty ram was synchronized (since 2.1)
The number of page requests received from the destination (since 2.7)
The number of bytes per page for the various page-based statistics (since 2.10)
The number of bytes sent through multifd (since 3.0)
the number of memory pages transferred per second (Since 4.0)
The number of bytes sent in the pre-copy phase (since 7.0).
The number of bytes sent while the guest is paused (since 7.0).
The number of bytes sent during the post-copy phase (since 7.0).
Number of times dirty RAM synchronization could not avoid copying dirty pages. This is between 0 and dirty-sync-count * multifd-channels. (since 7.1)

Features

Member skipped is always zero since 1.5.3

Since

0.14

XBZRLECacheStats (Object)

Detailed XBZRLE migration cache statistics

Members

XBZRLE cache size
amount of bytes already transferred to the target VM
amount of pages transferred to the target VM
number of cache miss
rate of cache miss (since 2.1)
rate of encoded bytes (since 5.1)
number of overflows

Since

1.2

CompressionStats (Object)

Detailed migration compression statistics

Members

amount of pages compressed and transferred to the target VM
count of times that no free thread was available to compress data
rate of thread busy
amount of bytes after compression
rate of compressed size

Since

3.1

MigrationStatus (Enum)

An enumeration of migration status.

Values

no migration has ever happened.
migration process has been initiated.
in the process of cancelling migration.
cancelling migration is finished.
in the process of doing migration.
like active, but now in postcopy mode. (since 2.5)
during postcopy but paused. (since 3.0)
trying to recover from a paused postcopy. (since 3.0)
migration is finished.
some error occurred during migration process.
VM is in the process of fault tolerance, VM can not get into this state unless colo capability is enabled for migration. (since 2.8)
Paused before device serialisation. (since 2.11)
During device serialisation when pause-before-switchover is enabled (since 2.11)
wait for device unplug request by guest OS to be completed. (since 4.2)

Since

2.3

VfioStats (Object)

Detailed VFIO devices migration statistics

Members

amount of bytes transferred to the target VM by VFIO devices

Since

5.2

MigrationInfo (Object)

Information about current migration process.

Members

MigrationStatus describing the current migration status. If this field is not returned, no migration process has been initiated
MigrationStats containing detailed migration status, only returned if status is 'active' or 'completed'(since 1.2)
MigrationStats containing detailed disk migration status, only returned if status is 'active' and it is a block migration
XBZRLECacheStats containing detailed XBZRLE migration statistics, only returned if XBZRLE feature is on and status is 'active' or 'completed' (since 1.2)
total amount of milliseconds since migration started. If migration has ended, it returns the total migration time. (since 1.2)
only present when migration finishes correctly total downtime in milliseconds for the guest. (since 1.3)
only present while migration is active expected downtime in milliseconds for the guest in last walk of the dirty bitmap. (since 1.3)
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)
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)
the human readable error description string. Clients should not attempt to parse the error strings. (Since 2.7)
total time when all vCPU were blocked during postcopy live migration. This is only present when the postcopy-blocktime migration capability is enabled. (Since 3.0)
list of the postcopy blocktime per vCPU. This is only present when the postcopy-blocktime migration capability is enabled. (Since 3.0)
migration compression statistics, only returned if compression feature is on and status is 'active' or 'completed' (Since 3.1)
Only used for tcp, to know what the real port is (Since 4.0)
VfioStats containing detailed VFIO devices migration statistics, only returned if VFIO device is present, migration is supported by all VFIO devices and status is 'active' or 'completed' (since 5.2)
A list of reasons an outgoing migration is blocked. Present and non-empty when migration is blocked. (since 6.0)
Maximum throttle time (in microseconds) of virtual CPUs each dirty ring full round, which shows how MigrationCapability dirty-limit affects the guest during live migration. (Since 8.1)
Estimated average dirty ring full time (in microseconds) for each dirty ring full round. The value equals the dirty ring memory size divided by the average dirty page rate of the virtual CPU, which can be used to observe the average memory load of the virtual CPU indirectly. Note that zero means guest doesn't dirty memory. (Since 8.1)

Features

Member disk is deprecated because block migration is. Member compression is deprecated because it is unreliable and untested. It is recommended to use multifd migration, which offers an alternative compression implementation that is reliable and tested.

Since

0.14

query-migrate (Command)

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

Examples

1. Before the first migration
-> { "execute": "query-migrate" }
<- { "return": {} }
2. Migration is done and has succeeded
-> { "execute": "query-migrate" }
<- { "return": {

"status": "completed",
"total-time":12345,
"setup-time":12345,
"downtime":12345,
"ram":{
"transferred":123,
"remaining":123,
"total":246,
"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",
"total-time":12345,
"setup-time":12345,
"expected-downtime":12345,
"ram":{
"transferred":123,
"remaining":123,
"total":246,
"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",
"total-time":12345,
"setup-time":12345,
"expected-downtime":12345,
"ram":{
"total":1057024,
"remaining":1053304,
"transferred":3720,
"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",
"total-time":12345,
"setup-time":12345,
"expected-downtime":12345,
"ram":{
"total":1057024,
"remaining":1053304,
"transferred":3720,
"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,
"encoding-rate":80.1,
"overflow":34434
}
}
}


MigrationCapability (Enum)

Migration capabilities enumeration

Values

Migration 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
Controls 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)
During 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)
Use 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)
generate events for each migration state change (since 2.4)
If enabled, QEMU will automatically throttle down the guest to speed up convergence of RAM migration. (since 1.6)
Start executing on the migration target before all of RAM has been migrated, pulling the remaining pages along as needed. The capacity must have the same setting on both source and target or migration will not even start. NOTE: If the migration fails during postcopy the VM will fail. (since 2.6)
If 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)
if enabled, qemu will free the migrated ram pages on the source during postcopy-ram migration. (since 2.9)
If enabled, QEMU will also migrate the contents of all block devices. Default is disabled. A possible alternative uses mirror jobs to a builtin NBD server on the destination, which offers more flexibility. (Since 2.10)
If enabled, migration will use the return path even for precopy. (since 2.10)
Pause outgoing migration before serialising device state and before disabling block IO (since 2.11)
Use more than one fd for migration (since 4.0)
If enabled, QEMU will migrate named dirty bitmaps. (since 2.12)
Calculate downtime for postcopy live migration (since 3.0)
If enabled, the destination will not activate block devices (and thus take locks) immediately at the end of migration. (since 3.0)
If enabled, QEMU will not migrate shared memory that is accessible on the destination machine. (since 4.0)
Send the UUID of the source to allow the destination to ensure it is the same. (since 4.2)
If enabled, the migration stream will be a snapshot of the VM exactly at the point when the migration procedure starts. The VM RAM is saved with running VM. (since 6.0)
Controls behavior on sending memory pages on migration. When true, enables a zero-copy mechanism for sending memory pages, if host supports it. Requires that QEMU be permitted to use locked memory for guest RAM pages. (since 7.1)
If enabled, the migration process will allow postcopy requests to preempt precopy stream, so postcopy requests will be handled faster. This is a performance feature and should not affect the correctness of postcopy migration. (since 7.1)
If enabled, migration will not stop the source VM and complete the migration until an ACK is received from the destination that it's OK to do so. Exactly when this ACK is sent depends on the migrated devices that use this feature. For example, a device can use it to make sure some of its data is sent and loaded in the destination before doing switchover. This can reduce downtime if devices that support this capability are present. 'return-path' capability must be enabled to use it. (since 8.1)
If enabled, migration will throttle vCPUs as needed to keep their dirty page rate within vcpu-dirty-limit. This can improve responsiveness of large guests during live migration, and can result in more stable read performance. Requires KVM with accelerator property "dirty-ring-size" set. (Since 8.1)

Features

Member block is deprecated. Use blockdev-mirror with NBD instead. Member compression is deprecated because it is unreliable and untested. It is recommended to use multifd migration, which offers an alternative compression implementation that is reliable and tested.
Members x-colo and x-ignore-shared are experimental.

Since

1.2

MigrationCapabilityStatus (Object)

Migration capability information

Members

capability enum
capability state bool

Since

1.2

migrate-set-capabilities (Command)

Enable/Disable the following migration capabilities (like xbzrle)

Arguments

json array of capability modifications to make

Since

1.2

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate-set-capabilities" , "arguments":

{ "capabilities": [ { "capability": "xbzrle", "state": true } ] } } <- { "return": {} }


query-migrate-capabilities (Command)

Returns information about the current migration capabilities status

Returns

MigrationCapabilityStatus

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"}
]}


MultiFDCompression (Enum)

An enumeration of multifd compression methods.

Values

no compression.
use zlib compression method.
use zstd compression method.

Since

5.0

MigMode (Enum)

Values

the original form of migration. (since 8.2)
The migrate command saves state to a file, allowing one to quit qemu, reboot to an updated kernel, and restart an updated version of qemu. The caller must specify a migration URI that writes to and reads from a file. Unlike normal mode, the use of certain local storage options does not block the migration, but the caller must not modify guest block devices between the quit and restart. To avoid saving guest RAM to the file, the memory backend must be shared, and the x-ignore-shared migration capability must be set. Guest RAM must be non-volatile across reboot, such as by backing it with a dax device, but this is not enforced. The restarted qemu arguments must match those used to initially start qemu, plus the -incoming option. (since 8.2)

BitmapMigrationBitmapAliasTransform (Object)

Members

If present, the bitmap will be made persistent or transient depending on this parameter.

Since

6.0

BitmapMigrationBitmapAlias (Object)

Members

The name of the bitmap.
An alias name for migration (for example the bitmap name on the opposite site).
Allows the modification of the migrated bitmap. (since 6.0)

Since

5.2

BitmapMigrationNodeAlias (Object)

Maps a block node name and the bitmaps it has to aliases for dirty bitmap migration.

Members

A block node name.
An alias block node name for migration (for example the node name on the opposite site).
Mappings for the bitmaps on this node.

Since

5.2

MigrationParameter (Enum)

Migration parameters enumeration

Values

Initial delay (in milliseconds) before sending the first announce (Since 4.0)
Maximum delay (in milliseconds) between packets in the announcement (Since 4.0)
Number of self-announce packets sent after migration (Since 4.0)
Increase in delay (in milliseconds) between subsequent packets in the announcement (Since 4.0)
Set 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.
Set compression thread count to be used in live migration, the compression thread count is an integer between 1 and 255.
Controls behavior when all compression threads are currently busy. If true (default), wait for a free compression thread to become available; otherwise, send the page uncompressed. (Since 3.1)
Set 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.
The ratio of bytes_dirty_period and bytes_xfer_period to trigger throttling. It is expressed as percentage. The default value is 50. (Since 5.0)
Initial percentage of time guest cpus are throttled when migration auto-converge is activated. The default value is 20. (Since 2.7)
throttle percentage increase each time auto-converge detects that migration is not making progress. The default value is 10. (Since 2.7)
Make CPU throttling slower at tail stage At the tail stage of throttling, the Guest is very sensitive to CPU percentage while the cpu-throttle -increment is excessive usually at tail stage. If this parameter is true, we will compute the ideal CPU percentage used by the Guest, which may exactly make the dirty rate match the dirty rate threshold. Then we will choose a smaller throttle increment between the one specified by cpu-throttle-increment and the one generated by ideal CPU percentage. Therefore, it is compatible to traditional throttling, meanwhile the throttle increment won't be excessive at tail stage. The default value is false. (Since 5.1)
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)
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)
ID of the 'authz' object subclass that provides access control checking of the TLS x509 certificate distinguished name. This object is only resolved at time of use, so can be deleted and recreated on the fly while the migration server is active. If missing, it will default to denying access (Since 4.0)
to set maximum speed for migration. maximum speed in bytes per second. (Since 2.8)
to set the available bandwidth that migration can use during switchover phase. NOTE! This does not limit the bandwidth during switchover, but only for calculations when making decisions to switchover. By default, this value is zero, which means QEMU will estimate the bandwidth automatically. This can be set when the estimated value is not accurate, while the user is able to guarantee such bandwidth is available when switching over. When specified correctly, this can make the switchover decision much more accurate. (Since 8.2)
set maximum tolerated downtime for migration. maximum downtime in milliseconds (Since 2.8)
The delay time (in ms) between two COLO checkpoints in periodic mode. (Since 2.8)
Affects how much storage is migrated when the block migration capability is enabled. When false, the entire storage backing chain is migrated into a flattened image at the destination; when true, only the active qcow2 layer is migrated and the destination must already have access to the same backing chain as was used on the source. (since 2.10)
Number of channels used to migrate data in parallel. This is the same number that the number of sockets used for migration. The default value is 2 (since 4.0)
cache size to be used by XBZRLE migration. It needs to be a multiple of the target page size and a power of 2 (Since 2.11)
Background transfer bandwidth during postcopy. Defaults to 0 (unlimited). In bytes per second. (Since 3.0)
maximum cpu throttle percentage. Defaults to 99. (Since 3.1)
Which compression method to use. Defaults to none. (Since 5.0)
Set 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. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0)
Set the compression level to be used in live migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 20, where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression speed, and 20 means best compression ratio which will consume more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0)
Maps block nodes and bitmaps on them to aliases for the purpose of dirty bitmap migration. Such aliases may for example be the corresponding names on the opposite site. The mapping must be one-to-one, but not necessarily complete: On the source, unmapped bitmaps and all bitmaps on unmapped nodes will be ignored. On the destination, encountering an unmapped alias in the incoming migration stream will result in a report, and all further bitmap migration data will then be discarded. Note that the destination does not know about bitmaps it does not receive, so there is no limitation or requirement regarding the number of bitmaps received, or how they are named, or on which nodes they are placed. By default (when this parameter has never been set), bitmap names are mapped to themselves. Nodes are mapped to their block device name if there is one, and to their node name otherwise. (Since 5.2)
Periodic time (in milliseconds) of dirty limit during live migration. Should be in the range 1 to 1000ms. Defaults to 1000ms. (Since 8.1)
Dirtyrate limit (MB/s) during live migration. Defaults to 1. (Since 8.1)
Migration mode. See description in MigMode. Default is 'normal'. (Since 8.2)

Features

Member block-incremental is deprecated. Use blockdev-mirror with NBD instead. Members compress-level, compress-threads, decompress-threads and compress-wait-thread are deprecated because compression is deprecated.
Members x-checkpoint-delay and x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period are experimental.

Since

2.4

MigrateSetParameters (Object)

Members

Initial delay (in milliseconds) before sending the first announce (Since 4.0)
Maximum delay (in milliseconds) between packets in the announcement (Since 4.0)
Number of self-announce packets sent after migration (Since 4.0)
Increase in delay (in milliseconds) between subsequent packets in the announcement (Since 4.0)
compression level
compression thread count
Controls behavior when all compression threads are currently busy. If true (default), wait for a free compression thread to become available; otherwise, send the page uncompressed. (Since 3.1)
decompression thread count
The ratio of bytes_dirty_period and bytes_xfer_period to trigger throttling. It is expressed as percentage. The default value is 50. (Since 5.0)
Initial percentage of time guest cpus are throttled when migration auto-converge is activated. The default value is 20. (Since 2.7)
throttle percentage increase each time auto-converge detects that migration is not making progress. The default value is 10. (Since 2.7)
Make CPU throttling slower at tail stage At the tail stage of throttling, the Guest is very sensitive to CPU percentage while the cpu-throttle -increment is excessive usually at tail stage. If this parameter is true, we will compute the ideal CPU percentage used by the Guest, which may exactly make the dirty rate match the dirty rate threshold. Then we will choose a smaller throttle increment between the one specified by cpu-throttle-increment and the one generated by ideal CPU percentage. Therefore, it is compatible to traditional throttling, meanwhile the throttle increment won't be excessive at tail stage. The default value is false. (Since 5.1)
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 to a non-empty string enables TLS for all migrations. An empty string means that QEMU will use plain text mode for migration, rather than TLS (Since 2.9) Previously (since 2.7), this was reported by omitting tls-creds instead.
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) Previously (since 2.7), this was reported by omitting tls-hostname instead.
to set maximum speed for migration. maximum speed in bytes per second. (Since 2.8)
to set the available bandwidth that migration can use during switchover phase. NOTE! This does not limit the bandwidth during switchover, but only for calculations when making decisions to switchover. By default, this value is zero, which means QEMU will estimate the bandwidth automatically. This can be set when the estimated value is not accurate, while the user is able to guarantee such bandwidth is available when switching over. When specified correctly, this can make the switchover decision much more accurate. (Since 8.2)
set maximum tolerated downtime for migration. maximum downtime in milliseconds (Since 2.8)
the delay time between two COLO checkpoints. (Since 2.8)
Affects how much storage is migrated when the block migration capability is enabled. When false, the entire storage backing chain is migrated into a flattened image at the destination; when true, only the active qcow2 layer is migrated and the destination must already have access to the same backing chain as was used on the source. (since 2.10)
Number of channels used to migrate data in parallel. This is the same number that the number of sockets used for migration. The default value is 2 (since 4.0)
cache size to be used by XBZRLE migration. It needs to be a multiple of the target page size and a power of 2 (Since 2.11)
Background transfer bandwidth during postcopy. Defaults to 0 (unlimited). In bytes per second. (Since 3.0)
maximum cpu throttle percentage. The default value is 99. (Since 3.1)
Which compression method to use. Defaults to none. (Since 5.0)
Set 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. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0)
Set the compression level to be used in live migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 20, where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression speed, and 20 means best compression ratio which will consume more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0)
Maps block nodes and bitmaps on them to aliases for the purpose of dirty bitmap migration. Such aliases may for example be the corresponding names on the opposite site. The mapping must be one-to-one, but not necessarily complete: On the source, unmapped bitmaps and all bitmaps on unmapped nodes will be ignored. On the destination, encountering an unmapped alias in the incoming migration stream will result in a report, and all further bitmap migration data will then be discarded. Note that the destination does not know about bitmaps it does not receive, so there is no limitation or requirement regarding the number of bitmaps received, or how they are named, or on which nodes they are placed. By default (when this parameter has never been set), bitmap names are mapped to themselves. Nodes are mapped to their block device name if there is one, and to their node name otherwise. (Since 5.2)
Periodic time (in milliseconds) of dirty limit during live migration. Should be in the range 1 to 1000ms. Defaults to 1000ms. (Since 8.1)
Dirtyrate limit (MB/s) during live migration. Defaults to 1. (Since 8.1)
Migration mode. See description in MigMode. Default is 'normal'. (Since 8.2)
Not documented

Features

Member block-incremental is deprecated. Use blockdev-mirror with NBD instead. Members compress-level, compress-threads, decompress-threads and compress-wait-thread are deprecated because compression is deprecated.
Members x-checkpoint-delay and x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period are experimental.

Since

2.4

migrate-set-parameters (Command)

Set various migration parameters.

Arguments


Since

2.4

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate-set-parameters" ,

"arguments": { "multifd-channels": 5 } } <- { "return": {} }


MigrationParameters (Object)

The optional members aren't actually optional.

Members

Initial delay (in milliseconds) before sending the first announce (Since 4.0)
Maximum delay (in milliseconds) between packets in the announcement (Since 4.0)
Number of self-announce packets sent after migration (Since 4.0)
Increase in delay (in milliseconds) between subsequent packets in the announcement (Since 4.0)
compression level
compression thread count
Controls behavior when all compression threads are currently busy. If true (default), wait for a free compression thread to become available; otherwise, send the page uncompressed. (Since 3.1)
decompression thread count
The ratio of bytes_dirty_period and bytes_xfer_period to trigger throttling. It is expressed as percentage. The default value is 50. (Since 5.0)
Initial percentage of time guest cpus are throttled when migration auto-converge is activated. (Since 2.7)
throttle percentage increase each time auto-converge detects that migration is not making progress. (Since 2.7)
Make CPU throttling slower at tail stage At the tail stage of throttling, the Guest is very sensitive to CPU percentage while the cpu-throttle -increment is excessive usually at tail stage. If this parameter is true, we will compute the ideal CPU percentage used by the Guest, which may exactly make the dirty rate match the dirty rate threshold. Then we will choose a smaller throttle increment between the one specified by cpu-throttle-increment and the one generated by ideal CPU percentage. Therefore, it is compatible to traditional throttling, meanwhile the throttle increment won't be excessive at tail stage. The default value is false. (Since 5.1)
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. An empty string means that QEMU will use plain text mode for migration, rather than TLS (Since 2.7) Note: 2.8 reports this by omitting tls-creds instead.
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) Note: 2.8 reports this by omitting tls-hostname instead.
ID of the 'authz' object subclass that provides access control checking of the TLS x509 certificate distinguished name. (Since 4.0)
to set maximum speed for migration. maximum speed in bytes per second. (Since 2.8)
to set the available bandwidth that migration can use during switchover phase. NOTE! This does not limit the bandwidth during switchover, but only for calculations when making decisions to switchover. By default, this value is zero, which means QEMU will estimate the bandwidth automatically. This can be set when the estimated value is not accurate, while the user is able to guarantee such bandwidth is available when switching over. When specified correctly, this can make the switchover decision much more accurate. (Since 8.2)
set maximum tolerated downtime for migration. maximum downtime in milliseconds (Since 2.8)
the delay time between two COLO checkpoints. (Since 2.8)
Affects how much storage is migrated when the block migration capability is enabled. When false, the entire storage backing chain is migrated into a flattened image at the destination; when true, only the active qcow2 layer is migrated and the destination must already have access to the same backing chain as was used on the source. (since 2.10)
Number of channels used to migrate data in parallel. This is the same number that the number of sockets used for migration. The default value is 2 (since 4.0)
cache size to be used by XBZRLE migration. It needs to be a multiple of the target page size and a power of 2 (Since 2.11)
Background transfer bandwidth during postcopy. Defaults to 0 (unlimited). In bytes per second. (Since 3.0)
maximum cpu throttle percentage. Defaults to 99. (Since 3.1)
Which compression method to use. Defaults to none. (Since 5.0)
Set 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. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0)
Set the compression level to be used in live migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 20, where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression speed, and 20 means best compression ratio which will consume more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0)
Maps block nodes and bitmaps on them to aliases for the purpose of dirty bitmap migration. Such aliases may for example be the corresponding names on the opposite site. The mapping must be one-to-one, but not necessarily complete: On the source, unmapped bitmaps and all bitmaps on unmapped nodes will be ignored. On the destination, encountering an unmapped alias in the incoming migration stream will result in a report, and all further bitmap migration data will then be discarded. Note that the destination does not know about bitmaps it does not receive, so there is no limitation or requirement regarding the number of bitmaps received, or how they are named, or on which nodes they are placed. By default (when this parameter has never been set), bitmap names are mapped to themselves. Nodes are mapped to their block device name if there is one, and to their node name otherwise. (Since 5.2)
Periodic time (in milliseconds) of dirty limit during live migration. Should be in the range 1 to 1000ms. Defaults to 1000ms. (Since 8.1)
Dirtyrate limit (MB/s) during live migration. Defaults to 1. (Since 8.1)
Migration mode. See description in MigMode. Default is 'normal'. (Since 8.2)

Features

Member block-incremental is deprecated. Use blockdev-mirror with NBD instead. Members compress-level, compress-threads, decompress-threads and compress-wait-thread are deprecated because compression is deprecated.
Members x-checkpoint-delay and x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period are experimental.

Since

2.4

query-migrate-parameters (Command)

Returns information about the current migration parameters

Returns

MigrationParameters

Since

2.4

Example

-> { "execute": "query-migrate-parameters" }
<- { "return": {

"multifd-channels": 2,
"cpu-throttle-increment": 10,
"cpu-throttle-initial": 20,
"max-bandwidth": 33554432,
"downtime-limit": 300
}
}


migrate-start-postcopy (Command)

Followup to a migration command to switch the migration to postcopy mode. The postcopy-ram capability must be set on both source and destination before the original migration command.

Since

2.5

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate-start-postcopy" }
<- { "return": {} }


MIGRATION (Event)

Emitted when a migration event happens

Arguments

MigrationStatus describing the current migration status.

Since

2.4

Example

<- {"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432121972, "microseconds": 744001},

"event": "MIGRATION",
"data": {"status": "completed"} }


MIGRATION_PASS (Event)

Emitted from the source side of a migration at the start of each pass (when it syncs the dirty bitmap)

Arguments

An incrementing count (starting at 1 on the first pass)

Since

2.6

Example

<- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 1449669631, "microseconds": 239225},

"event": "MIGRATION_PASS", "data": {"pass": 2} }


COLOMessage (Enum)

The message transmission between Primary side and Secondary side.

Values

Secondary VM (SVM) is ready for checkpointing
Primary VM (PVM) tells SVM to prepare for checkpointing
SVM gets PVM's checkpoint request
VM's state will be sent by PVM.
The total size of VMstate.
VM's state has been received by SVM.
VM's state has been loaded by SVM.

Since

2.8

COLOMode (Enum)

The COLO current mode.

Values

COLO is disabled.
COLO node in primary side.
COLO node in slave side.

Since

2.8

FailoverStatus (Enum)

An enumeration of COLO failover status

Values

no failover has ever happened
got failover requirement but not handled
in the process of doing failover
finish the process of failover
restart the failover process, from 'none' -> 'completed' (Since 2.9)

Since

2.8

COLO_EXIT (Event)

Emitted when VM finishes COLO mode due to some errors happening or at the request of users.

Arguments

report COLO mode when COLO exited.
describes the reason for the COLO exit.

Since

3.1

Example

<- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 2032141960, "microseconds": 417172},

"event": "COLO_EXIT", "data": {"mode": "primary", "reason": "request" } }


COLOExitReason (Enum)

The reason for a COLO exit.

Values

failover has never happened. This state does not occur in the COLO_EXIT event, and is only visible in the result of query-colo-status.
COLO exit is due to an external request.
COLO exit is due to an internal error.
COLO is currently handling a failover (since 4.0).

Since

3.1

x-colo-lost-heartbeat (Command)

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.

Features

This command is experimental.

Since

2.8

Example

-> { "execute": "x-colo-lost-heartbeat" }
<- { "return": {} }


If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

migrate_cancel (Command)

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

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate_cancel" }
<- { "return": {} }


migrate-continue (Command)

Continue migration when it's in a paused state.

Arguments

The state the migration is currently expected to be in

Returns

nothing on success

Since

2.11

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate-continue" , "arguments":

{ "state": "pre-switchover" } } <- { "return": {} }


MigrationAddressType (Enum)

The migration stream transport mechanisms.

Values

Migrate via socket.
Direct the migration stream to another process.
Migrate via RDMA.
Direct the migration stream to a file.

Since 8.2

FileMigrationArgs (Object)

Members

The file to receive the migration stream
The file offset where the migration stream will start

Since 8.2

MigrationExecCommand (Object)

Members

command (list head) and arguments to execute.

Since 8.2

MigrationAddress (Object)

Migration endpoint configuration.

Since 8.2

Members


MigrationChannelType (Enum)

The migration channel-type request options.

Values

Main outbound migration channel.

Since 8.1

MigrationChannel (Object)

Migration stream channel parameters.

Members

Channel type for transferring packet information.
Migration endpoint configuration on destination interface.

Since 8.1

migrate (Command)

Migrates the current running guest to another Virtual Machine.

Arguments

the Uniform Resource Identifier of the destination VM
list of migration stream channels with each stream in the list connected to a destination interface endpoint.
do block migration (full disk copy)
incremental disk copy migration
this argument exists only for compatibility reasons and is ignored by QEMU
resume one paused migration, default "off". (since 3.0)

Features

Members inc and blk are deprecated. Use blockdev-mirror with NBD instead.

Returns

nothing on success

Since

0.14

Notes

1.
The 'query-migrate' command should be used to check migration's progress and final result (this information is provided by the 'status' member)
2.
All boolean arguments default to false
3.
The user Monitor's "detach" argument is invalid in QMP and should not be used
4.
The uri argument should have the Uniform Resource Identifier of default destination VM. This connection will be bound to default network.
5.
For now, number of migration streams is restricted to one, i.e number of items in 'channels' list is just 1.
6.
The 'uri' and 'channels' arguments are mutually exclusive; exactly one of the two should be present.

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate", "arguments": { "uri": "tcp:0:4446" } }
<- { "return": {} }
-> { "execute": "migrate",

"arguments": {
"channels": [ { "channel-type": "main",
"addr": { "transport": "socket",
"type": "inet",
"host": "10.12.34.9",
"port": "1050" } } ] } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "migrate",
"arguments": {
"channels": [ { "channel-type": "main",
"addr": { "transport": "exec",
"args": [ "/bin/nc", "-p", "6000",
"/some/sock" ] } } ] } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "migrate",
"arguments": {
"channels": [ { "channel-type": "main",
"addr": { "transport": "rdma",
"host": "10.12.34.9",
"port": "1050" } } ] } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "migrate",
"arguments": {
"channels": [ { "channel-type": "main",
"addr": { "transport": "file",
"filename": "/tmp/migfile",
"offset": "0x1000" } } ] } } <- { "return": {} }


migrate-incoming (Command)

Start an incoming migration, the qemu must have been started with -incoming defer

Arguments

The Uniform Resource Identifier identifying the source or address to listen on
list of migration stream channels with each stream in the list connected to a destination interface endpoint.

Returns

nothing on success

Since

2.3

Notes

1.
It's a bad idea to use a string for the uri, but it needs to stay compatible with -incoming and the format of the uri is already exposed above libvirt.
2.
QEMU must be started with -incoming defer to allow migrate-incoming to be used.
3.
The uri format is the same as for -incoming

5.
For now, number of migration streams is restricted to one, i.e number of items in 'channels' list is just 1.

4.
The 'uri' and 'channels' arguments are mutually exclusive; exactly one of the two should be present.

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate-incoming",

"arguments": { "uri": "tcp::4446" } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "migrate",
"arguments": {
"channels": [ { "channel-type": "main",
"addr": { "transport": "socket",
"type": "inet",
"host": "10.12.34.9",
"port": "1050" } } ] } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "migrate",
"arguments": {
"channels": [ { "channel-type": "main",
"addr": { "transport": "exec",
"args": [ "/bin/nc", "-p", "6000",
"/some/sock" ] } } ] } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "migrate",
"arguments": {
"channels": [ { "channel-type": "main",
"addr": { "transport": "rdma",
"host": "10.12.34.9",
"port": "1050" } } ] } } <- { "return": {} }


xen-save-devices-state (Command)

Save the state of all devices to file. The RAM and the block devices of the VM are not saved by this command.

Arguments

the 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.
Optional argument to ask QEMU to treat this command as part of a live migration. Default to true. (since 2.11)

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

1.1

Example

-> { "execute": "xen-save-devices-state",

"arguments": { "filename": "/tmp/save" } } <- { "return": {} }


xen-set-global-dirty-log (Command)

Enable or disable the global dirty log mode.

Arguments

true to enable, false to disable.

Returns

nothing

Since

1.3

Example

-> { "execute": "xen-set-global-dirty-log",

"arguments": { "enable": true } } <- { "return": {} }


xen-load-devices-state (Command)

Load the state of all devices from file. The RAM and the block devices of the VM are not loaded by this command.

Arguments

the 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": {} }


xen-set-replication (Command)

Enable or disable replication.

Arguments

true to enable, false to disable.
true for primary or false for secondary.
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

If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

ReplicationStatus (Object)

The result format for 'query-xen-replication-status'.

Members

true if an error happened, false if replication is normal.
the human readable error description string, when error is 'true'.

Since

2.9

If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

query-xen-replication-status (Command)

Query replication status while the vm is running.

Returns

A ReplicationStatus object showing the status.

Example

-> { "execute": "query-xen-replication-status" }
<- { "return": { "error": false } }


Since

2.9

If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

xen-colo-do-checkpoint (Command)

Xen uses this command to notify replication to trigger a checkpoint.

Returns

nothing.

Example

-> { "execute": "xen-colo-do-checkpoint" }
<- { "return": {} }


Since

2.9

If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

COLOStatus (Object)

The result format for 'query-colo-status'.

Members

COLO running mode. If COLO is running, this field will return 'primary' or 'secondary'.
COLO last running mode. If COLO is running, this field will return same like mode field, after failover we can use this field to get last colo mode. (since 4.0)
describes the reason for the COLO exit.

Since

3.1

If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

query-colo-status (Command)

Query COLO status while the vm is running.

Returns

A COLOStatus object showing the status.

Example

-> { "execute": "query-colo-status" }
<- { "return": { "mode": "primary", "last-mode": "none", "reason": "request" } }


Since

3.1

If

CONFIG_REPLICATION

migrate-recover (Command)

Provide a recovery migration stream URI.

Arguments

the URI to be used for the recovery of migration stream.

Returns

nothing.

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate-recover",

"arguments": { "uri": "tcp:192.168.1.200:12345" } } <- { "return": {} }


Since

3.0

migrate-pause (Command)

Pause a migration. Currently it only supports postcopy.

Returns

nothing.

Example

-> { "execute": "migrate-pause" }
<- { "return": {} }


Since

3.0

UNPLUG_PRIMARY (Event)

Emitted from source side of a migration when migration state is WAIT_UNPLUG. Device was unplugged by guest operating system. Device resources in QEMU are kept on standby to be able to re-plug it in case of migration failure.

Arguments

QEMU device id of the unplugged device

Since

4.2

Example

<- { "event": "UNPLUG_PRIMARY",

"data": { "device-id": "hostdev0" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }


DirtyRateVcpu (Object)

Dirty rate of vcpu.

Members

vcpu index.
dirty rate.

Since

6.2

DirtyRateStatus (Enum)

Dirty page rate measurement status.

Values

measuring thread has not been started yet
measuring thread is running
dirty page rate is measured and the results are available

Since

5.2

DirtyRateMeasureMode (Enum)

Method used to measure dirty page rate. Differences between available methods are explained in calc-dirty-rate.

Values

use page sampling
use dirty ring
use dirty bitmap

Since

6.2

TimeUnit (Enum)

Specifies unit in which time-related value is specified.

Values

value is in seconds
value is in milliseconds

Since 8.2

DirtyRateInfo (Object)

Information about measured dirty page rate.

Members

an estimate of the dirty page rate of the VM in units of MiB/s. Value is present only when status is 'measured'.
current status of dirty page rate measurements
start time in units of second for calculation
time period for which dirty page rate was measured, expressed and rounded down to calc-time-unit.
time unit of calc-time (Since 8.2)
number of sampled pages per GiB of guest memory. Valid only in page-sampling mode (Since 6.1)
mode that was used to measure dirty page rate (Since 6.2)
dirty rate for each vCPU if dirty-ring mode was specified (Since 6.2)

Since

5.2

calc-dirty-rate (Command)

Start measuring dirty page rate of the VM. Results can be retrieved with query-dirty-rate after measurements are completed.

Dirty page rate is the number of pages changed in a given time period expressed in MiB/s. The following methods of calculation are available:

1.
In page sampling mode, a random subset of pages are selected and hashed twice: once at the beginning of measurement time period, and once again at the end. If two hashes for some page are different, the page is counted as changed. Since this method relies on sampling and hashing, calculated dirty page rate is only an estimate of its true value. Increasing sample-pages improves estimation quality at the cost of higher computational overhead.
2.
Dirty bitmap mode captures writes to memory (for example by temporarily revoking write access to all pages) and counting page faults. Information about modified pages is collected into a bitmap, where each bit corresponds to one guest page. This mode requires that KVM accelerator property "dirty-ring-size" is not set.
3.
Dirty ring mode is similar to dirty bitmap mode, but the information about modified pages is collected into ring buffer. This mode tracks page modification per each vCPU separately. It requires that KVM accelerator property "dirty-ring-size" is set.

Arguments

time period for which dirty page rate is calculated. By default it is specified in seconds, but the unit can be set explicitly with calc-time-unit. Note that larger calc-time values will typically result in smaller dirty page rates because page dirtying is a one-time event. Once some page is counted as dirty during calc-time period, further writes to this page will not increase dirty page rate anymore.
time unit in which calc-time is specified. By default it is seconds. (Since 8.2)
number of sampled pages per each GiB of guest memory. Default value is 512. For 4KiB guest pages this corresponds to sampling ratio of 0.2%. This argument is used only in page sampling mode. (Since 6.1)
mechanism for tracking dirty pages. Default value is 'page-sampling'. Others are 'dirty-bitmap' and 'dirty-ring'. (Since 6.1)

Since

5.2

Example

-> {"execute": "calc-dirty-rate", "arguments": {"calc-time": 1,

'sample-pages': 512} } <- { "return": {} } Measure dirty rate using dirty bitmap for 500 milliseconds: -> {"execute": "calc-dirty-rate", "arguments": {"calc-time": 500,
"calc-time-unit": "millisecond", "mode": "dirty-bitmap"} } <- { "return": {} }


query-dirty-rate (Command)

Query results of the most recent invocation of calc-dirty-rate.

Arguments

time unit in which to report calculation time. By default it is reported in seconds. (Since 8.2)

Since

5.2

Examples

1. Measurement is in progress:
<- {"status": "measuring", "sample-pages": 512,

"mode": "page-sampling", "start-time": 1693900454, "calc-time": 10,
"calc-time-unit": "second"} 2. Measurement has been completed: <- {"status": "measured", "sample-pages": 512, "dirty-rate": 108,
"mode": "page-sampling", "start-time": 1693900454, "calc-time": 10,
"calc-time-unit": "second"}


DirtyLimitInfo (Object)

Dirty page rate limit information of a virtual CPU.

Members

index of a virtual CPU.
upper limit of dirty page rate (MB/s) for a virtual CPU, 0 means unlimited.
current dirty page rate (MB/s) for a virtual CPU.

Since

7.1

set-vcpu-dirty-limit (Command)

Set the upper limit of dirty page rate for virtual CPUs.

Requires KVM with accelerator property "dirty-ring-size" set. A virtual CPU's dirty page rate is a measure of its memory load. To observe dirty page rates, use calc-dirty-rate.

Arguments

index of a virtual CPU, default is all.
upper limit of dirty page rate (MB/s) for virtual CPUs.

Since

7.1

Example

-> {"execute": "set-vcpu-dirty-limit"}

"arguments": { "dirty-rate": 200,
"cpu-index": 1 } } <- { "return": {} }


cancel-vcpu-dirty-limit (Command)

Cancel the upper limit of dirty page rate for virtual CPUs.

Cancel the dirty page limit for the vCPU which has been set with set-vcpu-dirty-limit command. Note that this command requires support from dirty ring, same as the "set-vcpu-dirty-limit".

Arguments

index of a virtual CPU, default is all.

Since

7.1

Example

-> {"execute": "cancel-vcpu-dirty-limit"},

"arguments": { "cpu-index": 1 } } <- { "return": {} }


query-vcpu-dirty-limit (Command)

Returns information about virtual CPU dirty page rate limits, if any.

Since

7.1

Example

-> {"execute": "query-vcpu-dirty-limit"}
<- {"return": [

{ "limit-rate": 60, "current-rate": 3, "cpu-index": 0},
{ "limit-rate": 60, "current-rate": 3, "cpu-index": 1}]}


MigrationThreadInfo (Object)

Information about migrationthreads

Members

the name of migration thread
ID of the underlying host thread

Since

7.2

query-migrationthreads (Command)

Returns information of migration threads

data: migration thread name

Returns

information about migration threads

Since

7.2

snapshot-save (Command)

Save a VM snapshot

Arguments

identifier for the newly created job
name of the snapshot to create
block device node name to save vmstate to
list of block device node names to save a snapshot to

Applications should not assume that the snapshot save is complete when this command returns. The job commands / events must be used to determine completion and to fetch details of any errors that arise.

Note that execution of the guest CPUs may be stopped during the time it takes to save the snapshot. A future version of QEMU may ensure CPUs are executing continuously.

It is strongly recommended that devices contain all writable block device nodes if a consistent snapshot is required.

If tag already exists, an error will be reported

Returns

nothing

Example

-> { "execute": "snapshot-save",

"arguments": {
"job-id": "snapsave0",
"tag": "my-snap",
"vmstate": "disk0",
"devices": ["disk0", "disk1"]
}
} <- { "return": { } } <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432121972, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "created", "id": "snapsave0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "running", "id": "snapsave0"}} <- {"event": "STOP",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122372, "microseconds": 744001} } <- {"event": "RESUME",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122572, "microseconds": 744001} } <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122772, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "waiting", "id": "snapsave0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122972, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "pending", "id": "snapsave0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432123172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "concluded", "id": "snapsave0"}} -> {"execute": "query-jobs"} <- {"return": [{"current-progress": 1,
"status": "concluded",
"total-progress": 1,
"type": "snapshot-save",
"id": "snapsave0"}]}


Since

6.0

snapshot-load (Command)

Load a VM snapshot

Arguments

identifier for the newly created job
name of the snapshot to load.
block device node name to load vmstate from
list of block device node names to load a snapshot from

Applications should not assume that the snapshot load is complete when this command returns. The job commands / events must be used to determine completion and to fetch details of any errors that arise.

Note that execution of the guest CPUs will be stopped during the time it takes to load the snapshot.

It is strongly recommended that devices contain all writable block device nodes that can have changed since the original snapshot-save command execution.

Returns

nothing

Example

-> { "execute": "snapshot-load",

"arguments": {
"job-id": "snapload0",
"tag": "my-snap",
"vmstate": "disk0",
"devices": ["disk0", "disk1"]
}
} <- { "return": { } } <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1472124172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "created", "id": "snapload0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1472125172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "running", "id": "snapload0"}} <- {"event": "STOP",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1472125472, "microseconds": 744001} } <- {"event": "RESUME",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1472125872, "microseconds": 744001} } <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1472126172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "waiting", "id": "snapload0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1472127172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "pending", "id": "snapload0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1472128172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "concluded", "id": "snapload0"}} -> {"execute": "query-jobs"} <- {"return": [{"current-progress": 1,
"status": "concluded",
"total-progress": 1,
"type": "snapshot-load",
"id": "snapload0"}]}


Since

6.0

snapshot-delete (Command)

Delete a VM snapshot

Arguments

identifier for the newly created job
name of the snapshot to delete.
list of block device node names to delete a snapshot from

Applications should not assume that the snapshot delete is complete when this command returns. The job commands / events must be used to determine completion and to fetch details of any errors that arise.

Returns

nothing

Example

-> { "execute": "snapshot-delete",

"arguments": {
"job-id": "snapdelete0",
"tag": "my-snap",
"devices": ["disk0", "disk1"]
}
} <- { "return": { } } <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1442124172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "created", "id": "snapdelete0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1442125172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "running", "id": "snapdelete0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1442126172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "waiting", "id": "snapdelete0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1442127172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "pending", "id": "snapdelete0"}} <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE",
"timestamp": {"seconds": 1442128172, "microseconds": 744001},
"data": {"status": "concluded", "id": "snapdelete0"}} -> {"execute": "query-jobs"} <- {"return": [{"current-progress": 1,
"status": "concluded",
"total-progress": 1,
"type": "snapshot-delete",
"id": "snapdelete0"}]}


Since

6.0

TRANSACTIONS

Abort (Object)

This action can be used to test transaction failure.

Since

1.6

ActionCompletionMode (Enum)

An enumeration of Transactional completion modes.

Values

Do 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.
If 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

TransactionActionKind (Enum)

Values


Features

Member drive-backup is deprecated. Use member blockdev-backup instead.

Since

1.1

AbortWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.6

BlockDirtyBitmapAddWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.5

BlockDirtyBitmapWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.5

BlockDirtyBitmapMergeWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

4.0

BlockdevBackupWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.3

BlockdevSnapshotWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.5

BlockdevSnapshotInternalWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

1.7

BlockdevSnapshotSyncWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

1.1

DriveBackupWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

1.6

TransactionAction (Object)

A discriminated record of operations that can be performed with transaction.

Members


Since

1.1

TransactionProperties (Object)

Optional arguments to modify the behavior of a Transaction.

Members

Controls how jobs launched asynchronously by Actions will complete or fail as a group. See ActionCompletionMode for details.

Since

2.5

transaction (Command)

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, and rbd,

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

List of TransactionAction; information needed for the respective operations.
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": {} }


TRACING

TraceEventState (Enum)

State of a tracing event.

Values

The event is statically disabled.
The event is dynamically disabled.
The event is dynamically enabled.

Since

2.2

TraceEventInfo (Object)

Information of a tracing event.

Members

Event name.
Tracing state.
Whether this is a per-vCPU event (since 2.7).

Features

Member vcpu is deprecated, and always ignored.

Since

2.2

trace-event-get-state (Command)

Query the state of events.

Arguments

Event name pattern (case-sensitive glob).
The vCPU to query (since 2.7).

Features

Member vcpu is deprecated, and always ignored.

Returns

a list of TraceEventInfo for the matching events

Since

2.2

Example

-> { "execute": "trace-event-get-state",

"arguments": { "name": "qemu_memalign" } } <- { "return": [ { "name": "qemu_memalign", "state": "disabled", "vcpu": false } ] }


trace-event-set-state (Command)

Set the dynamic tracing state of events.

Arguments

Event name pattern (case-sensitive glob).
Whether to enable tracing.
Do not match unavailable events with name.
The vCPU to act upon (all by default; since 2.7).

Features

Member vcpu is deprecated, and always ignored.

Since

2.2

Example

-> { "execute": "trace-event-set-state",

"arguments": { "name": "qemu_memalign", "enable": true } } <- { "return": {} }


COMPATIBILITY POLICY

CompatPolicyInput (Enum)

Policy for handling "funny" input.

Values

Accept silently
Reject with an error
abort() the process

Since

6.0

CompatPolicyOutput (Enum)

Policy for handling "funny" output.

Values

Pass on unchanged
Filter out

Since

6.0

CompatPolicy (Object)

Policy for handling deprecated management interfaces.

This is intended for testing users of the management interfaces.

Limitation: covers only syntactic aspects of QMP, i.e. stuff tagged with feature 'deprecated' or 'unstable'. We may want to extend it to cover semantic aspects and CLI.

Limitation: deprecated-output policy hide is not implemented for enumeration values. They behave the same as with policy accept.

Members

how to handle deprecated input (default 'accept')
how to handle deprecated output (default 'accept')
how to handle unstable input (default 'accept') (since 6.2)
how to handle unstable output (default 'accept') (since 6.2)

Since

6.0

QMP MONITOR CONTROL

qmp_capabilities (Command)

Enable QMP capabilities.

Arguments:

Arguments

An optional list of QMPCapability values to enable. The client must not enable any capability that is not mentioned in the QMP greeting message. If the field is not provided, it means no QMP capabilities will be enabled. (since 2.12)

Example

-> { "execute": "qmp_capabilities",

"arguments": { "enable": [ "oob" ] } } <- { "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/interop/qmp-spec.rst)

The QMP client needs to explicitly enable QMP capabilities, otherwise all the QMP capabilities will be turned off by default.

Since

0.13

QMPCapability (Enum)

Enumeration of capabilities to be advertised during initial client connection, used for agreeing on particular QMP extension behaviors.

Values

QMP ability to support out-of-band requests. (Please refer to qmp-spec.rst for more information on OOB)

Since

2.12

VersionTriple (Object)

A three-part version number.

Members

The major version number.
The minor version number.
The micro version number.

Since

2.4

VersionInfo (Object)

A description of QEMU's version.

Members

The 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.
QEMU 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

query-version (Command)

Returns the current version of QEMU.

Returns

A VersionInfo object describing the current version of QEMU.

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "query-version" }
<- {

"return":{
"qemu":{
"major":0,
"minor":11,
"micro":5
},
"package":""
}
}


CommandInfo (Object)

Information about a QMP command

Members

The command name

Since

0.14

query-commands (Command)

Return a list of supported QMP commands by this server

Returns

A list of CommandInfo for all supported commands

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "query-commands" }
<- {

"return":[
{
"name":"query-balloon"
},
{
"name":"system_powerdown"
}
]
}


Note

This example has been shortened as the real response is too long.

quit (Command)

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

Example

-> { "execute": "quit" }
<- { "return": {} }


MonitorMode (Enum)

An enumeration of monitor modes.

Values

HMP monitor (human-oriented command line interface)
QMP monitor (JSON-based machine interface)

Since

5.0

MonitorOptions (Object)

Options to be used for adding a new monitor.

Members

Name of the monitor
Selects the monitor mode (default: readline in the system emulator, control in qemu-storage-daemon)
Enables pretty printing (QMP only)
Name of a character device to expose the monitor on

Since

5.0

QMP INTROSPECTION

query-qmp-schema (Command)

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

SchemaMetaType (Enum)

This is a SchemaInfo's meta type, i.e. the kind of entity it describes.

Values

a predefined type such as 'int' or 'bool'.
an enumeration type
an array type
an object type (struct or union)
an alternate type
a QMP command
a QMP event

Since

2.5

SchemaInfo (Object)

Members

the 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.
the entity's meta type, inherited from base.
names of features associated with the entity, in no particular order. (since 4.1 for object types, 4.2 for commands, 5.0 for the rest)

Additional members depend on the value of meta-type.

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoBuiltin (Object)

Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type 'builtin'.

Members

the JSON type used for this type on the wire.

Since

2.5

JSONType (Enum)

The four primitive and two structured types according to RFC 8259 section 1, plus 'int' (split off 'number'), plus the obvious top type 'value'.

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoEnum (Object)

Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type 'enum'.

Members

the enum type's members, in no particular order (since 6.2).
the enumeration type's member names, in no particular order. Redundant with members. Just for backward compatibility.

Features

Member values is deprecated. Use members instead.

Values of this type are JSON string on the wire.

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoEnumMember (Object)

An object member.

Members

the member's name, as defined in the QAPI schema.
names of features associated with the member, in no particular order.

Since

6.2

SchemaInfoArray (Object)

Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type 'array'.

Members

the array type's element type.

Values of this type are JSON array on the wire.

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoObject (Object)

Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type 'object'.

Members

the object type's (non-variant) members, in no particular order.
the name of the member serving as type tag. An element of members with this name must exist.
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

SchemaInfoObjectMember (Object)

An object member.

Members

the member's name, as defined in the QAPI schema.
the name of the member's type.
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.
names of features associated with the member, in no particular order. (since 5.0)

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoObjectVariant (Object)

The variant members for a value of the type tag.

Members

a value of the type tag.
the name of the object type that provides the variant members when the type tag has value case.

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoAlternate (Object)

Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type 'alternate'.

Members

the alternate type's members, in no particular order. The members' wire encoding is distinct, see docs/devel/qapi-code-gen.txt section Alternate types.

On the wire, this can be any of the members.

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoAlternateMember (Object)

An alternate member.

Members

the name of the member's type.

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoCommand (Object)

Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type 'command'.

Members

the name of the object type that provides the command's parameters.
the name of the command's result type.
whether the command allows out-of-band execution, defaults to false (Since: 2.12)

Since

2.5

SchemaInfoEvent (Object)

Additional SchemaInfo members for meta-type 'event'.

Members

the name of the object type that provides the event's parameters.

Since

2.5

QEMU OBJECT MODEL (QOM)

ObjectPropertyInfo (Object)

Members

the name of the property
the 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.

if specified, the description of the property.
the default value, if any (since 5.0)

Since

1.2

qom-list (Command)

This command will list any properties of a object given a path in the object model.

Arguments

the 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

Example

-> { "execute": "qom-list",

"arguments": { "path": "/chardevs" } } <- { "return": [ { "name": "type", "type": "string" },
{ "name": "parallel0", "type": "child<chardev-vc>" },
{ "name": "serial0", "type": "child<chardev-vc>" },
{ "name": "mon0", "type": "child<chardev-stdio>" } ] }


qom-get (Command)

This command will get a property from a object model path and return the value.

Arguments

The 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.

The 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

Examples

1. Use absolute path
-> { "execute": "qom-get",

"arguments": { "path": "/machine/unattached/device[0]",
"property": "hotplugged" } } <- { "return": false } 2. Use partial path -> { "execute": "qom-get",
"arguments": { "path": "unattached/sysbus",
"property": "type" } } <- { "return": "System" }


qom-set (Command)

This command will set a property from a object model path.

Arguments

see qom-get for a description of this parameter
the property name to set
a value who's type is appropriate for the property type. See qom-get for a description of type mapping.

Since

1.2

Example

-> { "execute": "qom-set",

"arguments": { "path": "/machine",
"property": "graphics",
"value": false } } <- { "return": {} }


ObjectTypeInfo (Object)

This structure describes a search result from qom-list-types

Members

the type name found in the search
the type is abstract and can't be directly instantiated. Omitted if false. (since 2.10)
Name of parent type, if any (since 2.10)

Since

1.1

qom-list-types (Command)

This command will return a list of types given search parameters

Arguments

if specified, only return types that implement this type name
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

qom-list-properties (Command)

List properties associated with a QOM object.

Arguments

the type name of an object

Note

objects can create properties at runtime, for example to describe links between different devices and/or objects. These properties are not included in the output of this command.

Returns

a list of ObjectPropertyInfo describing object properties

Since

2.12

CanHostSocketcanProperties (Object)

Properties for can-host-socketcan objects.

Members

interface name of the host system CAN bus to connect to
object ID of the can-bus object to connect to the host interface

Since

2.12

ColoCompareProperties (Object)

Properties for colo-compare objects.

Members

name of the character device backend to use for the primary input (incoming packets are redirected to outdev)
name of the character device backend to use for secondary input (incoming packets are only compared to the input on primary_in and then dropped)
name of the character device backend to use for output
name of the iothread to run in
name of the character device backend to be used to communicate with the remote colo-frame (only for Xen COLO)
the maximum time to hold a packet from primary_in for comparison with an incoming packet on secondary_in in milliseconds (default: 3000)
the interval at which colo-compare checks whether packets from primary have timed out, in milliseconds (default: 3000)
the maximum number of packets to keep in the queue for comparing with incoming packets from secondary_in. If the queue is full and additional packets are received, the additional packets are dropped. (default: 1024)
if true, vnet header support is enabled (default: false)

Since

2.8

CryptodevBackendProperties (Object)

Properties for cryptodev-backend and cryptodev-backend-builtin objects.

Members

the number of queues for the cryptodev backend. Ignored for cryptodev-backend and must be 1 for cryptodev-backend-builtin. (default: 1)
limit total bytes per second (Since 8.0)
limit total operations per second (Since 8.0)

Since

2.8

CryptodevVhostUserProperties (Object)

Properties for cryptodev-vhost-user objects.

Members

the name of a Unix domain socket character device that connects to the vhost-user server

Since

2.12

DBusVMStateProperties (Object)

Properties for dbus-vmstate objects.

Members

the name of the DBus bus to connect to
a comma separated list of DBus IDs of helpers whose data should be included in the VM state on migration

Since

5.0

NetfilterInsert (Enum)

Indicates where to insert a netfilter relative to a given other filter.

Values

insert before the specified filter
insert behind the specified filter

Since

5.0

NetfilterProperties (Object)

Properties for objects of classes derived from netfilter.

Members

id of the network device backend to filter
indicates which queue(s) to filter (default: all)
indicates whether the filter is enabled ("on") or disabled ("off") (default: "on")
specifies where the filter should be inserted in the filter list. "head" means the filter is inserted at the head of the filter list, before any existing filters. "tail" means the filter is inserted at the tail of the filter list, behind any existing filters (default). "id=<id>" means the filter is inserted before or behind the filter specified by <id>, depending on the insert property. (default: "tail")
where to insert the filter relative to the filter given in position. Ignored if position is "head" or "tail". (default: behind)

Since

2.5

FilterBufferProperties (Object)

Properties for filter-buffer objects.

Members

a non-zero interval in microseconds. All packets arriving in the given interval are delayed until the end of the interval.

Since

2.5

FilterDumpProperties (Object)

Properties for filter-dump objects.

Members

the filename where the dumped packets should be stored
maximum number of bytes in a packet that are stored (default: 65536)

Since

2.5

FilterMirrorProperties (Object)

Properties for filter-mirror objects.

Members

the name of a character device backend to which all incoming packets are mirrored
if true, vnet header support is enabled (default: false)

Since

2.6

FilterRedirectorProperties (Object)

Properties for filter-redirector objects.

At least one of indev or outdev must be present. If both are present, they must not refer to the same character device backend.

Members

the name of a character device backend from which packets are received and redirected to the filtered network device
the name of a character device backend to which all incoming packets are redirected
if true, vnet header support is enabled (default: false)

Since

2.6

FilterRewriterProperties (Object)

Properties for filter-rewriter objects.

Members

if true, vnet header support is enabled (default: false)

Since

2.8

InputBarrierProperties (Object)

Properties for input-barrier objects.

Members

the screen name as declared in the screens section of barrier.conf
hostname of the Barrier server (default: "localhost")
TCP port of the Barrier server (default: "24800")
x coordinate of the leftmost pixel on the guest screen (default: "0")
y coordinate of the topmost pixel on the guest screen (default: "0")
the width of secondary screen in pixels (default: "1920")
the height of secondary screen in pixels (default: "1080")

Since

4.2

InputLinuxProperties (Object)

Properties for input-linux objects.

Members

the path of the host evdev device to use
if true, grab is toggled for all devices (e.g. both keyboard and mouse) instead of just one device (default: false)
enables auto-repeat events (default: false)
the key or key combination that toggles device grab (default: ctrl-ctrl)

Since

2.6

EventLoopBaseProperties (Object)

Common properties for event loops

Members

maximum number of requests in a batch for the AIO engine, 0 means that the engine will use its default. (default: 0)
minimum number of threads reserved in the thread pool (default:0)
maximum number of threads the thread pool can contain (default:64)

Since

7.1

IothreadProperties (Object)

Properties for iothread objects.

Members

the maximum number of nanoseconds to busy wait for events. 0 means polling is disabled (default: 32768 on POSIX hosts, 0 otherwise)
the multiplier used to increase the polling time when the algorithm detects it is missing events due to not polling long enough. 0 selects a default behaviour (default: 0)
the divisor used to decrease the polling time when the algorithm detects it is spending too long polling without encountering events. 0 selects a default behaviour (default: 0)

The aio-max-batch option is available since 6.1.

Since

2.0

MainLoopProperties (Object)

Properties for the main-loop object.

Members


Since

7.1

MemoryBackendProperties (Object)

Properties for objects of classes derived from memory-backend.

Members

if true, mark the memory as mergeable (default depends on the machine type)
if true, include the memory in core dumps (default depends on the machine type)
the list of NUMA host nodes to bind the memory to
the NUMA policy (default: 'default')
if true, preallocate memory (default: false)
number of CPU threads to use for prealloc (default: 1)
thread context to use for creation of preallocation threads (default: none) (since 7.2)
if false, the memory is private to QEMU; if true, it is shared (default: false)
if true, reserve swap space (or huge pages) if applicable (default: true) (since 6.1)
size of the memory region in bytes
if true, the canonical path is used for ramblock-id. Disable this for 4.0 machine types or older to allow migration with newer QEMU versions. (default: false generally, but true for machine types <= 4.0)

Note

prealloc=true and reserve=false cannot be set at the same time. With reserve=true, the behavior depends on the operating system: for example, Linux will not reserve swap space for shared file mappings -- "not applicable". In contrast, reserve=false will bail out if it cannot be configured accordingly.

Since

2.1

MemoryBackendFileProperties (Object)

Properties for memory-backend-file objects.

Members

the base address alignment when QEMU mmap(2)s mem-path. Some backend stores specified by mem-path require an alignment different than the default one used by QEMU, e.g. the device DAX /dev/dax0.0 requires 2M alignment rather than 4K. In such cases, users can specify the required alignment via this option. 0 selects a default alignment (currently the page size). (default: 0)
the offset into the target file that the region starts at. You can use this option to back multiple regions with a single file. Must be a multiple of the page size. (default: 0) (since 8.1)
if true, the file contents can be destroyed when QEMU exits, to avoid unnecessarily flushing data to the backing file. Note that discard-data is only an optimization, and QEMU might not discard file contents if it aborts unexpectedly or is terminated using SIGKILL. (default: false)
the path to either a shared memory or huge page filesystem mount
specifies whether the backing file specified by mem-path is in host persistent memory that can be accessed using the SNIA NVM programming model (e.g. Intel NVDIMM).
if true, the backing file is opened read-only; if false, it is opened read-write. (default: false)
whether to create Read Only Memory (ROM) that cannot be modified by the VM. Any write attempts to such ROM will be denied. Most use cases want writable RAM instead of ROM. However, selected use cases, like R/O NVDIMMs, can benefit from ROM. If set to 'on', create ROM; if set to 'off', create writable RAM; if set to 'auto', the value of the readonly property is used. This property is primarily helpful when we want to have proper RAM in configurations that would traditionally create ROM before this property was introduced: VM templating, where we want to open a file readonly (readonly set to true) and mark the memory to be private for QEMU (share set to false). For this use case, we need writable RAM instead of ROM, and want to set this property to 'off'. (default: auto, since 8.2)

Since

2.1

MemoryBackendMemfdProperties (Object)

Properties for memory-backend-memfd objects.

The share boolean option is true by default with memfd.

Members

if true, the file to be created resides in the hugetlbfs filesystem (default: false)
the hugetlb page size on systems that support multiple hugetlb page sizes (it must be a power of 2 value supported by the system). 0 selects a default page size. This option is ignored if hugetlb is false. (default: 0)
if true, create a sealed-file, which will block further resizing of the memory (default: true)

Since

2.12

MemoryBackendEpcProperties (Object)

Properties for memory-backend-epc objects.

The share boolean option is true by default with epc

The merge boolean option is false by default with epc

The dump boolean option is false by default with epc

Members


Since

6.2

PrManagerHelperProperties (Object)

Properties for pr-manager-helper objects.

Members

the path to a Unix domain socket for connecting to the external helper

Since

2.11

QtestProperties (Object)

Properties for qtest objects.

Members

the chardev to be used to receive qtest commands on.
the path to a log file

Since

6.0

RemoteObjectProperties (Object)

Properties for x-remote-object objects.

Members

file descriptor name previously passed via 'getfd' command
the id of the device to be associated with the file descriptor

Since

6.0

VfioUserServerProperties (Object)

Properties for x-vfio-user-server objects.

Members

socket to be used by the libvfio-user library
the ID of the device to be emulated at the server

Since

7.1

IOMMUFDProperties (Object)

Properties for iommufd objects.

Members

file descriptor name previously passed via 'getfd' command, which represents a pre-opened /dev/iommu. This allows the iommufd object to be shared accross several subsystems (VFIO, VDPA, ...), and the file descriptor to be shared with other process, e.g. DPDK. (default: QEMU opens /dev/iommu by itself)

Since

9.0

RngProperties (Object)

Properties for objects of classes derived from rng.

Members

if true, the device is opened immediately when applying this option and will probably fail when processing the next option. Don't use; only provided for compatibility. (default: false)

Features

Member opened is deprecated. Setting true doesn't make sense, and false is already the default.

Since

1.3

RngEgdProperties (Object)

Properties for rng-egd objects.

Members

the name of a character device backend that provides the connection to the RNG daemon

Since

1.3

RngRandomProperties (Object)

Properties for rng-random objects.

Members

the filename of the device on the host to obtain entropy from (default: "/dev/urandom")

Since

1.3

SevGuestProperties (Object)

Properties for sev-guest objects.

Members

SEV device to use (default: "/dev/sev")
guest owners DH certificate (encoded with base64)
guest owners session parameters (encoded with base64)
SEV policy value (default: 0x1)
SEV firmware handle (default: 0)
C-bit location in page table entry (default: 0)
number of bits in physical addresses that become unavailable when SEV is enabled
if true, add hashes of kernel/initrd/cmdline to a designated guest firmware page for measured boot with -kernel (default: false) (since 6.2)

Since

2.12

ThreadContextProperties (Object)

Properties for thread context objects.

Members

the list of host CPU numbers used as CPU affinity for all threads created in the thread context (default: QEMU main thread CPU affinity)
the list of host node numbers that will be resolved to a list of host CPU numbers used as CPU affinity. This is a shortcut for specifying the list of host CPU numbers belonging to the host nodes manually by setting cpu-affinity. (default: QEMU main thread affinity)

Since

7.2

ObjectType (Enum)

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Features

Member x-remote-object is experimental.

Since

6.0

ObjectOptions (Object)

Describes the options of a user creatable QOM object.

Members

the class name for the object to be created
the name of the new object

Since

6.0

object-add (Command)

Create a QOM object.

Arguments


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",
"filename": "/dev/hwrng" } } <- { "return": {} }


object-del (Command)

Remove a QOM object.

Arguments

the 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": {} }


DEVICE INFRASTRUCTURE (QDEV)

device-list-properties (Command)

List properties associated with a device.

Arguments

the type name of a device

Returns

a list of ObjectPropertyInfo describing a devices properties

Note

objects can create properties at runtime, for example to describe links between different devices and/or objects. These properties are not included in the output of this command.

Since

1.2

device_add (Command)

Add a device.

Arguments

the name of the new device's driver
the device's parent bus (device tree path)
the device's ID, must be unique

Features

If present, the "-device" command line option supports JSON syntax with a structure identical to the arguments of this command.
If present, the "-device" command line option supports JSON syntax without the reference counting leak that broke hot-unplug

Notes

1.
Additional arguments depend on the type.
2.
For detailed information about this command, please refer to the 'docs/qdev-device-use.txt' file.
3.
It's possible to list device properties by running QEMU with the "-device DEVICE,help" command-line argument, where DEVICE is the device's name

Example

-> { "execute": "device_add",

"arguments": { "driver": "e1000", "id": "net1",
"bus": "pci.0",
"mac": "52:54:00:12:34:56" } } <- { "return": {} }


Since

0.13

device_del (Command)

Remove a device from a guest

Arguments

the 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. If a guest-side error in the hot removal process is detected, the device will not be removed and a DEVICE_UNPLUG_GUEST_ERROR event is sent. Some errors cannot be detected.

Since

0.14

Examples

-> { "execute": "device_del",

"arguments": { "id": "net1" } } <- { "return": {} } -> { "execute": "device_del",
"arguments": { "id": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[0]" } } <- { "return": {} }


DEVICE_DELETED (Event)

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

the device's ID if it has one
the device's QOM 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 } }


DEVICE_UNPLUG_GUEST_ERROR (Event)

Emitted when a device hot unplug fails due to a guest reported error.

Arguments

the device's ID if it has one
the device's QOM path

Since

6.2

Example

<- { "event": "DEVICE_UNPLUG_GUEST_ERROR",

"data": { "device": "core1",
"path": "/machine/peripheral/core1" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1615570772, "microseconds": 202844 } }


MACHINES S390 DATA TYPES

CpuS390Entitlement (Enum)

An enumeration of CPU entitlements that can be assumed by a virtual S390 CPU

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

8.2

MACHINES

SysEmuTarget (Enum)

The comprehensive enumeration of QEMU system emulation ("softmmu") targets. Run "./configure --help" in the project root directory, and look for the *-softmmu targets near the "--target-list" option. The individual target constants are not documented here, for the time being.

Values

since 5.0
since 5.1
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Notes

The resulting QMP strings can be appended to the "qemu-system-" prefix to produce the corresponding QEMU executable name. This is true even for "qemu-system-x86_64".

Since

3.0

CpuS390State (Enum)

An enumeration of cpu states that can be assumed by a virtual S390 CPU

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

2.12

CpuInfoS390 (Object)

Additional information about a virtual S390 CPU

Members

the virtual CPU's state
the virtual CPU's dedication (since 8.2)
the virtual CPU's entitlement (since 8.2)

Since

2.12

CpuInfoFast (Object)

Information about a virtual CPU

Members

index of the virtual CPU
path to the CPU object in the QOM tree
ID of the underlying host thread
properties associated with a virtual CPU, e.g. the socket id
the QEMU system emulation target, which determines which additional fields will be listed (since 3.0)

Since

2.12

query-cpus-fast (Command)

Returns information about all virtual CPUs.

Returns

list of CpuInfoFast

Since

2.12

Example

-> { "execute": "query-cpus-fast" }
<- { "return": [

{
"thread-id": 25627,
"props": {
"core-id": 0,
"thread-id": 0,
"socket-id": 0
},
"qom-path": "/machine/unattached/device[0]",
"target":"x86_64",
"cpu-index": 0
},
{
"thread-id": 25628,
"props": {
"core-id": 0,
"thread-id": 0,
"socket-id": 1
},
"qom-path": "/machine/unattached/device[2]",
"target":"x86_64",
"cpu-index": 1
}
] }


MachineInfo (Object)

Information describing a machine.

Members

the name of the machine
an alias for the machine name
whether the machine is default
maximum number of CPUs supported by the machine type (since 1.5)
cpu hotplug via -device is supported (since 2.7)
true if '-numa node,mem' option is supported by the machine type and false otherwise (since 4.1)
if true, the machine type is deprecated and may be removed in future versions of QEMU according to the QEMU deprecation policy (since 4.1)
default CPU model typename if none is requested via the -cpu argument. (since 4.2)
the default ID of initial RAM memory backend (since 5.2)
machine type supports ACPI (since 8.0)

Since

1.2

query-machines (Command)

Return a list of supported machines

Returns

a list of MachineInfo

Since

1.2

CurrentMachineParams (Object)

Information describing the running machine parameters.

Members

true if the machine supports wake up from suspend

Since

4.0

query-current-machine (Command)

Return information on the current virtual machine.

Returns

CurrentMachineParams

Since

4.0

TargetInfo (Object)

Information describing the QEMU target.

Members

the target architecture

Since

1.2

query-target (Command)

Return information about the target for this QEMU

Returns

TargetInfo

Since

1.2

UuidInfo (Object)

Guest UUID information (Universally Unique Identifier).

Members

the UUID of the guest

Since

0.14

Notes

If no UUID was specified for the guest, a null UUID is returned.

query-uuid (Command)

Query the guest UUID information.

Returns

The UuidInfo for the guest

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "query-uuid" }
<- { "return": { "UUID": "550e8400-e29b-41d4-a716-446655440000" } }


GuidInfo (Object)

GUID information.

Members

the globally unique identifier

Since

2.9

query-vm-generation-id (Command)

Show Virtual Machine Generation ID

Since

2.9

system_reset (Command)

Performs a hard reset of a guest.

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "system_reset" }
<- { "return": {} }


system_powerdown (Command)

Requests that a guest perform a powerdown operation.

Since

0.14

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": {} }


system_wakeup (Command)

Wake up guest from suspend. If the guest has wake-up from suspend support enabled (wakeup-suspend-support flag from query-current-machine), wake-up guest from suspend if the guest is in SUSPENDED state. Return an error otherwise.

Since

1.1

Returns

nothing.

Note

prior to 4.0, this command does nothing in case the guest isn't suspended.

Example

-> { "execute": "system_wakeup" }
<- { "return": {} }


LostTickPolicy (Enum)

Policy for handling lost ticks in timer devices. Ticks end up getting lost when, for example, the guest is paused.

Values

throw away the missed ticks and continue with future injection normally. The guest OS will see the timer jump ahead by a potentially quite significant amount all at once, as if the intervening chunk of time had simply not existed; needless to say, such a sudden jump can easily confuse a guest OS which is not specifically prepared to deal with it. Assuming the guest OS can deal correctly with the time jump, the time in the guest and in the host should now match.
continue to deliver ticks at the normal rate. The guest OS will not notice anything is amiss, as from its point of view time will have continued to flow normally. The time in the guest should now be behind the time in the host by exactly the amount of time during which ticks have been missed.
deliver ticks at a higher rate to catch up with the missed ticks. The guest OS will not notice anything is amiss, as from its point of view time will have continued to flow normally. Once the timer has managed to catch up with all the missing ticks, the time in the guest and in the host should match.

Since

2.0

inject-nmi (Command)

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

Note

prior to 2.1, this command was only supported for x86 and s390 VMs

Example

-> { "execute": "inject-nmi" }
<- { "return": {} }


KvmInfo (Object)

Information about support for KVM acceleration

Members

true if KVM acceleration is active
true if KVM acceleration is built into this executable

Since

0.14

query-kvm (Command)

Returns information about KVM acceleration

Returns

KvmInfo

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "query-kvm" }
<- { "return": { "enabled": true, "present": true } }


NumaOptionsType (Enum)

Values

NUMA nodes configuration
NUMA distance configuration (since 2.10)
property based CPU(s) to node mapping (Since: 2.10)
memory latency and bandwidth information (Since: 5.0)
memory side cache information (Since: 5.0)

Since

2.1

NumaOptions (Object)

A discriminated record of NUMA options. (for OptsVisitor)

Members


Since

2.1

NumaNodeOptions (Object)

Create a guest NUMA node. (for OptsVisitor)

Members

NUMA node ID (increase by 1 from 0 if omitted)
VCPUs belonging to this node (assign VCPUS round-robin if omitted)
memory size of this node; mutually exclusive with memdev. Equally divide total memory among nodes if both mem and memdev are omitted.
memory backend object. If specified for one node, it must be specified for all nodes.
defined in ACPI 6.3 Chapter 5.2.27.3 Table 5-145, points to the nodeid which has the memory controller responsible for this NUMA node. This field provides additional information as to the initiator node that is closest (as in directly attached) to this node, and therefore has the best performance (since 5.0)

Since

2.1

NumaDistOptions (Object)

Set the distance between 2 NUMA nodes.

Members

source NUMA node.
destination NUMA node.
NUMA distance from source node to destination node. When a node is unreachable from another node, set the distance between them to 255.

Since

2.10

CXLFixedMemoryWindowOptions (Object)

Create a CXL Fixed Memory Window

Members

Size of the Fixed Memory Window in bytes. Must be a multiple of 256MiB.
Number of contiguous bytes for which accesses will go to a given interleave target. Accepted values [256, 512, 1k, 2k, 4k, 8k, 16k]
Target root bridge IDs from -device ...,id=<ID> for each root bridge.

Since

7.1

CXLFMWProperties (Object)

List of CXL Fixed Memory Windows.

Members

List of CXLFixedMemoryWindowOptions

Since

7.1

X86CPURegister32 (Enum)

A X86 32-bit register

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

1.5

X86CPUFeatureWordInfo (Object)

Information about a X86 CPU feature word

Members

Input EAX value for CPUID instruction for that feature word
Input ECX value for CPUID instruction for that feature word
Output register containing the feature bits
value of output register, containing the feature bits

Since

1.5

DummyForceArrays (Object)

Not used by QMP; hack to let us use X86CPUFeatureWordInfoList internally

Members


Since

2.5

NumaCpuOptions (Object)

Option "-numa cpu" overrides default cpu to node mapping. It accepts the same set of cpu properties as returned by query-hotpluggable-cpus[].props, where node-id could be used to override default node mapping.

Members


Since

2.10

HmatLBMemoryHierarchy (Enum)

The memory hierarchy in the System Locality Latency and Bandwidth Information Structure of HMAT (Heterogeneous Memory Attribute Table)

For more information about HmatLBMemoryHierarchy, see chapter 5.2.27.4: Table 5-146: Field "Flags" of ACPI 6.3 spec.

Values

the structure represents the memory performance
first level of memory side cache
second level of memory side cache
third level of memory side cache

Since

5.0

HmatLBDataType (Enum)

Data type in the System Locality Latency and Bandwidth Information Structure of HMAT (Heterogeneous Memory Attribute Table)

For more information about HmatLBDataType, see chapter 5.2.27.4: Table 5-146: Field "Data Type" of ACPI 6.3 spec.

Values

access latency (nanoseconds)
read latency (nanoseconds)
write latency (nanoseconds)
access bandwidth (Bytes per second)
read bandwidth (Bytes per second)
write bandwidth (Bytes per second)

Since

5.0

NumaHmatLBOptions (Object)

Set the system locality latency and bandwidth information between Initiator and Target proximity Domains.

For more information about NumaHmatLBOptions, see chapter 5.2.27.4: Table 5-146 of ACPI 6.3 spec.

Members

the Initiator Proximity Domain.
the Target Proximity Domain.
the Memory Hierarchy. Indicates the performance of memory or side cache.
presents the type of data, access/read/write latency or hit latency.
the value of latency from initiator to target proximity domain, the latency unit is "ns(nanosecond)".
the value of bandwidth between initiator and target proximity domain, the bandwidth unit is "Bytes per second".

Since

5.0

HmatCacheAssociativity (Enum)

Cache associativity in the Memory Side Cache Information Structure of HMAT

For more information of HmatCacheAssociativity, see chapter 5.2.27.5: Table 5-147 of ACPI 6.3 spec.

Values

None (no memory side cache in this proximity domain, or cache associativity unknown)
Direct Mapped
Complex Cache Indexing (implementation specific)

Since

5.0

HmatCacheWritePolicy (Enum)

Cache write policy in the Memory Side Cache Information Structure of HMAT

For more information of HmatCacheWritePolicy, see chapter 5.2.27.5: Table 5-147: Field "Cache Attributes" of ACPI 6.3 spec.

Values

None (no memory side cache in this proximity domain, or cache write policy unknown)
Write Back (WB)
Write Through (WT)

Since

5.0

NumaHmatCacheOptions (Object)

Set the memory side cache information for a given memory domain.

For more information of NumaHmatCacheOptions, see chapter 5.2.27.5: Table 5-147: Field "Cache Attributes" of ACPI 6.3 spec.

Members

the memory proximity domain to which the memory belongs.
the size of memory side cache in bytes.
the cache level described in this structure.
the cache associativity, none/direct-mapped/complex(complex cache indexing).
the write policy, none/write-back/write-through.
the cache Line size in bytes.

Since

5.0

memsave (Command)

Save a portion of guest memory to a file.

Arguments

the virtual address of the guest to start from
the size of memory region to save
the file to save the memory to as binary data
the index of the virtual CPU to use for translating the virtual address (defaults to CPU 0)

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

0.14

Notes

Errors were not reliably returned until 1.1

Example

-> { "execute": "memsave",

"arguments": { "val": 10,
"size": 100,
"filename": "/tmp/virtual-mem-dump" } } <- { "return": {} }


pmemsave (Command)

Save a portion of guest physical memory to a file.

Arguments

the physical address of the guest to start from
the size of memory region to save
the file to save the memory to as binary data

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

0.14

Notes

Errors were not reliably returned until 1.1

Example

-> { "execute": "pmemsave",

"arguments": { "val": 10,
"size": 100,
"filename": "/tmp/physical-mem-dump" } } <- { "return": {} }


Memdev (Object)

Information about memory backend

Members

backend's ID if backend has 'id' property (since 2.9)
memory backend size
whether memory merge support is enabled
whether memory backend's memory is included in a core dump
whether memory was preallocated
whether memory is private to QEMU or shared (since 6.1)
whether swap space (or huge pages) was reserved if applicable. This corresponds to the user configuration and not the actual behavior implemented in the OS to perform the reservation. For example, Linux will never reserve swap space for shared file mappings. (since 6.1)
host nodes for its memory policy
memory policy of memory backend

Since

2.1

query-memdev (Command)

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,
"share": false,
"host-nodes": [0, 1],
"policy": "bind"
},
{
"size": 536870912,
"merge": false,
"dump": true,
"prealloc": true,
"share": false,
"host-nodes": [2, 3],
"policy": "preferred"
}
]
}


CpuInstanceProperties (Object)

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.

Which members are optional and which mandatory depends on the architecture and board.

For s390x see cpu-topology-s390x.

The ids other than the node-id specify the position of the CPU within the CPU topology (as defined by the machine property "smp", thus see also type SMPConfiguration)

Members

NUMA node ID the CPU belongs to
drawer number within CPU topology the CPU belongs to (since 8.2)
book number within parent container the CPU belongs to (since 8.2)
socket number within parent container the CPU belongs to
die number within the parent container the CPU belongs to (since 4.1)
cluster number within the parent container the CPU belongs to (since 7.1)
core number within the parent container the CPU belongs to
thread number within the core the CPU belongs to

Note

management should be prepared to pass through additional properties with device_add.

Since

2.7

HotpluggableCPU (Object)

Members

CPU object type for usage with device_add command
list of properties to be used for hotplugging CPU
number of logical VCPU threads HotpluggableCPU provides
link to existing CPU object if CPU is present or omitted if CPU is not present.

Since

2.7

query-hotpluggable-cpus (Command)

Returns

a list of HotpluggableCPU objects.

Since

2.7

Examples

For pseries machine type started with -smp 2,cores=2,maxcpus=4 -cpu
POWER8:
-> { "execute": "query-hotpluggable-cpus" }
<- {"return": [

{ "props": { "core-id": 8 }, "type": "POWER8-spapr-cpu-core",
"vcpus-count": 1 },
{ "props": { "core-id": 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}
}
]} For s390x-virtio-ccw machine type started with -smp 1,maxcpus=2 -cpu qemu (Since: 2.11): -> { "execute": "query-hotpluggable-cpus" } <- {"return": [
{
"type": "qemu-s390x-cpu", "vcpus-count": 1,
"props": { "core-id": 1 }
},
{
"qom-path": "/machine/unattached/device[0]",
"type": "qemu-s390x-cpu", "vcpus-count": 1,
"props": { "core-id": 0 }
}
]}


set-numa-node (Command)

Runtime equivalent of '-numa' CLI option, available at preconfigure stage to configure numa mapping before initializing machine.

Arguments


Since

3.0

balloon (Command)

Request the balloon driver to change its balloon size.

Arguments

the target logical size of the VM in bytes. We can deduce the size of the balloon using this formula:
logical_vm_size = vm_ram_size - balloon_size


From it we have: balloon_size = vm_ram_size - value


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

Example

-> { "execute": "balloon", "arguments": { "value": 536870912 } }
<- { "return": {} }
With a 2.5GiB guest this command inflated the ballon to 3GiB.


BalloonInfo (Object)

Information about the guest balloon device.

Members

the logical size of the VM in bytes Formula used: logical_vm_size = vm_ram_size - balloon_size

Since

0.14

query-balloon (Command)

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

Example

-> { "execute": "query-balloon" }
<- { "return": {

"actual": 1073741824
}
}


BALLOON_CHANGE (Event)

Emitted when the guest changes the actual BALLOON level. This value is equivalent to the actual field return by the 'query-balloon' command

Arguments

the logical size of the VM in bytes Formula used: logical_vm_size = vm_ram_size - balloon_size

Note

this event is rate-limited.

Since

1.2

Example

<- { "event": "BALLOON_CHANGE",

"data": { "actual": 944766976 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267020223, "microseconds": 435656 } }


HvBalloonInfo (Object)

hv-balloon guest-provided memory status information.

Members

the amount of memory in use inside the guest plus the amount of the memory unusable inside the guest (ballooned out, offline, etc.)
the amount of the memory inside the guest available for new allocations ("free")

Since

8.2

query-hv-balloon-status-report (Command)

Returns the hv-balloon driver data contained in the last received "STATUS" message from the guest.

Returns

  • HvBalloonInfo on success
  • If no hv-balloon device is present, guest memory status reporting is not enabled or no guest memory status report received yet, GenericError

Since

8.2

Example

-> { "execute": "query-hv-balloon-status-report" }
<- { "return": {

"committed": 816640000,
"available": 3333054464
}
}


HV_BALLOON_STATUS_REPORT (Event)

Emitted when the hv-balloon driver receives a "STATUS" message from the guest.

Note

this event is rate-limited.

Since

8.2

Example

<- { "event": "HV_BALLOON_STATUS_REPORT",

"data": { "committed": 816640000, "available": 3333054464 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1600295492, "microseconds": 661044 } }


MemoryInfo (Object)

Actual memory information in bytes.

Members

size of "base" memory specified with command line option -m.
size of memory that can be hot-unplugged. This field is omitted if target doesn't support memory hotplug (i.e. CONFIG_MEM_DEVICE not defined at build time).

Since

2.11

query-memory-size-summary (Command)

Return the amount of initially allocated and present hotpluggable (if enabled) memory in bytes.

Example

-> { "execute": "query-memory-size-summary" }
<- { "return": { "base-memory": 4294967296, "plugged-memory": 0 } }


Since

2.11

PCDIMMDeviceInfo (Object)

PCDIMMDevice state information

Members

device's ID
physical address, where device is mapped
size of memory that the device provides
slot number at which device is plugged in
NUMA node number where device is plugged in
memory backend linked with device
true if device was hotplugged
true if device if could be added/removed while machine is running

Since

2.1

VirtioPMEMDeviceInfo (Object)

VirtioPMEM state information

Members

device's ID
physical address in memory, where device is mapped
size of memory that the device provides
memory backend linked with device

Since

4.1

VirtioMEMDeviceInfo (Object)

VirtioMEMDevice state information

Members

device's ID
physical address in memory, where device is mapped
the user requested size of the device
the (current) size of memory that the device provides
the maximum size of memory that the device can provide
the block size of memory that the device provides
NUMA node number where device is assigned to
memory backend linked with the region

Since

5.1

SgxEPCDeviceInfo (Object)

Sgx EPC state information

Members

device's ID
physical address in memory, where device is mapped
size of memory that the device provides
memory backend linked with device
the numa node (Since: 7.0)

Since

6.2

HvBalloonDeviceInfo (Object)

hv-balloon provided memory state information

Members

device's ID
physical address in memory, where device is mapped
the maximum size of memory that the device can provide
memory backend linked with device

Since

8.2

MemoryDeviceInfoKind (Enum)

Values

since 2.12
since 4.1
since 5.1
since 6.2.
since 8.2.
Not documented

Since

2.1

PCDIMMDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.1

VirtioPMEMDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)

Members


Since

2.1

VirtioMEMDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

2.1

SgxEPCDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

6.2

HvBalloonDeviceInfoWrapper (Object)

Members

Not documented

Since

8.2

MemoryDeviceInfo (Object)

Union containing information about a memory device

Members


Since

2.1

SgxEPC (Object)

Sgx EPC cmdline information

Members

memory backend linked with device
the numa node (Since: 7.0)

Since

6.2

SgxEPCProperties (Object)

SGX properties of machine types.

Members

list of ids of memory-backend-epc objects.

Since

6.2

query-memory-devices (Command)

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"
} ] }


MEMORY_DEVICE_SIZE_CHANGE (Event)

Emitted when the size of a memory device changes. Only emitted for memory devices that can actually change the size (e.g., virtio-mem due to guest action).

Arguments

device's ID
the new size of memory that the device provides
path to the device object in the QOM tree (since 6.2)

Note

this event is rate-limited.

Since

5.1

Example

<- { "event": "MEMORY_DEVICE_SIZE_CHANGE",

"data": { "id": "vm0", "size": 1073741824,
"qom-path": "/machine/unattached/device[2]" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1588168529, "microseconds": 201316 } }


MEM_UNPLUG_ERROR (Event)

Emitted when memory hot unplug error occurs.

Arguments

device name
Informative message

Features

This event is deprecated. Use DEVICE_UNPLUG_GUEST_ERROR instead.

Since

2.4

Example

<- { "event": "MEM_UNPLUG_ERROR",

"data": { "device": "dimm1",
"msg": "acpi: device unplug for unsupported device"
},
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }


BootConfiguration (Object)

Schema for virtual machine boot configuration.

Members

Boot order (a=floppy, c=hard disk, d=CD-ROM, n=network)
Boot order to apply on first boot
Whether to show a boot menu
The name of the file to be passed to the firmware as logo picture, if menu is true.
How long to show the logo picture, in milliseconds
Timeout before guest reboots after boot fails
Whether to attempt booting from devices not included in the boot order

Since

7.1

SMPConfiguration (Object)

Schema for CPU topology configuration. A missing value lets QEMU figure out a suitable value based on the ones that are provided.

The members other than cpus and maxcpus define a topology of containers.

The ordering from highest/coarsest to lowest/finest is: drawers, books, sockets, dies, clusters, cores, threads.

Different architectures support different subsets of topology containers.

For example, s390x does not have clusters and dies, and the socket is the parent container of cores.

Members

number of virtual CPUs in the virtual machine
maximum number of hotpluggable virtual CPUs in the virtual machine
number of drawers in the CPU topology (since 8.2)
number of books in the CPU topology (since 8.2)
number of sockets per parent container
number of dies per parent container
number of clusters per parent container (since 7.0)
number of cores per parent container
number of threads per core

Since

6.1

x-query-irq (Command)

Query interrupt statistics

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

interrupt statistics

Since

6.2

x-query-jit (Command)

Query TCG compiler statistics

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

TCG compiler statistics

Since

6.2

If

CONFIG_TCG

x-query-numa (Command)

Query NUMA topology information

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

topology information

Since

6.2

x-query-opcount (Command)

Query TCG opcode counters

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

TCG opcode counters

Since

6.2

If

CONFIG_TCG

x-query-ramblock (Command)

Query system ramblock information

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

system ramblock information

Since

6.2

x-query-rdma (Command)

Query RDMA state

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

RDMA state

Since

6.2

x-query-roms (Command)

Query information on the registered ROMS

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

registered ROMs

Since

6.2

x-query-usb (Command)

Query information on the USB devices

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

USB device information

Since

6.2

SmbiosEntryPointType (Enum)

Values

32
SMBIOS version 2.1 (32-bit) Entry Point
64
SMBIOS version 3.0 (64-bit) Entry Point
Either 2.x or 3.x SMBIOS version, 2.x if configuration can be described by it and 3.x otherwise (since: 9.0)

Since

7.0

MemorySizeConfiguration (Object)

Schema for memory size configuration.

Members

memory size in bytes
maximum hotpluggable memory size in bytes
number of available memory slots for hotplug

Since

7.1

dumpdtb (Command)

Save the FDT in dtb format.

Arguments

name of the dtb file to be created

Since

7.2

Example

-> { "execute": "dumpdtb" }

"arguments": { "filename": "fdt.dtb" } } <- { "return": {} }


If

CONFIG_FDT

CpuModelInfo (Object)

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

the name of the CPU definition the model is based on
a dictionary of QOM properties to be applied

Since

2.8

CpuModelExpansionType (Enum)

An enumeration of CPU model expansion types.

Values

Expand 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, 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. The static CPU models are migration-safe.
Expand 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

CpuModelCompareResult (Enum)

An enumeration of CPU model comparison results. The result is usually calculated using e.g. CPU features or CPU generations.

Values

If model A is incompatible to model B, model A is not guaranteed to run where model B runs and the other way around.
If model A is identical to model B, model A is guaranteed to run where model B runs and the other way around.
If 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.
If 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

CpuModelBaselineInfo (Object)

The result of a CPU model baseline.

Members

the baselined CpuModelInfo.

Since

2.8

If

TARGET_S390X

CpuModelCompareInfo (Object)

The result of a CPU model comparison.

Members

The result of the compare operation.
List 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

If

TARGET_S390X

query-cpu-model-comparison (Command)

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:

  • QEMU version: CPU models may look different depending on the QEMU version. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • machine-type: CPU model may look different depending on the machine-type. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • machine options (including accelerator): in some architectures, CPU models may look different depending on machine and accelerator options. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • "-cpu" arguments and global properties: arguments to the -cpu option and global properties may affect expansion of CPU models. Using query-cpu-model-expansion while using these is not advised.

Some architectures may not support comparing CPU models. s390x supports comparing CPU models.

Arguments

Not documented
Not 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.

Note

this command isn't specific to s390x, but is only implemented on this architecture currently.

Since

2.8

If

TARGET_S390X

query-cpu-model-baseline (Command)

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:

  • QEMU version: CPU models may look different depending on the QEMU version. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • machine-type: CPU model may look different depending on the machine-type. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • machine options (including accelerator): in some architectures, CPU models may look different depending on machine and accelerator options. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • "-cpu" arguments and global properties: arguments to the -cpu option and global properties may affect expansion of CPU models. Using query-cpu-model-expansion while using these is not advised.

Some architectures may not support baselining CPU models. s390x supports baselining CPU models.

Arguments

Not documented
Not 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.

Note

this command isn't specific to s390x, but is only implemented on this architecture currently.

Since

2.8

If

TARGET_S390X

CpuModelExpansionInfo (Object)

The result of a cpu model expansion.

Members

the expanded CpuModelInfo.

Since

2.8

If

TARGET_S390X or TARGET_I386 or TARGET_ARM or TARGET_LOONGARCH64 or TARGET_RISCV

query-cpu-model-expansion (Command)

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:

  • QEMU version: CPU models may look different depending on the QEMU version. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • machine-type: CPU model may look different depending on the machine-type. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • machine options (including accelerator): in some architectures, CPU models may look different depending on machine and accelerator options. (Except for CPU models reported as "static" in query-cpu-definitions.)
  • "-cpu" arguments and global properties: arguments to the -cpu option and global properties may affect expansion of CPU models. Using query-cpu-model-expansion while using these is not advised.

Some architectures may not support all expansion types. s390x supports "full" and "static". Arm only supports "full".

Arguments

Not documented
Not 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

If

TARGET_S390X or TARGET_I386 or TARGET_ARM or TARGET_LOONGARCH64 or TARGET_RISCV

CpuDefinitionInfo (Object)

Virtual CPU definition.

Members

the name of the CPU definition
whether a CPU definition can be safely used for migration in combination with a QEMU compatibility machine when migrating between different QEMU 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)
whether 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)
List of properties that prevent the CPU model from running in the current host. (since 2.8)
Type name that can be used as argument to device-list-properties, to introspect properties configurable using -cpu or -global. (since 2.9)
Name of CPU model this model is an alias for. The target of the CPU model alias may change depending on the machine type. Management software is supposed to translate CPU model aliases in the VM configuration, because aliases may stop being migration-safe in the future (since 4.1)
If true, this CPU model is deprecated and may be removed in in some future version of QEMU according to the QEMU deprecation policy. (since 5.2)

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

If

TARGET_PPC or TARGET_ARM or TARGET_I386 or TARGET_S390X or TARGET_MIPS or TARGET_LOONGARCH64 or TARGET_RISCV

query-cpu-definitions (Command)

Return a list of supported virtual CPU definitions

Returns

a list of CpuDefinitionInfo

Since

1.2

If

TARGET_PPC or TARGET_ARM or TARGET_I386 or TARGET_S390X or TARGET_MIPS or TARGET_LOONGARCH64 or TARGET_RISCV

CpuS390Polarization (Enum)

An enumeration of CPU polarization that can be assumed by a virtual S390 CPU

Values

Not documented
Not documented

Since

8.2

If

TARGET_S390X

set-cpu-topology (Command)

Modify the topology by moving the CPU inside the topology tree, or by changing a modifier attribute of a CPU. Absent values will not be modified.

Arguments

the vCPU ID to be moved
destination socket to move the vCPU to
destination book to move the vCPU to
destination drawer to move the vCPU to
entitlement to set
whether the provisioning of real to virtual CPU is dedicated

Features

This command is experimental.

Returns

Nothing on success.

Since

8.2

If

TARGET_S390X and CONFIG_KVM

CPU_POLARIZATION_CHANGE (Event)

Emitted when the guest asks to change the polarization.

The guest can tell the host (via the PTF instruction) whether the CPUs should be provisioned using horizontal or vertical polarization.

On horizontal polarization the host is expected to provision all vCPUs equally.

On vertical polarization the host can provision each vCPU differently. The guest will get information on the details of the provisioning the next time it uses the STSI(15) instruction.

Arguments

polarization specified by the guest

Features

This event is experimental.

Since

8.2

Example

<- { "event": "CPU_POLARIZATION_CHANGE",

"data": { "polarization": "horizontal" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1401385907, "microseconds": 422329 } }


If

TARGET_S390X and CONFIG_KVM

CpuPolarizationInfo (Object)

The result of a CPU polarization query.

Members

the CPU polarization

Since

8.2

If

TARGET_S390X and CONFIG_KVM

query-s390x-cpu-polarization (Command)

Features

This command is experimental.

Returns

the machine's CPU polarization

Since

8.2

If

TARGET_S390X and CONFIG_KVM

RECORD/REPLAY

ReplayMode (Enum)

Mode of the replay subsystem.

Values

normal execution mode. Replay or record are not enabled.
record mode. All non-deterministic data is written into the replay log.
replay mode. Non-deterministic data required for system execution is read from the log.

Since

2.5

ReplayInfo (Object)

Record/replay information.

Members

current mode.
name of the record/replay log file. It is present only in record or replay modes, when the log is recorded or replayed.
current number of executed instructions.

Since

5.2

query-replay (Command)

Retrieve the record/replay information. It includes current instruction count which may be used for replay-break and replay-seek commands.

Returns

record/replay information.

Since

5.2

Example

-> { "execute": "query-replay" }
<- { "return": { "mode": "play", "filename": "log.rr", "icount": 220414 } }


replay-break (Command)

Set replay breakpoint at instruction count icount. Execution stops when the specified instruction is reached. There can be at most one breakpoint. When breakpoint is set, any prior one is removed. The breakpoint may be set only in replay mode and only "in the future", i.e. at instruction counts greater than the current one. The current instruction count can be observed with query-replay.

Arguments

instruction count to stop at

Since

5.2

Example

-> { "execute": "replay-break", "arguments": { "icount": 220414 } }
<- { "return": {} }


replay-delete-break (Command)

Remove replay breakpoint which was set with replay-break. The command is ignored when there are no replay breakpoints.

Since

5.2

Example

-> { "execute": "replay-delete-break" }
<- { "return": {} }


replay-seek (Command)

Automatically proceed to the instruction count icount, when replaying the execution. The command automatically loads nearest snapshot and replays the execution to find the desired instruction. When there is no preceding snapshot or the execution is not replayed, then the command fails. icount for the reference may be obtained with query-replay command.

Arguments

target instruction count

Since

5.2

Example

-> { "execute": "replay-seek", "arguments": { "icount": 220414 } }
<- { "return": {} }


YANK FEATURE

YankInstanceType (Enum)

An enumeration of yank instance types. See YankInstance for more information.

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

6.0

YankInstanceBlockNode (Object)

Specifies which block graph node to yank. See YankInstance for more information.

Members

the name of the block graph node

Since

6.0

YankInstanceChardev (Object)

Specifies which character device to yank. See YankInstance for more information.

Members

the chardev's ID

Since

6.0

YankInstance (Object)

A yank instance can be yanked with the yank qmp command to recover from a hanging QEMU.

Currently implemented yank instances:

  • nbd block device: Yanking it will shut down the connection to the nbd server without attempting to reconnect.
  • socket chardev: Yanking it will shut down the connected socket.
  • migration: Yanking it will shut down all migration connections. Unlike migrate_cancel, it will not notify the migration process, so migration will go into failed state, instead of cancelled state. yank should be used to recover from hangs.

Members


Since

6.0

yank (Command)

Try to recover from hanging QEMU by yanking the specified instances. See YankInstance for more information.

Takes a list of YankInstance as argument.

Arguments


Returns

  • Nothing on success
  • DeviceNotFound error, if any of the YankInstances doesn't exist

Example

-> { "execute": "yank",

"arguments": {
"instances": [
{ "type": "block-node",
"node-name": "nbd0" }
] } } <- { "return": {} }


Since

6.0

query-yank (Command)

Query yank instances. See YankInstance for more information.

Returns

list of YankInstance

Example

-> { "execute": "query-yank" }
<- { "return": [

{ "type": "block-node",
"node-name": "nbd0" }
] }


Since

6.0

MISCELLANEA

add_client (Command)

Allow client connections for VNC, Spice and socket based character devices to be passed in to QEMU via SCM_RIGHTS.

If the FD associated with fdname is not a socket, the command will fail and the FD will be closed.

Arguments

protocol name. Valid names are "vnc", "spice", "dbus-display" or the name of a character device (e.g. from -chardev id=XXXX)
file descriptor name previously passed via 'getfd' command
whether to skip authentication. Only applies to "vnc" and "spice" protocols
whether to perform TLS. Only applies to the "spice" protocol

Returns

nothing on success.

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "add_client", "arguments": { "protocol": "vnc",

"fdname": "myclient" } } <- { "return": {} }


NameInfo (Object)

Guest name information.

Members

The name of the guest

Since

0.14

query-name (Command)

Return the name information of a guest.

Returns

NameInfo of the guest

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "query-name" }
<- { "return": { "name": "qemu-name" } }


IOThreadInfo (Object)

Information about an iothread

Members

the identifier of the iothread
ID of the underlying host thread
maximum polling time in ns, 0 means polling is disabled (since 2.9)
how many ns will be added to polling time, 0 means that it's not configured (since 2.9)
how many ns will be removed from polling time, 0 means that it's not configured (since 2.9)
maximum number of requests in a batch for the AIO engine, 0 means that the engine will use its default (since 6.1)

Since

2.0

query-iothreads (Command)

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
}
]
}


stop (Command)

Stop all guest VCPU execution.

Since

0.14

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": {} }


cont (Command)

Resume guest VCPU execution.

Since

0.14

Returns

If successful, nothing

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": {} }


x-exit-preconfig (Command)

Exit from "preconfig" state

This command makes QEMU exit the preconfig state and proceed with VM initialization using configuration data provided on the command line and via the QMP monitor during the preconfig state. The command is only available during the preconfig state (i.e. when the --preconfig command line option was in use).

Features

This command is experimental.

Since

3.0

Returns

nothing

Example

-> { "execute": "x-exit-preconfig" }
<- { "return": {} }


human-monitor-command (Command)

Execute a command on the human monitor and return the output.

Arguments

the command to execute in the human monitor
The CPU to use for commands that require an implicit CPU

Features

If present, HMP command savevm only snapshots monitor-owned nodes if they have no parents. This allows the use of 'savevm' with -blockdev. (since 4.2)

Returns

the output of the command as a string

Since

0.14

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:

  • This command is stateless, this means that commands that depend on state information (such as getfd) might not work
  • Commands that prompt the user for data don't currently work

Example

-> { "execute": "human-monitor-command",

"arguments": { "command-line": "info kvm" } } <- { "return": "kvm support: enabled\r\n" }


getfd (Command)

Receive a file descriptor via SCM rights and assign it a name

Arguments

file descriptor name

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

0.14

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": {} }


If

CONFIG_POSIX

get-win32-socket (Command)

Add a socket that was duplicated to QEMU process with WSADuplicateSocketW() via WSASocket() & WSAPROTOCOL_INFOW structure and assign it a name (the SOCKET is associated with a CRT file descriptor)

Arguments

the WSAPROTOCOL_INFOW structure (encoded in base64)
file descriptor name

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

8.0

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": "get-win32-socket", "arguments": { "info": "abcd123..", fdname": "skclient" } }
<- { "return": {} }


If

CONFIG_WIN32

closefd (Command)

Close a file descriptor previously passed via SCM rights

Arguments

file descriptor name

Returns

Nothing on success

Since

0.14

Example

-> { "execute": "closefd", "arguments": { "fdname": "fd1" } }
<- { "return": {} }


AddfdInfo (Object)

Information about a file descriptor that was added to an fd set.

Members

The ID of the fd set that fd was added to.
The file descriptor that was received via SCM rights and added to the fd set.

Since

1.2

add-fd (Command)

Add a file descriptor, that was passed via SCM rights, to an fd set.

Arguments

The ID of the fd set to add the file descriptor to.
A free-form string that can be used to describe the fd.

Returns

  • AddfdInfo on success
  • If file descriptor was not received, GenericError
  • If fdset-id is a negative value, GenericError

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

Example

-> { "execute": "add-fd", "arguments": { "fdset-id": 1 } }
<- { "return": { "fdset-id": 1, "fd": 3 } }


remove-fd (Command)

Remove a file descriptor from an fd set.

Arguments

The ID of the fd set that the file descriptor belongs to.
The file descriptor that is to be removed.

Returns

  • Nothing on success
  • If fdset-id or fd is not found, GenericError

Since

1.2

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": {} }


FdsetFdInfo (Object)

Information about a file descriptor that belongs to an fd set.

Members

The file descriptor value.
A free-form string that can be used to describe the fd.

Since

1.2

FdsetInfo (Object)

Information about an fd set.

Members

The ID of the fd set.
A list of file descriptors that belong to this fd set.

Since

1.2

query-fdsets (Command)

Return information describing all fd sets.

Returns

A list of FdsetInfo

Since

1.2

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
}
]
}


CommandLineParameterType (Enum)

Possible types for an option parameter.

Values

accepts a character string
accepts "on" or "off"
accepts a number
accepts a number followed by an optional suffix (K)ilo, (M)ega, (G)iga, (T)era

Since

1.5

CommandLineParameterInfo (Object)

Details about a single parameter of a command line option.

Members

parameter name
parameter CommandLineParameterType
human readable text string, not suitable for parsing.
default value string (since 2.1)

Since

1.5

CommandLineOptionInfo (Object)

Details about a command line option, including its list of parameter details

Members

option name
an array of CommandLineParameterInfo

Since

1.5

query-command-line-options (Command)

Query command line option schema.

Arguments


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"
}
]
}


RTC_CHANGE (Event)

Emitted when the guest changes the RTC time.

Arguments

offset in seconds between base RTC clock (as specified by -rtc base), and new RTC clock value
path to the RTC object in the QOM tree

Note

This event is rate-limited. It is not guaranteed that the RTC in the system implements this event, or even that the system has an RTC at all.

Since

0.13

Example

<- { "event": "RTC_CHANGE",

"data": { "offset": 78 },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1267020223, "microseconds": 435656 } }


VFU_CLIENT_HANGUP (Event)

Emitted when the client of a TYPE_VFIO_USER_SERVER closes the communication channel

Arguments

ID of the TYPE_VFIO_USER_SERVER object. It is the last component of vfu-qom-path referenced below
path to the TYPE_VFIO_USER_SERVER object in the QOM tree
ID of attached PCI device
path to attached PCI device in the QOM tree

Since

7.1

Example

<- { "event": "VFU_CLIENT_HANGUP",

"data": { "vfu-id": "vfu1",
"vfu-qom-path": "/objects/vfu1",
"dev-id": "sas1",
"dev-qom-path": "/machine/peripheral/sas1" },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }


rtc-reset-reinjection (Command)

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": {} }


If

TARGET_I386

SevState (Enum)

An enumeration of SEV state information used during query-sev.

Values

The guest is uninitialized.
The guest is currently being launched; plaintext data and register state is being imported.
The guest is currently being launched; ciphertext data is being imported.
The guest is fully launched or migrated in.
The guest is currently being migrated out to another machine.
The guest is currently being migrated from another machine.

Since

2.12

If

TARGET_I386

SevInfo (Object)

Information about Secure Encrypted Virtualization (SEV) support

Members

true if SEV is active
SEV API major version
SEV API minor version
SEV FW build id
SEV policy value
SEV guest state
SEV firmware handle

Since

2.12

If

TARGET_I386

query-sev (Command)

Returns information about SEV

Returns

SevInfo

Since

2.12

Example

-> { "execute": "query-sev" }
<- { "return": { "enabled": true, "api-major" : 0, "api-minor" : 0,

"build-id" : 0, "policy" : 0, "state" : "running",
"handle" : 1 } }


If

TARGET_I386

SevLaunchMeasureInfo (Object)

SEV Guest Launch measurement information

Members

the measurement value encoded in base64

Since

2.12

If

TARGET_I386

query-sev-launch-measure (Command)

Query the SEV guest launch information.

Returns

The SevLaunchMeasureInfo for the guest

Since

2.12

Example

-> { "execute": "query-sev-launch-measure" }
<- { "return": { "data": "4l8LXeNlSPUDlXPJG5966/8%YZ" } }


If

TARGET_I386

SevCapability (Object)

The struct describes capability for a Secure Encrypted Virtualization feature.

Members

Platform Diffie-Hellman key (base64 encoded)
PDH certificate chain (base64 encoded)
Unique ID of CPU0 (base64 encoded) (since 7.1)
C-bit location in page table entry
Number of physical Address bit reduction when SEV is enabled

Since

2.12

If

TARGET_I386

query-sev-capabilities (Command)

This command is used to get the SEV capabilities, and is supported on AMD X86 platforms only.

Returns

SevCapability objects.

Since

2.12

Example

-> { "execute": "query-sev-capabilities" }
<- { "return": { "pdh": "8CCDD8DDD", "cert-chain": "888CCCDDDEE",

"cpu0-id": "2lvmGwo+...61iEinw==",
"cbitpos": 47, "reduced-phys-bits": 1}}


If

TARGET_I386

sev-inject-launch-secret (Command)

This command injects a secret blob into memory of SEV guest.

Arguments

the launch secret packet header encoded in base64
the launch secret data to be injected encoded in base64
the guest physical address where secret will be injected.

Since

6.0

If

TARGET_I386

SevAttestationReport (Object)

The struct describes attestation report for a Secure Encrypted Virtualization feature.

Members

guest attestation report (base64 encoded)

Since

6.1

If

TARGET_I386

query-sev-attestation-report (Command)

This command is used to get the SEV attestation report, and is supported on AMD X86 platforms only.

Arguments

a random 16 bytes value encoded in base64 (it will be included in report)

Returns

SevAttestationReport objects.

Since

6.1

Example

-> { "execute" : "query-sev-attestation-report",

"arguments": { "mnonce": "aaaaaaa" } } <- { "return" : { "data": "aaaaaaaabbbddddd"} }


If

TARGET_I386

dump-skeys (Command)

Dump guest's storage keys

Arguments

the 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": {} }


If

TARGET_S390X

GICCapability (Object)

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 of GIC to be described. Currently, only 2 and 3 are supported.
whether current QEMU/hardware supports emulated GIC device in user space.
whether current QEMU/hardware supports hardware accelerated GIC device in kernel.

Since

2.6

If

TARGET_ARM

query-gic-capabilities (Command)

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 } ] }


If

TARGET_ARM

SGXEPCSection (Object)

Information about intel SGX EPC section info

Members

the numa node
the size of EPC section

Since

7.0

SGXInfo (Object)

Information about intel Safe Guard eXtension (SGX) support

Members

true if SGX is supported
true if SGX1 is supported
true if SGX2 is supported
true if FLC is supported
The EPC sections info for guest (Since: 7.0)

Since

6.2

If

TARGET_I386

query-sgx (Command)

Returns information about SGX

Returns

SGXInfo

Since

6.2

Example

-> { "execute": "query-sgx" }
<- { "return": { "sgx": true, "sgx1" : true, "sgx2" : true,

"flc": true,
"sections": [{"node": 0, "size": 67108864},
{"node": 1, "size": 29360128}]} }


If

TARGET_I386

query-sgx-capabilities (Command)

Returns information from host SGX capabilities

Returns

SGXInfo

Since

6.2

Example

-> { "execute": "query-sgx-capabilities" }
<- { "return": { "sgx": true, "sgx1" : true, "sgx2" : true,

"flc": true,
"section" : [{"node": 0, "size": 67108864},
{"node": 1, "size": 29360128}]} }


If

TARGET_I386

EvtchnPortType (Enum)

An enumeration of Xen event channel port types.

Values

The port is unused.
The port is allocated and ready to be bound.
The port is connected as an interdomain interrupt.
The port is bound to a physical IRQ (PIRQ).
The port is bound to a virtual IRQ (VIRQ).
The post is an inter-processor interrupt (IPI).

Since

8.0

If

TARGET_I386

EvtchnInfo (Object)

Information about a Xen event channel port

Members

the port number
target vCPU for this port
the port type
remote domain for interdomain ports
remote port ID, or virq/pirq number
port is currently active pending delivery
port is masked

Since

8.0

If

TARGET_I386

xen-event-list (Command)

Query the Xen event channels opened by the guest.

Returns

list of open event channel ports.

Since

8.0

Example

-> { "execute": "xen-event-list" }
<- { "return": [

{
"pending": false,
"port": 1,
"vcpu": 1,
"remote-domain": "qemu",
"masked": false,
"type": "interdomain",
"target": 1
},
{
"pending": false,
"port": 2,
"vcpu": 0,
"remote-domain": "",
"masked": false,
"type": "virq",
"target": 0
}
]
}


If

TARGET_I386

xen-event-inject (Command)

Inject a Xen event channel port (interrupt) to the guest.

Arguments

The port number

Returns

Nothing on success.

Since

8.0

Example

-> { "execute": "xen-event-inject", "arguments": { "port": 1 } }
<- { "return": { } }


If

TARGET_I386

AUDIO

AudiodevPerDirectionOptions (Object)

General audio backend options that are used for both playback and recording.

Members

use QEMU's mixing engine to mix all streams inside QEMU and convert audio formats when not supported by the backend. When set to off, fixed-settings must be also off (default on, since 4.2)
use fixed settings for host input/output. When off, frequency, channels and format must not be specified (default true)
frequency to use when using fixed settings (default 44100)
number of channels when using fixed settings (default 2)
number of voices to use (default 1)
sample format to use when using fixed settings (default s16)
the buffer length in microseconds

Since

4.0

AudiodevGenericOptions (Object)

Generic driver-specific options.

Members

options of the capture stream
options of the playback stream

Since

4.0

AudiodevAlsaPerDirectionOptions (Object)

Options of the ALSA backend that are used for both playback and recording.

Members

the name of the ALSA device to use (default 'default')
the period length in microseconds
attempt to use poll mode, falling back to non-polling access on failure (default true)

Since

4.0

AudiodevAlsaOptions (Object)

Options of the ALSA audio backend.

Members

options of the capture stream
options of the playback stream
set the threshold (in microseconds) when playback starts

Since

4.0

AudiodevSndioOptions (Object)

Options of the sndio audio backend.

Members

options of the capture stream
options of the playback stream
the name of the sndio device to use (default 'default')
play buffer size (in microseconds)

Since

7.2

AudiodevCoreaudioPerDirectionOptions (Object)

Options of the Core Audio backend that are used for both playback and recording.

Members


Since

4.0

AudiodevCoreaudioOptions (Object)

Options of the coreaudio audio backend.

Members


Since

4.0

AudiodevDsoundOptions (Object)

Options of the DirectSound audio backend.

Members

options of the capture stream
options of the playback stream
add extra latency to playback in microseconds (default 10000)

Since

4.0

AudiodevJackPerDirectionOptions (Object)

Options of the JACK backend that are used for both playback and recording.

Members

select from among several possible concurrent server instances (default: environment variable $JACK_DEFAULT_SERVER if set, else "default")
the client name to use. The server will modify this name to create a unique variant, if needed unless exact-name is true (default: the guest's name)
if set, a regular expression of JACK client port name(s) to monitor for and automatically connect to
start a jack server process if one is not already present (default: false)
use the exact name requested otherwise JACK automatically generates a unique one, if needed (default: false)

Since

5.1

AudiodevJackOptions (Object)

Options of the JACK audio backend.

Members

options of the capture stream
options of the playback stream

Since

5.1

AudiodevOssPerDirectionOptions (Object)

Options of the OSS backend that are used for both playback and recording.

Members

file name of the OSS device (default '/dev/dsp')
number of buffers
attempt to use poll mode, falling back to non-polling access on failure (default true)

Since

4.0

AudiodevOssOptions (Object)

Options of the OSS audio backend.

Members

options of the capture stream
options of the playback stream
try using memory-mapped access, falling back to non-memory-mapped access on failure (default true)
open device in exclusive mode (vmix won't work) (default false)
set the timing policy of the device (between 0 and 10, where smaller number means smaller latency but higher CPU usage) or -1 to use fragment mode (option ignored on some platforms) (default 5)

Since

4.0

AudiodevPaPerDirectionOptions (Object)

Options of the Pulseaudio backend that are used for both playback and recording.

Members

name of the sink/source to use
name of the PulseAudio stream created by qemu. Can be used to identify the stream in PulseAudio when you create multiple PulseAudio devices or run multiple qemu instances (default: audiodev's id, since 4.2)
latency you want PulseAudio to achieve in microseconds (default 15000)

Since

4.0

AudiodevPaOptions (Object)

Options of the PulseAudio audio backend.

Members

options of the capture stream
options of the playback stream
PulseAudio server address (default: let PulseAudio choose)

Since

4.0

AudiodevPipewirePerDirectionOptions (Object)

Options of the PipeWire backend that are used for both playback and recording.

Members

name of the sink/source to use
name of the PipeWire stream created by qemu. Can be used to identify the stream in PipeWire when you create multiple PipeWire devices or run multiple qemu instances (default: audiodev's id)
latency you want PipeWire to achieve in microseconds (default 46000)

Since

8.1

AudiodevPipewireOptions (Object)

Options of the PipeWire audio backend.

Members


Since

8.1

AudiodevSdlPerDirectionOptions (Object)

Options of the SDL audio backend that are used for both playback and recording.

Members


Since

6.0

AudiodevSdlOptions (Object)

Options of the SDL audio backend.

Members

options of the recording stream
options of the playback stream

Since

6.0

AudiodevWavOptions (Object)

Options of the wav audio backend.

Members

options of the capture stream
options of the playback stream
name of the wav file to record (default 'qemu.wav')

Since

4.0

AudioFormat (Enum)

An enumeration of possible audio formats.

Values

unsigned 8 bit integer
signed 8 bit integer
unsigned 16 bit integer
signed 16 bit integer
unsigned 32 bit integer
signed 32 bit integer
single precision floating-point (since 5.0)

Since

4.0

AudiodevDriver (Enum)

An enumeration of possible audio backend drivers.

Values

JACK audio backend (since 5.1)
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

4.0

Audiodev (Object)

Options of an audio backend.

Members


Since

4.0

query-audiodevs (Command)

Returns information about audiodev configuration

Returns

array of Audiodev

Since

8.0

ACPI

AcpiTableOptions (Object)

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

table signature / identifier (4 bytes)
table revision number (dependent on signature, 1 byte)
OEM identifier (6 bytes)
OEM table identifier (8 bytes)
OEM-supplied revision number (4 bytes)
identifier of the utility that created the table (4 bytes)
revision number of the utility that created the table (4 bytes)
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.
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

ACPISlotType (Enum)

Values

memory slot
logical CPU slot (since 2.7)

ACPIOSTInfo (Object)

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 ID associated with slot
slot ID, unique per slot of a given slot-type
type of the slot
an integer containing the source event
an integer containing the status code

Since

2.1

query-acpi-ospm-status (Command)

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}
]}


ACPI_DEVICE_OST (Event)

Emitted when guest executes ACPI _OST method.

Arguments

OSPM Status Indication

Since

2.1

Example

<- { "event": "ACPI_DEVICE_OST",

"data": { "info": { "device": "d1", "slot": "0",
"slot-type": "DIMM", "source": 1, "status": 0 } },
"timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }


PCI

PciMemoryRange (Object)

A PCI device memory region

Members

the starting address (guest physical)
the ending address (guest physical)

Since

0.14

PciMemoryRegion (Object)

Information about a PCI device I/O region.

Members

the index of the Base Address Register for this region
  • 'io' if the region is a PIO region
  • 'memory' if the region is a MMIO region

memory size
if type is 'memory', true if the memory is prefetchable
if type is 'memory', true if the BAR is 64-bit
Not documented

Since

0.14

PciBusInfo (Object)

Information about a bus of a PCI Bridge device

Members

primary bus interface number. This should be the number of the bus the device resides on.
secondary bus interface number. This is the number of the main bus for the bridge
This is the highest number bus that resides below the bridge.
The PIO range for all devices on this bridge
The MMIO range for all devices on this bridge
The range of prefetchable MMIO for all devices on this bridge

Since

2.4

PciBridgeInfo (Object)

Information about a PCI Bridge device

Members

information about the bus the device resides on
a list of PciDeviceInfo for each device on this bridge

Since

0.14

PciDeviceClass (Object)

Information about the Class of a PCI device

Members

a string description of the device's class
the class code of the device

Since

2.4

PciDeviceId (Object)

Information about the Id of a PCI device

Members

the PCI device id
the PCI vendor id
the PCI subsystem id (since 3.1)
the PCI subsystem vendor id (since 3.1)

Since

2.4

PciDeviceInfo (Object)

Information about a PCI device

Members

the bus number of the device
the slot the device is located in
the function of the slot used by the device
the class of the device
the PCI device id
if an IRQ is assigned to the device, the IRQ number
the IRQ pin, zero means no IRQ (since 5.1)
the device name of the PCI device
if the device is a PCI bridge, the bridge information
a 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

PciInfo (Object)

Information about a PCI bus

Members

the bus index
a list of devices on this bus

Since

0.14

query-pci (Command)

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

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.

STATISTICS

StatsType (Enum)

Enumeration of statistics types

Values

stat is cumulative; value can only increase.
stat is instantaneous; value can increase or decrease.
stat is the peak value; value can only increase.
stat is a linear histogram.
stat is a logarithmic histogram, with one bucket for each power of two.

Since

7.1

StatsUnit (Enum)

Enumeration of unit of measurement for statistics

Values

stat reported in bytes.
stat reported in seconds.
stat reported in clock cycles.
stat is a boolean value.

Since

7.1

StatsProvider (Enum)

Enumeration of statistics providers.

Values

since 7.1
since 8.0

Since

7.1

StatsTarget (Enum)

The kinds of objects on which one can request statistics.

Values

statistics that apply to the entire virtual machine or the entire QEMU process.
statistics that apply to a single virtual CPU.
statistics that apply to a crypto device (since 8.0)

Since

7.1

StatsRequest (Object)

Indicates a set of statistics that should be returned by query-stats.

Members

provider for which to return statistics.
statistics to be returned (all if omitted).

Since

7.1

StatsVCPUFilter (Object)

Members

list of QOM paths for the desired vCPU objects.

Since

7.1

StatsFilter (Object)

The arguments to the query-stats command; specifies a target for which to request statistics and optionally the required subset of information for that target:

  • which vCPUs to request statistics for
  • which providers to request statistics from
  • which named values to return within each provider

Members


Since

7.1

StatsValue (Alternate)

Members

single unsigned 64-bit integers.
list of unsigned 64-bit integers (used for histograms).
Not documented

Since

7.1

Stats (Object)

Members

name of stat.
stat value.

Since

7.1

StatsResult (Object)

Members

provider for this set of statistics.
Path to the object for which the statistics are returned, if the object is exposed in the QOM tree
list of statistics.

Since

7.1

query-stats (Command)

Return runtime-collected statistics for objects such as the VM or its vCPUs.

The arguments are a StatsFilter and specify the provider and objects to return statistics about.

Arguments


Returns

a list of StatsResult, one for each provider and object (e.g., for each vCPU).

Since

7.1

StatsSchemaValue (Object)

Schema for a single statistic.

Members

name of the statistic; each element of the schema is uniquely identified by a target, a provider (both available in StatsSchema) and the name.
kind of statistic.
basic unit of measure for the statistic; if missing, the statistic is a simple number or counter.
base for the multiple of unit in which the statistic is measured. Only present if exponent is non-zero; base and exponent together form a SI prefix (e.g., _nano-_ for base=10 and exponent=-9) or IEC binary prefix (e.g. _kibi-_ for base=2 and exponent=10)
exponent for the multiple of unit in which the statistic is expressed, or 0 for the basic unit
Present when type is "linear-histogram", contains the width of each bucket of the histogram.

Since

7.1

StatsSchema (Object)

Schema for all available statistics for a provider and target.

Members

provider for this set of statistics.
the kind of object that can be queried through the provider.
list of statistics.

Since

7.1

query-stats-schemas (Command)

Return the schema for all available runtime-collected statistics.

Arguments


Note

runtime-collected statistics and their names fall outside QEMU's usual deprecation policies. QEMU will try to keep the set of available data stable, together with their names, but will not guarantee stability at all costs; the same is true of providers that source statistics externally, e.g. from Linux. For example, if the same value is being tracked with different names on different architectures or by different providers, one of them might be renamed. A statistic might go away if an algorithm is changed or some code is removed; changing a default might cause previously useful statistics to always report 0. Such changes, however, are expected to be rare.

Since

7.1

VIRTIO DEVICES

VirtioInfo (Object)

Basic information about a given VirtIODevice

Members

The VirtIODevice's canonical QOM path
Name of the VirtIODevice

Since

7.2

x-query-virtio (Command)

Returns a list of all realized VirtIODevices

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

List of gathered VirtIODevices

Since

7.2

Example

-> { "execute": "x-query-virtio" }
<- { "return": [

{
"name": "virtio-input",
"path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[4]/virtio-backend"
},
{
"name": "virtio-crypto",
"path": "/machine/peripheral/crypto0/virtio-backend"
},
{
"name": "virtio-scsi",
"path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[2]/virtio-backend"
},
{
"name": "virtio-net",
"path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[1]/virtio-backend"
},
{
"name": "virtio-serial",
"path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[0]/virtio-backend"
}
]
}


VhostStatus (Object)

Information about a vhost device. This information will only be displayed if the vhost device is active.

Members

vhost_dev n_mem_sections
vhost_dev n_tmp_sections
vhost_dev nvqs (number of virtqueues being used)
vhost_dev vq_index
vhost_dev features
vhost_dev acked_features
vhost_dev backend_features
vhost_dev protocol_features
vhost_dev max_queues
vhost_dev backend_cap
vhost_dev log_enabled flag
vhost_dev log_size

Since

7.2

VirtioStatus (Object)

Full status of the virtio device with most VirtIODevice members. Also includes the full status of the corresponding vhost device if the vhost device is active.

Members

VirtIODevice name
VirtIODevice ID
VirtIODevice vhost_started flag
VirtIODevice guest_features
VirtIODevice host_features
VirtIODevice backend_features
VirtIODevice device_endian
VirtIODevice virtqueue count. This is the number of active virtqueues being used by the VirtIODevice.
VirtIODevice configuration status (VirtioDeviceStatus)
VirtIODevice ISR
VirtIODevice queue_sel
VirtIODevice vm_running flag
VirtIODevice broken flag
VirtIODevice disabled flag
VirtIODevice use_started flag
VirtIODevice started flag
VirtIODevice start_on_kick flag
VirtIODevice disabled_legacy_check flag
VirtIODevice bus_name
VirtIODevice use_guest_notifier_mask flag
Corresponding vhost device info for a given VirtIODevice. Present if the given VirtIODevice has an active vhost device.

Since

7.2

x-query-virtio-status (Command)

Poll for a comprehensive status of a given virtio device

Arguments

Canonical QOM path of the VirtIODevice

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

VirtioStatus of the virtio device

Since

7.2

Examples

1. Poll for the status of virtio-crypto (no vhost-crypto active)
-> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-status",

"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral/crypto0/virtio-backend" }
} <- { "return": {
"device-endian": "little",
"bus-name": "",
"disable-legacy-check": false,
"name": "virtio-crypto",
"started": true,
"device-id": 20,
"backend-features": {
"transports": [],
"dev-features": []
},
"start-on-kick": false,
"isr": 1,
"broken": false,
"status": {
"statuses": [
"VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_ACKNOWLEDGE: Valid virtio device found",
"VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER: Guest OS compatible with device",
"VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_FEATURES_OK: Feature negotiation complete",
"VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK: Driver setup and ready"
]
},
"num-vqs": 2,
"guest-features": {
"dev-features": [],
"transports": [
"VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX: Used & avail. event fields enabled",
"VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC: Indirect descriptors supported",
"VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1: Device compliant for v1 spec (legacy)"
]
},
"host-features": {
"unknown-dev-features": 1073741824,
"dev-features": [],
"transports": [
"VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX: Used & avail. event fields enabled",
"VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC: Indirect descriptors supported",
"VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1: Device compliant for v1 spec (legacy)",
"VIRTIO_F_ANY_LAYOUT: Device accepts arbitrary desc. layouts",
"VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY: Notify when device runs out of avail. descs. on VQ"
]
},
"use-guest-notifier-mask": true,
"vm-running": true,
"queue-sel": 1,
"disabled": false,
"vhost-started": false,
"use-started": true
}
} 2. Poll for the status of virtio-net (vhost-net is active) -> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-status",
"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[1]/virtio-backend" }
} <- { "return": {
"device-endian": "little",
"bus-name": "",
"disabled-legacy-check": false,
"name": "virtio-net",
"started": true,
"device-id": 1,
"vhost-dev": {
"n-tmp-sections": 4,
"n-mem-sections": 4,
"max-queues": 1,
"backend-cap": 2,
"log-size": 0,
"backend-features": {
"dev-features": [],
"transports": []
},
"nvqs": 2,
"protocol-features": {
"protocols": []
},
"vq-index": 0,
"log-enabled": false,
"acked-features": {
"dev-features": [
"VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF: Driver can merge receive buffers"
],
"transports": [
"VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX: Used & avail. event fields enabled",
"VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC: Indirect descriptors supported",
"VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1: Device compliant for v1 spec (legacy)"
]
},
"features": {
"dev-features": [
"VHOST_F_LOG_ALL: Logging write descriptors supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF: Driver can merge receive buffers"
],
"transports": [
"VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX: Used & avail. event fields enabled",
"VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC: Indirect descriptors supported",
"VIRTIO_F_IOMMU_PLATFORM: Device can be used on IOMMU platform",
"VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1: Device compliant for v1 spec (legacy)",
"VIRTIO_F_ANY_LAYOUT: Device accepts arbitrary desc. layouts",
"VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY: Notify when device runs out of avail. descs. on VQ"
]
}
},
"backend-features": {
"dev-features": [
"VHOST_USER_F_PROTOCOL_FEATURES: Vhost-user protocol features negotiation supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GSO: Handling GSO-type packets supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_MAC_ADDR: MAC address set through control channel",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ANNOUNCE: Driver sending gratuitous packets supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_RX_EXTRA: Extra RX mode control supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VLAN: Control channel VLAN filtering supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_RX: Control channel RX mode supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VQ: Control channel available",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_STATUS: Configuration status field available",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF: Driver can merge receive buffers",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_UFO: Device can receive UFO",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_ECN: Device can receive TSO with ECN",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO6: Device can receive TSOv6",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO4: Device can receive TSOv4",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_UFO: Driver can receive UFO",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ECN: Driver can receive TSO with ECN",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO6: Driver can receive TSOv6",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4: Driver can receive TSOv4",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_MAC: Device has given MAC address",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_GUEST_OFFLOADS: Control channel offloading reconfig. supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_CSUM: Driver handling packets with partial checksum supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CSUM: Device handling packets with partial checksum supported"
],
"transports": [
"VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX: Used & avail. event fields enabled",
"VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC: Indirect descriptors supported",
"VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1: Device compliant for v1 spec (legacy)",
"VIRTIO_F_ANY_LAYOUT: Device accepts arbitrary desc. layouts",
"VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY: Notify when device runs out of avail. descs. on VQ"
]
},
"start-on-kick": false,
"isr": 1,
"broken": false,
"status": {
"statuses": [
"VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_ACKNOWLEDGE: Valid virtio device found",
"VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER: Guest OS compatible with device",
"VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_FEATURES_OK: Feature negotiation complete",
"VIRTIO_CONFIG_S_DRIVER_OK: Driver setup and ready"
]
},
"num-vqs": 3,
"guest-features": {
"dev-features": [
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_MAC_ADDR: MAC address set through control channel",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ANNOUNCE: Driver sending gratuitous packets supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VLAN: Control channel VLAN filtering supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_RX: Control channel RX mode supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VQ: Control channel available",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_STATUS: Configuration status field available",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF: Driver can merge receive buffers",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_UFO: Device can receive UFO",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_ECN: Device can receive TSO with ECN",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO6: Device can receive TSOv6",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO4: Device can receive TSOv4",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_UFO: Driver can receive UFO",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ECN: Driver can receive TSO with ECN",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO6: Driver can receive TSOv6",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4: Driver can receive TSOv4",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_MAC: Device has given MAC address",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_GUEST_OFFLOADS: Control channel offloading reconfig. supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_CSUM: Driver handling packets with partial checksum supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CSUM: Device handling packets with partial checksum supported"
],
"transports": [
"VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX: Used & avail. event fields enabled",
"VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC: Indirect descriptors supported",
"VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1: Device compliant for v1 spec (legacy)"
]
},
"host-features": {
"dev-features": [
"VHOST_USER_F_PROTOCOL_FEATURES: Vhost-user protocol features negotiation supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GSO: Handling GSO-type packets supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_MAC_ADDR: MAC address set through control channel",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ANNOUNCE: Driver sending gratuitous packets supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_RX_EXTRA: Extra RX mode control supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VLAN: Control channel VLAN filtering supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_RX: Control channel RX mode supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_VQ: Control channel available",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_STATUS: Configuration status field available",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_MRG_RXBUF: Driver can merge receive buffers",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_UFO: Device can receive UFO",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_ECN: Device can receive TSO with ECN",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO6: Device can receive TSOv6",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_HOST_TSO4: Device can receive TSOv4",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_UFO: Driver can receive UFO",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_ECN: Driver can receive TSO with ECN",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO6: Driver can receive TSOv6",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_TSO4: Driver can receive TSOv4",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_MAC: Device has given MAC address",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CTRL_GUEST_OFFLOADS: Control channel offloading reconfig. supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_GUEST_CSUM: Driver handling packets with partial checksum supported",
"VIRTIO_NET_F_CSUM: Device handling packets with partial checksum supported"
],
"transports": [
"VIRTIO_RING_F_EVENT_IDX: Used & avail. event fields enabled",
"VIRTIO_RING_F_INDIRECT_DESC: Indirect descriptors supported",
"VIRTIO_F_VERSION_1: Device compliant for v1 spec (legacy)",
"VIRTIO_F_ANY_LAYOUT: Device accepts arbitrary desc. layouts",
"VIRTIO_F_NOTIFY_ON_EMPTY: Notify when device runs out of avail. descs. on VQ"
]
},
"use-guest-notifier-mask": true,
"vm-running": true,
"queue-sel": 2,
"disabled": false,
"vhost-started": true,
"use-started": true
}
}


VirtioDeviceStatus (Object)

A structure defined to list the configuration statuses of a virtio device

Members

List of decoded configuration statuses of the virtio device
Virtio device statuses bitmap that have not been decoded

Since

7.2

VhostDeviceProtocols (Object)

A structure defined to list the vhost user protocol features of a Vhost User device

Members

List of decoded vhost user protocol features of a vhost user device
Vhost user device protocol features bitmap that have not been decoded

Since

7.2

VirtioDeviceFeatures (Object)

The common fields that apply to most Virtio devices. Some devices may not have their own device-specific features (e.g. virtio-rng).

Members

List of transport features of the virtio device
List of device-specific features (if the device has unique features)
Virtio device features bitmap that have not been decoded

Since

7.2

VirtQueueStatus (Object)

Information of a VirtIODevice VirtQueue, including most members of the VirtQueue data structure.

Members

Name of the VirtIODevice that uses this VirtQueue
VirtQueue queue_index
VirtQueue inuse
VirtQueue vring.num
VirtQueue vring.num_default
VirtQueue vring.align
VirtQueue vring.desc (descriptor area)
VirtQueue vring.avail (driver area)
VirtQueue vring.used (device area)
VirtQueue last_avail_idx or return of vhost_dev vhost_get_vring_base (if vhost active)
VirtQueue shadow_avail_idx
VirtQueue used_idx
VirtQueue signalled_used
VirtQueue signalled_used_valid flag

Since

7.2

x-query-virtio-queue-status (Command)

Return the status of a given VirtIODevice's VirtQueue

Arguments

VirtIODevice canonical QOM path
VirtQueue index to examine

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

VirtQueueStatus of the VirtQueue

Notes

last_avail_idx will not be displayed in the case where the selected VirtIODevice has a running vhost device and the VirtIODevice VirtQueue index (queue) does not exist for the corresponding vhost device vhost_virtqueue. Also, shadow_avail_idx will not be displayed in the case where the selected VirtIODevice has a running vhost device.

Since

7.2

Examples

1. Get VirtQueueStatus for virtio-vsock (vhost-vsock running)
-> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-queue-status",

"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral/vsock0/virtio-backend",
"queue": 1 }
} <- { "return": {
"signalled-used": 0,
"inuse": 0,
"name": "vhost-vsock",
"vring-align": 4096,
"vring-desc": 5217370112,
"signalled-used-valid": false,
"vring-num-default": 128,
"vring-avail": 5217372160,
"queue-index": 1,
"last-avail-idx": 0,
"vring-used": 5217372480,
"used-idx": 0,
"vring-num": 128
}
} 2. Get VirtQueueStatus for virtio-serial (no vhost) -> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-queue-status",
"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[0]/virtio-backend",
"queue": 20 }
} <- { "return": {
"signalled-used": 0,
"inuse": 0,
"name": "virtio-serial",
"vring-align": 4096,
"vring-desc": 5182074880,
"signalled-used-valid": false,
"vring-num-default": 128,
"vring-avail": 5182076928,
"queue-index": 20,
"last-avail-idx": 0,
"vring-used": 5182077248,
"used-idx": 0,
"shadow-avail-idx": 0,
"vring-num": 128
}
}


VirtVhostQueueStatus (Object)

Information of a vhost device's vhost_virtqueue, including most members of the vhost_dev vhost_virtqueue data structure.

Members

Name of the VirtIODevice that uses this vhost_virtqueue
vhost_virtqueue kick
vhost_virtqueue call
vhost_virtqueue desc
vhost_virtqueue avail
vhost_virtqueue used
vhost_virtqueue num
vhost_virtqueue desc_phys (descriptor area phys. addr.)
vhost_virtqueue desc_size
vhost_virtqueue avail_phys (driver area phys. addr.)
vhost_virtqueue avail_size
vhost_virtqueue used_phys (device area phys. addr.)
vhost_virtqueue used_size

Since

7.2

x-query-virtio-vhost-queue-status (Command)

Return information of a given vhost device's vhost_virtqueue

Arguments

VirtIODevice canonical QOM path
vhost_virtqueue index to examine

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

VirtVhostQueueStatus of the vhost_virtqueue

Since

7.2

Examples

1. Get vhost_virtqueue status for vhost-crypto
-> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-vhost-queue-status",

"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral/crypto0/virtio-backend",
"queue": 0 }
} <- { "return": {
"avail-phys": 5216124928,
"name": "virtio-crypto",
"used-phys": 5216127040,
"avail-size": 2054,
"desc-size": 16384,
"used-size": 8198,
"desc": 140141447430144,
"num": 1024,
"call": 0,
"avail": 140141447446528,
"desc-phys": 5216108544,
"used": 140141447448640,
"kick": 0
}
} 2. Get vhost_virtqueue status for vhost-vsock -> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-vhost-queue-status",
"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral/vsock0/virtio-backend",
"queue": 0 }
} <- { "return": {
"avail-phys": 5182261248,
"name": "vhost-vsock",
"used-phys": 5182261568,
"avail-size": 262,
"desc-size": 2048,
"used-size": 1030,
"desc": 140141413580800,
"num": 128,
"call": 0,
"avail": 140141413582848,
"desc-phys": 5182259200,
"used": 140141413583168,
"kick": 0
}
}


VirtioRingDesc (Object)

Information regarding the vring descriptor area

Members

Guest physical address of the descriptor area
Length of the descriptor area
List of descriptor flags

Since

7.2

VirtioRingAvail (Object)

Information regarding the avail vring (a.k.a. driver area)

Members

VRingAvail flags
VRingAvail index
VRingAvail ring[] entry at provided index

Since

7.2

VirtioRingUsed (Object)

Information regarding the used vring (a.k.a. device area)

Members

VRingUsed flags
VRingUsed index

Since

7.2

VirtioQueueElement (Object)

Information regarding a VirtQueue's VirtQueueElement including descriptor, driver, and device areas

Members

Name of the VirtIODevice that uses this VirtQueue
Index of the element in the queue
List of descriptors (VirtioRingDesc)
VRingAvail info
VRingUsed info

Since

7.2

x-query-virtio-queue-element (Command)

Return the information about a VirtQueue's VirtQueueElement

Arguments

VirtIODevice canonical QOM path
VirtQueue index to examine
Index of the element in the queue (default: head of the queue)

Features

This command is meant for debugging.

Returns

VirtioQueueElement information

Since

7.2

Examples

1. Introspect on virtio-net's VirtQueue 0 at index 5
-> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-queue-element",

"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[1]/virtio-backend",
"queue": 0,
"index": 5 }
} <- { "return": {
"index": 5,
"name": "virtio-net",
"descs": [
{
"flags": ["write"],
"len": 1536,
"addr": 5257305600
}
],
"avail": {
"idx": 256,
"flags": 0,
"ring": 5
},
"used": {
"idx": 13,
"flags": 0
}
}
} 2. Introspect on virtio-crypto's VirtQueue 1 at head -> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-queue-element",
"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral/crypto0/virtio-backend",
"queue": 1 }
} <- { "return": {
"index": 0,
"name": "virtio-crypto",
"descs": [
{
"flags": [],
"len": 0,
"addr": 8080268923184214134
}
],
"avail": {
"idx": 280,
"flags": 0,
"ring": 0
},
"used": {
"idx": 280,
"flags": 0
}
}
} 3. Introspect on virtio-scsi's VirtQueue 2 at head -> { "execute": "x-query-virtio-queue-element",
"arguments": { "path": "/machine/peripheral-anon/device[2]/virtio-backend",
"queue": 2 }
} <- { "return": {
"index": 19,
"name": "virtio-scsi",
"descs": [
{
"flags": ["used", "indirect", "write"],
"len": 4099327944,
"addr": 12055409292258155293
}
],
"avail": {
"idx": 1147,
"flags": 0,
"ring": 19
},
"used": {
"idx": 280,
"flags": 0
}
}
}


IOThreadVirtQueueMapping (Object)

Describes the subset of virtqueues assigned to an IOThread.

Members

the id of IOThread object
an optional array of virtqueue indices that will be handled by this IOThread. When absent, virtqueues are assigned round-robin across all IOThreadVirtQueueMappings provided. Either all IOThreadVirtQueueMappings must have vqs or none of them must have it.

Since

9.0

DummyVirtioForceArrays (Object)

Not used by QMP; hack to let us use IOThreadVirtQueueMappingList internally

Members


Since

9.0

CRYPTOGRAPHY DEVICES

QCryptodevBackendAlgType (Enum)

The supported algorithm types of a crypto device.

Values

symmetric encryption
asymmetric Encryption

Since

8.0

QCryptodevBackendServiceType (Enum)

The supported service types of a crypto device.

Values

Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented
Not documented

Since

8.0

QCryptodevBackendType (Enum)

The crypto device backend type

Values

the QEMU builtin support
vhost-user
Linux kernel cryptographic framework

Since

8.0

QCryptodevBackendClient (Object)

Information about a queue of crypto device.

Members

the queue index of the crypto device
the type of the crypto device

Since

8.0

QCryptodevInfo (Object)

Information about a crypto device.

Members

the id of the crypto device
supported service types of a crypto device
the additional information of the crypto device

Since

8.0

query-cryptodev (Command)

Returns information about current crypto devices.

Returns

a list of QCryptodevInfo

Since

8.0

CXL DEVICES

CxlEventLog (Enum)

CXL has a number of separate event logs for different types of events. Each such event log is handled and signaled independently.

Values

Information Event Log
Warning Event Log
Failure Event Log
Fatal Event Log

Since

8.1

cxl-inject-general-media-event (Command)

Inject an event record for a General Media Event (CXL r3.0 8.2.9.2.1.1). This event type is reported via one of the event logs specified via the log parameter.

Arguments

CXL type 3 device canonical QOM path
event log to add the event to
Event Record Flags. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-42 Common Event Record Format, Event Record Flags for subfield definitions.
Device Physical Address (relative to path device). Note lower bits include some flags. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-43 General Media Event Record, Physical Address.
Memory Event Descriptor with additional memory event information. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-43 General Media Event Record, Memory Event Descriptor for bit definitions.
Type of memory event that occurred. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-43 General Media Event Record, Memory Event Type for possible values.
Type of first transaction that caused the event to occur. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-43 General Media Event Record, Transaction Type for possible values.
The channel of the memory event location. A channel is an interface that can be independently accessed for a transaction.
The rank of the memory event location. A rank is a set of memory devices on a channel that together execute a transaction.
Bitmask that represents all devices in the rank associated with the memory event location.
Device specific component identifier for the event. May describe a field replaceable sub-component of the device.

Since

8.1

cxl-inject-dram-event (Command)

Inject an event record for a DRAM Event (CXL r3.0 8.2.9.2.1.2). This event type is reported via one of the event logs specified via the log parameter.

Arguments

CXL type 3 device canonical QOM path
Event log to add the event to
Event Record Flags. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-42 Common Event Record Format, Event Record Flags for subfield definitions.
Device Physical Address (relative to path device). Note lower bits include some flags. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-44 DRAM Event Record, Physical Address.
Memory Event Descriptor with additional memory event information. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-44 DRAM Event Record, Memory Event Descriptor for bit definitions.
Type of memory event that occurred. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-44 DRAM Event Record, Memory Event Type for possible values.
Type of first transaction that caused the event to occur. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-44 DRAM Event Record, Transaction Type for possible values.
The channel of the memory event location. A channel is an interface that can be independently accessed for a transaction.
The rank of the memory event location. A rank is a set of memory devices on a channel that together execute a transaction.
Identifies one or more nibbles that the error affects
Bank group of the memory event location, incorporating a number of Banks.
Bank of the memory event location. A single bank is accessed per read or write of the memory.
Row address within the DRAM.
Column address within the DRAM.
Bits within each nibble. Used in order of bits set in the nibble-mask. Up to 4 nibbles may be covered.

Since

8.1

cxl-inject-memory-module-event (Command)

Inject an event record for a Memory Module Event (CXL r3.0 8.2.9.2.1.3). This event includes a copy of the Device Health info at the time of the event.

Arguments

CXL type 3 device canonical QOM path
Event Log to add the event to
Event Record Flags. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-42 Common Event Record Format, Event Record Flags for subfield definitions.
Device Event Type. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-45 Memory Module Event Record for bit definitions for bit definiions.
Overall health summary bitmap. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-100 Get Health Info Output Payload, Health Status for bit definitions.
Overall media health summary. See CXL r3.0 Table 8-100 Get Health Info Output Payload, Media Status for bit definitions.
See CXL r3.0 Table 8-100 Get Health Info Output Payload, Additional Status for subfield definitions.
Percentage (0-100) of factory expected life span.
Device temperature in degrees Celsius.
Number of times the device has been unable to determine whether data loss may have occurred.
Total number of correctable errors in volatile memory.
Total number of correctable errors in persistent memory

Since

8.1

cxl-inject-poison (Command)

Poison records indicate that a CXL memory device knows that a particular memory region may be corrupted. This may be because of locally detected errors (e.g. ECC failure) or poisoned writes received from other components in the system. This injection mechanism enables testing of the OS handling of poison records which may be queried via the CXL mailbox.

Arguments

CXL type 3 device canonical QOM path
Start address; must be 64 byte aligned.
Length of poison to inject; must be a multiple of 64 bytes.

Since

8.1

CxlUncorErrorType (Enum)

Type of uncorrectable CXL error to inject. These errors are reported via an AER uncorrectable internal error with additional information logged at the CXL device.

Values

Data error such as data parity or data ECC error CXL.cache
Address parity or other errors associated with the address field on CXL.cache
Byte enable parity or other byte enable errors on CXL.cache
ECC error on CXL.cache
Data error such as data parity or data ECC error on CXL.mem
Address parity or other errors associated with the address field on CXL.mem
Byte enable parity or other byte enable errors on CXL.mem.
Data ECC error on CXL.mem.
REINIT threshold hit.
Received unrecognized encoding.
Received poison from the peer.
Buffer overflows (first 3 bits of header log indicate which)
Component specific error
Integrity and data encryption tx error.
Integrity and data encryption rx error.

Since

8.0

CXLUncorErrorRecord (Object)

Record of a single error including header log.

Members

Type of error
16 DWORD of header.

Since

8.0

cxl-inject-uncorrectable-errors (Command)

Command to allow injection of multiple errors in one go. This allows testing of multiple header log handling in the OS.

Arguments

CXL Type 3 device canonical QOM path
Errors to inject

Since

8.0

CxlCorErrorType (Enum)

Type of CXL correctable error to inject

Values

Data ECC error on CXL.cache
Data ECC error on CXL.mem
Component specific and applicable to 68 byte Flit mode only.
Received poison from a peer on CXL.cache.
Received poison from a peer on CXL.mem
Received error indication from the physical layer.
Not documented

Since

8.0

cxl-inject-correctable-error (Command)

Command to inject a single correctable error. Multiple error injection of this error type is not interesting as there is no associated header log. These errors are reported via AER as a correctable internal error, with additional detail available from the CXL device.

Arguments

CXL Type 3 device canonical QOM path
Type of error.

Since

8.0

COPYRIGHT

2024, The QEMU Project Developers

May 20, 2024 8.2.0