1# -*- Mode: Python -*- 2# 3# QAPI block core definitions (vm unrelated) 4 5# QAPI common definitions 6{ 'include': 'common.json' } 7 8## 9# @SnapshotInfo 10# 11# @id: unique snapshot id 12# 13# @name: user chosen name 14# 15# @vm-state-size: size of the VM state 16# 17# @date-sec: UTC date of the snapshot in seconds 18# 19# @date-nsec: fractional part in nano seconds to be used with date-sec 20# 21# @vm-clock-sec: VM clock relative to boot in seconds 22# 23# @vm-clock-nsec: fractional part in nano seconds to be used with vm-clock-sec 24# 25# Since: 1.3 26# 27## 28 29{ 'struct': 'SnapshotInfo', 30 'data': { 'id': 'str', 'name': 'str', 'vm-state-size': 'int', 31 'date-sec': 'int', 'date-nsec': 'int', 32 'vm-clock-sec': 'int', 'vm-clock-nsec': 'int' } } 33 34## 35# @ImageInfoSpecificQCow2: 36# 37# @compat: compatibility level 38# 39# @lazy-refcounts: #optional on or off; only valid for compat >= 1.1 40# 41# @corrupt: #optional true if the image has been marked corrupt; only valid for 42# compat >= 1.1 (since 2.2) 43# 44# @refcount-bits: width of a refcount entry in bits (since 2.3) 45# 46# Since: 1.7 47## 48{ 'struct': 'ImageInfoSpecificQCow2', 49 'data': { 50 'compat': 'str', 51 '*lazy-refcounts': 'bool', 52 '*corrupt': 'bool', 53 'refcount-bits': 'int' 54 } } 55 56## 57# @ImageInfoSpecificVmdk: 58# 59# @create-type: The create type of VMDK image 60# 61# @cid: Content id of image 62# 63# @parent-cid: Parent VMDK image's cid 64# 65# @extents: List of extent files 66# 67# Since: 1.7 68## 69{ 'struct': 'ImageInfoSpecificVmdk', 70 'data': { 71 'create-type': 'str', 72 'cid': 'int', 73 'parent-cid': 'int', 74 'extents': ['ImageInfo'] 75 } } 76 77## 78# @ImageInfoSpecific: 79# 80# A discriminated record of image format specific information structures. 81# 82# Since: 1.7 83## 84 85{ 'union': 'ImageInfoSpecific', 86 'data': { 87 'qcow2': 'ImageInfoSpecificQCow2', 88 'vmdk': 'ImageInfoSpecificVmdk', 89 # If we need to add block driver specific parameters for 90 # LUKS in future, then we'll subclass QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS 91 # to define a ImageInfoSpecificLUKS 92 'luks': 'QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS' 93 } } 94 95## 96# @ImageInfo: 97# 98# Information about a QEMU image file 99# 100# @filename: name of the image file 101# 102# @format: format of the image file 103# 104# @virtual-size: maximum capacity in bytes of the image 105# 106# @actual-size: #optional actual size on disk in bytes of the image 107# 108# @dirty-flag: #optional true if image is not cleanly closed 109# 110# @cluster-size: #optional size of a cluster in bytes 111# 112# @encrypted: #optional true if the image is encrypted 113# 114# @compressed: #optional true if the image is compressed (Since 1.7) 115# 116# @backing-filename: #optional name of the backing file 117# 118# @full-backing-filename: #optional full path of the backing file 119# 120# @backing-filename-format: #optional the format of the backing file 121# 122# @snapshots: #optional list of VM snapshots 123# 124# @backing-image: #optional info of the backing image (since 1.6) 125# 126# @format-specific: #optional structure supplying additional format-specific 127# information (since 1.7) 128# 129# Since: 1.3 130# 131## 132 133{ 'struct': 'ImageInfo', 134 'data': {'filename': 'str', 'format': 'str', '*dirty-flag': 'bool', 135 '*actual-size': 'int', 'virtual-size': 'int', 136 '*cluster-size': 'int', '*encrypted': 'bool', '*compressed': 'bool', 137 '*backing-filename': 'str', '*full-backing-filename': 'str', 138 '*backing-filename-format': 'str', '*snapshots': ['SnapshotInfo'], 139 '*backing-image': 'ImageInfo', 140 '*format-specific': 'ImageInfoSpecific' } } 141 142## 143# @ImageCheck: 144# 145# Information about a QEMU image file check 146# 147# @filename: name of the image file checked 148# 149# @format: format of the image file checked 150# 151# @check-errors: number of unexpected errors occurred during check 152# 153# @image-end-offset: #optional offset (in bytes) where the image ends, this 154# field is present if the driver for the image format 155# supports it 156# 157# @corruptions: #optional number of corruptions found during the check if any 158# 159# @leaks: #optional number of leaks found during the check if any 160# 161# @corruptions-fixed: #optional number of corruptions fixed during the check 162# if any 163# 164# @leaks-fixed: #optional number of leaks fixed during the check if any 165# 166# @total-clusters: #optional total number of clusters, this field is present 167# if the driver for the image format supports it 168# 169# @allocated-clusters: #optional total number of allocated clusters, this 170# field is present if the driver for the image format 171# supports it 172# 173# @fragmented-clusters: #optional total number of fragmented clusters, this 174# field is present if the driver for the image format 175# supports it 176# 177# @compressed-clusters: #optional total number of compressed clusters, this 178# field is present if the driver for the image format 179# supports it 180# 181# Since: 1.4 182# 183## 184 185{ 'struct': 'ImageCheck', 186 'data': {'filename': 'str', 'format': 'str', 'check-errors': 'int', 187 '*image-end-offset': 'int', '*corruptions': 'int', '*leaks': 'int', 188 '*corruptions-fixed': 'int', '*leaks-fixed': 'int', 189 '*total-clusters': 'int', '*allocated-clusters': 'int', 190 '*fragmented-clusters': 'int', '*compressed-clusters': 'int' } } 191 192## 193# @MapEntry: 194# 195# Mapping information from a virtual block range to a host file range 196# 197# @start: the start byte of the mapped virtual range 198# 199# @length: the number of bytes of the mapped virtual range 200# 201# @data: whether the mapped range has data 202# 203# @zero: whether the virtual blocks are zeroed 204# 205# @depth: the depth of the mapping 206# 207# @offset: #optional the offset in file that the virtual sectors are mapped to 208# 209# @filename: #optional filename that is referred to by @offset 210# 211# Since: 2.6 212# 213## 214{ 'struct': 'MapEntry', 215 'data': {'start': 'int', 'length': 'int', 'data': 'bool', 216 'zero': 'bool', 'depth': 'int', '*offset': 'int', 217 '*filename': 'str' } } 218 219## 220# @BlockdevCacheInfo 221# 222# Cache mode information for a block device 223# 224# @writeback: true if writeback mode is enabled 225# @direct: true if the host page cache is bypassed (O_DIRECT) 226# @no-flush: true if flush requests are ignored for the device 227# 228# Since: 2.3 229## 230{ 'struct': 'BlockdevCacheInfo', 231 'data': { 'writeback': 'bool', 232 'direct': 'bool', 233 'no-flush': 'bool' } } 234 235## 236# @BlockDeviceInfo: 237# 238# Information about the backing device for a block device. 239# 240# @file: the filename of the backing device 241# 242# @node-name: #optional the name of the block driver node (Since 2.0) 243# 244# @ro: true if the backing device was open read-only 245# 246# @drv: the name of the block format used to open the backing device. As of 247# 0.14.0 this can be: 'blkdebug', 'bochs', 'cloop', 'cow', 'dmg', 248# 'file', 'file', 'ftp', 'ftps', 'host_cdrom', 'host_device', 249# 'http', 'https', 'luks', 'nbd', 'parallels', 'qcow', 250# 'qcow2', 'raw', 'tftp', 'vdi', 'vmdk', 'vpc', 'vvfat' 251# 2.2: 'archipelago' added, 'cow' dropped 252# 2.3: 'host_floppy' deprecated 253# 2.5: 'host_floppy' dropped 254# 2.6: 'luks' added 255# 256# @backing_file: #optional the name of the backing file (for copy-on-write) 257# 258# @backing_file_depth: number of files in the backing file chain (since: 1.2) 259# 260# @encrypted: true if the backing device is encrypted 261# 262# @encryption_key_missing: true if the backing device is encrypted but an 263# valid encryption key is missing 264# 265# @detect_zeroes: detect and optimize zero writes (Since 2.1) 266# 267# @bps: total throughput limit in bytes per second is specified 268# 269# @bps_rd: read throughput limit in bytes per second is specified 270# 271# @bps_wr: write throughput limit in bytes per second is specified 272# 273# @iops: total I/O operations per second is specified 274# 275# @iops_rd: read I/O operations per second is specified 276# 277# @iops_wr: write I/O operations per second is specified 278# 279# @image: the info of image used (since: 1.6) 280# 281# @bps_max: #optional total throughput limit during bursts, 282# in bytes (Since 1.7) 283# 284# @bps_rd_max: #optional read throughput limit during bursts, 285# in bytes (Since 1.7) 286# 287# @bps_wr_max: #optional write throughput limit during bursts, 288# in bytes (Since 1.7) 289# 290# @iops_max: #optional total I/O operations per second during bursts, 291# in bytes (Since 1.7) 292# 293# @iops_rd_max: #optional read I/O operations per second during bursts, 294# in bytes (Since 1.7) 295# 296# @iops_wr_max: #optional write I/O operations per second during bursts, 297# in bytes (Since 1.7) 298# 299# @bps_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @bps_max burst 300# period, in seconds. (Since 2.6) 301# 302# @bps_rd_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @bps_rd_max 303# burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6) 304# 305# @bps_wr_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @bps_wr_max 306# burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6) 307# 308# @iops_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @iops burst 309# period, in seconds. (Since 2.6) 310# 311# @iops_rd_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @iops_rd_max 312# burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6) 313# 314# @iops_wr_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @iops_wr_max 315# burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6) 316# 317# @iops_size: #optional an I/O size in bytes (Since 1.7) 318# 319# @group: #optional throttle group name (Since 2.4) 320# 321# @cache: the cache mode used for the block device (since: 2.3) 322# 323# @write_threshold: configured write threshold for the device. 324# 0 if disabled. (Since 2.3) 325# 326# Since: 0.14.0 327# 328## 329{ 'struct': 'BlockDeviceInfo', 330 'data': { 'file': 'str', '*node-name': 'str', 'ro': 'bool', 'drv': 'str', 331 '*backing_file': 'str', 'backing_file_depth': 'int', 332 'encrypted': 'bool', 'encryption_key_missing': 'bool', 333 'detect_zeroes': 'BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions', 334 'bps': 'int', 'bps_rd': 'int', 'bps_wr': 'int', 335 'iops': 'int', 'iops_rd': 'int', 'iops_wr': 'int', 336 'image': 'ImageInfo', 337 '*bps_max': 'int', '*bps_rd_max': 'int', 338 '*bps_wr_max': 'int', '*iops_max': 'int', 339 '*iops_rd_max': 'int', '*iops_wr_max': 'int', 340 '*bps_max_length': 'int', '*bps_rd_max_length': 'int', 341 '*bps_wr_max_length': 'int', '*iops_max_length': 'int', 342 '*iops_rd_max_length': 'int', '*iops_wr_max_length': 'int', 343 '*iops_size': 'int', '*group': 'str', 'cache': 'BlockdevCacheInfo', 344 'write_threshold': 'int' } } 345 346## 347# @BlockDeviceIoStatus: 348# 349# An enumeration of block device I/O status. 350# 351# @ok: The last I/O operation has succeeded 352# 353# @failed: The last I/O operation has failed 354# 355# @nospace: The last I/O operation has failed due to a no-space condition 356# 357# Since: 1.0 358## 359{ 'enum': 'BlockDeviceIoStatus', 'data': [ 'ok', 'failed', 'nospace' ] } 360 361## 362# @BlockDeviceMapEntry: 363# 364# Entry in the metadata map of the device (returned by "qemu-img map") 365# 366# @start: Offset in the image of the first byte described by this entry 367# (in bytes) 368# 369# @length: Length of the range described by this entry (in bytes) 370# 371# @depth: Number of layers (0 = top image, 1 = top image's backing file, etc.) 372# before reaching one for which the range is allocated. The value is 373# in the range 0 to the depth of the image chain - 1. 374# 375# @zero: the sectors in this range read as zeros 376# 377# @data: reading the image will actually read data from a file (in particular, 378# if @offset is present this means that the sectors are not simply 379# preallocated, but contain actual data in raw format) 380# 381# @offset: if present, the image file stores the data for this range in 382# raw format at the given offset. 383# 384# Since 1.7 385## 386{ 'struct': 'BlockDeviceMapEntry', 387 'data': { 'start': 'int', 'length': 'int', 'depth': 'int', 'zero': 'bool', 388 'data': 'bool', '*offset': 'int' } } 389 390## 391# @DirtyBitmapStatus: 392# 393# An enumeration of possible states that a dirty bitmap can report to the user. 394# 395# @frozen: The bitmap is currently in-use by a backup operation or block job, 396# and is immutable. 397# 398# @disabled: The bitmap is currently in-use by an internal operation and is 399# read-only. It can still be deleted. 400# 401# @active: The bitmap is actively monitoring for new writes, and can be cleared, 402# deleted, or used for backup operations. 403# 404# Since: 2.4 405## 406{ 'enum': 'DirtyBitmapStatus', 407 'data': ['active', 'disabled', 'frozen'] } 408 409## 410# @BlockDirtyInfo: 411# 412# Block dirty bitmap information. 413# 414# @name: #optional the name of the dirty bitmap (Since 2.4) 415# 416# @count: number of dirty bytes according to the dirty bitmap 417# 418# @granularity: granularity of the dirty bitmap in bytes (since 1.4) 419# 420# @status: current status of the dirty bitmap (since 2.4) 421# 422# Since: 1.3 423## 424{ 'struct': 'BlockDirtyInfo', 425 'data': {'*name': 'str', 'count': 'int', 'granularity': 'uint32', 426 'status': 'DirtyBitmapStatus'} } 427 428## 429# @BlockInfo: 430# 431# Block device information. This structure describes a virtual device and 432# the backing device associated with it. 433# 434# @device: The device name associated with the virtual device. 435# 436# @type: This field is returned only for compatibility reasons, it should 437# not be used (always returns 'unknown') 438# 439# @removable: True if the device supports removable media. 440# 441# @locked: True if the guest has locked this device from having its media 442# removed 443# 444# @tray_open: #optional True if the device's tray is open 445# (only present if it has a tray) 446# 447# @dirty-bitmaps: #optional dirty bitmaps information (only present if the 448# driver has one or more dirty bitmaps) (Since 2.0) 449# 450# @io-status: #optional @BlockDeviceIoStatus. Only present if the device 451# supports it and the VM is configured to stop on errors 452# (supported device models: virtio-blk, ide, scsi-disk) 453# 454# @inserted: #optional @BlockDeviceInfo describing the device if media is 455# present 456# 457# Since: 0.14.0 458## 459{ 'struct': 'BlockInfo', 460 'data': {'device': 'str', 'type': 'str', 'removable': 'bool', 461 'locked': 'bool', '*inserted': 'BlockDeviceInfo', 462 '*tray_open': 'bool', '*io-status': 'BlockDeviceIoStatus', 463 '*dirty-bitmaps': ['BlockDirtyInfo'] } } 464 465## 466# @query-block: 467# 468# Get a list of BlockInfo for all virtual block devices. 469# 470# Returns: a list of @BlockInfo describing each virtual block device 471# 472# Since: 0.14.0 473## 474{ 'command': 'query-block', 'returns': ['BlockInfo'] } 475 476 477## 478# @BlockDeviceTimedStats: 479# 480# Statistics of a block device during a given interval of time. 481# 482# @interval_length: Interval used for calculating the statistics, 483# in seconds. 484# 485# @min_rd_latency_ns: Minimum latency of read operations in the 486# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 487# 488# @min_wr_latency_ns: Minimum latency of write operations in the 489# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 490# 491# @min_flush_latency_ns: Minimum latency of flush operations in the 492# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 493# 494# @max_rd_latency_ns: Maximum latency of read operations in the 495# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 496# 497# @max_wr_latency_ns: Maximum latency of write operations in the 498# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 499# 500# @max_flush_latency_ns: Maximum latency of flush operations in the 501# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 502# 503# @avg_rd_latency_ns: Average latency of read operations in the 504# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 505# 506# @avg_wr_latency_ns: Average latency of write operations in the 507# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 508# 509# @avg_flush_latency_ns: Average latency of flush operations in the 510# defined interval, in nanoseconds. 511# 512# @avg_rd_queue_depth: Average number of pending read operations 513# in the defined interval. 514# 515# @avg_wr_queue_depth: Average number of pending write operations 516# in the defined interval. 517# 518# Since: 2.5 519## 520 521{ 'struct': 'BlockDeviceTimedStats', 522 'data': { 'interval_length': 'int', 'min_rd_latency_ns': 'int', 523 'max_rd_latency_ns': 'int', 'avg_rd_latency_ns': 'int', 524 'min_wr_latency_ns': 'int', 'max_wr_latency_ns': 'int', 525 'avg_wr_latency_ns': 'int', 'min_flush_latency_ns': 'int', 526 'max_flush_latency_ns': 'int', 'avg_flush_latency_ns': 'int', 527 'avg_rd_queue_depth': 'number', 'avg_wr_queue_depth': 'number' } } 528 529## 530# @BlockDeviceStats: 531# 532# Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device. 533# 534# @rd_bytes: The number of bytes read by the device. 535# 536# @wr_bytes: The number of bytes written by the device. 537# 538# @rd_operations: The number of read operations performed by the device. 539# 540# @wr_operations: The number of write operations performed by the device. 541# 542# @flush_operations: The number of cache flush operations performed by the 543# device (since 0.15.0) 544# 545# @flush_total_time_ns: Total time spend on cache flushes in nano-seconds 546# (since 0.15.0). 547# 548# @wr_total_time_ns: Total time spend on writes in nano-seconds (since 0.15.0). 549# 550# @rd_total_time_ns: Total_time_spend on reads in nano-seconds (since 0.15.0). 551# 552# @wr_highest_offset: The offset after the greatest byte written to the 553# device. The intended use of this information is for 554# growable sparse files (like qcow2) that are used on top 555# of a physical device. 556# 557# @rd_merged: Number of read requests that have been merged into another 558# request (Since 2.3). 559# 560# @wr_merged: Number of write requests that have been merged into another 561# request (Since 2.3). 562# 563# @idle_time_ns: #optional Time since the last I/O operation, in 564# nanoseconds. If the field is absent it means that 565# there haven't been any operations yet (Since 2.5). 566# 567# @failed_rd_operations: The number of failed read operations 568# performed by the device (Since 2.5) 569# 570# @failed_wr_operations: The number of failed write operations 571# performed by the device (Since 2.5) 572# 573# @failed_flush_operations: The number of failed flush operations 574# performed by the device (Since 2.5) 575# 576# @invalid_rd_operations: The number of invalid read operations 577# performed by the device (Since 2.5) 578# 579# @invalid_wr_operations: The number of invalid write operations 580# performed by the device (Since 2.5) 581# 582# @invalid_flush_operations: The number of invalid flush operations 583# performed by the device (Since 2.5) 584# 585# @account_invalid: Whether invalid operations are included in the 586# last access statistics (Since 2.5) 587# 588# @account_failed: Whether failed operations are included in the 589# latency and last access statistics (Since 2.5) 590# 591# @timed_stats: Statistics specific to the set of previously defined 592# intervals of time (Since 2.5) 593# 594# Since: 0.14.0 595## 596{ 'struct': 'BlockDeviceStats', 597 'data': {'rd_bytes': 'int', 'wr_bytes': 'int', 'rd_operations': 'int', 598 'wr_operations': 'int', 'flush_operations': 'int', 599 'flush_total_time_ns': 'int', 'wr_total_time_ns': 'int', 600 'rd_total_time_ns': 'int', 'wr_highest_offset': 'int', 601 'rd_merged': 'int', 'wr_merged': 'int', '*idle_time_ns': 'int', 602 'failed_rd_operations': 'int', 'failed_wr_operations': 'int', 603 'failed_flush_operations': 'int', 'invalid_rd_operations': 'int', 604 'invalid_wr_operations': 'int', 'invalid_flush_operations': 'int', 605 'account_invalid': 'bool', 'account_failed': 'bool', 606 'timed_stats': ['BlockDeviceTimedStats'] } } 607 608## 609# @BlockStats: 610# 611# Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device. 612# 613# @device: #optional If the stats are for a virtual block device, the name 614# corresponding to the virtual block device. 615# 616# @node-name: #optional The node name of the device. (Since 2.3) 617# 618# @stats: A @BlockDeviceStats for the device. 619# 620# @parent: #optional This describes the file block device if it has one. 621# 622# @backing: #optional This describes the backing block device if it has one. 623# (Since 2.0) 624# 625# Since: 0.14.0 626## 627{ 'struct': 'BlockStats', 628 'data': {'*device': 'str', '*node-name': 'str', 629 'stats': 'BlockDeviceStats', 630 '*parent': 'BlockStats', 631 '*backing': 'BlockStats'} } 632 633## 634# @query-blockstats: 635# 636# Query the @BlockStats for all virtual block devices. 637# 638# @query-nodes: #optional If true, the command will query all the block nodes 639# that have a node name, in a list which will include "parent" 640# information, but not "backing". 641# If false or omitted, the behavior is as before - query all the 642# device backends, recursively including their "parent" and 643# "backing". (Since 2.3) 644# 645# Returns: A list of @BlockStats for each virtual block devices. 646# 647# Since: 0.14.0 648## 649{ 'command': 'query-blockstats', 650 'data': { '*query-nodes': 'bool' }, 651 'returns': ['BlockStats'] } 652 653## 654# @BlockdevOnError: 655# 656# An enumeration of possible behaviors for errors on I/O operations. 657# The exact meaning depends on whether the I/O was initiated by a guest 658# or by a block job 659# 660# @report: for guest operations, report the error to the guest; 661# for jobs, cancel the job 662# 663# @ignore: ignore the error, only report a QMP event (BLOCK_IO_ERROR 664# or BLOCK_JOB_ERROR) 665# 666# @enospc: same as @stop on ENOSPC, same as @report otherwise. 667# 668# @stop: for guest operations, stop the virtual machine; 669# for jobs, pause the job 670# 671# @auto: inherit the error handling policy of the backend (since: 2.7) 672# 673# Since: 1.3 674## 675{ 'enum': 'BlockdevOnError', 676 'data': ['report', 'ignore', 'enospc', 'stop', 'auto'] } 677 678## 679# @MirrorSyncMode: 680# 681# An enumeration of possible behaviors for the initial synchronization 682# phase of storage mirroring. 683# 684# @top: copies data in the topmost image to the destination 685# 686# @full: copies data from all images to the destination 687# 688# @none: only copy data written from now on 689# 690# @incremental: only copy data described by the dirty bitmap. Since: 2.4 691# 692# Since: 1.3 693## 694{ 'enum': 'MirrorSyncMode', 695 'data': ['top', 'full', 'none', 'incremental'] } 696 697## 698# @BlockJobType: 699# 700# Type of a block job. 701# 702# @commit: block commit job type, see "block-commit" 703# 704# @stream: block stream job type, see "block-stream" 705# 706# @mirror: drive mirror job type, see "drive-mirror" 707# 708# @backup: drive backup job type, see "drive-backup" 709# 710# Since: 1.7 711## 712{ 'enum': 'BlockJobType', 713 'data': ['commit', 'stream', 'mirror', 'backup'] } 714 715## 716# @BlockJobInfo: 717# 718# Information about a long-running block device operation. 719# 720# @type: the job type ('stream' for image streaming) 721# 722# @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other 723# values are allowed since QEMU 2.7 724# 725# @len: the maximum progress value 726# 727# @busy: false if the job is known to be in a quiescent state, with 728# no pending I/O. Since 1.3. 729# 730# @paused: whether the job is paused or, if @busy is true, will 731# pause itself as soon as possible. Since 1.3. 732# 733# @offset: the current progress value 734# 735# @speed: the rate limit, bytes per second 736# 737# @io-status: the status of the job (since 1.3) 738# 739# @ready: true if the job may be completed (since 2.2) 740# 741# Since: 1.1 742## 743{ 'struct': 'BlockJobInfo', 744 'data': {'type': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'len': 'int', 745 'offset': 'int', 'busy': 'bool', 'paused': 'bool', 'speed': 'int', 746 'io-status': 'BlockDeviceIoStatus', 'ready': 'bool'} } 747 748## 749# @query-block-jobs: 750# 751# Return information about long-running block device operations. 752# 753# Returns: a list of @BlockJobInfo for each active block job 754# 755# Since: 1.1 756## 757{ 'command': 'query-block-jobs', 'returns': ['BlockJobInfo'] } 758 759## 760# @block_passwd: 761# 762# This command sets the password of a block device that has not been open 763# with a password and requires one. 764# 765# The two cases where this can happen are a block device is created through 766# QEMU's initial command line or a block device is changed through the legacy 767# @change interface. 768# 769# In the event that the block device is created through the initial command 770# line, the VM will start in the stopped state regardless of whether '-S' is 771# used. The intention is for a management tool to query the block devices to 772# determine which ones are encrypted, set the passwords with this command, and 773# then start the guest with the @cont command. 774# 775# Either @device or @node-name must be set but not both. 776# 777# @device: #optional the name of the block backend device to set the password on 778# 779# @node-name: #optional graph node name to set the password on (Since 2.0) 780# 781# @password: the password to use for the device 782# 783# Returns: nothing on success 784# If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound 785# If @device is not encrypted, DeviceNotEncrypted 786# 787# Notes: Not all block formats support encryption and some that do are not 788# able to validate that a password is correct. Disk corruption may 789# occur if an invalid password is specified. 790# 791# Since: 0.14.0 792## 793{ 'command': 'block_passwd', 'data': {'*device': 'str', 794 '*node-name': 'str', 'password': 'str'} } 795 796## 797# @block_resize 798# 799# Resize a block image while a guest is running. 800# 801# Either @device or @node-name must be set but not both. 802# 803# @device: #optional the name of the device to get the image resized 804# 805# @node-name: #optional graph node name to get the image resized (Since 2.0) 806# 807# @size: new image size in bytes 808# 809# Returns: nothing on success 810# If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound 811# 812# Since: 0.14.0 813## 814{ 'command': 'block_resize', 'data': { '*device': 'str', 815 '*node-name': 'str', 816 'size': 'int' }} 817 818## 819# @NewImageMode 820# 821# An enumeration that tells QEMU how to set the backing file path in 822# a new image file. 823# 824# @existing: QEMU should look for an existing image file. 825# 826# @absolute-paths: QEMU should create a new image with absolute paths 827# for the backing file. If there is no backing file available, the new 828# image will not be backed either. 829# 830# Since: 1.1 831## 832{ 'enum': 'NewImageMode', 833 'data': [ 'existing', 'absolute-paths' ] } 834 835## 836# @BlockdevSnapshotSync 837# 838# Either @device or @node-name must be set but not both. 839# 840# @device: #optional the name of the device to generate the snapshot from. 841# 842# @node-name: #optional graph node name to generate the snapshot from (Since 2.0) 843# 844# @snapshot-file: the target of the new image. A new file will be created. 845# 846# @snapshot-node-name: #optional the graph node name of the new image (Since 2.0) 847# 848# @format: #optional the format of the snapshot image, default is 'qcow2'. 849# 850# @mode: #optional whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is 851# 'absolute-paths'. 852## 853{ 'struct': 'BlockdevSnapshotSync', 854 'data': { '*device': 'str', '*node-name': 'str', 855 'snapshot-file': 'str', '*snapshot-node-name': 'str', 856 '*format': 'str', '*mode': 'NewImageMode' } } 857 858## 859# @BlockdevSnapshot 860# 861# @node: device or node name that will have a snapshot created. 862# 863# @overlay: reference to the existing block device that will become 864# the overlay of @node, as part of creating the snapshot. 865# It must not have a current backing file (this can be 866# achieved by passing "backing": "" to blockdev-add). 867# 868# Since 2.5 869## 870{ 'struct': 'BlockdevSnapshot', 871 'data': { 'node': 'str', 'overlay': 'str' } } 872 873## 874# @DriveBackup 875# 876# @job-id: #optional identifier for the newly-created block job. If 877# omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7) 878# 879# @device: the name of the device which should be copied. 880# 881# @target: the target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it 882# is a device, the existing file/device will be used as the new 883# destination. If it does not exist, a new file will be created. 884# 885# @format: #optional the format of the new destination, default is to 886# probe if @mode is 'existing', else the format of the source 887# 888# @sync: what parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination 889# (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, from a 890# dirty bitmap, or only new I/O). 891# 892# @mode: #optional whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is 893# 'absolute-paths'. 894# 895# @speed: #optional the maximum speed, in bytes per second 896# 897# @bitmap: #optional the name of dirty bitmap if sync is "incremental". 898# Must be present if sync is "incremental", must NOT be present 899# otherwise. (Since 2.4) 900# 901# @on-source-error: #optional the action to take on an error on the source, 902# default 'report'. 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used 903# if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo). 904# 905# @on-target-error: #optional the action to take on an error on the target, 906# default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to 907# a different block device than @device). 908# 909# Note that @on-source-error and @on-target-error only affect background I/O. 910# If an error occurs during a guest write request, the device's rerror/werror 911# actions will be used. 912# 913# Since: 1.6 914## 915{ 'struct': 'DriveBackup', 916 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'target': 'str', 917 '*format': 'str', 'sync': 'MirrorSyncMode', '*mode': 'NewImageMode', 918 '*speed': 'int', '*bitmap': 'str', 919 '*on-source-error': 'BlockdevOnError', 920 '*on-target-error': 'BlockdevOnError' } } 921 922## 923# @BlockdevBackup 924# 925# @job-id: #optional identifier for the newly-created block job. If 926# omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7) 927# 928# @device: the name of the device which should be copied. 929# 930# @target: the device name or node-name of the backup target node. 931# 932# @sync: what parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination 933# (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or 934# only new I/O). 935# 936# @speed: #optional the maximum speed, in bytes per second. The default is 0, 937# for unlimited. 938# 939# @on-source-error: #optional the action to take on an error on the source, 940# default 'report'. 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used 941# if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo). 942# 943# @on-target-error: #optional the action to take on an error on the target, 944# default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to 945# a different block device than @device). 946# 947# Note that @on-source-error and @on-target-error only affect background I/O. 948# If an error occurs during a guest write request, the device's rerror/werror 949# actions will be used. 950# 951# Since: 2.3 952## 953{ 'struct': 'BlockdevBackup', 954 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'target': 'str', 955 'sync': 'MirrorSyncMode', 956 '*speed': 'int', 957 '*on-source-error': 'BlockdevOnError', 958 '*on-target-error': 'BlockdevOnError' } } 959 960## 961# @blockdev-snapshot-sync 962# 963# Generates a synchronous snapshot of a block device. 964# 965# For the arguments, see the documentation of BlockdevSnapshotSync. 966# 967# Returns: nothing on success 968# If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound 969# 970# Since 0.14.0 971## 972{ 'command': 'blockdev-snapshot-sync', 973 'data': 'BlockdevSnapshotSync' } 974 975 976## 977# @blockdev-snapshot 978# 979# Generates a snapshot of a block device. 980# 981# For the arguments, see the documentation of BlockdevSnapshot. 982# 983# Since 2.5 984## 985{ 'command': 'blockdev-snapshot', 986 'data': 'BlockdevSnapshot' } 987 988## 989# @change-backing-file 990# 991# Change the backing file in the image file metadata. This does not 992# cause QEMU to reopen the image file to reparse the backing filename 993# (it may, however, perform a reopen to change permissions from 994# r/o -> r/w -> r/o, if needed). The new backing file string is written 995# into the image file metadata, and the QEMU internal strings are 996# updated. 997# 998# @image-node-name: The name of the block driver state node of the 999# image to modify. 1000# 1001# @device: The name of the device that owns image-node-name. 1002# 1003# @backing-file: The string to write as the backing file. This 1004# string is not validated, so care should be taken 1005# when specifying the string or the image chain may 1006# not be able to be reopened again. 1007# 1008# Since: 2.1 1009## 1010{ 'command': 'change-backing-file', 1011 'data': { 'device': 'str', 'image-node-name': 'str', 1012 'backing-file': 'str' } } 1013 1014## 1015# @block-commit 1016# 1017# Live commit of data from overlay image nodes into backing nodes - i.e., 1018# writes data between 'top' and 'base' into 'base'. 1019# 1020# @job-id: #optional identifier for the newly-created block job. If 1021# omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7) 1022# 1023# @device: the name of the device 1024# 1025# @base: #optional The file name of the backing image to write data into. 1026# If not specified, this is the deepest backing image 1027# 1028# @top: #optional The file name of the backing image within the image chain, 1029# which contains the topmost data to be committed down. If 1030# not specified, this is the active layer. 1031# 1032# @backing-file: #optional The backing file string to write into the overlay 1033# image of 'top'. If 'top' is the active layer, 1034# specifying a backing file string is an error. This 1035# filename is not validated. 1036# 1037# If a pathname string is such that it cannot be 1038# resolved by QEMU, that means that subsequent QMP or 1039# HMP commands must use node-names for the image in 1040# question, as filename lookup methods will fail. 1041# 1042# If not specified, QEMU will automatically determine 1043# the backing file string to use, or error out if 1044# there is no obvious choice. Care should be taken 1045# when specifying the string, to specify a valid 1046# filename or protocol. 1047# (Since 2.1) 1048# 1049# If top == base, that is an error. 1050# If top == active, the job will not be completed by itself, 1051# user needs to complete the job with the block-job-complete 1052# command after getting the ready event. (Since 2.0) 1053# 1054# If the base image is smaller than top, then the base image 1055# will be resized to be the same size as top. If top is 1056# smaller than the base image, the base will not be 1057# truncated. If you want the base image size to match the 1058# size of the smaller top, you can safely truncate it 1059# yourself once the commit operation successfully completes. 1060# 1061# @speed: #optional the maximum speed, in bytes per second 1062# 1063# Returns: Nothing on success 1064# If commit or stream is already active on this device, DeviceInUse 1065# If @device does not exist, DeviceNotFound 1066# If image commit is not supported by this device, NotSupported 1067# If @base or @top is invalid, a generic error is returned 1068# If @speed is invalid, InvalidParameter 1069# 1070# Since: 1.3 1071# 1072## 1073{ 'command': 'block-commit', 1074 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', '*base': 'str', '*top': 'str', 1075 '*backing-file': 'str', '*speed': 'int' } } 1076 1077## 1078# @drive-backup 1079# 1080# Start a point-in-time copy of a block device to a new destination. The 1081# status of ongoing drive-backup operations can be checked with 1082# query-block-jobs where the BlockJobInfo.type field has the value 'backup'. 1083# The operation can be stopped before it has completed using the 1084# block-job-cancel command. 1085# 1086# For the arguments, see the documentation of DriveBackup. 1087# 1088# Returns: nothing on success 1089# If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound 1090# 1091# Since 1.6 1092## 1093{ 'command': 'drive-backup', 'data': 'DriveBackup' } 1094 1095## 1096# @blockdev-backup 1097# 1098# Start a point-in-time copy of a block device to a new destination. The 1099# status of ongoing blockdev-backup operations can be checked with 1100# query-block-jobs where the BlockJobInfo.type field has the value 'backup'. 1101# The operation can be stopped before it has completed using the 1102# block-job-cancel command. 1103# 1104# For the arguments, see the documentation of BlockdevBackup. 1105# 1106# Since 2.3 1107## 1108{ 'command': 'blockdev-backup', 'data': 'BlockdevBackup' } 1109 1110 1111## 1112# @query-named-block-nodes 1113# 1114# Get the named block driver list 1115# 1116# Returns: the list of BlockDeviceInfo 1117# 1118# Since 2.0 1119## 1120{ 'command': 'query-named-block-nodes', 'returns': [ 'BlockDeviceInfo' ] } 1121 1122## 1123# @drive-mirror 1124# 1125# Start mirroring a block device's writes to a new destination. 1126# 1127# See DriveMirror for parameter descriptions 1128# 1129# Returns: nothing on success 1130# If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound 1131# 1132# Since 1.3 1133## 1134{ 'command': 'drive-mirror', 'boxed': true, 1135 'data': 'DriveMirror' } 1136 1137## 1138# DriveMirror 1139# 1140# A set of parameters describing drive mirror setup. 1141# 1142# @job-id: #optional identifier for the newly-created block job. If 1143# omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7) 1144# 1145# @device: the name of the device whose writes should be mirrored. 1146# 1147# @target: the target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it 1148# is a device, the existing file/device will be used as the new 1149# destination. If it does not exist, a new file will be created. 1150# 1151# @format: #optional the format of the new destination, default is to 1152# probe if @mode is 'existing', else the format of the source 1153# 1154# @node-name: #optional the new block driver state node name in the graph 1155# (Since 2.1) 1156# 1157# @replaces: #optional with sync=full graph node name to be replaced by the new 1158# image when a whole image copy is done. This can be used to repair 1159# broken Quorum files. (Since 2.1) 1160# 1161# @mode: #optional whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is 1162# 'absolute-paths'. 1163# 1164# @speed: #optional the maximum speed, in bytes per second 1165# 1166# @sync: what parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination 1167# (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or 1168# only new I/O). 1169# 1170# @granularity: #optional granularity of the dirty bitmap, default is 64K 1171# if the image format doesn't have clusters, 4K if the clusters 1172# are smaller than that, else the cluster size. Must be a 1173# power of 2 between 512 and 64M (since 1.4). 1174# 1175# @buf-size: #optional maximum amount of data in flight from source to 1176# target (since 1.4). 1177# 1178# @on-source-error: #optional the action to take on an error on the source, 1179# default 'report'. 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used 1180# if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo). 1181# 1182# @on-target-error: #optional the action to take on an error on the target, 1183# default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to 1184# a different block device than @device). 1185# @unmap: #optional Whether to try to unmap target sectors where source has 1186# only zero. If true, and target unallocated sectors will read as zero, 1187# target image sectors will be unmapped; otherwise, zeroes will be 1188# written. Both will result in identical contents. 1189# Default is true. (Since 2.4) 1190# 1191# Since 1.3 1192## 1193{ 'struct': 'DriveMirror', 1194 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'target': 'str', 1195 '*format': 'str', '*node-name': 'str', '*replaces': 'str', 1196 'sync': 'MirrorSyncMode', '*mode': 'NewImageMode', 1197 '*speed': 'int', '*granularity': 'uint32', 1198 '*buf-size': 'int', '*on-source-error': 'BlockdevOnError', 1199 '*on-target-error': 'BlockdevOnError', 1200 '*unmap': 'bool' } } 1201 1202## 1203# @BlockDirtyBitmap 1204# 1205# @node: name of device/node which the bitmap is tracking 1206# 1207# @name: name of the dirty bitmap 1208# 1209# Since 2.4 1210## 1211{ 'struct': 'BlockDirtyBitmap', 1212 'data': { 'node': 'str', 'name': 'str' } } 1213 1214## 1215# @BlockDirtyBitmapAdd 1216# 1217# @node: name of device/node which the bitmap is tracking 1218# 1219# @name: name of the dirty bitmap 1220# 1221# @granularity: #optional the bitmap granularity, default is 64k for 1222# block-dirty-bitmap-add 1223# 1224# Since 2.4 1225## 1226{ 'struct': 'BlockDirtyBitmapAdd', 1227 'data': { 'node': 'str', 'name': 'str', '*granularity': 'uint32' } } 1228 1229## 1230# @block-dirty-bitmap-add 1231# 1232# Create a dirty bitmap with a name on the node 1233# 1234# Returns: nothing on success 1235# If @node is not a valid block device or node, DeviceNotFound 1236# If @name is already taken, GenericError with an explanation 1237# 1238# Since 2.4 1239## 1240{ 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-add', 1241 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmapAdd' } 1242 1243## 1244# @block-dirty-bitmap-remove 1245# 1246# Remove a dirty bitmap on the node 1247# 1248# Returns: nothing on success 1249# If @node is not a valid block device or node, DeviceNotFound 1250# If @name is not found, GenericError with an explanation 1251# if @name is frozen by an operation, GenericError 1252# 1253# Since 2.4 1254## 1255{ 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-remove', 1256 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmap' } 1257 1258## 1259# @block-dirty-bitmap-clear 1260# 1261# Clear (reset) a dirty bitmap on the device 1262# 1263# Returns: nothing on success 1264# If @node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound 1265# If @name is not found, GenericError with an explanation 1266# 1267# Since 2.4 1268## 1269{ 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-clear', 1270 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmap' } 1271 1272## 1273# @blockdev-mirror 1274# 1275# Start mirroring a block device's writes to a new destination. 1276# 1277# @job-id: #optional identifier for the newly-created block job. If 1278# omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7) 1279# 1280# @device: the name of the device whose writes should be mirrored. 1281# 1282# @target: the id or node-name of the block device to mirror to. This mustn't be 1283# attached to guest. 1284# 1285# @replaces: #optional with sync=full graph node name to be replaced by the new 1286# image when a whole image copy is done. This can be used to repair 1287# broken Quorum files. 1288# 1289# @speed: #optional the maximum speed, in bytes per second 1290# 1291# @sync: what parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination 1292# (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or 1293# only new I/O). 1294# 1295# @granularity: #optional granularity of the dirty bitmap, default is 64K 1296# if the image format doesn't have clusters, 4K if the clusters 1297# are smaller than that, else the cluster size. Must be a 1298# power of 2 between 512 and 64M 1299# 1300# @buf-size: #optional maximum amount of data in flight from source to 1301# target 1302# 1303# @on-source-error: #optional the action to take on an error on the source, 1304# default 'report'. 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used 1305# if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo). 1306# 1307# @on-target-error: #optional the action to take on an error on the target, 1308# default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to 1309# a different block device than @device). 1310# 1311# Returns: nothing on success. 1312# 1313# Since 2.6 1314## 1315{ 'command': 'blockdev-mirror', 1316 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'target': 'str', 1317 '*replaces': 'str', 1318 'sync': 'MirrorSyncMode', 1319 '*speed': 'int', '*granularity': 'uint32', 1320 '*buf-size': 'int', '*on-source-error': 'BlockdevOnError', 1321 '*on-target-error': 'BlockdevOnError' } } 1322 1323## 1324# @block_set_io_throttle: 1325# 1326# Change I/O throttle limits for a block drive. 1327# 1328# Since QEMU 2.4, each device with I/O limits is member of a throttle 1329# group. 1330# 1331# If two or more devices are members of the same group, the limits 1332# will apply to the combined I/O of the whole group in a round-robin 1333# fashion. Therefore, setting new I/O limits to a device will affect 1334# the whole group. 1335# 1336# The name of the group can be specified using the 'group' parameter. 1337# If the parameter is unset, it is assumed to be the current group of 1338# that device. If it's not in any group yet, the name of the device 1339# will be used as the name for its group. 1340# 1341# The 'group' parameter can also be used to move a device to a 1342# different group. In this case the limits specified in the parameters 1343# will be applied to the new group only. 1344# 1345# I/O limits can be disabled by setting all of them to 0. In this case 1346# the device will be removed from its group and the rest of its 1347# members will not be affected. The 'group' parameter is ignored. 1348# 1349# See BlockIOThrottle for parameter descriptions. 1350# 1351# Returns: Nothing on success 1352# If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound 1353# 1354# Since: 1.1 1355## 1356{ 'command': 'block_set_io_throttle', 'boxed': true, 1357 'data': 'BlockIOThrottle' } 1358 1359## 1360# BlockIOThrottle 1361# 1362# A set of parameters describing block throttling. 1363# 1364# @device: The name of the device 1365# 1366# @bps: total throughput limit in bytes per second 1367# 1368# @bps_rd: read throughput limit in bytes per second 1369# 1370# @bps_wr: write throughput limit in bytes per second 1371# 1372# @iops: total I/O operations per second 1373# 1374# @iops_rd: read I/O operations per second 1375# 1376# @iops_wr: write I/O operations per second 1377# 1378# @bps_max: #optional total throughput limit during bursts, 1379# in bytes (Since 1.7) 1380# 1381# @bps_rd_max: #optional read throughput limit during bursts, 1382# in bytes (Since 1.7) 1383# 1384# @bps_wr_max: #optional write throughput limit during bursts, 1385# in bytes (Since 1.7) 1386# 1387# @iops_max: #optional total I/O operations per second during bursts, 1388# in bytes (Since 1.7) 1389# 1390# @iops_rd_max: #optional read I/O operations per second during bursts, 1391# in bytes (Since 1.7) 1392# 1393# @iops_wr_max: #optional write I/O operations per second during bursts, 1394# in bytes (Since 1.7) 1395# 1396# @bps_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @bps_max burst 1397# period, in seconds. It must only 1398# be set if @bps_max is set as well. 1399# Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6) 1400# 1401# @bps_rd_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @bps_rd_max 1402# burst period, in seconds. It must only 1403# be set if @bps_rd_max is set as well. 1404# Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6) 1405# 1406# @bps_wr_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @bps_wr_max 1407# burst period, in seconds. It must only 1408# be set if @bps_wr_max is set as well. 1409# Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6) 1410# 1411# @iops_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @iops burst 1412# period, in seconds. It must only 1413# be set if @iops_max is set as well. 1414# Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6) 1415# 1416# @iops_rd_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @iops_rd_max 1417# burst period, in seconds. It must only 1418# be set if @iops_rd_max is set as well. 1419# Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6) 1420# 1421# @iops_wr_max_length: #optional maximum length of the @iops_wr_max 1422# burst period, in seconds. It must only 1423# be set if @iops_wr_max is set as well. 1424# Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6) 1425# 1426# @iops_size: #optional an I/O size in bytes (Since 1.7) 1427# 1428# @group: #optional throttle group name (Since 2.4) 1429# 1430# Since: 1.1 1431## 1432{ 'struct': 'BlockIOThrottle', 1433 'data': { 'device': 'str', 'bps': 'int', 'bps_rd': 'int', 'bps_wr': 'int', 1434 'iops': 'int', 'iops_rd': 'int', 'iops_wr': 'int', 1435 '*bps_max': 'int', '*bps_rd_max': 'int', 1436 '*bps_wr_max': 'int', '*iops_max': 'int', 1437 '*iops_rd_max': 'int', '*iops_wr_max': 'int', 1438 '*bps_max_length': 'int', '*bps_rd_max_length': 'int', 1439 '*bps_wr_max_length': 'int', '*iops_max_length': 'int', 1440 '*iops_rd_max_length': 'int', '*iops_wr_max_length': 'int', 1441 '*iops_size': 'int', '*group': 'str' } } 1442 1443## 1444# @block-stream: 1445# 1446# Copy data from a backing file into a block device. 1447# 1448# The block streaming operation is performed in the background until the entire 1449# backing file has been copied. This command returns immediately once streaming 1450# has started. The status of ongoing block streaming operations can be checked 1451# with query-block-jobs. The operation can be stopped before it has completed 1452# using the block-job-cancel command. 1453# 1454# If a base file is specified then sectors are not copied from that base file and 1455# its backing chain. When streaming completes the image file will have the base 1456# file as its backing file. This can be used to stream a subset of the backing 1457# file chain instead of flattening the entire image. 1458# 1459# On successful completion the image file is updated to drop the backing file 1460# and the BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED event is emitted. 1461# 1462# @job-id: #optional identifier for the newly-created block job. If 1463# omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7) 1464# 1465# @device: the device name 1466# 1467# @base: #optional the common backing file name 1468# 1469# @backing-file: #optional The backing file string to write into the active 1470# layer. This filename is not validated. 1471# 1472# If a pathname string is such that it cannot be 1473# resolved by QEMU, that means that subsequent QMP or 1474# HMP commands must use node-names for the image in 1475# question, as filename lookup methods will fail. 1476# 1477# If not specified, QEMU will automatically determine 1478# the backing file string to use, or error out if there 1479# is no obvious choice. Care should be taken when 1480# specifying the string, to specify a valid filename or 1481# protocol. 1482# (Since 2.1) 1483# 1484# @speed: #optional the maximum speed, in bytes per second 1485# 1486# @on-error: #optional the action to take on an error (default report). 1487# 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used if the block device 1488# supports io-status (see BlockInfo). Since 1.3. 1489# 1490# Returns: Nothing on success 1491# If @device does not exist, DeviceNotFound 1492# 1493# Since: 1.1 1494## 1495{ 'command': 'block-stream', 1496 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', '*base': 'str', 1497 '*backing-file': 'str', '*speed': 'int', 1498 '*on-error': 'BlockdevOnError' } } 1499 1500## 1501# @block-job-set-speed: 1502# 1503# Set maximum speed for a background block operation. 1504# 1505# This command can only be issued when there is an active block job. 1506# 1507# Throttling can be disabled by setting the speed to 0. 1508# 1509# @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence 1510# the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have 1511# other values. 1512# 1513# @speed: the maximum speed, in bytes per second, or 0 for unlimited. 1514# Defaults to 0. 1515# 1516# Returns: Nothing on success 1517# If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive 1518# 1519# Since: 1.1 1520## 1521{ 'command': 'block-job-set-speed', 1522 'data': { 'device': 'str', 'speed': 'int' } } 1523 1524## 1525# @block-job-cancel: 1526# 1527# Stop an active background block operation. 1528# 1529# This command returns immediately after marking the active background block 1530# operation for cancellation. It is an error to call this command if no 1531# operation is in progress. 1532# 1533# The operation will cancel as soon as possible and then emit the 1534# BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED event. Before that happens the job is still visible when 1535# enumerated using query-block-jobs. 1536# 1537# For streaming, the image file retains its backing file unless the streaming 1538# operation happens to complete just as it is being cancelled. A new streaming 1539# operation can be started at a later time to finish copying all data from the 1540# backing file. 1541# 1542# @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence 1543# the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have 1544# other values. 1545# 1546# @force: #optional whether to allow cancellation of a paused job (default 1547# false). Since 1.3. 1548# 1549# Returns: Nothing on success 1550# If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive 1551# 1552# Since: 1.1 1553## 1554{ 'command': 'block-job-cancel', 'data': { 'device': 'str', '*force': 'bool' } } 1555 1556## 1557# @block-job-pause: 1558# 1559# Pause an active background block operation. 1560# 1561# This command returns immediately after marking the active background block 1562# operation for pausing. It is an error to call this command if no 1563# operation is in progress. Pausing an already paused job has no cumulative 1564# effect; a single block-job-resume command will resume the job. 1565# 1566# The operation will pause as soon as possible. No event is emitted when 1567# the operation is actually paused. Cancelling a paused job automatically 1568# resumes it. 1569# 1570# @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence 1571# the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have 1572# other values. 1573# 1574# Returns: Nothing on success 1575# If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive 1576# 1577# Since: 1.3 1578## 1579{ 'command': 'block-job-pause', 'data': { 'device': 'str' } } 1580 1581## 1582# @block-job-resume: 1583# 1584# Resume an active background block operation. 1585# 1586# This command returns immediately after resuming a paused background block 1587# operation. It is an error to call this command if no operation is in 1588# progress. Resuming an already running job is not an error. 1589# 1590# This command also clears the error status of the job. 1591# 1592# @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence 1593# the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have 1594# other values. 1595# 1596# Returns: Nothing on success 1597# If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive 1598# 1599# Since: 1.3 1600## 1601{ 'command': 'block-job-resume', 'data': { 'device': 'str' } } 1602 1603## 1604# @block-job-complete: 1605# 1606# Manually trigger completion of an active background block operation. This 1607# is supported for drive mirroring, where it also switches the device to 1608# write to the target path only. The ability to complete is signaled with 1609# a BLOCK_JOB_READY event. 1610# 1611# This command completes an active background block operation synchronously. 1612# The ordering of this command's return with the BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED event 1613# is not defined. Note that if an I/O error occurs during the processing of 1614# this command: 1) the command itself will fail; 2) the error will be processed 1615# according to the rerror/werror arguments that were specified when starting 1616# the operation. 1617# 1618# A cancelled or paused job cannot be completed. 1619# 1620# @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence 1621# the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have 1622# other values. 1623# 1624# Returns: Nothing on success 1625# If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive 1626# 1627# Since: 1.3 1628## 1629{ 'command': 'block-job-complete', 'data': { 'device': 'str' } } 1630 1631## 1632# @BlockdevDiscardOptions 1633# 1634# Determines how to handle discard requests. 1635# 1636# @ignore: Ignore the request 1637# @unmap: Forward as an unmap request 1638# 1639# Since: 1.7 1640## 1641{ 'enum': 'BlockdevDiscardOptions', 1642 'data': [ 'ignore', 'unmap' ] } 1643 1644## 1645# @BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions 1646# 1647# Describes the operation mode for the automatic conversion of plain 1648# zero writes by the OS to driver specific optimized zero write commands. 1649# 1650# @off: Disabled (default) 1651# @on: Enabled 1652# @unmap: Enabled and even try to unmap blocks if possible. This requires 1653# also that @BlockdevDiscardOptions is set to unmap for this device. 1654# 1655# Since: 2.1 1656## 1657{ 'enum': 'BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions', 1658 'data': [ 'off', 'on', 'unmap' ] } 1659 1660## 1661# @BlockdevAioOptions 1662# 1663# Selects the AIO backend to handle I/O requests 1664# 1665# @threads: Use qemu's thread pool 1666# @native: Use native AIO backend (only Linux and Windows) 1667# 1668# Since: 1.7 1669## 1670{ 'enum': 'BlockdevAioOptions', 1671 'data': [ 'threads', 'native' ] } 1672 1673## 1674# @BlockdevCacheOptions 1675# 1676# Includes cache-related options for block devices 1677# 1678# @direct: #optional enables use of O_DIRECT (bypass the host page cache; 1679# default: false) 1680# @no-flush: #optional ignore any flush requests for the device (default: 1681# false) 1682# 1683# Since: 1.7 1684## 1685{ 'struct': 'BlockdevCacheOptions', 1686 'data': { '*direct': 'bool', 1687 '*no-flush': 'bool' } } 1688 1689## 1690# @BlockdevDriver 1691# 1692# Drivers that are supported in block device operations. 1693# 1694# @host_device, @host_cdrom: Since 2.1 1695# @gluster: Since 2.7 1696# 1697# Since: 2.0 1698## 1699{ 'enum': 'BlockdevDriver', 1700 'data': [ 'archipelago', 'blkdebug', 'blkverify', 'bochs', 'cloop', 1701 'dmg', 'file', 'ftp', 'ftps', 'gluster', 'host_cdrom', 1702 'host_device', 'http', 'https', 'luks', 'null-aio', 'null-co', 1703 'parallels', 'qcow', 'qcow2', 'qed', 'quorum', 'raw', 'tftp', 1704 'vdi', 'vhdx', 'vmdk', 'vpc', 'vvfat' ] } 1705 1706## 1707# @BlockdevOptionsFile 1708# 1709# Driver specific block device options for the file backend and similar 1710# protocols. 1711# 1712# @filename: path to the image file 1713# 1714# Since: 1.7 1715## 1716{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', 1717 'data': { 'filename': 'str' } } 1718 1719## 1720# @BlockdevOptionsNull 1721# 1722# Driver specific block device options for the null backend. 1723# 1724# @size: #optional size of the device in bytes. 1725# @latency-ns: #optional emulated latency (in nanoseconds) in processing 1726# requests. Default to zero which completes requests immediately. 1727# (Since 2.4) 1728# 1729# Since: 2.2 1730## 1731{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsNull', 1732 'data': { '*size': 'int', '*latency-ns': 'uint64' } } 1733 1734## 1735# @BlockdevOptionsVVFAT 1736# 1737# Driver specific block device options for the vvfat protocol. 1738# 1739# @dir: directory to be exported as FAT image 1740# @fat-type: #optional FAT type: 12, 16 or 32 1741# @floppy: #optional whether to export a floppy image (true) or 1742# partitioned hard disk (false; default) 1743# @label: #optional set the volume label, limited to 11 bytes. FAT16 and 1744# FAT32 traditionally have some restrictions on labels, which are 1745# ignored by most operating systems. Defaults to "QEMU VVFAT". 1746# (since 2.4) 1747# @rw: #optional whether to allow write operations (default: false) 1748# 1749# Since: 1.7 1750## 1751{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsVVFAT', 1752 'data': { 'dir': 'str', '*fat-type': 'int', '*floppy': 'bool', 1753 '*label': 'str', '*rw': 'bool' } } 1754 1755## 1756# @BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat 1757# 1758# Driver specific block device options for image format that have no option 1759# besides their data source. 1760# 1761# @file: reference to or definition of the data source block device 1762# 1763# Since: 1.7 1764## 1765{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 1766 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef' } } 1767 1768## 1769# @BlockdevOptionsLUKS 1770# 1771# Driver specific block device options for LUKS. 1772# 1773# @key-secret: #optional the ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing 1774# the decryption key (since 2.6). Mandatory except when 1775# doing a metadata-only probe of the image. 1776# 1777# Since: 2.6 1778## 1779{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsLUKS', 1780 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 1781 'data': { '*key-secret': 'str' } } 1782 1783 1784## 1785# @BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat 1786# 1787# Driver specific block device options for image format that have no option 1788# besides their data source and an optional backing file. 1789# 1790# @backing: #optional reference to or definition of the backing file block 1791# device (if missing, taken from the image file content). It is 1792# allowed to pass an empty string here in order to disable the 1793# default backing file. 1794# 1795# Since: 1.7 1796## 1797{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat', 1798 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 1799 'data': { '*backing': 'BlockdevRef' } } 1800 1801## 1802# @Qcow2OverlapCheckMode 1803# 1804# General overlap check modes. 1805# 1806# @none: Do not perform any checks 1807# 1808# @constant: Perform only checks which can be done in constant time and 1809# without reading anything from disk 1810# 1811# @cached: Perform only checks which can be done without reading anything 1812# from disk 1813# 1814# @all: Perform all available overlap checks 1815# 1816# Since: 2.2 1817## 1818{ 'enum': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckMode', 1819 'data': [ 'none', 'constant', 'cached', 'all' ] } 1820 1821## 1822# @Qcow2OverlapCheckFlags 1823# 1824# Structure of flags for each metadata structure. Setting a field to 'true' 1825# makes qemu guard that structure against unintended overwriting. The default 1826# value is chosen according to the template given. 1827# 1828# @template: Specifies a template mode which can be adjusted using the other 1829# flags, defaults to 'cached' 1830# 1831# Since: 2.2 1832## 1833{ 'struct': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckFlags', 1834 'data': { '*template': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckMode', 1835 '*main-header': 'bool', 1836 '*active-l1': 'bool', 1837 '*active-l2': 'bool', 1838 '*refcount-table': 'bool', 1839 '*refcount-block': 'bool', 1840 '*snapshot-table': 'bool', 1841 '*inactive-l1': 'bool', 1842 '*inactive-l2': 'bool' } } 1843 1844## 1845# @Qcow2OverlapChecks 1846# 1847# Specifies which metadata structures should be guarded against unintended 1848# overwriting. 1849# 1850# @flags: set of flags for separate specification of each metadata structure 1851# type 1852# 1853# @mode: named mode which chooses a specific set of flags 1854# 1855# Since: 2.2 1856## 1857{ 'alternate': 'Qcow2OverlapChecks', 1858 'data': { 'flags': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckFlags', 1859 'mode': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckMode' } } 1860 1861## 1862# @BlockdevOptionsQcow2 1863# 1864# Driver specific block device options for qcow2. 1865# 1866# @lazy-refcounts: #optional whether to enable the lazy refcounts 1867# feature (default is taken from the image file) 1868# 1869# @pass-discard-request: #optional whether discard requests to the qcow2 1870# device should be forwarded to the data source 1871# 1872# @pass-discard-snapshot: #optional whether discard requests for the data source 1873# should be issued when a snapshot operation (e.g. 1874# deleting a snapshot) frees clusters in the qcow2 file 1875# 1876# @pass-discard-other: #optional whether discard requests for the data source 1877# should be issued on other occasions where a cluster 1878# gets freed 1879# 1880# @overlap-check: #optional which overlap checks to perform for writes 1881# to the image, defaults to 'cached' (since 2.2) 1882# 1883# @cache-size: #optional the maximum total size of the L2 table and 1884# refcount block caches in bytes (since 2.2) 1885# 1886# @l2-cache-size: #optional the maximum size of the L2 table cache in 1887# bytes (since 2.2) 1888# 1889# @refcount-cache-size: #optional the maximum size of the refcount block cache 1890# in bytes (since 2.2) 1891# 1892# @cache-clean-interval: #optional clean unused entries in the L2 and refcount 1893# caches. The interval is in seconds. The default value 1894# is 0 and it disables this feature (since 2.5) 1895# 1896# Since: 1.7 1897## 1898{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsQcow2', 1899 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat', 1900 'data': { '*lazy-refcounts': 'bool', 1901 '*pass-discard-request': 'bool', 1902 '*pass-discard-snapshot': 'bool', 1903 '*pass-discard-other': 'bool', 1904 '*overlap-check': 'Qcow2OverlapChecks', 1905 '*cache-size': 'int', 1906 '*l2-cache-size': 'int', 1907 '*refcount-cache-size': 'int', 1908 '*cache-clean-interval': 'int' } } 1909 1910 1911## 1912# @BlockdevOptionsArchipelago 1913# 1914# Driver specific block device options for Archipelago. 1915# 1916# @volume: Name of the Archipelago volume image 1917# 1918# @mport: #optional The port number on which mapperd is 1919# listening. This is optional 1920# and if not specified, QEMU will make Archipelago 1921# use the default port (1001). 1922# 1923# @vport: #optional The port number on which vlmcd is 1924# listening. This is optional 1925# and if not specified, QEMU will make Archipelago 1926# use the default port (501). 1927# 1928# @segment: #optional The name of the shared memory segment 1929# Archipelago stack is using. This is optional 1930# and if not specified, QEMU will make Archipelago 1931# use the default value, 'archipelago'. 1932# Since: 2.2 1933## 1934{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsArchipelago', 1935 'data': { 'volume': 'str', 1936 '*mport': 'int', 1937 '*vport': 'int', 1938 '*segment': 'str' } } 1939 1940 1941## 1942# @BlkdebugEvent 1943# 1944# Trigger events supported by blkdebug. 1945# 1946# Since: 2.0 1947## 1948{ 'enum': 'BlkdebugEvent', 'prefix': 'BLKDBG', 1949 'data': [ 'l1_update', 'l1_grow_alloc_table', 'l1_grow_write_table', 1950 'l1_grow_activate_table', 'l2_load', 'l2_update', 1951 'l2_update_compressed', 'l2_alloc_cow_read', 'l2_alloc_write', 1952 'read_aio', 'read_backing_aio', 'read_compressed', 'write_aio', 1953 'write_compressed', 'vmstate_load', 'vmstate_save', 'cow_read', 1954 'cow_write', 'reftable_load', 'reftable_grow', 'reftable_update', 1955 'refblock_load', 'refblock_update', 'refblock_update_part', 1956 'refblock_alloc', 'refblock_alloc_hookup', 'refblock_alloc_write', 1957 'refblock_alloc_write_blocks', 'refblock_alloc_write_table', 1958 'refblock_alloc_switch_table', 'cluster_alloc', 1959 'cluster_alloc_bytes', 'cluster_free', 'flush_to_os', 1960 'flush_to_disk', 'pwritev_rmw_head', 'pwritev_rmw_after_head', 1961 'pwritev_rmw_tail', 'pwritev_rmw_after_tail', 'pwritev', 1962 'pwritev_zero', 'pwritev_done', 'empty_image_prepare' ] } 1963 1964## 1965# @BlkdebugInjectErrorOptions 1966# 1967# Describes a single error injection for blkdebug. 1968# 1969# @event: trigger event 1970# 1971# @state: #optional the state identifier blkdebug needs to be in to 1972# actually trigger the event; defaults to "any" 1973# 1974# @errno: #optional error identifier (errno) to be returned; defaults to 1975# EIO 1976# 1977# @sector: #optional specifies the sector index which has to be affected 1978# in order to actually trigger the event; defaults to "any 1979# sector" 1980# 1981# @once: #optional disables further events after this one has been 1982# triggered; defaults to false 1983# 1984# @immediately: #optional fail immediately; defaults to false 1985# 1986# Since: 2.0 1987## 1988{ 'struct': 'BlkdebugInjectErrorOptions', 1989 'data': { 'event': 'BlkdebugEvent', 1990 '*state': 'int', 1991 '*errno': 'int', 1992 '*sector': 'int', 1993 '*once': 'bool', 1994 '*immediately': 'bool' } } 1995 1996## 1997# @BlkdebugSetStateOptions 1998# 1999# Describes a single state-change event for blkdebug. 2000# 2001# @event: trigger event 2002# 2003# @state: #optional the current state identifier blkdebug needs to be in; 2004# defaults to "any" 2005# 2006# @new_state: the state identifier blkdebug is supposed to assume if 2007# this event is triggered 2008# 2009# Since: 2.0 2010## 2011{ 'struct': 'BlkdebugSetStateOptions', 2012 'data': { 'event': 'BlkdebugEvent', 2013 '*state': 'int', 2014 'new_state': 'int' } } 2015 2016## 2017# @BlockdevOptionsBlkdebug 2018# 2019# Driver specific block device options for blkdebug. 2020# 2021# @image: underlying raw block device (or image file) 2022# 2023# @config: #optional filename of the configuration file 2024# 2025# @align: #optional required alignment for requests in bytes, 2026# must be power of 2, or 0 for default 2027# 2028# @inject-error: #optional array of error injection descriptions 2029# 2030# @set-state: #optional array of state-change descriptions 2031# 2032# Since: 2.0 2033## 2034{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsBlkdebug', 2035 'data': { 'image': 'BlockdevRef', 2036 '*config': 'str', 2037 '*align': 'int', 2038 '*inject-error': ['BlkdebugInjectErrorOptions'], 2039 '*set-state': ['BlkdebugSetStateOptions'] } } 2040 2041## 2042# @BlockdevOptionsBlkverify 2043# 2044# Driver specific block device options for blkverify. 2045# 2046# @test: block device to be tested 2047# 2048# @raw: raw image used for verification 2049# 2050# Since: 2.0 2051## 2052{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsBlkverify', 2053 'data': { 'test': 'BlockdevRef', 2054 'raw': 'BlockdevRef' } } 2055 2056## 2057# @QuorumReadPattern 2058# 2059# An enumeration of quorum read patterns. 2060# 2061# @quorum: read all the children and do a quorum vote on reads 2062# 2063# @fifo: read only from the first child that has not failed 2064# 2065# Since: 2.2 2066## 2067{ 'enum': 'QuorumReadPattern', 'data': [ 'quorum', 'fifo' ] } 2068 2069## 2070# @BlockdevOptionsQuorum 2071# 2072# Driver specific block device options for Quorum 2073# 2074# @blkverify: #optional true if the driver must print content mismatch 2075# set to false by default 2076# 2077# @children: the children block devices to use 2078# 2079# @vote-threshold: the vote limit under which a read will fail 2080# 2081# @rewrite-corrupted: #optional rewrite corrupted data when quorum is reached 2082# (Since 2.1) 2083# 2084# @read-pattern: #optional choose read pattern and set to quorum by default 2085# (Since 2.2) 2086# 2087# Since: 2.0 2088## 2089{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsQuorum', 2090 'data': { '*blkverify': 'bool', 2091 'children': [ 'BlockdevRef' ], 2092 'vote-threshold': 'int', 2093 '*rewrite-corrupted': 'bool', 2094 '*read-pattern': 'QuorumReadPattern' } } 2095 2096## 2097# @GlusterTransport 2098# 2099# An enumeration of Gluster transport types 2100# 2101# @tcp: TCP - Transmission Control Protocol 2102# 2103# @unix: UNIX - Unix domain socket 2104# 2105# Since: 2.7 2106## 2107{ 'enum': 'GlusterTransport', 2108 'data': [ 'unix', 'tcp' ] } 2109 2110 2111## 2112# @GlusterServer 2113# 2114# Captures the address of a socket 2115# 2116# Details for connecting to a gluster server 2117# 2118# @type: Transport type used for gluster connection 2119# 2120# @unix: socket file 2121# 2122# @tcp: host address and port number 2123# 2124# Since: 2.7 2125## 2126{ 'union': 'GlusterServer', 2127 'base': { 'type': 'GlusterTransport' }, 2128 'discriminator': 'type', 2129 'data': { 'unix': 'UnixSocketAddress', 2130 'tcp': 'InetSocketAddress' } } 2131 2132## 2133# @BlockdevOptionsGluster 2134# 2135# Driver specific block device options for Gluster 2136# 2137# @volume: name of gluster volume where VM image resides 2138# 2139# @path: absolute path to image file in gluster volume 2140# 2141# @server: gluster servers description 2142# 2143# @debug-level: #optional libgfapi log level (default '4' which is Error) 2144# 2145# Since: 2.7 2146## 2147{ 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsGluster', 2148 'data': { 'volume': 'str', 2149 'path': 'str', 2150 'server': ['GlusterServer'], 2151 '*debug-level': 'int' } } 2152 2153## 2154# @BlockdevOptions 2155# 2156# Options for creating a block device. Many options are available for all 2157# block devices, independent of the block driver: 2158# 2159# @driver: block driver name 2160# @id: #optional id by which the new block device can be referred to. 2161# This option is only allowed on the top level of blockdev-add. 2162# A BlockBackend will be created by blockdev-add if and only if 2163# this option is given. 2164# @node-name: #optional the name of a block driver state node (Since 2.0). 2165# This option is required on the top level of blockdev-add if 2166# the @id option is not given there. 2167# @discard: #optional discard-related options (default: ignore) 2168# @cache: #optional cache-related options 2169# @aio: #optional AIO backend (default: threads) 2170# @read-only: #optional whether the block device should be read-only 2171# (default: false) 2172# @detect-zeroes: #optional detect and optimize zero writes (Since 2.1) 2173# (default: off) 2174# 2175# Remaining options are determined by the block driver. 2176# 2177# Since: 1.7 2178## 2179{ 'union': 'BlockdevOptions', 2180 'base': { 'driver': 'BlockdevDriver', 2181# TODO 'id' is a BB-level option, remove it 2182 '*id': 'str', 2183 '*node-name': 'str', 2184 '*discard': 'BlockdevDiscardOptions', 2185 '*cache': 'BlockdevCacheOptions', 2186 '*aio': 'BlockdevAioOptions', 2187 '*read-only': 'bool', 2188 '*detect-zeroes': 'BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions' }, 2189 'discriminator': 'driver', 2190 'data': { 2191 'archipelago':'BlockdevOptionsArchipelago', 2192 'blkdebug': 'BlockdevOptionsBlkdebug', 2193 'blkverify': 'BlockdevOptionsBlkverify', 2194 'bochs': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 2195 'cloop': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 2196 'dmg': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 2197 'file': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', 2198 'ftp': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', 2199 'ftps': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', 2200 'gluster': 'BlockdevOptionsGluster', 2201 'host_cdrom': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', 2202 'host_device':'BlockdevOptionsFile', 2203 'http': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', 2204 'https': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', 2205# TODO iscsi: Wait for structured options 2206 'luks': 'BlockdevOptionsLUKS', 2207# TODO nbd: Should take InetSocketAddress for 'host'? 2208# TODO nfs: Wait for structured options 2209 'null-aio': 'BlockdevOptionsNull', 2210 'null-co': 'BlockdevOptionsNull', 2211 'parallels': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 2212 'qcow2': 'BlockdevOptionsQcow2', 2213 'qcow': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat', 2214 'qed': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat', 2215 'quorum': 'BlockdevOptionsQuorum', 2216 'raw': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 2217# TODO rbd: Wait for structured options 2218# TODO sheepdog: Wait for structured options 2219# TODO ssh: Should take InetSocketAddress for 'host'? 2220 'tftp': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', 2221 'vdi': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 2222 'vhdx': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 2223 'vmdk': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat', 2224 'vpc': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', 2225 'vvfat': 'BlockdevOptionsVVFAT' 2226 } } 2227 2228## 2229# @BlockdevRef 2230# 2231# Reference to a block device. 2232# 2233# @definition: defines a new block device inline 2234# @reference: references the ID of an existing block device. An 2235# empty string means that no block device should be 2236# referenced. 2237# 2238# Since: 1.7 2239## 2240{ 'alternate': 'BlockdevRef', 2241 'data': { 'definition': 'BlockdevOptions', 2242 'reference': 'str' } } 2243 2244## 2245# @blockdev-add: 2246# 2247# Creates a new block device. If the @id option is given at the top level, a 2248# BlockBackend will be created; otherwise, @node-name is mandatory at the top 2249# level and no BlockBackend will be created. 2250# 2251# This command is still a work in progress. It doesn't support all 2252# block drivers among other things. Stay away from it unless you want 2253# to help with its development. 2254# 2255# @options: block device options for the new device 2256# 2257# Since: 1.7 2258## 2259{ 'command': 'blockdev-add', 'data': { 'options': 'BlockdevOptions' } } 2260 2261## 2262# @x-blockdev-del: 2263# 2264# Deletes a block device that has been added using blockdev-add. 2265# The selected device can be either a block backend or a graph node. 2266# 2267# In the former case the backend will be destroyed, along with its 2268# inserted medium if there's any. The command will fail if the backend 2269# or its medium are in use. 2270# 2271# In the latter case the node will be destroyed. The command will fail 2272# if the node is attached to a block backend or is otherwise being 2273# used. 2274# 2275# One of @id or @node-name must be specified, but not both. 2276# 2277# This command is still a work in progress and is considered 2278# experimental. Stay away from it unless you want to help with its 2279# development. 2280# 2281# @id: #optional Name of the block backend device to delete. 2282# 2283# @node-name: #optional Name of the graph node to delete. 2284# 2285# Since: 2.5 2286## 2287{ 'command': 'x-blockdev-del', 'data': { '*id': 'str', '*node-name': 'str' } } 2288 2289## 2290# @blockdev-open-tray: 2291# 2292# Opens a block device's tray. If there is a block driver state tree inserted as 2293# a medium, it will become inaccessible to the guest (but it will remain 2294# associated to the block device, so closing the tray will make it accessible 2295# again). 2296# 2297# If the tray was already open before, this will be a no-op. 2298# 2299# Once the tray opens, a DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED event is emitted. There are cases in 2300# which no such event will be generated, these include: 2301# - if the guest has locked the tray, @force is false and the guest does not 2302# respond to the eject request 2303# - if the BlockBackend denoted by @device does not have a guest device attached 2304# to it 2305# - if the guest device does not have an actual tray 2306# 2307# @device: block device name 2308# 2309# @force: #optional if false (the default), an eject request will be sent to 2310# the guest if it has locked the tray (and the tray will not be opened 2311# immediately); if true, the tray will be opened regardless of whether 2312# it is locked 2313# 2314# Since: 2.5 2315## 2316{ 'command': 'blockdev-open-tray', 2317 'data': { 'device': 'str', 2318 '*force': 'bool' } } 2319 2320## 2321# @blockdev-close-tray: 2322# 2323# Closes a block device's tray. If there is a block driver state tree associated 2324# with the block device (which is currently ejected), that tree will be loaded 2325# as the medium. 2326# 2327# If the tray was already closed before, this will be a no-op. 2328# 2329# @device: block device name 2330# 2331# Since: 2.5 2332## 2333{ 'command': 'blockdev-close-tray', 2334 'data': { 'device': 'str' } } 2335 2336## 2337# @x-blockdev-remove-medium: 2338# 2339# Removes a medium (a block driver state tree) from a block device. That block 2340# device's tray must currently be open (unless there is no attached guest 2341# device). 2342# 2343# If the tray is open and there is no medium inserted, this will be a no-op. 2344# 2345# This command is still a work in progress and is considered experimental. 2346# Stay away from it unless you want to help with its development. 2347# 2348# @device: block device name 2349# 2350# Since: 2.5 2351## 2352{ 'command': 'x-blockdev-remove-medium', 2353 'data': { 'device': 'str' } } 2354 2355## 2356# @x-blockdev-insert-medium: 2357# 2358# Inserts a medium (a block driver state tree) into a block device. That block 2359# device's tray must currently be open (unless there is no attached guest 2360# device) and there must be no medium inserted already. 2361# 2362# This command is still a work in progress and is considered experimental. 2363# Stay away from it unless you want to help with its development. 2364# 2365# @device: block device name 2366# 2367# @node-name: name of a node in the block driver state graph 2368# 2369# Since: 2.5 2370## 2371{ 'command': 'x-blockdev-insert-medium', 2372 'data': { 'device': 'str', 2373 'node-name': 'str'} } 2374 2375 2376## 2377# @BlockdevChangeReadOnlyMode: 2378# 2379# Specifies the new read-only mode of a block device subject to the 2380# @blockdev-change-medium command. 2381# 2382# @retain: Retains the current read-only mode 2383# 2384# @read-only: Makes the device read-only 2385# 2386# @read-write: Makes the device writable 2387# 2388# Since: 2.3 2389## 2390{ 'enum': 'BlockdevChangeReadOnlyMode', 2391 'data': ['retain', 'read-only', 'read-write'] } 2392 2393 2394## 2395# @blockdev-change-medium: 2396# 2397# Changes the medium inserted into a block device by ejecting the current medium 2398# and loading a new image file which is inserted as the new medium (this command 2399# combines blockdev-open-tray, x-blockdev-remove-medium, 2400# x-blockdev-insert-medium and blockdev-close-tray). 2401# 2402# @device: block device name 2403# 2404# @filename: filename of the new image to be loaded 2405# 2406# @format: #optional, format to open the new image with (defaults to 2407# the probed format) 2408# 2409# @read-only-mode: #optional, change the read-only mode of the device; defaults 2410# to 'retain' 2411# 2412# Since: 2.5 2413## 2414{ 'command': 'blockdev-change-medium', 2415 'data': { 'device': 'str', 2416 'filename': 'str', 2417 '*format': 'str', 2418 '*read-only-mode': 'BlockdevChangeReadOnlyMode' } } 2419 2420 2421## 2422# @BlockErrorAction 2423# 2424# An enumeration of action that has been taken when a DISK I/O occurs 2425# 2426# @ignore: error has been ignored 2427# 2428# @report: error has been reported to the device 2429# 2430# @stop: error caused VM to be stopped 2431# 2432# Since: 2.1 2433## 2434{ 'enum': 'BlockErrorAction', 2435 'data': [ 'ignore', 'report', 'stop' ] } 2436 2437 2438## 2439# @BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED 2440# 2441# Emitted when a corruption has been detected in a disk image 2442# 2443# @device: device name. This is always present for compatibility 2444# reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the image does not 2445# have a device name associated. 2446# 2447# @node-name: #optional node name (Since: 2.4) 2448# 2449# @msg: informative message for human consumption, such as the kind of 2450# corruption being detected. It should not be parsed by machine as it is 2451# not guaranteed to be stable 2452# 2453# @offset: #optional, if the corruption resulted from an image access, this is 2454# the host's access offset into the image 2455# 2456# @size: #optional, if the corruption resulted from an image access, this is 2457# the access size 2458# 2459# fatal: if set, the image is marked corrupt and therefore unusable after this 2460# event and must be repaired (Since 2.2; before, every 2461# BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED event was fatal) 2462# 2463# Since: 1.7 2464## 2465{ 'event': 'BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED', 2466 'data': { 'device' : 'str', 2467 '*node-name' : 'str', 2468 'msg' : 'str', 2469 '*offset' : 'int', 2470 '*size' : 'int', 2471 'fatal' : 'bool' } } 2472 2473## 2474# @BLOCK_IO_ERROR 2475# 2476# Emitted when a disk I/O error occurs 2477# 2478# @device: device name 2479# 2480# @operation: I/O operation 2481# 2482# @action: action that has been taken 2483# 2484# @nospace: #optional true if I/O error was caused due to a no-space 2485# condition. This key is only present if query-block's 2486# io-status is present, please see query-block documentation 2487# for more information (since: 2.2) 2488# 2489# @reason: human readable string describing the error cause. 2490# (This field is a debugging aid for humans, it should not 2491# be parsed by applications) (since: 2.2) 2492# 2493# Note: If action is "stop", a STOP event will eventually follow the 2494# BLOCK_IO_ERROR event 2495# 2496# Since: 0.13.0 2497## 2498{ 'event': 'BLOCK_IO_ERROR', 2499 'data': { 'device': 'str', 'operation': 'IoOperationType', 2500 'action': 'BlockErrorAction', '*nospace': 'bool', 2501 'reason': 'str' } } 2502 2503## 2504# @BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED 2505# 2506# Emitted when a block job has completed 2507# 2508# @type: job type 2509# 2510# @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other 2511# values are allowed since QEMU 2.7 2512# 2513# @len: maximum progress value 2514# 2515# @offset: current progress value. On success this is equal to len. 2516# On failure this is less than len 2517# 2518# @speed: rate limit, bytes per second 2519# 2520# @error: #optional, error message. Only present on failure. This field 2521# contains a human-readable error message. There are no semantics 2522# other than that streaming has failed and clients should not try to 2523# interpret the error string 2524# 2525# Since: 1.1 2526## 2527{ 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED', 2528 'data': { 'type' : 'BlockJobType', 2529 'device': 'str', 2530 'len' : 'int', 2531 'offset': 'int', 2532 'speed' : 'int', 2533 '*error': 'str' } } 2534 2535## 2536# @BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED 2537# 2538# Emitted when a block job has been cancelled 2539# 2540# @type: job type 2541# 2542# @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other 2543# values are allowed since QEMU 2.7 2544# 2545# @len: maximum progress value 2546# 2547# @offset: current progress value. On success this is equal to len. 2548# On failure this is less than len 2549# 2550# @speed: rate limit, bytes per second 2551# 2552# Since: 1.1 2553## 2554{ 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED', 2555 'data': { 'type' : 'BlockJobType', 2556 'device': 'str', 2557 'len' : 'int', 2558 'offset': 'int', 2559 'speed' : 'int' } } 2560 2561## 2562# @BLOCK_JOB_ERROR 2563# 2564# Emitted when a block job encounters an error 2565# 2566# @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other 2567# values are allowed since QEMU 2.7 2568# 2569# @operation: I/O operation 2570# 2571# @action: action that has been taken 2572# 2573# Since: 1.3 2574## 2575{ 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_ERROR', 2576 'data': { 'device' : 'str', 2577 'operation': 'IoOperationType', 2578 'action' : 'BlockErrorAction' } } 2579 2580## 2581# @BLOCK_JOB_READY 2582# 2583# Emitted when a block job is ready to complete 2584# 2585# @type: job type 2586# 2587# @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other 2588# values are allowed since QEMU 2.7 2589# 2590# @len: maximum progress value 2591# 2592# @offset: current progress value. On success this is equal to len. 2593# On failure this is less than len 2594# 2595# @speed: rate limit, bytes per second 2596# 2597# Note: The "ready to complete" status is always reset by a @BLOCK_JOB_ERROR 2598# event 2599# 2600# Since: 1.3 2601## 2602{ 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_READY', 2603 'data': { 'type' : 'BlockJobType', 2604 'device': 'str', 2605 'len' : 'int', 2606 'offset': 'int', 2607 'speed' : 'int' } } 2608 2609# @PreallocMode 2610# 2611# Preallocation mode of QEMU image file 2612# 2613# @off: no preallocation 2614# @metadata: preallocate only for metadata 2615# @falloc: like @full preallocation but allocate disk space by 2616# posix_fallocate() rather than writing zeros. 2617# @full: preallocate all data by writing zeros to device to ensure disk 2618# space is really available. @full preallocation also sets up 2619# metadata correctly. 2620# 2621# Since 2.2 2622## 2623{ 'enum': 'PreallocMode', 2624 'data': [ 'off', 'metadata', 'falloc', 'full' ] } 2625 2626## 2627# @BLOCK_WRITE_THRESHOLD 2628# 2629# Emitted when writes on block device reaches or exceeds the 2630# configured write threshold. For thin-provisioned devices, this 2631# means the device should be extended to avoid pausing for 2632# disk exhaustion. 2633# The event is one shot. Once triggered, it needs to be 2634# re-registered with another block-set-threshold command. 2635# 2636# @node-name: graph node name on which the threshold was exceeded. 2637# 2638# @amount-exceeded: amount of data which exceeded the threshold, in bytes. 2639# 2640# @write-threshold: last configured threshold, in bytes. 2641# 2642# Since: 2.3 2643## 2644{ 'event': 'BLOCK_WRITE_THRESHOLD', 2645 'data': { 'node-name': 'str', 2646 'amount-exceeded': 'uint64', 2647 'write-threshold': 'uint64' } } 2648 2649## 2650# @block-set-write-threshold 2651# 2652# Change the write threshold for a block drive. An event will be delivered 2653# if a write to this block drive crosses the configured threshold. 2654# This is useful to transparently resize thin-provisioned drives without 2655# the guest OS noticing. 2656# 2657# @node-name: graph node name on which the threshold must be set. 2658# 2659# @write-threshold: configured threshold for the block device, bytes. 2660# Use 0 to disable the threshold. 2661# 2662# Since: 2.3 2663## 2664{ 'command': 'block-set-write-threshold', 2665 'data': { 'node-name': 'str', 'write-threshold': 'uint64' } } 2666 2667## 2668# @x-blockdev-change 2669# 2670# Dynamically reconfigure the block driver state graph. It can be used 2671# to add, remove, insert or replace a graph node. Currently only the 2672# Quorum driver implements this feature to add or remove its child. This 2673# is useful to fix a broken quorum child. 2674# 2675# If @node is specified, it will be inserted under @parent. @child 2676# may not be specified in this case. If both @parent and @child are 2677# specified but @node is not, @child will be detached from @parent. 2678# 2679# @parent: the id or name of the parent node. 2680# 2681# @child: #optional the name of a child under the given parent node. 2682# 2683# @node: #optional the name of the node that will be added. 2684# 2685# Note: this command is experimental, and its API is not stable. It 2686# does not support all kinds of operations, all kinds of children, nor 2687# all block drivers. 2688# 2689# Warning: The data in a new quorum child MUST be consistent with that of 2690# the rest of the array. 2691# 2692# Since: 2.7 2693## 2694{ 'command': 'x-blockdev-change', 2695 'data' : { 'parent': 'str', 2696 '*child': 'str', 2697 '*node': 'str' } } 2698