| .. |
| Copyright (C) 2009-2016 Red Hat, Inc. |
| |
| This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or |
| later. See the COPYING file in the top-level directory. |
| |
| |
| =================================== |
| QEMU Machine Protocol Specification |
| =================================== |
| |
| The QEMU Machine Protocol (QMP) is a JSON-based |
| protocol which is available for applications to operate QEMU at the |
| machine-level. It is also in use by the QEMU Guest Agent (QGA), which |
| is available for host applications to interact with the guest |
| operating system. This page specifies the general format of |
| the protocol; details of the commands and data structures can |
| be found in the :doc:`qemu-qmp-ref` and the :doc:`qemu-ga-ref`. |
| |
| .. contents:: |
| |
| Protocol Specification |
| ====================== |
| |
| This section details the protocol format. For the purpose of this |
| document, "Server" is either QEMU or the QEMU Guest Agent, and |
| "Client" is any application communicating with it via QMP. |
| |
| JSON data structures, when mentioned in this document, are always in the |
| following format: |
| |
| json-DATA-STRUCTURE-NAME |
| |
| Where DATA-STRUCTURE-NAME is any valid JSON data structure, as defined |
| by the `JSON standard <http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc8259.txt>`_. |
| |
| The server expects its input to be encoded in UTF-8, and sends its |
| output encoded in ASCII. |
| |
| For convenience, json-object members mentioned in this document will |
| be in a certain order. However, in real protocol usage they can be in |
| ANY order, thus no particular order should be assumed. On the other |
| hand, use of json-array elements presumes that preserving order is |
| important unless specifically documented otherwise. Repeating a key |
| within a json-object gives unpredictable results. |
| |
| Also for convenience, the server will accept an extension of |
| ``'single-quoted'`` strings in place of the usual ``"double-quoted"`` |
| json-string, and both input forms of strings understand an additional |
| escape sequence of ``\'`` for a single quote. The server will only use |
| double quoting on output. |
| |
| General Definitions |
| ------------------- |
| |
| All interactions transmitted by the Server are json-objects, always |
| terminating with CRLF. |
| |
| All json-objects members are mandatory when not specified otherwise. |
| |
| Server Greeting |
| --------------- |
| |
| Right when connected the Server will issue a greeting message, which signals |
| that the connection has been successfully established and that the Server is |
| ready for capabilities negotiation (for more information refer to section |
| `Capabilities Negotiation`_). |
| |
| The greeting message format is: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| { "QMP": { "version": json-object, "capabilities": json-array } } |
| |
| Where: |
| |
| - The ``version`` member contains the Server's version information (the format |
| is the same as for the query-version command). |
| - The ``capabilities`` member specifies the availability of features beyond the |
| baseline specification; the order of elements in this array has no |
| particular significance. |
| |
| Capabilities |
| ------------ |
| |
| Currently supported capabilities are: |
| |
| ``oob`` |
| the QMP server supports "out-of-band" (OOB) command |
| execution, as described in section `Out-of-band execution`_. |
| |
| Issuing Commands |
| ---------------- |
| |
| The format for command execution is: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| { "execute": json-string, "arguments": json-object, "id": json-value } |
| |
| or |
| |
| :: |
| |
| { "exec-oob": json-string, "arguments": json-object, "id": json-value } |
| |
| Where: |
| |
| - The ``execute`` or ``exec-oob`` member identifies the command to be |
| executed by the server. The latter requests out-of-band execution. |
| - The ``arguments`` member is used to pass any arguments required for the |
| execution of the command, it is optional when no arguments are |
| required. Each command documents what contents will be considered |
| valid when handling the json-argument. |
| - The ``id`` member is a transaction identification associated with the |
| command execution, it is optional and will be part of the response |
| if provided. The ``id`` member can be any json-value. A json-number |
| incremented for each successive command works fine. |
| |
| The actual commands are documented in the :doc:`qemu-qmp-ref`. |
| |
| Out-of-band execution |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The server normally reads, executes and responds to one command after |
| the other. The client therefore receives command responses in issue |
| order. |
| |
| With out-of-band execution enabled via `capabilities negotiation`_, |
| the server reads and queues commands as they arrive. It executes |
| commands from the queue one after the other. Commands executed |
| out-of-band jump the queue: the command get executed right away, |
| possibly overtaking prior in-band commands. The client may therefore |
| receive such a command's response before responses from prior in-band |
| commands. |
| |
| To be able to match responses back to their commands, the client needs |
| to pass ``id`` with out-of-band commands. Passing it with all commands |
| is recommended for clients that accept capability ``oob``. |
| |
| If the client sends in-band commands faster than the server can |
| execute them, the server will stop reading requests until the request |
| queue length is reduced to an acceptable range. |
| |
| To ensure commands to be executed out-of-band get read and executed, |
| the client should have at most eight in-band commands in flight. |
| |
| Only a few commands support out-of-band execution. The ones that do |
| have ``"allow-oob": true`` in the output of ``query-qmp-schema``. |
| |
| Commands Responses |
| ------------------ |
| |
| There are two possible responses which the Server will issue as the result |
| of a command execution: success or error. |
| |
| As long as the commands were issued with a proper ``id`` field, then the |
| same ``id`` field will be attached in the corresponding response message |
| so that requests and responses can match. Clients should drop all the |
| responses that have an unknown ``id`` field. |
| |
| Success |
| ------- |
| |
| The format of a success response is: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| { "return": json-value, "id": json-value } |
| |
| Where: |
| |
| - The ``return`` member contains the data returned by the command, which |
| is defined on a per-command basis (usually a json-object or |
| json-array of json-objects, but sometimes a json-number, json-string, |
| or json-array of json-strings); it is an empty json-object if the |
| command does not return data. |
| - The ``id`` member contains the transaction identification associated |
| with the command execution if issued by the Client. |
| |
| Error |
| ----- |
| |
| The format of an error response is: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| { "error": { "class": json-string, "desc": json-string }, "id": json-value } |
| |
| Where: |
| |
| - The ``class`` member contains the error class name (eg. ``"GenericError"``). |
| - The ``desc`` member is a human-readable error message. Clients should |
| not attempt to parse this message. |
| - The ``id`` member contains the transaction identification associated with |
| the command execution if issued by the Client. |
| |
| NOTE: Some errors can occur before the Server is able to read the ``id`` member; |
| in these cases the ``id`` member will not be part of the error response, even |
| if provided by the client. |
| |
| Asynchronous events |
| ------------------- |
| |
| As a result of state changes, the Server may send messages unilaterally |
| to the Client at any time, when not in the middle of any other |
| response. They are called "asynchronous events". |
| |
| The format of asynchronous events is: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| { "event": json-string, "data": json-object, |
| "timestamp": { "seconds": json-number, "microseconds": json-number } } |
| |
| Where: |
| |
| - The ``event`` member contains the event's name. |
| - The ``data`` member contains event specific data, which is defined in a |
| per-event basis. It is optional. |
| - The ``timestamp`` member contains the exact time of when the event |
| occurred in the Server. It is a fixed json-object with time in |
| seconds and microseconds relative to the Unix Epoch (1 Jan 1970); if |
| there is a failure to retrieve host time, both members of the |
| timestamp will be set to -1. |
| |
| The actual asynchronous events are documented in the :doc:`qemu-qmp-ref`. |
| |
| Some events are rate-limited to at most one per second. If additional |
| "similar" events arrive within one second, all but the last one are |
| dropped, and the last one is delayed. "Similar" normally means same |
| event type. |
| |
| Forcing the JSON parser into known-good state |
| --------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Incomplete or invalid input can leave the server's JSON parser in a |
| state where it can't parse additional commands. To get it back into |
| known-good state, the client should provoke a lexical error. |
| |
| The cleanest way to do that is sending an ASCII control character |
| other than ``\t`` (horizontal tab), ``\r`` (carriage return), or |
| ``\n`` (new line). |
| |
| Sadly, older versions of QEMU can fail to flag this as an error. If a |
| client needs to deal with them, it should send a 0xFF byte. |
| |
| QGA Synchronization |
| ------------------- |
| |
| When a client connects to QGA over a transport lacking proper |
| connection semantics such as virtio-serial, QGA may have read partial |
| input from a previous client. The client needs to force QGA's parser |
| into known-good state using the previous section's technique. |
| Moreover, the client may receive output a previous client didn't read. |
| To help with skipping that output, QGA provides the |
| ``guest-sync-delimited`` command. Refer to its documentation for |
| details. |
| |
| |
| QMP Examples |
| ============ |
| |
| This section provides some examples of real QMP usage, in all of them |
| ``->`` marks text sent by the Client and ``<-`` marks replies by the Server. |
| |
| .. admonition:: Example |
| |
| Server greeting |
| |
| .. code-block:: QMP |
| |
| <- { "QMP": {"version": {"qemu": {"micro": 0, "minor": 0, "major": 3}, |
| "package": "v3.0.0"}, "capabilities": ["oob"] } } |
| |
| .. admonition:: Example |
| |
| Capabilities negotiation |
| |
| .. code-block:: QMP |
| |
| -> { "execute": "qmp_capabilities", "arguments": { "enable": ["oob"] } } |
| <- { "return": {}} |
| |
| .. admonition:: Example |
| |
| Simple 'stop' execution |
| |
| .. code-block:: QMP |
| |
| -> { "execute": "stop" } |
| <- { "return": {} } |
| |
| .. admonition:: Example |
| |
| KVM information |
| |
| .. code-block:: QMP |
| |
| -> { "execute": "query-kvm", "id": "example" } |
| <- { "return": { "enabled": true, "present": true }, "id": "example"} |
| |
| .. admonition:: Example |
| |
| Parsing error |
| |
| .. code-block:: QMP |
| |
| -> { "execute": } |
| <- { "error": { "class": "GenericError", "desc": "JSON parse error, expecting value" } } |
| |
| .. admonition:: Example |
| |
| Powerdown event |
| |
| .. code-block:: QMP |
| |
| <- { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1258551470, "microseconds": 802384 }, |
| "event": "POWERDOWN" } |
| |
| .. admonition:: Example |
| |
| Out-of-band execution |
| |
| .. code-block:: QMP |
| |
| -> { "exec-oob": "migrate-pause", "id": 42 } |
| <- { "id": 42, |
| "error": { "class": "GenericError", |
| "desc": "migrate-pause is currently only supported during postcopy-active state" } } |
| |
| |
| Capabilities Negotiation |
| ======================== |
| |
| When a Client successfully establishes a connection, the Server is in |
| Capabilities Negotiation mode. |
| |
| In this mode only the ``qmp_capabilities`` command is allowed to run; all |
| other commands will return the ``CommandNotFound`` error. Asynchronous |
| messages are not delivered either. |
| |
| Clients should use the ``qmp_capabilities`` command to enable capabilities |
| advertised in the `Server Greeting`_ which they support. |
| |
| When the ``qmp_capabilities`` command is issued, and if it does not return an |
| error, the Server enters Command mode where capabilities changes take |
| effect, all commands (except ``qmp_capabilities``) are allowed and asynchronous |
| messages are delivered. |
| |
| Compatibility Considerations |
| ============================ |
| |
| All protocol changes or new features which modify the protocol format in an |
| incompatible way are disabled by default and will be advertised by the |
| capabilities array (in the `Server Greeting`_). Thus, Clients can check |
| that array and enable the capabilities they support. |
| |
| The QMP Server performs a type check on the arguments to a command. It |
| generates an error if a value does not have the expected type for its |
| key, or if it does not understand a key that the Client included. The |
| strictness of the Server catches wrong assumptions of Clients about |
| the Server's schema. Clients can assume that, when such validation |
| errors occur, they will be reported before the command generated any |
| side effect. |
| |
| However, Clients must not assume any particular: |
| |
| - Length of json-arrays |
| - Size of json-objects; in particular, future versions of QEMU may add |
| new keys and Clients should be able to ignore them |
| - Order of json-object members or json-array elements |
| - Amount of errors generated by a command, that is, new errors can be added |
| to any existing command in newer versions of the Server |
| |
| Any command or member name beginning with ``x-`` is deemed experimental, |
| and may be withdrawn or changed in an incompatible manner in a future |
| release. |
| |
| Of course, the Server does guarantee to send valid JSON. But apart from |
| this, a Client should be "conservative in what they send, and liberal in |
| what they accept". |
| |
| Downstream extension of QMP |
| =========================== |
| |
| We recommend that downstream consumers of QEMU do *not* modify QMP. |
| Management tools should be able to support both upstream and downstream |
| versions of QMP without special logic, and downstream extensions are |
| inherently at odds with that. |
| |
| However, we recognize that it is sometimes impossible for downstreams to |
| avoid modifying QMP. Both upstream and downstream need to take care to |
| preserve long-term compatibility and interoperability. |
| |
| To help with that, QMP reserves JSON object member names beginning with |
| ``__`` (double underscore) for downstream use ("downstream names"). This |
| means upstream will never use any downstream names for its commands, |
| arguments, errors, asynchronous events, and so forth. |
| |
| Any new names downstream wishes to add must begin with ``__``. To |
| ensure compatibility with other downstreams, it is strongly |
| recommended that you prefix your downstream names with ``__RFQDN_`` where |
| RFQDN is a valid, reverse fully qualified domain name which you |
| control. For example, a qemu-kvm specific monitor command would be: |
| |
| :: |
| |
| (qemu) __org.linux-kvm_enable_irqchip |
| |
| Downstream must not change the `server greeting`_ other than |
| to offer additional capabilities. But see below for why even that is |
| discouraged. |
| |
| The section `Compatibility Considerations`_ applies to downstream as well |
| as to upstream, obviously. It follows that downstream must behave |
| exactly like upstream for any input not containing members with |
| downstream names ("downstream members"), except it may add members |
| with downstream names to its output. |
| |
| Thus, a client should not be able to distinguish downstream from |
| upstream as long as it doesn't send input with downstream members, and |
| properly ignores any downstream members in the output it receives. |
| |
| Advice on downstream modifications: |
| |
| 1. Introducing new commands is okay. If you want to extend an existing |
| command, consider introducing a new one with the new behaviour |
| instead. |
| |
| 2. Introducing new asynchronous messages is okay. If you want to extend |
| an existing message, consider adding a new one instead. |
| |
| 3. Introducing new errors for use in new commands is okay. Adding new |
| errors to existing commands counts as extension, so 1. applies. |
| |
| 4. New capabilities are strongly discouraged. Capabilities are for |
| evolving the basic protocol, and multiple diverging basic protocol |
| dialects are most undesirable. |