xref: /openbmc/qemu/docs/interop/vhost-user.json (revision 8de702cb)
1# -*- Mode: Python -*-
2#
3# Copyright (C) 2018 Red Hat, Inc.
4#
5# Authors:
6#  Marc-André Lureau <marcandre.lureau@redhat.com>
7#
8# This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or
9# later. See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
10
11##
12# = vhost user backend discovery & capabilities
13##
14
15##
16# @VHostUserBackendType:
17#
18# List the various vhost user backend types.
19#
20# @9p: 9p virtio console
21# @balloon: virtio balloon
22# @block: virtio block
23# @caif: virtio caif
24# @console: virtio console
25# @crypto: virtio crypto
26# @gpu: virtio gpu
27# @input: virtio input
28# @net: virtio net
29# @rng: virtio rng
30# @rpmsg: virtio remote processor messaging
31# @rproc-serial: virtio remoteproc serial link
32# @scsi: virtio scsi
33# @vsock: virtio vsock transport
34#
35# Since: 4.0
36##
37{
38  'enum': 'VHostUserBackendType',
39  'data': [
40      '9p',
41      'balloon',
42      'block',
43      'caif',
44      'console',
45      'crypto',
46      'gpu',
47      'input',
48      'net',
49      'rng',
50      'rpmsg',
51      'rproc-serial',
52      'scsi',
53      'vsock'
54  ]
55}
56
57##
58# @VHostUserBackendBlockFeature:
59#
60# List of vhost user "block" features.
61#
62# @read-only: The --read-only command line option is supported.
63# @blk-file: The --blk-file command line option is supported.
64#
65# Since: 5.0
66##
67{
68  'enum': 'VHostUserBackendBlockFeature',
69  'data': [ 'read-only', 'blk-file' ]
70}
71
72##
73# @VHostUserBackendCapabilitiesBlock:
74#
75# Capabilities reported by vhost user "block" backends
76#
77# @features: list of supported features.
78#
79# Since: 5.0
80##
81{
82  'struct': 'VHostUserBackendCapabilitiesBlock',
83  'data': {
84    'features': [ 'VHostUserBackendBlockFeature' ]
85  }
86}
87
88##
89# @VHostUserBackendInputFeature:
90#
91# List of vhost user "input" features.
92#
93# @evdev-path: The --evdev-path command line option is supported.
94# @no-grab: The --no-grab command line option is supported.
95#
96# Since: 4.0
97##
98{
99  'enum': 'VHostUserBackendInputFeature',
100  'data': [ 'evdev-path', 'no-grab' ]
101}
102
103##
104# @VHostUserBackendCapabilitiesInput:
105#
106# Capabilities reported by vhost user "input" backends
107#
108# @features: list of supported features.
109#
110# Since: 4.0
111##
112{
113  'struct': 'VHostUserBackendCapabilitiesInput',
114  'data': {
115    'features': [ 'VHostUserBackendInputFeature' ]
116  }
117}
118
119##
120# @VHostUserBackendGPUFeature:
121#
122# List of vhost user "gpu" features.
123#
124# @render-node: The --render-node command line option is supported.
125# @virgl: The --virgl command line option is supported.
126#
127# Since: 4.0
128##
129{
130  'enum': 'VHostUserBackendGPUFeature',
131  'data': [ 'render-node', 'virgl' ]
132}
133
134##
135# @VHostUserBackendCapabilitiesGPU:
136#
137# Capabilities reported by vhost user "gpu" backends.
138#
139# @features: list of supported features.
140#
141# Since: 4.0
142##
143{
144  'struct': 'VHostUserBackendCapabilitiesGPU',
145  'data': {
146    'features': [ 'VHostUserBackendGPUFeature' ]
147  }
148}
149
150##
151# @VHostUserBackendCapabilities:
152#
153# Capabilities reported by vhost user backends.
154#
155# @type: The vhost user backend type.
156#
157# Since: 4.0
158##
159{
160  'union': 'VHostUserBackendCapabilities',
161  'base': { 'type': 'VHostUserBackendType' },
162  'discriminator': 'type',
163  'data': {
164    'input': 'VHostUserBackendCapabilitiesInput',
165    'gpu': 'VHostUserBackendCapabilitiesGPU'
166  }
167}
168
169##
170# @VhostUserBackend:
171#
172# Describes a vhost user backend to management software.
173#
174# It is possible for multiple @VhostUserBackend elements to match the
175# search criteria of management software. Applications thus need rules
176# to pick one of the many matches, and users need the ability to
177# override distro defaults.
178#
179# It is recommended to create vhost user backend JSON files (each
180# containing a single @VhostUserBackend root element) with a
181# double-digit prefix, for example "50-qemu-gpu.json",
182# "50-crosvm-gpu.json", etc, so they can be sorted in predictable
183# order. The backend JSON files should be searched for in three
184# directories:
185#
186#   - /usr/share/qemu/vhost-user -- populated by distro-provided
187#                                   packages (XDG_DATA_DIRS covers
188#                                   /usr/share by default),
189#
190#   - /etc/qemu/vhost-user -- exclusively for sysadmins' local additions,
191#
192#   - $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/qemu/vhost-user -- exclusively for per-user local
193#                                         additions (XDG_CONFIG_HOME
194#                                         defaults to $HOME/.config).
195#
196# Top-down, the list of directories goes from general to specific.
197#
198# Management software should build a list of files from all three
199# locations, then sort the list by filename (i.e., basename
200# component). Management software should choose the first JSON file on
201# the sorted list that matches the search criteria. If a more specific
202# directory has a file with same name as a less specific directory,
203# then the file in the more specific directory takes effect. If the
204# more specific file is zero length, it hides the less specific one.
205#
206# For example, if a distro ships
207#
208#   - /usr/share/qemu/vhost-user/50-qemu-gpu.json
209#
210#   - /usr/share/qemu/vhost-user/50-crosvm-gpu.json
211#
212# then the sysadmin can prevent the default QEMU GPU being used at all with
213#
214#   $ touch /etc/qemu/vhost-user/50-qemu-gpu.json
215#
216# The sysadmin can replace/alter the distro default QEMU GPU with
217#
218#   $ vim /etc/qemu/vhost-user/50-qemu-gpu.json
219#
220# or they can provide a parallel QEMU GPU with higher priority
221#
222#   $ vim /etc/qemu/vhost-user/10-qemu-gpu.json
223#
224# or they can provide a parallel QEMU GPU with lower priority
225#
226#   $ vim /etc/qemu/vhost-user/99-qemu-gpu.json
227#
228# @type: The vhost user backend type.
229#
230# @description: Provides a human-readable description of the backend.
231#               Management software may or may not display @description.
232#
233# @binary: Absolute path to the backend binary.
234#
235# @tags: An optional list of auxiliary strings associated with the
236#        backend for which @description is not appropriate, due to the
237#        latter's possible exposure to the end-user. @tags serves
238#        development and debugging purposes only, and management
239#        software shall explicitly ignore it.
240#
241# Since: 4.0
242#
243# Example:
244#
245# {
246#   "description": "QEMU vhost-user-gpu",
247#   "type": "gpu",
248#   "binary": "/usr/libexec/qemu/vhost-user-gpu",
249#   "tags": [
250#     "CONFIG_OPENGL_DMABUF=y"
251#   ]
252# }
253#
254##
255{
256  'struct' : 'VhostUserBackend',
257  'data'   : {
258    'description': 'str',
259    'type': 'VHostUserBackendType',
260    'binary': 'str',
261    '*tags': [ 'str' ]
262  }
263}
264