1# -*- Mode: Python -*- 2# vim: filetype=python 3# 4 5## 6# = Migration 7## 8 9{ 'include': 'common.json' } 10{ 'include': 'sockets.json' } 11 12## 13# @MigrationStats: 14# 15# Detailed migration status. 16# 17# @transferred: amount of bytes already transferred to the target VM 18# 19# @remaining: amount of bytes remaining to be transferred to the 20# target VM 21# 22# @total: total amount of bytes involved in the migration process 23# 24# @duplicate: number of duplicate (zero) pages (since 1.2) 25# 26# @skipped: number of skipped zero pages. Always zero, only provided for 27# compatibility (since 1.5) 28# 29# @normal: number of normal pages (since 1.2) 30# 31# @normal-bytes: number of normal bytes sent (since 1.2) 32# 33# @dirty-pages-rate: number of pages dirtied by second by the guest 34# (since 1.3) 35# 36# @mbps: throughput in megabits/sec. (since 1.6) 37# 38# @dirty-sync-count: number of times that dirty ram was synchronized 39# (since 2.1) 40# 41# @postcopy-requests: The number of page requests received from the 42# destination (since 2.7) 43# 44# @page-size: The number of bytes per page for the various page-based 45# statistics (since 2.10) 46# 47# @multifd-bytes: The number of bytes sent through multifd (since 3.0) 48# 49# @pages-per-second: the number of memory pages transferred per second 50# (Since 4.0) 51# 52# @precopy-bytes: The number of bytes sent in the pre-copy phase 53# (since 7.0). 54# 55# @downtime-bytes: The number of bytes sent while the guest is paused 56# (since 7.0). 57# 58# @postcopy-bytes: The number of bytes sent during the post-copy phase 59# (since 7.0). 60# 61# @dirty-sync-missed-zero-copy: Number of times dirty RAM 62# synchronization could not avoid copying dirty pages. This is 63# between 0 and @dirty-sync-count * @multifd-channels. (since 64# 7.1) 65# 66# Features: 67# 68# @deprecated: Member @skipped is always zero since 1.5.3 69# 70# Since: 0.14 71# 72## 73{ 'struct': 'MigrationStats', 74 'data': {'transferred': 'int', 'remaining': 'int', 'total': 'int' , 75 'duplicate': 'int', 76 'skipped': { 'type': 'int', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 77 'normal': 'int', 78 'normal-bytes': 'int', 'dirty-pages-rate': 'int', 79 'mbps': 'number', 'dirty-sync-count': 'int', 80 'postcopy-requests': 'int', 'page-size': 'int', 81 'multifd-bytes': 'uint64', 'pages-per-second': 'uint64', 82 'precopy-bytes': 'uint64', 'downtime-bytes': 'uint64', 83 'postcopy-bytes': 'uint64', 84 'dirty-sync-missed-zero-copy': 'uint64' } } 85 86## 87# @XBZRLECacheStats: 88# 89# Detailed XBZRLE migration cache statistics 90# 91# @cache-size: XBZRLE cache size 92# 93# @bytes: amount of bytes already transferred to the target VM 94# 95# @pages: amount of pages transferred to the target VM 96# 97# @cache-miss: number of cache miss 98# 99# @cache-miss-rate: rate of cache miss (since 2.1) 100# 101# @encoding-rate: rate of encoded bytes (since 5.1) 102# 103# @overflow: number of overflows 104# 105# Since: 1.2 106## 107{ 'struct': 'XBZRLECacheStats', 108 'data': {'cache-size': 'size', 'bytes': 'int', 'pages': 'int', 109 'cache-miss': 'int', 'cache-miss-rate': 'number', 110 'encoding-rate': 'number', 'overflow': 'int' } } 111 112## 113# @CompressionStats: 114# 115# Detailed migration compression statistics 116# 117# @pages: amount of pages compressed and transferred to the target VM 118# 119# @busy: count of times that no free thread was available to compress 120# data 121# 122# @busy-rate: rate of thread busy 123# 124# @compressed-size: amount of bytes after compression 125# 126# @compression-rate: rate of compressed size 127# 128# Since: 3.1 129## 130{ 'struct': 'CompressionStats', 131 'data': {'pages': 'int', 'busy': 'int', 'busy-rate': 'number', 132 'compressed-size': 'int', 'compression-rate': 'number' } } 133 134## 135# @MigrationStatus: 136# 137# An enumeration of migration status. 138# 139# @none: no migration has ever happened. 140# 141# @setup: migration process has been initiated. 142# 143# @cancelling: in the process of cancelling migration. 144# 145# @cancelled: cancelling migration is finished. 146# 147# @active: in the process of doing migration. 148# 149# @postcopy-active: like active, but now in postcopy mode. (since 150# 2.5) 151# 152# @postcopy-paused: during postcopy but paused. (since 3.0) 153# 154# @postcopy-recover: trying to recover from a paused postcopy. (since 155# 3.0) 156# 157# @completed: migration is finished. 158# 159# @failed: some error occurred during migration process. 160# 161# @colo: VM is in the process of fault tolerance, VM can not get into 162# this state unless colo capability is enabled for migration. 163# (since 2.8) 164# 165# @pre-switchover: Paused before device serialisation. (since 2.11) 166# 167# @device: During device serialisation when pause-before-switchover is 168# enabled (since 2.11) 169# 170# @wait-unplug: wait for device unplug request by guest OS to be 171# completed. (since 4.2) 172# 173# Since: 2.3 174## 175{ 'enum': 'MigrationStatus', 176 'data': [ 'none', 'setup', 'cancelling', 'cancelled', 177 'active', 'postcopy-active', 'postcopy-paused', 178 'postcopy-recover', 'completed', 'failed', 'colo', 179 'pre-switchover', 'device', 'wait-unplug' ] } 180## 181# @VfioStats: 182# 183# Detailed VFIO devices migration statistics 184# 185# @transferred: amount of bytes transferred to the target VM by VFIO 186# devices 187# 188# Since: 5.2 189## 190{ 'struct': 'VfioStats', 191 'data': {'transferred': 'int' } } 192 193## 194# @MigrationInfo: 195# 196# Information about current migration process. 197# 198# @status: @MigrationStatus describing the current migration status. 199# If this field is not returned, no migration process has been 200# initiated 201# 202# @ram: @MigrationStats containing detailed migration status, only 203# returned if status is 'active' or 'completed'(since 1.2) 204# 205# @disk: @MigrationStats containing detailed disk migration status, 206# only returned if status is 'active' and it is a block migration 207# 208# @xbzrle-cache: @XBZRLECacheStats containing detailed XBZRLE 209# migration statistics, only returned if XBZRLE feature is on and 210# status is 'active' or 'completed' (since 1.2) 211# 212# @total-time: total amount of milliseconds since migration started. 213# If migration has ended, it returns the total migration time. 214# (since 1.2) 215# 216# @downtime: only present when migration finishes correctly total 217# downtime in milliseconds for the guest. (since 1.3) 218# 219# @expected-downtime: only present while migration is active expected 220# downtime in milliseconds for the guest in last walk of the dirty 221# bitmap. (since 1.3) 222# 223# @setup-time: amount of setup time in milliseconds *before* the 224# iterations begin but *after* the QMP command is issued. This is 225# designed to provide an accounting of any activities (such as 226# RDMA pinning) which may be expensive, but do not actually occur 227# during the iterative migration rounds themselves. (since 1.6) 228# 229# @cpu-throttle-percentage: percentage of time guest cpus are being 230# throttled during auto-converge. This is only present when 231# auto-converge has started throttling guest cpus. (Since 2.7) 232# 233# @error-desc: the human readable error description string. Clients 234# should not attempt to parse the error strings. (Since 2.7) 235# 236# @postcopy-blocktime: total time when all vCPU were blocked during 237# postcopy live migration. This is only present when the 238# postcopy-blocktime migration capability is enabled. (Since 3.0) 239# 240# @postcopy-vcpu-blocktime: list of the postcopy blocktime per vCPU. 241# This is only present when the postcopy-blocktime migration 242# capability is enabled. (Since 3.0) 243# 244# @compression: migration compression statistics, only returned if 245# compression feature is on and status is 'active' or 'completed' 246# (Since 3.1) 247# 248# @socket-address: Only used for tcp, to know what the real port is 249# (Since 4.0) 250# 251# @vfio: @VfioStats containing detailed VFIO devices migration 252# statistics, only returned if VFIO device is present, migration 253# is supported by all VFIO devices and status is 'active' or 254# 'completed' (since 5.2) 255# 256# @blocked-reasons: A list of reasons an outgoing migration is 257# blocked. Present and non-empty when migration is blocked. 258# (since 6.0) 259# 260# @dirty-limit-throttle-time-per-round: Maximum throttle time 261# (in microseconds) of virtual CPUs each dirty ring full round, 262# which shows how MigrationCapability dirty-limit affects the 263# guest during live migration. (Since 8.1) 264# 265# @dirty-limit-ring-full-time: Estimated average dirty ring full time 266# (in microseconds) for each dirty ring full round. The value 267# equals the dirty ring memory size divided by the average dirty 268# page rate of the virtual CPU, which can be used to observe the 269# average memory load of the virtual CPU indirectly. Note that 270# zero means guest doesn't dirty memory. (Since 8.1) 271# 272# Features: 273# 274# @deprecated: Member @disk is deprecated because block migration is. 275# Member @compression is deprecated because it is unreliable and 276# untested. It is recommended to use multifd migration, which 277# offers an alternative compression implementation that is 278# reliable and tested. 279# 280# Since: 0.14 281## 282{ 'struct': 'MigrationInfo', 283 'data': {'*status': 'MigrationStatus', '*ram': 'MigrationStats', 284 '*disk': { 'type': 'MigrationStats', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 285 '*vfio': 'VfioStats', 286 '*xbzrle-cache': 'XBZRLECacheStats', 287 '*total-time': 'int', 288 '*expected-downtime': 'int', 289 '*downtime': 'int', 290 '*setup-time': 'int', 291 '*cpu-throttle-percentage': 'int', 292 '*error-desc': 'str', 293 '*blocked-reasons': ['str'], 294 '*postcopy-blocktime': 'uint32', 295 '*postcopy-vcpu-blocktime': ['uint32'], 296 '*compression': { 'type': 'CompressionStats', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 297 '*socket-address': ['SocketAddress'], 298 '*dirty-limit-throttle-time-per-round': 'uint64', 299 '*dirty-limit-ring-full-time': 'uint64'} } 300 301## 302# @query-migrate: 303# 304# Returns information about current migration process. If migration 305# is active there will be another json-object with RAM migration 306# status and if block migration is active another one with block 307# migration status. 308# 309# Returns: @MigrationInfo 310# 311# Since: 0.14 312# 313# Examples: 314# 315# 1. Before the first migration 316# 317# -> { "execute": "query-migrate" } 318# <- { "return": {} } 319# 320# 2. Migration is done and has succeeded 321# 322# -> { "execute": "query-migrate" } 323# <- { "return": { 324# "status": "completed", 325# "total-time":12345, 326# "setup-time":12345, 327# "downtime":12345, 328# "ram":{ 329# "transferred":123, 330# "remaining":123, 331# "total":246, 332# "duplicate":123, 333# "normal":123, 334# "normal-bytes":123456, 335# "dirty-sync-count":15 336# } 337# } 338# } 339# 340# 3. Migration is done and has failed 341# 342# -> { "execute": "query-migrate" } 343# <- { "return": { "status": "failed" } } 344# 345# 4. Migration is being performed and is not a block migration: 346# 347# -> { "execute": "query-migrate" } 348# <- { 349# "return":{ 350# "status":"active", 351# "total-time":12345, 352# "setup-time":12345, 353# "expected-downtime":12345, 354# "ram":{ 355# "transferred":123, 356# "remaining":123, 357# "total":246, 358# "duplicate":123, 359# "normal":123, 360# "normal-bytes":123456, 361# "dirty-sync-count":15 362# } 363# } 364# } 365# 366# 5. Migration is being performed and is a block migration: 367# 368# -> { "execute": "query-migrate" } 369# <- { 370# "return":{ 371# "status":"active", 372# "total-time":12345, 373# "setup-time":12345, 374# "expected-downtime":12345, 375# "ram":{ 376# "total":1057024, 377# "remaining":1053304, 378# "transferred":3720, 379# "duplicate":123, 380# "normal":123, 381# "normal-bytes":123456, 382# "dirty-sync-count":15 383# }, 384# "disk":{ 385# "total":20971520, 386# "remaining":20880384, 387# "transferred":91136 388# } 389# } 390# } 391# 392# 6. Migration is being performed and XBZRLE is active: 393# 394# -> { "execute": "query-migrate" } 395# <- { 396# "return":{ 397# "status":"active", 398# "total-time":12345, 399# "setup-time":12345, 400# "expected-downtime":12345, 401# "ram":{ 402# "total":1057024, 403# "remaining":1053304, 404# "transferred":3720, 405# "duplicate":10, 406# "normal":3333, 407# "normal-bytes":3412992, 408# "dirty-sync-count":15 409# }, 410# "xbzrle-cache":{ 411# "cache-size":67108864, 412# "bytes":20971520, 413# "pages":2444343, 414# "cache-miss":2244, 415# "cache-miss-rate":0.123, 416# "encoding-rate":80.1, 417# "overflow":34434 418# } 419# } 420# } 421## 422{ 'command': 'query-migrate', 'returns': 'MigrationInfo' } 423 424## 425# @MigrationCapability: 426# 427# Migration capabilities enumeration 428# 429# @xbzrle: Migration supports xbzrle (Xor Based Zero Run Length 430# Encoding). This feature allows us to minimize migration traffic 431# for certain work loads, by sending compressed difference of the 432# pages 433# 434# @rdma-pin-all: Controls whether or not the entire VM memory 435# footprint is mlock()'d on demand or all at once. Refer to 436# docs/rdma.txt for usage. Disabled by default. (since 2.0) 437# 438# @zero-blocks: During storage migration encode blocks of zeroes 439# efficiently. This essentially saves 1MB of zeroes per block on 440# the wire. Enabling requires source and target VM to support 441# this feature. To enable it is sufficient to enable the 442# capability on the source VM. The feature is disabled by default. 443# (since 1.6) 444# 445# @compress: Use multiple compression threads to accelerate live 446# migration. This feature can help to reduce the migration 447# traffic, by sending compressed pages. Please note that if 448# compress and xbzrle are both on, compress only takes effect in 449# the ram bulk stage, after that, it will be disabled and only 450# xbzrle takes effect, this can help to minimize migration 451# traffic. The feature is disabled by default. (since 2.4) 452# 453# @events: generate events for each migration state change (since 2.4) 454# 455# @auto-converge: If enabled, QEMU will automatically throttle down 456# the guest to speed up convergence of RAM migration. (since 1.6) 457# 458# @postcopy-ram: Start executing on the migration target before all of 459# RAM has been migrated, pulling the remaining pages along as 460# needed. The capacity must have the same setting on both source 461# and target or migration will not even start. NOTE: If the 462# migration fails during postcopy the VM will fail. (since 2.6) 463# 464# @x-colo: If enabled, migration will never end, and the state of the 465# VM on the primary side will be migrated continuously to the VM 466# on secondary side, this process is called COarse-Grain LOck 467# Stepping (COLO) for Non-stop Service. (since 2.8) 468# 469# @release-ram: if enabled, qemu will free the migrated ram pages on 470# the source during postcopy-ram migration. (since 2.9) 471# 472# @block: If enabled, QEMU will also migrate the contents of all block 473# devices. Default is disabled. A possible alternative uses 474# mirror jobs to a builtin NBD server on the destination, which 475# offers more flexibility. (Since 2.10) 476# 477# @return-path: If enabled, migration will use the return path even 478# for precopy. (since 2.10) 479# 480# @pause-before-switchover: Pause outgoing migration before 481# serialising device state and before disabling block IO (since 482# 2.11) 483# 484# @multifd: Use more than one fd for migration (since 4.0) 485# 486# @dirty-bitmaps: If enabled, QEMU will migrate named dirty bitmaps. 487# (since 2.12) 488# 489# @postcopy-blocktime: Calculate downtime for postcopy live migration 490# (since 3.0) 491# 492# @late-block-activate: If enabled, the destination will not activate 493# block devices (and thus take locks) immediately at the end of 494# migration. (since 3.0) 495# 496# @x-ignore-shared: If enabled, QEMU will not migrate shared memory 497# that is accessible on the destination machine. (since 4.0) 498# 499# @validate-uuid: Send the UUID of the source to allow the destination 500# to ensure it is the same. (since 4.2) 501# 502# @background-snapshot: If enabled, the migration stream will be a 503# snapshot of the VM exactly at the point when the migration 504# procedure starts. The VM RAM is saved with running VM. (since 505# 6.0) 506# 507# @zero-copy-send: Controls behavior on sending memory pages on 508# migration. When true, enables a zero-copy mechanism for sending 509# memory pages, if host supports it. Requires that QEMU be 510# permitted to use locked memory for guest RAM pages. (since 7.1) 511# 512# @postcopy-preempt: If enabled, the migration process will allow 513# postcopy requests to preempt precopy stream, so postcopy 514# requests will be handled faster. This is a performance feature 515# and should not affect the correctness of postcopy migration. 516# (since 7.1) 517# 518# @switchover-ack: If enabled, migration will not stop the source VM 519# and complete the migration until an ACK is received from the 520# destination that it's OK to do so. Exactly when this ACK is 521# sent depends on the migrated devices that use this feature. For 522# example, a device can use it to make sure some of its data is 523# sent and loaded in the destination before doing switchover. 524# This can reduce downtime if devices that support this capability 525# are present. 'return-path' capability must be enabled to use 526# it. (since 8.1) 527# 528# @dirty-limit: If enabled, migration will throttle vCPUs as needed to 529# keep their dirty page rate within @vcpu-dirty-limit. This can 530# improve responsiveness of large guests during live migration, 531# and can result in more stable read performance. Requires KVM 532# with accelerator property "dirty-ring-size" set. (Since 8.1) 533# 534# Features: 535# 536# @deprecated: Member @block is deprecated. Use blockdev-mirror with 537# NBD instead. Member @compression is deprecated because it is 538# unreliable and untested. It is recommended to use multifd 539# migration, which offers an alternative compression 540# implementation that is reliable and tested. 541# 542# @unstable: Members @x-colo and @x-ignore-shared are experimental. 543# 544# Since: 1.2 545## 546{ 'enum': 'MigrationCapability', 547 'data': ['xbzrle', 'rdma-pin-all', 'auto-converge', 'zero-blocks', 548 { 'name': 'compress', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 549 'events', 'postcopy-ram', 550 { 'name': 'x-colo', 'features': [ 'unstable' ] }, 551 'release-ram', 552 { 'name': 'block', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 553 'return-path', 'pause-before-switchover', 'multifd', 554 'dirty-bitmaps', 'postcopy-blocktime', 'late-block-activate', 555 { 'name': 'x-ignore-shared', 'features': [ 'unstable' ] }, 556 'validate-uuid', 'background-snapshot', 557 'zero-copy-send', 'postcopy-preempt', 'switchover-ack', 558 'dirty-limit'] } 559 560## 561# @MigrationCapabilityStatus: 562# 563# Migration capability information 564# 565# @capability: capability enum 566# 567# @state: capability state bool 568# 569# Since: 1.2 570## 571{ 'struct': 'MigrationCapabilityStatus', 572 'data': { 'capability': 'MigrationCapability', 'state': 'bool' } } 573 574## 575# @migrate-set-capabilities: 576# 577# Enable/Disable the following migration capabilities (like xbzrle) 578# 579# @capabilities: json array of capability modifications to make 580# 581# Since: 1.2 582# 583# Example: 584# 585# -> { "execute": "migrate-set-capabilities" , "arguments": 586# { "capabilities": [ { "capability": "xbzrle", "state": true } ] } } 587# <- { "return": {} } 588## 589{ 'command': 'migrate-set-capabilities', 590 'data': { 'capabilities': ['MigrationCapabilityStatus'] } } 591 592## 593# @query-migrate-capabilities: 594# 595# Returns information about the current migration capabilities status 596# 597# Returns: @MigrationCapabilityStatus 598# 599# Since: 1.2 600# 601# Example: 602# 603# -> { "execute": "query-migrate-capabilities" } 604# <- { "return": [ 605# {"state": false, "capability": "xbzrle"}, 606# {"state": false, "capability": "rdma-pin-all"}, 607# {"state": false, "capability": "auto-converge"}, 608# {"state": false, "capability": "zero-blocks"}, 609# {"state": false, "capability": "compress"}, 610# {"state": true, "capability": "events"}, 611# {"state": false, "capability": "postcopy-ram"}, 612# {"state": false, "capability": "x-colo"} 613# ]} 614## 615{ 'command': 'query-migrate-capabilities', 'returns': ['MigrationCapabilityStatus']} 616 617## 618# @MultiFDCompression: 619# 620# An enumeration of multifd compression methods. 621# 622# @none: no compression. 623# 624# @zlib: use zlib compression method. 625# 626# @zstd: use zstd compression method. 627# 628# Since: 5.0 629## 630{ 'enum': 'MultiFDCompression', 631 'data': [ 'none', 'zlib', 632 { 'name': 'zstd', 'if': 'CONFIG_ZSTD' } ] } 633 634## 635# @MigMode: 636# 637# @normal: the original form of migration. (since 8.2) 638# 639## 640{ 'enum': 'MigMode', 641 'data': [ 'normal' ] } 642 643## 644# @BitmapMigrationBitmapAliasTransform: 645# 646# @persistent: If present, the bitmap will be made persistent or 647# transient depending on this parameter. 648# 649# Since: 6.0 650## 651{ 'struct': 'BitmapMigrationBitmapAliasTransform', 652 'data': { 653 '*persistent': 'bool' 654 } } 655 656## 657# @BitmapMigrationBitmapAlias: 658# 659# @name: The name of the bitmap. 660# 661# @alias: An alias name for migration (for example the bitmap name on 662# the opposite site). 663# 664# @transform: Allows the modification of the migrated bitmap. (since 665# 6.0) 666# 667# Since: 5.2 668## 669{ 'struct': 'BitmapMigrationBitmapAlias', 670 'data': { 671 'name': 'str', 672 'alias': 'str', 673 '*transform': 'BitmapMigrationBitmapAliasTransform' 674 } } 675 676## 677# @BitmapMigrationNodeAlias: 678# 679# Maps a block node name and the bitmaps it has to aliases for dirty 680# bitmap migration. 681# 682# @node-name: A block node name. 683# 684# @alias: An alias block node name for migration (for example the node 685# name on the opposite site). 686# 687# @bitmaps: Mappings for the bitmaps on this node. 688# 689# Since: 5.2 690## 691{ 'struct': 'BitmapMigrationNodeAlias', 692 'data': { 693 'node-name': 'str', 694 'alias': 'str', 695 'bitmaps': [ 'BitmapMigrationBitmapAlias' ] 696 } } 697 698## 699# @MigrationParameter: 700# 701# Migration parameters enumeration 702# 703# @announce-initial: Initial delay (in milliseconds) before sending 704# the first announce (Since 4.0) 705# 706# @announce-max: Maximum delay (in milliseconds) between packets in 707# the announcement (Since 4.0) 708# 709# @announce-rounds: Number of self-announce packets sent after 710# migration (Since 4.0) 711# 712# @announce-step: Increase in delay (in milliseconds) between 713# subsequent packets in the announcement (Since 4.0) 714# 715# @compress-level: Set the compression level to be used in live 716# migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 9, 717# where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression 718# speed, and 9 means best compression ratio which will consume 719# more CPU. 720# 721# @compress-threads: Set compression thread count to be used in live 722# migration, the compression thread count is an integer between 1 723# and 255. 724# 725# @compress-wait-thread: Controls behavior when all compression 726# threads are currently busy. If true (default), wait for a free 727# compression thread to become available; otherwise, send the page 728# uncompressed. (Since 3.1) 729# 730# @decompress-threads: Set decompression thread count to be used in 731# live migration, the decompression thread count is an integer 732# between 1 and 255. Usually, decompression is at least 4 times as 733# fast as compression, so set the decompress-threads to the number 734# about 1/4 of compress-threads is adequate. 735# 736# @throttle-trigger-threshold: The ratio of bytes_dirty_period and 737# bytes_xfer_period to trigger throttling. It is expressed as 738# percentage. The default value is 50. (Since 5.0) 739# 740# @cpu-throttle-initial: Initial percentage of time guest cpus are 741# throttled when migration auto-converge is activated. The 742# default value is 20. (Since 2.7) 743# 744# @cpu-throttle-increment: throttle percentage increase each time 745# auto-converge detects that migration is not making progress. 746# The default value is 10. (Since 2.7) 747# 748# @cpu-throttle-tailslow: Make CPU throttling slower at tail stage At 749# the tail stage of throttling, the Guest is very sensitive to CPU 750# percentage while the @cpu-throttle -increment is excessive 751# usually at tail stage. If this parameter is true, we will 752# compute the ideal CPU percentage used by the Guest, which may 753# exactly make the dirty rate match the dirty rate threshold. 754# Then we will choose a smaller throttle increment between the one 755# specified by @cpu-throttle-increment and the one generated by 756# ideal CPU percentage. Therefore, it is compatible to 757# traditional throttling, meanwhile the throttle increment won't 758# be excessive at tail stage. The default value is false. (Since 759# 5.1) 760# 761# @tls-creds: ID of the 'tls-creds' object that provides credentials 762# for establishing a TLS connection over the migration data 763# channel. On the outgoing side of the migration, the credentials 764# must be for a 'client' endpoint, while for the incoming side the 765# credentials must be for a 'server' endpoint. Setting this will 766# enable TLS for all migrations. The default is unset, resulting 767# in unsecured migration at the QEMU level. (Since 2.7) 768# 769# @tls-hostname: hostname of the target host for the migration. This 770# is required when using x509 based TLS credentials and the 771# migration URI does not already include a hostname. For example 772# if using fd: or exec: based migration, the hostname must be 773# provided so that the server's x509 certificate identity can be 774# validated. (Since 2.7) 775# 776# @tls-authz: ID of the 'authz' object subclass that provides access 777# control checking of the TLS x509 certificate distinguished name. 778# This object is only resolved at time of use, so can be deleted 779# and recreated on the fly while the migration server is active. 780# If missing, it will default to denying access (Since 4.0) 781# 782# @max-bandwidth: to set maximum speed for migration. maximum speed 783# in bytes per second. (Since 2.8) 784# 785# @avail-switchover-bandwidth: to set the available bandwidth that 786# migration can use during switchover phase. NOTE! This does not 787# limit the bandwidth during switchover, but only for calculations when 788# making decisions to switchover. By default, this value is zero, 789# which means QEMU will estimate the bandwidth automatically. This can 790# be set when the estimated value is not accurate, while the user is 791# able to guarantee such bandwidth is available when switching over. 792# When specified correctly, this can make the switchover decision much 793# more accurate. (Since 8.2) 794# 795# @downtime-limit: set maximum tolerated downtime for migration. 796# maximum downtime in milliseconds (Since 2.8) 797# 798# @x-checkpoint-delay: The delay time (in ms) between two COLO 799# checkpoints in periodic mode. (Since 2.8) 800# 801# @block-incremental: Affects how much storage is migrated when the 802# block migration capability is enabled. When false, the entire 803# storage backing chain is migrated into a flattened image at the 804# destination; when true, only the active qcow2 layer is migrated 805# and the destination must already have access to the same backing 806# chain as was used on the source. (since 2.10) 807# 808# @multifd-channels: Number of channels used to migrate data in 809# parallel. This is the same number that the number of sockets 810# used for migration. The default value is 2 (since 4.0) 811# 812# @xbzrle-cache-size: cache size to be used by XBZRLE migration. It 813# needs to be a multiple of the target page size and a power of 2 814# (Since 2.11) 815# 816# @max-postcopy-bandwidth: Background transfer bandwidth during 817# postcopy. Defaults to 0 (unlimited). In bytes per second. 818# (Since 3.0) 819# 820# @max-cpu-throttle: maximum cpu throttle percentage. Defaults to 99. 821# (Since 3.1) 822# 823# @multifd-compression: Which compression method to use. Defaults to 824# none. (Since 5.0) 825# 826# @multifd-zlib-level: Set the compression level to be used in live 827# migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 9, 828# where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression 829# speed, and 9 means best compression ratio which will consume 830# more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0) 831# 832# @multifd-zstd-level: Set the compression level to be used in live 833# migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 20, 834# where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression 835# speed, and 20 means best compression ratio which will consume 836# more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0) 837# 838# @block-bitmap-mapping: Maps block nodes and bitmaps on them to 839# aliases for the purpose of dirty bitmap migration. Such aliases 840# may for example be the corresponding names on the opposite site. 841# The mapping must be one-to-one, but not necessarily complete: On 842# the source, unmapped bitmaps and all bitmaps on unmapped nodes 843# will be ignored. On the destination, encountering an unmapped 844# alias in the incoming migration stream will result in a report, 845# and all further bitmap migration data will then be discarded. 846# Note that the destination does not know about bitmaps it does 847# not receive, so there is no limitation or requirement regarding 848# the number of bitmaps received, or how they are named, or on 849# which nodes they are placed. By default (when this parameter 850# has never been set), bitmap names are mapped to themselves. 851# Nodes are mapped to their block device name if there is one, and 852# to their node name otherwise. (Since 5.2) 853# 854# @x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period: Periodic time (in milliseconds) of dirty 855# limit during live migration. Should be in the range 1 to 1000ms. 856# Defaults to 1000ms. (Since 8.1) 857# 858# @vcpu-dirty-limit: Dirtyrate limit (MB/s) during live migration. 859# Defaults to 1. (Since 8.1) 860# 861# @mode: Migration mode. See description in @MigMode. Default is 'normal'. 862# (Since 8.2) 863# 864# Features: 865# 866# @deprecated: Member @block-incremental is deprecated. Use 867# blockdev-mirror with NBD instead. Members @compress-level, 868# @compress-threads, @decompress-threads and @compress-wait-thread 869# are deprecated because @compression is deprecated. 870# 871# @unstable: Members @x-checkpoint-delay and @x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period 872# are experimental. 873# 874# Since: 2.4 875## 876{ 'enum': 'MigrationParameter', 877 'data': ['announce-initial', 'announce-max', 878 'announce-rounds', 'announce-step', 879 { 'name': 'compress-level', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 880 { 'name': 'compress-threads', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 881 { 'name': 'decompress-threads', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 882 { 'name': 'compress-wait-thread', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 883 'throttle-trigger-threshold', 884 'cpu-throttle-initial', 'cpu-throttle-increment', 885 'cpu-throttle-tailslow', 886 'tls-creds', 'tls-hostname', 'tls-authz', 'max-bandwidth', 887 'avail-switchover-bandwidth', 'downtime-limit', 888 { 'name': 'x-checkpoint-delay', 'features': [ 'unstable' ] }, 889 { 'name': 'block-incremental', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 890 'multifd-channels', 891 'xbzrle-cache-size', 'max-postcopy-bandwidth', 892 'max-cpu-throttle', 'multifd-compression', 893 'multifd-zlib-level', 'multifd-zstd-level', 894 'block-bitmap-mapping', 895 { 'name': 'x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period', 'features': ['unstable'] }, 896 'vcpu-dirty-limit', 897 'mode'] } 898 899## 900# @MigrateSetParameters: 901# 902# @announce-initial: Initial delay (in milliseconds) before sending 903# the first announce (Since 4.0) 904# 905# @announce-max: Maximum delay (in milliseconds) between packets in 906# the announcement (Since 4.0) 907# 908# @announce-rounds: Number of self-announce packets sent after 909# migration (Since 4.0) 910# 911# @announce-step: Increase in delay (in milliseconds) between 912# subsequent packets in the announcement (Since 4.0) 913# 914# @compress-level: compression level 915# 916# @compress-threads: compression thread count 917# 918# @compress-wait-thread: Controls behavior when all compression 919# threads are currently busy. If true (default), wait for a free 920# compression thread to become available; otherwise, send the page 921# uncompressed. (Since 3.1) 922# 923# @decompress-threads: decompression thread count 924# 925# @throttle-trigger-threshold: The ratio of bytes_dirty_period and 926# bytes_xfer_period to trigger throttling. It is expressed as 927# percentage. The default value is 50. (Since 5.0) 928# 929# @cpu-throttle-initial: Initial percentage of time guest cpus are 930# throttled when migration auto-converge is activated. The 931# default value is 20. (Since 2.7) 932# 933# @cpu-throttle-increment: throttle percentage increase each time 934# auto-converge detects that migration is not making progress. 935# The default value is 10. (Since 2.7) 936# 937# @cpu-throttle-tailslow: Make CPU throttling slower at tail stage At 938# the tail stage of throttling, the Guest is very sensitive to CPU 939# percentage while the @cpu-throttle -increment is excessive 940# usually at tail stage. If this parameter is true, we will 941# compute the ideal CPU percentage used by the Guest, which may 942# exactly make the dirty rate match the dirty rate threshold. 943# Then we will choose a smaller throttle increment between the one 944# specified by @cpu-throttle-increment and the one generated by 945# ideal CPU percentage. Therefore, it is compatible to 946# traditional throttling, meanwhile the throttle increment won't 947# be excessive at tail stage. The default value is false. (Since 948# 5.1) 949# 950# @tls-creds: ID of the 'tls-creds' object that provides credentials 951# for establishing a TLS connection over the migration data 952# channel. On the outgoing side of the migration, the credentials 953# must be for a 'client' endpoint, while for the incoming side the 954# credentials must be for a 'server' endpoint. Setting this to a 955# non-empty string enables TLS for all migrations. An empty 956# string means that QEMU will use plain text mode for migration, 957# rather than TLS (Since 2.9) Previously (since 2.7), this was 958# reported by omitting tls-creds instead. 959# 960# @tls-hostname: hostname of the target host for the migration. This 961# is required when using x509 based TLS credentials and the 962# migration URI does not already include a hostname. For example 963# if using fd: or exec: based migration, the hostname must be 964# provided so that the server's x509 certificate identity can be 965# validated. (Since 2.7) An empty string means that QEMU will use 966# the hostname associated with the migration URI, if any. (Since 967# 2.9) Previously (since 2.7), this was reported by omitting 968# tls-hostname instead. 969# 970# @max-bandwidth: to set maximum speed for migration. maximum speed 971# in bytes per second. (Since 2.8) 972# 973# @avail-switchover-bandwidth: to set the available bandwidth that 974# migration can use during switchover phase. NOTE! This does not 975# limit the bandwidth during switchover, but only for calculations when 976# making decisions to switchover. By default, this value is zero, 977# which means QEMU will estimate the bandwidth automatically. This can 978# be set when the estimated value is not accurate, while the user is 979# able to guarantee such bandwidth is available when switching over. 980# When specified correctly, this can make the switchover decision much 981# more accurate. (Since 8.2) 982# 983# @downtime-limit: set maximum tolerated downtime for migration. 984# maximum downtime in milliseconds (Since 2.8) 985# 986# @x-checkpoint-delay: the delay time between two COLO checkpoints. 987# (Since 2.8) 988# 989# @block-incremental: Affects how much storage is migrated when the 990# block migration capability is enabled. When false, the entire 991# storage backing chain is migrated into a flattened image at the 992# destination; when true, only the active qcow2 layer is migrated 993# and the destination must already have access to the same backing 994# chain as was used on the source. (since 2.10) 995# 996# @multifd-channels: Number of channels used to migrate data in 997# parallel. This is the same number that the number of sockets 998# used for migration. The default value is 2 (since 4.0) 999# 1000# @xbzrle-cache-size: cache size to be used by XBZRLE migration. It 1001# needs to be a multiple of the target page size and a power of 2 1002# (Since 2.11) 1003# 1004# @max-postcopy-bandwidth: Background transfer bandwidth during 1005# postcopy. Defaults to 0 (unlimited). In bytes per second. 1006# (Since 3.0) 1007# 1008# @max-cpu-throttle: maximum cpu throttle percentage. The default 1009# value is 99. (Since 3.1) 1010# 1011# @multifd-compression: Which compression method to use. Defaults to 1012# none. (Since 5.0) 1013# 1014# @multifd-zlib-level: Set the compression level to be used in live 1015# migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 9, 1016# where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression 1017# speed, and 9 means best compression ratio which will consume 1018# more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0) 1019# 1020# @multifd-zstd-level: Set the compression level to be used in live 1021# migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 20, 1022# where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression 1023# speed, and 20 means best compression ratio which will consume 1024# more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0) 1025# 1026# @block-bitmap-mapping: Maps block nodes and bitmaps on them to 1027# aliases for the purpose of dirty bitmap migration. Such aliases 1028# may for example be the corresponding names on the opposite site. 1029# The mapping must be one-to-one, but not necessarily complete: On 1030# the source, unmapped bitmaps and all bitmaps on unmapped nodes 1031# will be ignored. On the destination, encountering an unmapped 1032# alias in the incoming migration stream will result in a report, 1033# and all further bitmap migration data will then be discarded. 1034# Note that the destination does not know about bitmaps it does 1035# not receive, so there is no limitation or requirement regarding 1036# the number of bitmaps received, or how they are named, or on 1037# which nodes they are placed. By default (when this parameter 1038# has never been set), bitmap names are mapped to themselves. 1039# Nodes are mapped to their block device name if there is one, and 1040# to their node name otherwise. (Since 5.2) 1041# 1042# @x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period: Periodic time (in milliseconds) of dirty 1043# limit during live migration. Should be in the range 1 to 1000ms. 1044# Defaults to 1000ms. (Since 8.1) 1045# 1046# @vcpu-dirty-limit: Dirtyrate limit (MB/s) during live migration. 1047# Defaults to 1. (Since 8.1) 1048# 1049# @mode: Migration mode. See description in @MigMode. Default is 'normal'. 1050# (Since 8.2) 1051# 1052# Features: 1053# 1054# @deprecated: Member @block-incremental is deprecated. Use 1055# blockdev-mirror with NBD instead. Members @compress-level, 1056# @compress-threads, @decompress-threads and @compress-wait-thread 1057# are deprecated because @compression is deprecated. 1058# 1059# @unstable: Members @x-checkpoint-delay and @x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period 1060# are experimental. 1061# 1062# TODO: either fuse back into MigrationParameters, or make 1063# MigrationParameters members mandatory 1064# 1065# Since: 2.4 1066## 1067{ 'struct': 'MigrateSetParameters', 1068 'data': { '*announce-initial': 'size', 1069 '*announce-max': 'size', 1070 '*announce-rounds': 'size', 1071 '*announce-step': 'size', 1072 '*compress-level': { 'type': 'uint8', 1073 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1074 '*compress-threads': { 'type': 'uint8', 1075 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1076 '*compress-wait-thread': { 'type': 'bool', 1077 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1078 '*decompress-threads': { 'type': 'uint8', 1079 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1080 '*throttle-trigger-threshold': 'uint8', 1081 '*cpu-throttle-initial': 'uint8', 1082 '*cpu-throttle-increment': 'uint8', 1083 '*cpu-throttle-tailslow': 'bool', 1084 '*tls-creds': 'StrOrNull', 1085 '*tls-hostname': 'StrOrNull', 1086 '*tls-authz': 'StrOrNull', 1087 '*max-bandwidth': 'size', 1088 '*avail-switchover-bandwidth': 'size', 1089 '*downtime-limit': 'uint64', 1090 '*x-checkpoint-delay': { 'type': 'uint32', 1091 'features': [ 'unstable' ] }, 1092 '*block-incremental': { 'type': 'bool', 1093 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1094 '*multifd-channels': 'uint8', 1095 '*xbzrle-cache-size': 'size', 1096 '*max-postcopy-bandwidth': 'size', 1097 '*max-cpu-throttle': 'uint8', 1098 '*multifd-compression': 'MultiFDCompression', 1099 '*multifd-zlib-level': 'uint8', 1100 '*multifd-zstd-level': 'uint8', 1101 '*block-bitmap-mapping': [ 'BitmapMigrationNodeAlias' ], 1102 '*x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period': { 'type': 'uint64', 1103 'features': [ 'unstable' ] }, 1104 '*vcpu-dirty-limit': 'uint64', 1105 '*mode': 'MigMode'} } 1106 1107## 1108# @migrate-set-parameters: 1109# 1110# Set various migration parameters. 1111# 1112# Since: 2.4 1113# 1114# Example: 1115# 1116# -> { "execute": "migrate-set-parameters" , 1117# "arguments": { "multifd-channels": 5 } } 1118# <- { "return": {} } 1119## 1120{ 'command': 'migrate-set-parameters', 'boxed': true, 1121 'data': 'MigrateSetParameters' } 1122 1123## 1124# @MigrationParameters: 1125# 1126# The optional members aren't actually optional. 1127# 1128# @announce-initial: Initial delay (in milliseconds) before sending 1129# the first announce (Since 4.0) 1130# 1131# @announce-max: Maximum delay (in milliseconds) between packets in 1132# the announcement (Since 4.0) 1133# 1134# @announce-rounds: Number of self-announce packets sent after 1135# migration (Since 4.0) 1136# 1137# @announce-step: Increase in delay (in milliseconds) between 1138# subsequent packets in the announcement (Since 4.0) 1139# 1140# @compress-level: compression level 1141# 1142# @compress-threads: compression thread count 1143# 1144# @compress-wait-thread: Controls behavior when all compression 1145# threads are currently busy. If true (default), wait for a free 1146# compression thread to become available; otherwise, send the page 1147# uncompressed. (Since 3.1) 1148# 1149# @decompress-threads: decompression thread count 1150# 1151# @throttle-trigger-threshold: The ratio of bytes_dirty_period and 1152# bytes_xfer_period to trigger throttling. It is expressed as 1153# percentage. The default value is 50. (Since 5.0) 1154# 1155# @cpu-throttle-initial: Initial percentage of time guest cpus are 1156# throttled when migration auto-converge is activated. (Since 1157# 2.7) 1158# 1159# @cpu-throttle-increment: throttle percentage increase each time 1160# auto-converge detects that migration is not making progress. 1161# (Since 2.7) 1162# 1163# @cpu-throttle-tailslow: Make CPU throttling slower at tail stage At 1164# the tail stage of throttling, the Guest is very sensitive to CPU 1165# percentage while the @cpu-throttle -increment is excessive 1166# usually at tail stage. If this parameter is true, we will 1167# compute the ideal CPU percentage used by the Guest, which may 1168# exactly make the dirty rate match the dirty rate threshold. 1169# Then we will choose a smaller throttle increment between the one 1170# specified by @cpu-throttle-increment and the one generated by 1171# ideal CPU percentage. Therefore, it is compatible to 1172# traditional throttling, meanwhile the throttle increment won't 1173# be excessive at tail stage. The default value is false. (Since 1174# 5.1) 1175# 1176# @tls-creds: ID of the 'tls-creds' object that provides credentials 1177# for establishing a TLS connection over the migration data 1178# channel. On the outgoing side of the migration, the credentials 1179# must be for a 'client' endpoint, while for the incoming side the 1180# credentials must be for a 'server' endpoint. An empty string 1181# means that QEMU will use plain text mode for migration, rather 1182# than TLS (Since 2.7) Note: 2.8 reports this by omitting 1183# tls-creds instead. 1184# 1185# @tls-hostname: hostname of the target host for the migration. This 1186# is required when using x509 based TLS credentials and the 1187# migration URI does not already include a hostname. For example 1188# if using fd: or exec: based migration, the hostname must be 1189# provided so that the server's x509 certificate identity can be 1190# validated. (Since 2.7) An empty string means that QEMU will use 1191# the hostname associated with the migration URI, if any. (Since 1192# 2.9) Note: 2.8 reports this by omitting tls-hostname instead. 1193# 1194# @tls-authz: ID of the 'authz' object subclass that provides access 1195# control checking of the TLS x509 certificate distinguished name. 1196# (Since 4.0) 1197# 1198# @max-bandwidth: to set maximum speed for migration. maximum speed 1199# in bytes per second. (Since 2.8) 1200# 1201# @avail-switchover-bandwidth: to set the available bandwidth that 1202# migration can use during switchover phase. NOTE! This does not 1203# limit the bandwidth during switchover, but only for calculations when 1204# making decisions to switchover. By default, this value is zero, 1205# which means QEMU will estimate the bandwidth automatically. This can 1206# be set when the estimated value is not accurate, while the user is 1207# able to guarantee such bandwidth is available when switching over. 1208# When specified correctly, this can make the switchover decision much 1209# more accurate. (Since 8.2) 1210# 1211# @downtime-limit: set maximum tolerated downtime for migration. 1212# maximum downtime in milliseconds (Since 2.8) 1213# 1214# @x-checkpoint-delay: the delay time between two COLO checkpoints. 1215# (Since 2.8) 1216# 1217# @block-incremental: Affects how much storage is migrated when the 1218# block migration capability is enabled. When false, the entire 1219# storage backing chain is migrated into a flattened image at the 1220# destination; when true, only the active qcow2 layer is migrated 1221# and the destination must already have access to the same backing 1222# chain as was used on the source. (since 2.10) 1223# 1224# @multifd-channels: Number of channels used to migrate data in 1225# parallel. This is the same number that the number of sockets 1226# used for migration. The default value is 2 (since 4.0) 1227# 1228# @xbzrle-cache-size: cache size to be used by XBZRLE migration. It 1229# needs to be a multiple of the target page size and a power of 2 1230# (Since 2.11) 1231# 1232# @max-postcopy-bandwidth: Background transfer bandwidth during 1233# postcopy. Defaults to 0 (unlimited). In bytes per second. 1234# (Since 3.0) 1235# 1236# @max-cpu-throttle: maximum cpu throttle percentage. Defaults to 99. 1237# (Since 3.1) 1238# 1239# @multifd-compression: Which compression method to use. Defaults to 1240# none. (Since 5.0) 1241# 1242# @multifd-zlib-level: Set the compression level to be used in live 1243# migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 9, 1244# where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression 1245# speed, and 9 means best compression ratio which will consume 1246# more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0) 1247# 1248# @multifd-zstd-level: Set the compression level to be used in live 1249# migration, the compression level is an integer between 0 and 20, 1250# where 0 means no compression, 1 means the best compression 1251# speed, and 20 means best compression ratio which will consume 1252# more CPU. Defaults to 1. (Since 5.0) 1253# 1254# @block-bitmap-mapping: Maps block nodes and bitmaps on them to 1255# aliases for the purpose of dirty bitmap migration. Such aliases 1256# may for example be the corresponding names on the opposite site. 1257# The mapping must be one-to-one, but not necessarily complete: On 1258# the source, unmapped bitmaps and all bitmaps on unmapped nodes 1259# will be ignored. On the destination, encountering an unmapped 1260# alias in the incoming migration stream will result in a report, 1261# and all further bitmap migration data will then be discarded. 1262# Note that the destination does not know about bitmaps it does 1263# not receive, so there is no limitation or requirement regarding 1264# the number of bitmaps received, or how they are named, or on 1265# which nodes they are placed. By default (when this parameter 1266# has never been set), bitmap names are mapped to themselves. 1267# Nodes are mapped to their block device name if there is one, and 1268# to their node name otherwise. (Since 5.2) 1269# 1270# @x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period: Periodic time (in milliseconds) of dirty 1271# limit during live migration. Should be in the range 1 to 1000ms. 1272# Defaults to 1000ms. (Since 8.1) 1273# 1274# @vcpu-dirty-limit: Dirtyrate limit (MB/s) during live migration. 1275# Defaults to 1. (Since 8.1) 1276# 1277# @mode: Migration mode. See description in @MigMode. Default is 'normal'. 1278# (Since 8.2) 1279# 1280# Features: 1281# 1282# @deprecated: Member @block-incremental is deprecated. Use 1283# blockdev-mirror with NBD instead. Members @compress-level, 1284# @compress-threads, @decompress-threads and @compress-wait-thread 1285# are deprecated because @compression is deprecated. 1286# 1287# @unstable: Members @x-checkpoint-delay and @x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period 1288# are experimental. 1289# 1290# Since: 2.4 1291## 1292{ 'struct': 'MigrationParameters', 1293 'data': { '*announce-initial': 'size', 1294 '*announce-max': 'size', 1295 '*announce-rounds': 'size', 1296 '*announce-step': 'size', 1297 '*compress-level': { 'type': 'uint8', 1298 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1299 '*compress-threads': { 'type': 'uint8', 1300 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1301 '*compress-wait-thread': { 'type': 'bool', 1302 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1303 '*decompress-threads': { 'type': 'uint8', 1304 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1305 '*throttle-trigger-threshold': 'uint8', 1306 '*cpu-throttle-initial': 'uint8', 1307 '*cpu-throttle-increment': 'uint8', 1308 '*cpu-throttle-tailslow': 'bool', 1309 '*tls-creds': 'str', 1310 '*tls-hostname': 'str', 1311 '*tls-authz': 'str', 1312 '*max-bandwidth': 'size', 1313 '*avail-switchover-bandwidth': 'size', 1314 '*downtime-limit': 'uint64', 1315 '*x-checkpoint-delay': { 'type': 'uint32', 1316 'features': [ 'unstable' ] }, 1317 '*block-incremental': { 'type': 'bool', 1318 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1319 '*multifd-channels': 'uint8', 1320 '*xbzrle-cache-size': 'size', 1321 '*max-postcopy-bandwidth': 'size', 1322 '*max-cpu-throttle': 'uint8', 1323 '*multifd-compression': 'MultiFDCompression', 1324 '*multifd-zlib-level': 'uint8', 1325 '*multifd-zstd-level': 'uint8', 1326 '*block-bitmap-mapping': [ 'BitmapMigrationNodeAlias' ], 1327 '*x-vcpu-dirty-limit-period': { 'type': 'uint64', 1328 'features': [ 'unstable' ] }, 1329 '*vcpu-dirty-limit': 'uint64', 1330 '*mode': 'MigMode'} } 1331 1332## 1333# @query-migrate-parameters: 1334# 1335# Returns information about the current migration parameters 1336# 1337# Returns: @MigrationParameters 1338# 1339# Since: 2.4 1340# 1341# Example: 1342# 1343# -> { "execute": "query-migrate-parameters" } 1344# <- { "return": { 1345# "multifd-channels": 2, 1346# "cpu-throttle-increment": 10, 1347# "cpu-throttle-initial": 20, 1348# "max-bandwidth": 33554432, 1349# "downtime-limit": 300 1350# } 1351# } 1352## 1353{ 'command': 'query-migrate-parameters', 1354 'returns': 'MigrationParameters' } 1355 1356## 1357# @migrate-start-postcopy: 1358# 1359# Followup to a migration command to switch the migration to postcopy 1360# mode. The postcopy-ram capability must be set on both source and 1361# destination before the original migration command. 1362# 1363# Since: 2.5 1364# 1365# Example: 1366# 1367# -> { "execute": "migrate-start-postcopy" } 1368# <- { "return": {} } 1369## 1370{ 'command': 'migrate-start-postcopy' } 1371 1372## 1373# @MIGRATION: 1374# 1375# Emitted when a migration event happens 1376# 1377# @status: @MigrationStatus describing the current migration status. 1378# 1379# Since: 2.4 1380# 1381# Example: 1382# 1383# <- {"timestamp": {"seconds": 1432121972, "microseconds": 744001}, 1384# "event": "MIGRATION", 1385# "data": {"status": "completed"} } 1386## 1387{ 'event': 'MIGRATION', 1388 'data': {'status': 'MigrationStatus'}} 1389 1390## 1391# @MIGRATION_PASS: 1392# 1393# Emitted from the source side of a migration at the start of each 1394# pass (when it syncs the dirty bitmap) 1395# 1396# @pass: An incrementing count (starting at 1 on the first pass) 1397# 1398# Since: 2.6 1399# 1400# Example: 1401# 1402# <- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 1449669631, "microseconds": 239225}, 1403# "event": "MIGRATION_PASS", "data": {"pass": 2} } 1404## 1405{ 'event': 'MIGRATION_PASS', 1406 'data': { 'pass': 'int' } } 1407 1408## 1409# @COLOMessage: 1410# 1411# The message transmission between Primary side and Secondary side. 1412# 1413# @checkpoint-ready: Secondary VM (SVM) is ready for checkpointing 1414# 1415# @checkpoint-request: Primary VM (PVM) tells SVM to prepare for 1416# checkpointing 1417# 1418# @checkpoint-reply: SVM gets PVM's checkpoint request 1419# 1420# @vmstate-send: VM's state will be sent by PVM. 1421# 1422# @vmstate-size: The total size of VMstate. 1423# 1424# @vmstate-received: VM's state has been received by SVM. 1425# 1426# @vmstate-loaded: VM's state has been loaded by SVM. 1427# 1428# Since: 2.8 1429## 1430{ 'enum': 'COLOMessage', 1431 'data': [ 'checkpoint-ready', 'checkpoint-request', 'checkpoint-reply', 1432 'vmstate-send', 'vmstate-size', 'vmstate-received', 1433 'vmstate-loaded' ] } 1434 1435## 1436# @COLOMode: 1437# 1438# The COLO current mode. 1439# 1440# @none: COLO is disabled. 1441# 1442# @primary: COLO node in primary side. 1443# 1444# @secondary: COLO node in slave side. 1445# 1446# Since: 2.8 1447## 1448{ 'enum': 'COLOMode', 1449 'data': [ 'none', 'primary', 'secondary'] } 1450 1451## 1452# @FailoverStatus: 1453# 1454# An enumeration of COLO failover status 1455# 1456# @none: no failover has ever happened 1457# 1458# @require: got failover requirement but not handled 1459# 1460# @active: in the process of doing failover 1461# 1462# @completed: finish the process of failover 1463# 1464# @relaunch: restart the failover process, from 'none' -> 'completed' 1465# (Since 2.9) 1466# 1467# Since: 2.8 1468## 1469{ 'enum': 'FailoverStatus', 1470 'data': [ 'none', 'require', 'active', 'completed', 'relaunch' ] } 1471 1472## 1473# @COLO_EXIT: 1474# 1475# Emitted when VM finishes COLO mode due to some errors happening or 1476# at the request of users. 1477# 1478# @mode: report COLO mode when COLO exited. 1479# 1480# @reason: describes the reason for the COLO exit. 1481# 1482# Since: 3.1 1483# 1484# Example: 1485# 1486# <- { "timestamp": {"seconds": 2032141960, "microseconds": 417172}, 1487# "event": "COLO_EXIT", "data": {"mode": "primary", "reason": "request" } } 1488## 1489{ 'event': 'COLO_EXIT', 1490 'data': {'mode': 'COLOMode', 'reason': 'COLOExitReason' } } 1491 1492## 1493# @COLOExitReason: 1494# 1495# The reason for a COLO exit. 1496# 1497# @none: failover has never happened. This state does not occur in 1498# the COLO_EXIT event, and is only visible in the result of 1499# query-colo-status. 1500# 1501# @request: COLO exit is due to an external request. 1502# 1503# @error: COLO exit is due to an internal error. 1504# 1505# @processing: COLO is currently handling a failover (since 4.0). 1506# 1507# Since: 3.1 1508## 1509{ 'enum': 'COLOExitReason', 1510 'data': [ 'none', 'request', 'error' , 'processing' ] } 1511 1512## 1513# @x-colo-lost-heartbeat: 1514# 1515# Tell qemu that heartbeat is lost, request it to do takeover 1516# procedures. If this command is sent to the PVM, the Primary side 1517# will exit COLO mode. If sent to the Secondary, the Secondary side 1518# will run failover work, then takes over server operation to become 1519# the service VM. 1520# 1521# Features: 1522# 1523# @unstable: This command is experimental. 1524# 1525# Since: 2.8 1526# 1527# Example: 1528# 1529# -> { "execute": "x-colo-lost-heartbeat" } 1530# <- { "return": {} } 1531## 1532{ 'command': 'x-colo-lost-heartbeat', 1533 'features': [ 'unstable' ], 1534 'if': 'CONFIG_REPLICATION' } 1535 1536## 1537# @migrate_cancel: 1538# 1539# Cancel the current executing migration process. 1540# 1541# Returns: nothing on success 1542# 1543# Notes: This command succeeds even if there is no migration process 1544# running. 1545# 1546# Since: 0.14 1547# 1548# Example: 1549# 1550# -> { "execute": "migrate_cancel" } 1551# <- { "return": {} } 1552## 1553{ 'command': 'migrate_cancel' } 1554 1555## 1556# @migrate-continue: 1557# 1558# Continue migration when it's in a paused state. 1559# 1560# @state: The state the migration is currently expected to be in 1561# 1562# Returns: nothing on success 1563# 1564# Since: 2.11 1565# 1566# Example: 1567# 1568# -> { "execute": "migrate-continue" , "arguments": 1569# { "state": "pre-switchover" } } 1570# <- { "return": {} } 1571## 1572{ 'command': 'migrate-continue', 'data': {'state': 'MigrationStatus'} } 1573 1574## 1575# @migrate: 1576# 1577# Migrates the current running guest to another Virtual Machine. 1578# 1579# @uri: the Uniform Resource Identifier of the destination VM 1580# 1581# @blk: do block migration (full disk copy) 1582# 1583# @inc: incremental disk copy migration 1584# 1585# @detach: this argument exists only for compatibility reasons and is 1586# ignored by QEMU 1587# 1588# @resume: resume one paused migration, default "off". (since 3.0) 1589# 1590# Features: 1591# 1592# @deprecated: Members @inc and @blk are deprecated. Use 1593# blockdev-mirror with NBD instead. 1594# 1595# Returns: nothing on success 1596# 1597# Since: 0.14 1598# 1599# Notes: 1600# 1601# 1. The 'query-migrate' command should be used to check migration's 1602# progress and final result (this information is provided by the 1603# 'status' member) 1604# 1605# 2. All boolean arguments default to false 1606# 1607# 3. The user Monitor's "detach" argument is invalid in QMP and should 1608# not be used 1609# 1610# Example: 1611# 1612# -> { "execute": "migrate", "arguments": { "uri": "tcp:0:4446" } } 1613# <- { "return": {} } 1614## 1615{ 'command': 'migrate', 1616 'data': {'uri': 'str', 1617 '*blk': { 'type': 'bool', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1618 '*inc': { 'type': 'bool', 'features': [ 'deprecated' ] }, 1619 '*detach': 'bool', '*resume': 'bool' } } 1620 1621## 1622# @migrate-incoming: 1623# 1624# Start an incoming migration, the qemu must have been started with 1625# -incoming defer 1626# 1627# @uri: The Uniform Resource Identifier identifying the source or 1628# address to listen on 1629# 1630# Returns: nothing on success 1631# 1632# Since: 2.3 1633# 1634# Notes: 1635# 1636# 1. It's a bad idea to use a string for the uri, but it needs 1637# to stay compatible with -incoming and the format of the uri 1638# is already exposed above libvirt. 1639# 1640# 2. QEMU must be started with -incoming defer to allow 1641# migrate-incoming to be used. 1642# 1643# 3. The uri format is the same as for -incoming 1644# 1645# Example: 1646# 1647# -> { "execute": "migrate-incoming", 1648# "arguments": { "uri": "tcp::4446" } } 1649# <- { "return": {} } 1650## 1651{ 'command': 'migrate-incoming', 'data': {'uri': 'str' } } 1652 1653## 1654# @xen-save-devices-state: 1655# 1656# Save the state of all devices to file. The RAM and the block 1657# devices of the VM are not saved by this command. 1658# 1659# @filename: the file to save the state of the devices to as binary 1660# data. See xen-save-devices-state.txt for a description of the 1661# binary format. 1662# 1663# @live: Optional argument to ask QEMU to treat this command as part 1664# of a live migration. Default to true. (since 2.11) 1665# 1666# Returns: Nothing on success 1667# 1668# Since: 1.1 1669# 1670# Example: 1671# 1672# -> { "execute": "xen-save-devices-state", 1673# "arguments": { "filename": "/tmp/save" } } 1674# <- { "return": {} } 1675## 1676{ 'command': 'xen-save-devices-state', 1677 'data': {'filename': 'str', '*live':'bool' } } 1678 1679## 1680# @xen-set-global-dirty-log: 1681# 1682# Enable or disable the global dirty log mode. 1683# 1684# @enable: true to enable, false to disable. 1685# 1686# Returns: nothing 1687# 1688# Since: 1.3 1689# 1690# Example: 1691# 1692# -> { "execute": "xen-set-global-dirty-log", 1693# "arguments": { "enable": true } } 1694# <- { "return": {} } 1695## 1696{ 'command': 'xen-set-global-dirty-log', 'data': { 'enable': 'bool' } } 1697 1698## 1699# @xen-load-devices-state: 1700# 1701# Load the state of all devices from file. The RAM and the block 1702# devices of the VM are not loaded by this command. 1703# 1704# @filename: the file to load the state of the devices from as binary 1705# data. See xen-save-devices-state.txt for a description of the 1706# binary format. 1707# 1708# Since: 2.7 1709# 1710# Example: 1711# 1712# -> { "execute": "xen-load-devices-state", 1713# "arguments": { "filename": "/tmp/resume" } } 1714# <- { "return": {} } 1715## 1716{ 'command': 'xen-load-devices-state', 'data': {'filename': 'str'} } 1717 1718## 1719# @xen-set-replication: 1720# 1721# Enable or disable replication. 1722# 1723# @enable: true to enable, false to disable. 1724# 1725# @primary: true for primary or false for secondary. 1726# 1727# @failover: true to do failover, false to stop. but cannot be 1728# specified if 'enable' is true. default value is false. 1729# 1730# Returns: nothing. 1731# 1732# Example: 1733# 1734# -> { "execute": "xen-set-replication", 1735# "arguments": {"enable": true, "primary": false} } 1736# <- { "return": {} } 1737# 1738# Since: 2.9 1739## 1740{ 'command': 'xen-set-replication', 1741 'data': { 'enable': 'bool', 'primary': 'bool', '*failover': 'bool' }, 1742 'if': 'CONFIG_REPLICATION' } 1743 1744## 1745# @ReplicationStatus: 1746# 1747# The result format for 'query-xen-replication-status'. 1748# 1749# @error: true if an error happened, false if replication is normal. 1750# 1751# @desc: the human readable error description string, when @error is 1752# 'true'. 1753# 1754# Since: 2.9 1755## 1756{ 'struct': 'ReplicationStatus', 1757 'data': { 'error': 'bool', '*desc': 'str' }, 1758 'if': 'CONFIG_REPLICATION' } 1759 1760## 1761# @query-xen-replication-status: 1762# 1763# Query replication status while the vm is running. 1764# 1765# Returns: A @ReplicationStatus object showing the status. 1766# 1767# Example: 1768# 1769# -> { "execute": "query-xen-replication-status" } 1770# <- { "return": { "error": false } } 1771# 1772# Since: 2.9 1773## 1774{ 'command': 'query-xen-replication-status', 1775 'returns': 'ReplicationStatus', 1776 'if': 'CONFIG_REPLICATION' } 1777 1778## 1779# @xen-colo-do-checkpoint: 1780# 1781# Xen uses this command to notify replication to trigger a checkpoint. 1782# 1783# Returns: nothing. 1784# 1785# Example: 1786# 1787# -> { "execute": "xen-colo-do-checkpoint" } 1788# <- { "return": {} } 1789# 1790# Since: 2.9 1791## 1792{ 'command': 'xen-colo-do-checkpoint', 1793 'if': 'CONFIG_REPLICATION' } 1794 1795## 1796# @COLOStatus: 1797# 1798# The result format for 'query-colo-status'. 1799# 1800# @mode: COLO running mode. If COLO is running, this field will 1801# return 'primary' or 'secondary'. 1802# 1803# @last-mode: COLO last running mode. If COLO is running, this field 1804# will return same like mode field, after failover we can use this 1805# field to get last colo mode. (since 4.0) 1806# 1807# @reason: describes the reason for the COLO exit. 1808# 1809# Since: 3.1 1810## 1811{ 'struct': 'COLOStatus', 1812 'data': { 'mode': 'COLOMode', 'last-mode': 'COLOMode', 1813 'reason': 'COLOExitReason' }, 1814 'if': 'CONFIG_REPLICATION' } 1815 1816## 1817# @query-colo-status: 1818# 1819# Query COLO status while the vm is running. 1820# 1821# Returns: A @COLOStatus object showing the status. 1822# 1823# Example: 1824# 1825# -> { "execute": "query-colo-status" } 1826# <- { "return": { "mode": "primary", "last-mode": "none", "reason": "request" } } 1827# 1828# Since: 3.1 1829## 1830{ 'command': 'query-colo-status', 1831 'returns': 'COLOStatus', 1832 'if': 'CONFIG_REPLICATION' } 1833 1834## 1835# @migrate-recover: 1836# 1837# Provide a recovery migration stream URI. 1838# 1839# @uri: the URI to be used for the recovery of migration stream. 1840# 1841# Returns: nothing. 1842# 1843# Example: 1844# 1845# -> { "execute": "migrate-recover", 1846# "arguments": { "uri": "tcp:192.168.1.200:12345" } } 1847# <- { "return": {} } 1848# 1849# Since: 3.0 1850## 1851{ 'command': 'migrate-recover', 1852 'data': { 'uri': 'str' }, 1853 'allow-oob': true } 1854 1855## 1856# @migrate-pause: 1857# 1858# Pause a migration. Currently it only supports postcopy. 1859# 1860# Returns: nothing. 1861# 1862# Example: 1863# 1864# -> { "execute": "migrate-pause" } 1865# <- { "return": {} } 1866# 1867# Since: 3.0 1868## 1869{ 'command': 'migrate-pause', 'allow-oob': true } 1870 1871## 1872# @UNPLUG_PRIMARY: 1873# 1874# Emitted from source side of a migration when migration state is 1875# WAIT_UNPLUG. Device was unplugged by guest operating system. Device 1876# resources in QEMU are kept on standby to be able to re-plug it in 1877# case of migration failure. 1878# 1879# @device-id: QEMU device id of the unplugged device 1880# 1881# Since: 4.2 1882# 1883# Example: 1884# 1885# <- { "event": "UNPLUG_PRIMARY", 1886# "data": { "device-id": "hostdev0" }, 1887# "timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } } 1888## 1889{ 'event': 'UNPLUG_PRIMARY', 1890 'data': { 'device-id': 'str' } } 1891 1892## 1893# @DirtyRateVcpu: 1894# 1895# Dirty rate of vcpu. 1896# 1897# @id: vcpu index. 1898# 1899# @dirty-rate: dirty rate. 1900# 1901# Since: 6.2 1902## 1903{ 'struct': 'DirtyRateVcpu', 1904 'data': { 'id': 'int', 'dirty-rate': 'int64' } } 1905 1906## 1907# @DirtyRateStatus: 1908# 1909# Dirty page rate measurement status. 1910# 1911# @unstarted: measuring thread has not been started yet 1912# 1913# @measuring: measuring thread is running 1914# 1915# @measured: dirty page rate is measured and the results are available 1916# 1917# Since: 5.2 1918## 1919{ 'enum': 'DirtyRateStatus', 1920 'data': [ 'unstarted', 'measuring', 'measured'] } 1921 1922## 1923# @DirtyRateMeasureMode: 1924# 1925# Method used to measure dirty page rate. Differences between 1926# available methods are explained in @calc-dirty-rate. 1927# 1928# @page-sampling: use page sampling 1929# 1930# @dirty-ring: use dirty ring 1931# 1932# @dirty-bitmap: use dirty bitmap 1933# 1934# Since: 6.2 1935## 1936{ 'enum': 'DirtyRateMeasureMode', 1937 'data': ['page-sampling', 'dirty-ring', 'dirty-bitmap'] } 1938 1939## 1940# @TimeUnit: 1941# 1942# Specifies unit in which time-related value is specified. 1943# 1944# @second: value is in seconds 1945# 1946# @millisecond: value is in milliseconds 1947# 1948# Since 8.2 1949# 1950## 1951{ 'enum': 'TimeUnit', 1952 'data': ['second', 'millisecond'] } 1953 1954## 1955# @DirtyRateInfo: 1956# 1957# Information about measured dirty page rate. 1958# 1959# @dirty-rate: an estimate of the dirty page rate of the VM in units 1960# of MiB/s. Value is present only when @status is 'measured'. 1961# 1962# @status: current status of dirty page rate measurements 1963# 1964# @start-time: start time in units of second for calculation 1965# 1966# @calc-time: time period for which dirty page rate was measured, 1967# expressed and rounded down to @calc-time-unit. 1968# 1969# @calc-time-unit: time unit of @calc-time (Since 8.2) 1970# 1971# @sample-pages: number of sampled pages per GiB of guest memory. 1972# Valid only in page-sampling mode (Since 6.1) 1973# 1974# @mode: mode that was used to measure dirty page rate (Since 6.2) 1975# 1976# @vcpu-dirty-rate: dirty rate for each vCPU if dirty-ring mode was 1977# specified (Since 6.2) 1978# 1979# Since: 5.2 1980## 1981{ 'struct': 'DirtyRateInfo', 1982 'data': {'*dirty-rate': 'int64', 1983 'status': 'DirtyRateStatus', 1984 'start-time': 'int64', 1985 'calc-time': 'int64', 1986 'calc-time-unit': 'TimeUnit', 1987 'sample-pages': 'uint64', 1988 'mode': 'DirtyRateMeasureMode', 1989 '*vcpu-dirty-rate': [ 'DirtyRateVcpu' ] } } 1990 1991## 1992# @calc-dirty-rate: 1993# 1994# Start measuring dirty page rate of the VM. Results can be retrieved 1995# with @query-dirty-rate after measurements are completed. 1996# 1997# Dirty page rate is the number of pages changed in a given time 1998# period expressed in MiB/s. The following methods of calculation are 1999# available: 2000# 2001# 1. In page sampling mode, a random subset of pages are selected and 2002# hashed twice: once at the beginning of measurement time period, 2003# and once again at the end. If two hashes for some page are 2004# different, the page is counted as changed. Since this method 2005# relies on sampling and hashing, calculated dirty page rate is 2006# only an estimate of its true value. Increasing @sample-pages 2007# improves estimation quality at the cost of higher computational 2008# overhead. 2009# 2010# 2. Dirty bitmap mode captures writes to memory (for example by 2011# temporarily revoking write access to all pages) and counting page 2012# faults. Information about modified pages is collected into a 2013# bitmap, where each bit corresponds to one guest page. This mode 2014# requires that KVM accelerator property "dirty-ring-size" is *not* 2015# set. 2016# 2017# 3. Dirty ring mode is similar to dirty bitmap mode, but the 2018# information about modified pages is collected into ring buffer. 2019# This mode tracks page modification per each vCPU separately. It 2020# requires that KVM accelerator property "dirty-ring-size" is set. 2021# 2022# @calc-time: time period for which dirty page rate is calculated. 2023# By default it is specified in seconds, but the unit can be set 2024# explicitly with @calc-time-unit. Note that larger @calc-time 2025# values will typically result in smaller dirty page rates because 2026# page dirtying is a one-time event. Once some page is counted 2027# as dirty during @calc-time period, further writes to this page 2028# will not increase dirty page rate anymore. 2029# 2030# @calc-time-unit: time unit in which @calc-time is specified. 2031# By default it is seconds. (Since 8.2) 2032# 2033# @sample-pages: number of sampled pages per each GiB of guest memory. 2034# Default value is 512. For 4KiB guest pages this corresponds to 2035# sampling ratio of 0.2%. This argument is used only in page 2036# sampling mode. (Since 6.1) 2037# 2038# @mode: mechanism for tracking dirty pages. Default value is 2039# 'page-sampling'. Others are 'dirty-bitmap' and 'dirty-ring'. 2040# (Since 6.1) 2041# 2042# Since: 5.2 2043# 2044# Example: 2045# 2046# -> {"execute": "calc-dirty-rate", "arguments": {"calc-time": 1, 2047# 'sample-pages': 512} } 2048# <- { "return": {} } 2049# 2050# Measure dirty rate using dirty bitmap for 500 milliseconds: 2051# 2052# -> {"execute": "calc-dirty-rate", "arguments": {"calc-time": 500, 2053# "calc-time-unit": "millisecond", "mode": "dirty-bitmap"} } 2054# 2055# <- { "return": {} } 2056## 2057{ 'command': 'calc-dirty-rate', 'data': {'calc-time': 'int64', 2058 '*calc-time-unit': 'TimeUnit', 2059 '*sample-pages': 'int', 2060 '*mode': 'DirtyRateMeasureMode'} } 2061 2062## 2063# @query-dirty-rate: 2064# 2065# Query results of the most recent invocation of @calc-dirty-rate. 2066# 2067# @calc-time-unit: time unit in which to report calculation time. 2068# By default it is reported in seconds. (Since 8.2) 2069# 2070# Since: 5.2 2071# 2072# Examples: 2073# 2074# 1. Measurement is in progress: 2075# 2076# <- {"status": "measuring", "sample-pages": 512, 2077# "mode": "page-sampling", "start-time": 1693900454, "calc-time": 10, 2078# "calc-time-unit": "second"} 2079# 2080# 2. Measurement has been completed: 2081# 2082# <- {"status": "measured", "sample-pages": 512, "dirty-rate": 108, 2083# "mode": "page-sampling", "start-time": 1693900454, "calc-time": 10, 2084# "calc-time-unit": "second"} 2085## 2086{ 'command': 'query-dirty-rate', 'data': {'*calc-time-unit': 'TimeUnit' }, 2087 'returns': 'DirtyRateInfo' } 2088 2089## 2090# @DirtyLimitInfo: 2091# 2092# Dirty page rate limit information of a virtual CPU. 2093# 2094# @cpu-index: index of a virtual CPU. 2095# 2096# @limit-rate: upper limit of dirty page rate (MB/s) for a virtual 2097# CPU, 0 means unlimited. 2098# 2099# @current-rate: current dirty page rate (MB/s) for a virtual CPU. 2100# 2101# Since: 7.1 2102## 2103{ 'struct': 'DirtyLimitInfo', 2104 'data': { 'cpu-index': 'int', 2105 'limit-rate': 'uint64', 2106 'current-rate': 'uint64' } } 2107 2108## 2109# @set-vcpu-dirty-limit: 2110# 2111# Set the upper limit of dirty page rate for virtual CPUs. 2112# 2113# Requires KVM with accelerator property "dirty-ring-size" set. A 2114# virtual CPU's dirty page rate is a measure of its memory load. To 2115# observe dirty page rates, use @calc-dirty-rate. 2116# 2117# @cpu-index: index of a virtual CPU, default is all. 2118# 2119# @dirty-rate: upper limit of dirty page rate (MB/s) for virtual CPUs. 2120# 2121# Since: 7.1 2122# 2123# Example: 2124# 2125# -> {"execute": "set-vcpu-dirty-limit"} 2126# "arguments": { "dirty-rate": 200, 2127# "cpu-index": 1 } } 2128# <- { "return": {} } 2129## 2130{ 'command': 'set-vcpu-dirty-limit', 2131 'data': { '*cpu-index': 'int', 2132 'dirty-rate': 'uint64' } } 2133 2134## 2135# @cancel-vcpu-dirty-limit: 2136# 2137# Cancel the upper limit of dirty page rate for virtual CPUs. 2138# 2139# Cancel the dirty page limit for the vCPU which has been set with 2140# set-vcpu-dirty-limit command. Note that this command requires 2141# support from dirty ring, same as the "set-vcpu-dirty-limit". 2142# 2143# @cpu-index: index of a virtual CPU, default is all. 2144# 2145# Since: 7.1 2146# 2147# Example: 2148# 2149# -> {"execute": "cancel-vcpu-dirty-limit"}, 2150# "arguments": { "cpu-index": 1 } } 2151# <- { "return": {} } 2152## 2153{ 'command': 'cancel-vcpu-dirty-limit', 2154 'data': { '*cpu-index': 'int'} } 2155 2156## 2157# @query-vcpu-dirty-limit: 2158# 2159# Returns information about virtual CPU dirty page rate limits, if 2160# any. 2161# 2162# Since: 7.1 2163# 2164# Example: 2165# 2166# -> {"execute": "query-vcpu-dirty-limit"} 2167# <- {"return": [ 2168# { "limit-rate": 60, "current-rate": 3, "cpu-index": 0}, 2169# { "limit-rate": 60, "current-rate": 3, "cpu-index": 1}]} 2170## 2171{ 'command': 'query-vcpu-dirty-limit', 2172 'returns': [ 'DirtyLimitInfo' ] } 2173 2174## 2175# @MigrationThreadInfo: 2176# 2177# Information about migrationthreads 2178# 2179# @name: the name of migration thread 2180# 2181# @thread-id: ID of the underlying host thread 2182# 2183# Since: 7.2 2184## 2185{ 'struct': 'MigrationThreadInfo', 2186 'data': {'name': 'str', 2187 'thread-id': 'int'} } 2188 2189## 2190# @query-migrationthreads: 2191# 2192# Returns information of migration threads 2193# 2194# data: migration thread name 2195# 2196# Returns: information about migration threads 2197# 2198# Since: 7.2 2199## 2200{ 'command': 'query-migrationthreads', 2201 'returns': ['MigrationThreadInfo'] } 2202 2203## 2204# @snapshot-save: 2205# 2206# Save a VM snapshot 2207# 2208# @job-id: identifier for the newly created job 2209# 2210# @tag: name of the snapshot to create 2211# 2212# @vmstate: block device node name to save vmstate to 2213# 2214# @devices: list of block device node names to save a snapshot to 2215# 2216# Applications should not assume that the snapshot save is complete 2217# when this command returns. The job commands / events must be used 2218# to determine completion and to fetch details of any errors that 2219# arise. 2220# 2221# Note that execution of the guest CPUs may be stopped during the time 2222# it takes to save the snapshot. A future version of QEMU may ensure 2223# CPUs are executing continuously. 2224# 2225# It is strongly recommended that @devices contain all writable block 2226# device nodes if a consistent snapshot is required. 2227# 2228# If @tag already exists, an error will be reported 2229# 2230# Returns: nothing 2231# 2232# Example: 2233# 2234# -> { "execute": "snapshot-save", 2235# "arguments": { 2236# "job-id": "snapsave0", 2237# "tag": "my-snap", 2238# "vmstate": "disk0", 2239# "devices": ["disk0", "disk1"] 2240# } 2241# } 2242# <- { "return": { } } 2243# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2244# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1432121972, "microseconds": 744001}, 2245# "data": {"status": "created", "id": "snapsave0"}} 2246# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2247# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2248# "data": {"status": "running", "id": "snapsave0"}} 2249# <- {"event": "STOP", 2250# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122372, "microseconds": 744001} } 2251# <- {"event": "RESUME", 2252# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122572, "microseconds": 744001} } 2253# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2254# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122772, "microseconds": 744001}, 2255# "data": {"status": "waiting", "id": "snapsave0"}} 2256# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2257# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1432122972, "microseconds": 744001}, 2258# "data": {"status": "pending", "id": "snapsave0"}} 2259# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2260# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1432123172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2261# "data": {"status": "concluded", "id": "snapsave0"}} 2262# -> {"execute": "query-jobs"} 2263# <- {"return": [{"current-progress": 1, 2264# "status": "concluded", 2265# "total-progress": 1, 2266# "type": "snapshot-save", 2267# "id": "snapsave0"}]} 2268# 2269# Since: 6.0 2270## 2271{ 'command': 'snapshot-save', 2272 'data': { 'job-id': 'str', 2273 'tag': 'str', 2274 'vmstate': 'str', 2275 'devices': ['str'] } } 2276 2277## 2278# @snapshot-load: 2279# 2280# Load a VM snapshot 2281# 2282# @job-id: identifier for the newly created job 2283# 2284# @tag: name of the snapshot to load. 2285# 2286# @vmstate: block device node name to load vmstate from 2287# 2288# @devices: list of block device node names to load a snapshot from 2289# 2290# Applications should not assume that the snapshot load is complete 2291# when this command returns. The job commands / events must be used 2292# to determine completion and to fetch details of any errors that 2293# arise. 2294# 2295# Note that execution of the guest CPUs will be stopped during the 2296# time it takes to load the snapshot. 2297# 2298# It is strongly recommended that @devices contain all writable block 2299# device nodes that can have changed since the original @snapshot-save 2300# command execution. 2301# 2302# Returns: nothing 2303# 2304# Example: 2305# 2306# -> { "execute": "snapshot-load", 2307# "arguments": { 2308# "job-id": "snapload0", 2309# "tag": "my-snap", 2310# "vmstate": "disk0", 2311# "devices": ["disk0", "disk1"] 2312# } 2313# } 2314# <- { "return": { } } 2315# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2316# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1472124172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2317# "data": {"status": "created", "id": "snapload0"}} 2318# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2319# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1472125172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2320# "data": {"status": "running", "id": "snapload0"}} 2321# <- {"event": "STOP", 2322# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1472125472, "microseconds": 744001} } 2323# <- {"event": "RESUME", 2324# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1472125872, "microseconds": 744001} } 2325# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2326# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1472126172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2327# "data": {"status": "waiting", "id": "snapload0"}} 2328# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2329# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1472127172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2330# "data": {"status": "pending", "id": "snapload0"}} 2331# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2332# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1472128172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2333# "data": {"status": "concluded", "id": "snapload0"}} 2334# -> {"execute": "query-jobs"} 2335# <- {"return": [{"current-progress": 1, 2336# "status": "concluded", 2337# "total-progress": 1, 2338# "type": "snapshot-load", 2339# "id": "snapload0"}]} 2340# 2341# Since: 6.0 2342## 2343{ 'command': 'snapshot-load', 2344 'data': { 'job-id': 'str', 2345 'tag': 'str', 2346 'vmstate': 'str', 2347 'devices': ['str'] } } 2348 2349## 2350# @snapshot-delete: 2351# 2352# Delete a VM snapshot 2353# 2354# @job-id: identifier for the newly created job 2355# 2356# @tag: name of the snapshot to delete. 2357# 2358# @devices: list of block device node names to delete a snapshot from 2359# 2360# Applications should not assume that the snapshot delete is complete 2361# when this command returns. The job commands / events must be used 2362# to determine completion and to fetch details of any errors that 2363# arise. 2364# 2365# Returns: nothing 2366# 2367# Example: 2368# 2369# -> { "execute": "snapshot-delete", 2370# "arguments": { 2371# "job-id": "snapdelete0", 2372# "tag": "my-snap", 2373# "devices": ["disk0", "disk1"] 2374# } 2375# } 2376# <- { "return": { } } 2377# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2378# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1442124172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2379# "data": {"status": "created", "id": "snapdelete0"}} 2380# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2381# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1442125172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2382# "data": {"status": "running", "id": "snapdelete0"}} 2383# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2384# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1442126172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2385# "data": {"status": "waiting", "id": "snapdelete0"}} 2386# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2387# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1442127172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2388# "data": {"status": "pending", "id": "snapdelete0"}} 2389# <- {"event": "JOB_STATUS_CHANGE", 2390# "timestamp": {"seconds": 1442128172, "microseconds": 744001}, 2391# "data": {"status": "concluded", "id": "snapdelete0"}} 2392# -> {"execute": "query-jobs"} 2393# <- {"return": [{"current-progress": 1, 2394# "status": "concluded", 2395# "total-progress": 1, 2396# "type": "snapshot-delete", 2397# "id": "snapdelete0"}]} 2398# 2399# Since: 6.0 2400## 2401{ 'command': 'snapshot-delete', 2402 'data': { 'job-id': 'str', 2403 'tag': 'str', 2404 'devices': ['str'] } } 2405