| ================================== |
| How to use the QAPI code generator |
| ================================== |
| |
| .. |
| Copyright IBM Corp. 2011 |
| Copyright (C) 2012-2016 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. |
| |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| QAPI is a native C API within QEMU which provides management-level |
| functionality to internal and external users. For external |
| users/processes, this interface is made available by a JSON-based wire |
| format for the QEMU Monitor Protocol (QMP) for controlling qemu, as |
| well as the QEMU Guest Agent (QGA) for communicating with the guest. |
| The remainder of this document uses "Client JSON Protocol" when |
| referring to the wire contents of a QMP or QGA connection. |
| |
| To map between Client JSON Protocol interfaces and the native C API, |
| we generate C code from a QAPI schema. This document describes the |
| QAPI schema language, and how it gets mapped to the Client JSON |
| Protocol and to C. It additionally provides guidance on maintaining |
| Client JSON Protocol compatibility. |
| |
| |
| The QAPI schema language |
| ======================== |
| |
| The QAPI schema defines the Client JSON Protocol's commands and |
| events, as well as types used by them. Forward references are |
| allowed. |
| |
| It is permissible for the schema to contain additional types not used |
| by any commands or events, for the side effect of generated C code |
| used internally. |
| |
| There are several kinds of types: simple types (a number of built-in |
| types, such as ``int`` and ``str``; as well as enumerations), arrays, |
| complex types (structs and unions), and alternate types (a choice |
| between other types). |
| |
| |
| Schema syntax |
| ------------- |
| |
| Syntax is loosely based on `JSON <http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc8259.txt>`_. |
| Differences: |
| |
| * Comments: start with a hash character (``#``) that is not part of a |
| string, and extend to the end of the line. |
| |
| * Strings are enclosed in ``'single quotes'``, not ``"double quotes"``. |
| |
| * Strings are restricted to printable ASCII, and escape sequences to |
| just ``\\``. |
| |
| * Numbers and ``null`` are not supported. |
| |
| A second layer of syntax defines the sequences of JSON texts that are |
| a correctly structured QAPI schema. We provide a grammar for this |
| syntax in an EBNF-like notation: |
| |
| * Production rules look like ``non-terminal = expression`` |
| * Concatenation: expression ``A B`` matches expression ``A``, then ``B`` |
| * Alternation: expression ``A | B`` matches expression ``A`` or ``B`` |
| * Repetition: expression ``A...`` matches zero or more occurrences of |
| expression ``A`` |
| * Repetition: expression ``A, ...`` matches zero or more occurrences of |
| expression ``A`` separated by ``,`` |
| * Grouping: expression ``( A )`` matches expression ``A`` |
| * JSON's structural characters are terminals: ``{ } [ ] : ,`` |
| * JSON's literal names are terminals: ``false true`` |
| * String literals enclosed in ``'single quotes'`` are terminal, and match |
| this JSON string, with a leading ``*`` stripped off |
| * When JSON object member's name starts with ``*``, the member is |
| optional. |
| * The symbol ``STRING`` is a terminal, and matches any JSON string |
| * The symbol ``BOOL`` is a terminal, and matches JSON ``false`` or ``true`` |
| * ALL-CAPS words other than ``STRING`` are non-terminals |
| |
| The order of members within JSON objects does not matter unless |
| explicitly noted. |
| |
| A QAPI schema consists of a series of top-level expressions:: |
| |
| SCHEMA = TOP-LEVEL-EXPR... |
| |
| The top-level expressions are all JSON objects. Code and |
| documentation is generated in schema definition order. Code order |
| should not matter. |
| |
| A top-level expressions is either a directive or a definition:: |
| |
| TOP-LEVEL-EXPR = DIRECTIVE | DEFINITION |
| |
| There are two kinds of directives and six kinds of definitions:: |
| |
| DIRECTIVE = INCLUDE | PRAGMA |
| DEFINITION = ENUM | STRUCT | UNION | ALTERNATE | COMMAND | EVENT |
| |
| These are discussed in detail below. |
| |
| |
| Built-in Types |
| -------------- |
| |
| The following types are predefined, and map to C as follows: |
| |
| ============= ============== ============================================ |
| Schema C JSON |
| ============= ============== ============================================ |
| ``str`` ``char *`` any JSON string, UTF-8 |
| ``number`` ``double`` any JSON number |
| ``int`` ``int64_t`` a JSON number without fractional part |
| that fits into the C integer type |
| ``int8`` ``int8_t`` likewise |
| ``int16`` ``int16_t`` likewise |
| ``int32`` ``int32_t`` likewise |
| ``int64`` ``int64_t`` likewise |
| ``uint8`` ``uint8_t`` likewise |
| ``uint16`` ``uint16_t`` likewise |
| ``uint32`` ``uint32_t`` likewise |
| ``uint64`` ``uint64_t`` likewise |
| ``size`` ``uint64_t`` like ``uint64_t``, except |
| ``StringInputVisitor`` accepts size suffixes |
| ``bool`` ``bool`` JSON ``true`` or ``false`` |
| ``null`` ``QNull *`` JSON ``null`` |
| ``any`` ``QObject *`` any JSON value |
| ``QType`` ``QType`` JSON string matching enum ``QType`` values |
| ============= ============== ============================================ |
| |
| |
| Include directives |
| ------------------ |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| INCLUDE = { 'include': STRING } |
| |
| The QAPI schema definitions can be modularized using the 'include' directive:: |
| |
| { 'include': 'path/to/file.json' } |
| |
| The directive is evaluated recursively, and include paths are relative |
| to the file using the directive. Multiple includes of the same file |
| are idempotent. |
| |
| As a matter of style, it is a good idea to have all files be |
| self-contained, but at the moment, nothing prevents an included file |
| from making a forward reference to a type that is only introduced by |
| an outer file. The parser may be made stricter in the future to |
| prevent incomplete include files. |
| |
| .. _pragma: |
| |
| Pragma directives |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| PRAGMA = { 'pragma': { |
| '*doc-required': BOOL, |
| '*command-name-exceptions': [ STRING, ... ], |
| '*command-returns-exceptions': [ STRING, ... ], |
| '*member-name-exceptions': [ STRING, ... ] } } |
| |
| The pragma directive lets you control optional generator behavior. |
| |
| Pragma's scope is currently the complete schema. Setting the same |
| pragma to different values in parts of the schema doesn't work. |
| |
| Pragma 'doc-required' takes a boolean value. If true, documentation |
| is required. Default is false. |
| |
| Pragma 'command-name-exceptions' takes a list of commands whose names |
| may contain ``"_"`` instead of ``"-"``. Default is none. |
| |
| Pragma 'command-returns-exceptions' takes a list of commands that may |
| violate the rules on permitted return types. Default is none. |
| |
| Pragma 'member-name-exceptions' takes a list of types whose member |
| names may contain uppercase letters, and ``"_"`` instead of ``"-"``. |
| Default is none. |
| |
| .. _ENUM-VALUE: |
| |
| Enumeration types |
| ----------------- |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| ENUM = { 'enum': STRING, |
| 'data': [ ENUM-VALUE, ... ], |
| '*prefix': STRING, |
| '*if': COND, |
| '*features': FEATURES } |
| ENUM-VALUE = STRING |
| | { 'name': STRING, |
| '*if': COND, |
| '*features': FEATURES } |
| |
| Member 'enum' names the enum type. |
| |
| Each member of the 'data' array defines a value of the enumeration |
| type. The form STRING is shorthand for :code:`{ 'name': STRING }`. The |
| 'name' values must be be distinct. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| { 'enum': 'MyEnum', 'data': [ 'value1', 'value2', 'value3' ] } |
| |
| Nothing prevents an empty enumeration, although it is probably not |
| useful. |
| |
| On the wire, an enumeration type's value is represented by its |
| (string) name. In C, it's represented by an enumeration constant. |
| These are of the form PREFIX_NAME, where PREFIX is derived from the |
| enumeration type's name, and NAME from the value's name. For the |
| example above, the generator maps 'MyEnum' to MY_ENUM and 'value1' to |
| VALUE1, resulting in the enumeration constant MY_ENUM_VALUE1. The |
| optional 'prefix' member overrides PREFIX. |
| |
| The generated C enumeration constants have values 0, 1, ..., N-1 (in |
| QAPI schema order), where N is the number of values. There is an |
| additional enumeration constant PREFIX__MAX with value N. |
| |
| Do not use string or an integer type when an enumeration type can do |
| the job satisfactorily. |
| |
| The optional 'if' member specifies a conditional. See `Configuring the |
| schema`_ below for more on this. |
| |
| The optional 'features' member specifies features. See Features_ |
| below for more on this. |
| |
| |
| .. _TYPE-REF: |
| |
| Type references and array types |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| TYPE-REF = STRING | ARRAY-TYPE |
| ARRAY-TYPE = [ STRING ] |
| |
| A string denotes the type named by the string. |
| |
| A one-element array containing a string denotes an array of the type |
| named by the string. Example: ``['int']`` denotes an array of ``int``. |
| |
| |
| Struct types |
| ------------ |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| STRUCT = { 'struct': STRING, |
| 'data': MEMBERS, |
| '*base': STRING, |
| '*if': COND, |
| '*features': FEATURES } |
| MEMBERS = { MEMBER, ... } |
| MEMBER = STRING : TYPE-REF |
| | STRING : { 'type': TYPE-REF, |
| '*if': COND, |
| '*features': FEATURES } |
| |
| Member 'struct' names the struct type. |
| |
| Each MEMBER of the 'data' object defines a member of the struct type. |
| |
| .. _MEMBERS: |
| |
| The MEMBER's STRING name consists of an optional ``*`` prefix and the |
| struct member name. If ``*`` is present, the member is optional. |
| |
| The MEMBER's value defines its properties, in particular its type. |
| The form TYPE-REF_ is shorthand for :code:`{ 'type': TYPE-REF }`. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| { 'struct': 'MyType', |
| 'data': { 'member1': 'str', 'member2': ['int'], '*member3': 'str' } } |
| |
| A struct type corresponds to a struct in C, and an object in JSON. |
| The C struct's members are generated in QAPI schema order. |
| |
| The optional 'base' member names a struct type whose members are to be |
| included in this type. They go first in the C struct. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', |
| 'data': { 'file': 'str' } } |
| { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat', |
| 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat', |
| 'data': { '*backing': 'str' } } |
| |
| An example BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat object on the wire could use |
| both members like this:: |
| |
| { "file": "/some/place/my-image", |
| "backing": "/some/place/my-backing-file" } |
| |
| The optional 'if' member specifies a conditional. See `Configuring |
| the schema`_ below for more on this. |
| |
| The optional 'features' member specifies features. See Features_ |
| below for more on this. |
| |
| |
| Union types |
| ----------- |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| UNION = { 'union': STRING, |
| 'base': ( MEMBERS | STRING ), |
| 'discriminator': STRING, |
| 'data': BRANCHES, |
| '*if': COND, |
| '*features': FEATURES } |
| BRANCHES = { BRANCH, ... } |
| BRANCH = STRING : TYPE-REF |
| | STRING : { 'type': TYPE-REF, '*if': COND } |
| |
| Member 'union' names the union type. |
| |
| The 'base' member defines the common members. If it is a MEMBERS_ |
| object, it defines common members just like a struct type's 'data' |
| member defines struct type members. If it is a STRING, it names a |
| struct type whose members are the common members. |
| |
| Member 'discriminator' must name a non-optional enum-typed member of |
| the base struct. That member's value selects a branch by its name. |
| If no such branch exists, an empty branch is assumed. |
| |
| Each BRANCH of the 'data' object defines a branch of the union. A |
| union must have at least one branch. |
| |
| The BRANCH's STRING name is the branch name. It must be a value of |
| the discriminator enum type. |
| |
| The BRANCH's value defines the branch's properties, in particular its |
| type. The type must a struct type. The form TYPE-REF_ is shorthand |
| for :code:`{ 'type': TYPE-REF }`. |
| |
| In the Client JSON Protocol, a union is represented by an object with |
| the common members (from the base type) and the selected branch's |
| members. The two sets of member names must be disjoint. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| { 'enum': 'BlockdevDriver', 'data': [ 'file', 'qcow2' ] } |
| { 'union': 'BlockdevOptions', |
| 'base': { 'driver': 'BlockdevDriver', '*read-only': 'bool' }, |
| 'discriminator': 'driver', |
| 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevOptionsFile', |
| 'qcow2': 'BlockdevOptionsQcow2' } } |
| |
| Resulting in these JSON objects:: |
| |
| { "driver": "file", "read-only": true, |
| "filename": "/some/place/my-image" } |
| { "driver": "qcow2", "read-only": false, |
| "backing": "/some/place/my-image", "lazy-refcounts": true } |
| |
| The order of branches need not match the order of the enum values. |
| The branches need not cover all possible enum values. In the |
| resulting generated C data types, a union is represented as a struct |
| with the base members in QAPI schema order, and then a union of |
| structures for each branch of the struct. |
| |
| The optional 'if' member specifies a conditional. See `Configuring |
| the schema`_ below for more on this. |
| |
| The optional 'features' member specifies features. See Features_ |
| below for more on this. |
| |
| |
| Alternate types |
| --------------- |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| ALTERNATE = { 'alternate': STRING, |
| 'data': ALTERNATIVES, |
| '*if': COND, |
| '*features': FEATURES } |
| ALTERNATIVES = { ALTERNATIVE, ... } |
| ALTERNATIVE = STRING : STRING |
| | STRING : { 'type': STRING, '*if': COND } |
| |
| Member 'alternate' names the alternate type. |
| |
| Each ALTERNATIVE of the 'data' object defines a branch of the |
| alternate. An alternate must have at least one branch. |
| |
| The ALTERNATIVE's STRING name is the branch name. |
| |
| The ALTERNATIVE's value defines the branch's properties, in particular |
| its type. The form STRING is shorthand for :code:`{ 'type': STRING }`. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| { 'alternate': 'BlockdevRef', |
| 'data': { 'definition': 'BlockdevOptions', |
| 'reference': 'str' } } |
| |
| An alternate type is like a union type, except there is no |
| discriminator on the wire. Instead, the branch to use is inferred |
| from the value. An alternate can only express a choice between types |
| represented differently on the wire. |
| |
| If a branch is typed as the 'bool' built-in, the alternate accepts |
| true and false; if it is typed as any of the various numeric |
| built-ins, it accepts a JSON number; if it is typed as a 'str' |
| built-in or named enum type, it accepts a JSON string; if it is typed |
| as the 'null' built-in, it accepts JSON null; and if it is typed as a |
| complex type (struct or union), it accepts a JSON object. |
| |
| The example alternate declaration above allows using both of the |
| following example objects:: |
| |
| { "file": "my_existing_block_device_id" } |
| { "file": { "driver": "file", |
| "read-only": false, |
| "filename": "/tmp/mydisk.qcow2" } } |
| |
| The optional 'if' member specifies a conditional. See `Configuring |
| the schema`_ below for more on this. |
| |
| The optional 'features' member specifies features. See Features_ |
| below for more on this. |
| |
| |
| Commands |
| -------- |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| COMMAND = { 'command': STRING, |
| ( |
| '*data': ( MEMBERS | STRING ), |
| | |
| 'data': STRING, |
| 'boxed': true, |
| ) |
| '*returns': TYPE-REF, |
| '*success-response': false, |
| '*gen': false, |
| '*allow-oob': true, |
| '*allow-preconfig': true, |
| '*coroutine': true, |
| '*if': COND, |
| '*features': FEATURES } |
| |
| Member 'command' names the command. |
| |
| Member 'data' defines the arguments. It defaults to an empty MEMBERS_ |
| object. |
| |
| If 'data' is a MEMBERS_ object, then MEMBERS defines arguments just |
| like a struct type's 'data' defines struct type members. |
| |
| If 'data' is a STRING, then STRING names a complex type whose members |
| are the arguments. A union type requires ``'boxed': true``. |
| |
| Member 'returns' defines the command's return type. It defaults to an |
| empty struct type. It must normally be a complex type or an array of |
| a complex type. To return anything else, the command must be listed |
| in pragma 'commands-returns-exceptions'. If you do this, extending |
| the command to return additional information will be harder. Use of |
| the pragma for new commands is strongly discouraged. |
| |
| A command's error responses are not specified in the QAPI schema. |
| Error conditions should be documented in comments. |
| |
| In the Client JSON Protocol, the value of the "execute" or "exec-oob" |
| member is the command name. The value of the "arguments" member then |
| has to conform to the arguments, and the value of the success |
| response's "return" member will conform to the return type. |
| |
| Some example commands:: |
| |
| { 'command': 'my-first-command', |
| 'data': { 'arg1': 'str', '*arg2': 'str' } } |
| { 'struct': 'MyType', 'data': { '*value': 'str' } } |
| { 'command': 'my-second-command', |
| 'returns': [ 'MyType' ] } |
| |
| which would validate this Client JSON Protocol transaction:: |
| |
| => { "execute": "my-first-command", |
| "arguments": { "arg1": "hello" } } |
| <= { "return": { } } |
| => { "execute": "my-second-command" } |
| <= { "return": [ { "value": "one" }, { } ] } |
| |
| The generator emits a prototype for the C function implementing the |
| command. The function itself needs to be written by hand. See |
| section `Code generated for commands`_ for examples. |
| |
| The function returns the return type. When member 'boxed' is absent, |
| it takes the command arguments as arguments one by one, in QAPI schema |
| order. Else it takes them wrapped in the C struct generated for the |
| complex argument type. It takes an additional ``Error **`` argument in |
| either case. |
| |
| The generator also emits a marshalling function that extracts |
| arguments for the user's function out of an input QDict, calls the |
| user's function, and if it succeeded, builds an output QObject from |
| its return value. This is for use by the QMP monitor core. |
| |
| In rare cases, QAPI cannot express a type-safe representation of a |
| corresponding Client JSON Protocol command. You then have to suppress |
| generation of a marshalling function by including a member 'gen' with |
| boolean value false, and instead write your own function. For |
| example:: |
| |
| { 'command': 'netdev_add', |
| 'data': {'type': 'str', 'id': 'str'}, |
| 'gen': false } |
| |
| Please try to avoid adding new commands that rely on this, and instead |
| use type-safe unions. |
| |
| Normally, the QAPI schema is used to describe synchronous exchanges, |
| where a response is expected. But in some cases, the action of a |
| command is expected to change state in a way that a successful |
| response is not possible (although the command will still return an |
| error object on failure). When a successful reply is not possible, |
| the command definition includes the optional member 'success-response' |
| with boolean value false. So far, only QGA makes use of this member. |
| |
| Member 'allow-oob' declares whether the command supports out-of-band |
| (OOB) execution. It defaults to false. For example:: |
| |
| { 'command': 'migrate_recover', |
| 'data': { 'uri': 'str' }, 'allow-oob': true } |
| |
| See qmp-spec.txt for out-of-band execution syntax and semantics. |
| |
| Commands supporting out-of-band execution can still be executed |
| in-band. |
| |
| When a command is executed in-band, its handler runs in the main |
| thread with the BQL held. |
| |
| When a command is executed out-of-band, its handler runs in a |
| dedicated monitor I/O thread with the BQL *not* held. |
| |
| An OOB-capable command handler must satisfy the following conditions: |
| |
| - It terminates quickly. |
| - It does not invoke system calls that may block. |
| - It does not access guest RAM that may block when userfaultfd is |
| enabled for postcopy live migration. |
| - It takes only "fast" locks, i.e. all critical sections protected by |
| any lock it takes also satisfy the conditions for OOB command |
| handler code. |
| |
| The restrictions on locking limit access to shared state. Such access |
| requires synchronization, but OOB commands can't take the BQL or any |
| other "slow" lock. |
| |
| When in doubt, do not implement OOB execution support. |
| |
| Member 'allow-preconfig' declares whether the command is available |
| before the machine is built. It defaults to false. For example:: |
| |
| { 'enum': 'QMPCapability', |
| 'data': [ 'oob' ] } |
| { 'command': 'qmp_capabilities', |
| 'data': { '*enable': [ 'QMPCapability' ] }, |
| 'allow-preconfig': true } |
| |
| QMP is available before the machine is built only when QEMU was |
| started with --preconfig. |
| |
| Member 'coroutine' tells the QMP dispatcher whether the command handler |
| is safe to be run in a coroutine. It defaults to false. If it is true, |
| the command handler is called from coroutine context and may yield while |
| waiting for an external event (such as I/O completion) in order to avoid |
| blocking the guest and other background operations. |
| |
| Coroutine safety can be hard to prove, similar to thread safety. Common |
| pitfalls are: |
| |
| - The global mutex isn't held across ``qemu_coroutine_yield()``, so |
| operations that used to assume that they execute atomically may have |
| to be more careful to protect against changes in the global state. |
| |
| - Nested event loops (``AIO_WAIT_WHILE()`` etc.) are problematic in |
| coroutine context and can easily lead to deadlocks. They should be |
| replaced by yielding and reentering the coroutine when the condition |
| becomes false. |
| |
| Since the command handler may assume coroutine context, any callers |
| other than the QMP dispatcher must also call it in coroutine context. |
| In particular, HMP commands calling such a QMP command handler must be |
| marked ``.coroutine = true`` in hmp-commands.hx. |
| |
| It is an error to specify both ``'coroutine': true`` and ``'allow-oob': true`` |
| for a command. We don't currently have a use case for both together and |
| without a use case, it's not entirely clear what the semantics should |
| be. |
| |
| The optional 'if' member specifies a conditional. See `Configuring |
| the schema`_ below for more on this. |
| |
| The optional 'features' member specifies features. See Features_ |
| below for more on this. |
| |
| |
| Events |
| ------ |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| EVENT = { 'event': STRING, |
| ( |
| '*data': ( MEMBERS | STRING ), |
| | |
| 'data': STRING, |
| 'boxed': true, |
| ) |
| '*if': COND, |
| '*features': FEATURES } |
| |
| Member 'event' names the event. This is the event name used in the |
| Client JSON Protocol. |
| |
| Member 'data' defines the event-specific data. It defaults to an |
| empty MEMBERS object. |
| |
| If 'data' is a MEMBERS object, then MEMBERS defines event-specific |
| data just like a struct type's 'data' defines struct type members. |
| |
| If 'data' is a STRING, then STRING names a complex type whose members |
| are the event-specific data. A union type requires ``'boxed': true``. |
| |
| An example event is:: |
| |
| { 'event': 'EVENT_C', |
| 'data': { '*a': 'int', 'b': 'str' } } |
| |
| Resulting in this JSON object:: |
| |
| { "event": "EVENT_C", |
| "data": { "b": "test string" }, |
| "timestamp": { "seconds": 1267020223, "microseconds": 435656 } } |
| |
| The generator emits a function to send the event. When member 'boxed' |
| is absent, it takes event-specific data one by one, in QAPI schema |
| order. Else it takes them wrapped in the C struct generated for the |
| complex type. See section `Code generated for events`_ for examples. |
| |
| The optional 'if' member specifies a conditional. See `Configuring |
| the schema`_ below for more on this. |
| |
| The optional 'features' member specifies features. See Features_ |
| below for more on this. |
| |
| |
| .. _FEATURE: |
| |
| Features |
| -------- |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| FEATURES = [ FEATURE, ... ] |
| FEATURE = STRING |
| | { 'name': STRING, '*if': COND } |
| |
| Sometimes, the behaviour of QEMU changes compatibly, but without a |
| change in the QMP syntax (usually by allowing values or operations |
| that previously resulted in an error). QMP clients may still need to |
| know whether the extension is available. |
| |
| For this purpose, a list of features can be specified for a command or |
| struct type. Each list member can either be ``{ 'name': STRING, '*if': |
| COND }``, or STRING, which is shorthand for ``{ 'name': STRING }``. |
| |
| The optional 'if' member specifies a conditional. See `Configuring |
| the schema`_ below for more on this. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| { 'struct': 'TestType', |
| 'data': { 'number': 'int' }, |
| 'features': [ 'allow-negative-numbers' ] } |
| |
| The feature strings are exposed to clients in introspection, as |
| explained in section `Client JSON Protocol introspection`_. |
| |
| Intended use is to have each feature string signal that this build of |
| QEMU shows a certain behaviour. |
| |
| |
| Special features |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Feature "deprecated" marks a command, event, enum value, or struct |
| member as deprecated. It is not supported elsewhere so far. |
| Interfaces so marked may be withdrawn in future releases in accordance |
| with QEMU's deprecation policy. |
| |
| Feature "unstable" marks a command, event, enum value, or struct |
| member as unstable. It is not supported elsewhere so far. Interfaces |
| so marked may be withdrawn or changed incompatibly in future releases. |
| |
| |
| Naming rules and reserved names |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| All names must begin with a letter, and contain only ASCII letters, |
| digits, hyphen, and underscore. There are two exceptions: enum values |
| may start with a digit, and names that are downstream extensions (see |
| section `Downstream extensions`_) start with underscore. |
| |
| Names beginning with ``q_`` are reserved for the generator, which uses |
| them for munging QMP names that resemble C keywords or other |
| problematic strings. For example, a member named ``default`` in qapi |
| becomes ``q_default`` in the generated C code. |
| |
| Types, commands, and events share a common namespace. Therefore, |
| generally speaking, type definitions should always use CamelCase for |
| user-defined type names, while built-in types are lowercase. |
| |
| Type names ending with ``Kind`` or ``List`` are reserved for the |
| generator, which uses them for implicit union enums and array types, |
| respectively. |
| |
| Command names, member names within a type, and feature names should be |
| all lower case with words separated by a hyphen. However, some |
| existing older commands and complex types use underscore; when |
| extending them, consistency is preferred over blindly avoiding |
| underscore. |
| |
| Event names should be ALL_CAPS with words separated by underscore. |
| |
| Member name ``u`` and names starting with ``has-`` or ``has_`` are reserved |
| for the generator, which uses them for unions and for tracking |
| optional members. |
| |
| Names beginning with ``x-`` used to signify "experimental". This |
| convention has been replaced by special feature "unstable". |
| |
| Pragmas ``command-name-exceptions`` and ``member-name-exceptions`` let |
| you violate naming rules. Use for new code is strongly discouraged. See |
| `Pragma directives`_ for details. |
| |
| |
| Downstream extensions |
| --------------------- |
| |
| QAPI schema names that are externally visible, say in the Client JSON |
| Protocol, need to be managed with care. Names starting with a |
| downstream prefix of the form __RFQDN_ are reserved for the downstream |
| who controls the valid, reverse fully qualified domain name RFQDN. |
| RFQDN may only contain ASCII letters, digits, hyphen and period. |
| |
| Example: Red Hat, Inc. controls redhat.com, and may therefore add a |
| downstream command ``__com.redhat_drive-mirror``. |
| |
| |
| Configuring the schema |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| Syntax:: |
| |
| COND = STRING |
| | { 'all: [ COND, ... ] } |
| | { 'any: [ COND, ... ] } |
| | { 'not': COND } |
| |
| All definitions take an optional 'if' member. Its value must be a |
| string, or an object with a single member 'all', 'any' or 'not'. |
| |
| The C code generated for the definition will then be guarded by an #if |
| preprocessing directive with an operand generated from that condition: |
| |
| * STRING will generate defined(STRING) |
| * { 'all': [COND, ...] } will generate (COND && ...) |
| * { 'any': [COND, ...] } will generate (COND || ...) |
| * { 'not': COND } will generate !COND |
| |
| Example: a conditional struct :: |
| |
| { 'struct': 'IfStruct', 'data': { 'foo': 'int' }, |
| 'if': { 'all': [ 'CONFIG_FOO', 'HAVE_BAR' ] } } |
| |
| gets its generated code guarded like this:: |
| |
| #if defined(CONFIG_FOO) && defined(HAVE_BAR) |
| ... generated code ... |
| #endif /* defined(HAVE_BAR) && defined(CONFIG_FOO) */ |
| |
| Individual members of complex types, commands arguments, and |
| event-specific data can also be made conditional. This requires the |
| longhand form of MEMBER. |
| |
| Example: a struct type with unconditional member 'foo' and conditional |
| member 'bar' :: |
| |
| { 'struct': 'IfStruct', |
| 'data': { 'foo': 'int', |
| 'bar': { 'type': 'int', 'if': 'IFCOND'} } } |
| |
| A union's discriminator may not be conditional. |
| |
| Likewise, individual enumeration values be conditional. This requires |
| the longhand form of ENUM-VALUE_. |
| |
| Example: an enum type with unconditional value 'foo' and conditional |
| value 'bar' :: |
| |
| { 'enum': 'IfEnum', |
| 'data': [ 'foo', |
| { 'name' : 'bar', 'if': 'IFCOND' } ] } |
| |
| Likewise, features can be conditional. This requires the longhand |
| form of FEATURE_. |
| |
| Example: a struct with conditional feature 'allow-negative-numbers' :: |
| |
| { 'struct': 'TestType', |
| 'data': { 'number': 'int' }, |
| 'features': [ { 'name': 'allow-negative-numbers', |
| 'if': 'IFCOND' } ] } |
| |
| Please note that you are responsible to ensure that the C code will |
| compile with an arbitrary combination of conditions, since the |
| generator is unable to check it at this point. |
| |
| The conditions apply to introspection as well, i.e. introspection |
| shows a conditional entity only when the condition is satisfied in |
| this particular build. |
| |
| |
| Documentation comments |
| ---------------------- |
| |
| A multi-line comment that starts and ends with a ``##`` line is a |
| documentation comment. |
| |
| If the documentation comment starts like :: |
| |
| ## |
| # @SYMBOL: |
| |
| it documents the definition of SYMBOL, else it's free-form |
| documentation. |
| |
| See below for more on `Definition documentation`_. |
| |
| Free-form documentation may be used to provide additional text and |
| structuring content. |
| |
| |
| Headings and subheadings |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| A free-form documentation comment containing a line which starts with |
| some ``=`` symbols and then a space defines a section heading:: |
| |
| ## |
| # = This is a top level heading |
| # |
| # This is a free-form comment which will go under the |
| # top level heading. |
| ## |
| |
| ## |
| # == This is a second level heading |
| ## |
| |
| A heading line must be the first line of the documentation |
| comment block. |
| |
| Section headings must always be correctly nested, so you can only |
| define a third-level heading inside a second-level heading, and so on. |
| |
| |
| Documentation markup |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Documentation comments can use most rST markup. In particular, |
| a ``::`` literal block can be used for examples:: |
| |
| # :: |
| # |
| # Text of the example, may span |
| # multiple lines |
| |
| ``*`` starts an itemized list:: |
| |
| # * First item, may span |
| # multiple lines |
| # * Second item |
| |
| You can also use ``-`` instead of ``*``. |
| |
| A decimal number followed by ``.`` starts a numbered list:: |
| |
| # 1. First item, may span |
| # multiple lines |
| # 2. Second item |
| |
| The actual number doesn't matter. |
| |
| Lists of either kind must be preceded and followed by a blank line. |
| If a list item's text spans multiple lines, then the second and |
| subsequent lines must be correctly indented to line up with the |
| first character of the first line. |
| |
| The usual ****strong****, *\*emphasized\** and ````literal```` markup |
| should be used. If you need a single literal ``*``, you will need to |
| backslash-escape it. As an extension beyond the usual rST syntax, you |
| can also use ``@foo`` to reference a name in the schema; this is rendered |
| the same way as ````foo````. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| ## |
| # Some text foo with **bold** and *emphasis* |
| # 1. with a list |
| # 2. like that |
| # |
| # And some code: |
| # |
| # :: |
| # |
| # $ echo foo |
| # -> do this |
| # <- get that |
| ## |
| |
| |
| Definition documentation |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Definition documentation, if present, must immediately precede the |
| definition it documents. |
| |
| When documentation is required (see pragma_ 'doc-required'), every |
| definition must have documentation. |
| |
| Definition documentation starts with a line naming the definition, |
| followed by an optional overview, a description of each argument (for |
| commands and events), member (for structs and unions), branch (for |
| alternates), or value (for enums), a description of each feature (if |
| any), and finally optional tagged sections. |
| |
| The description of an argument or feature 'name' starts with |
| '\@name:'. The description text can start on the line following the |
| '\@name:', in which case it must not be indented at all. It can also |
| start on the same line as the '\@name:'. In this case if it spans |
| multiple lines then second and subsequent lines must be indented to |
| line up with the first character of the first line of the |
| description:: |
| |
| # @argone: |
| # This is a two line description |
| # in the first style. |
| # |
| # @argtwo: This is a two line description |
| # in the second style. |
| |
| The number of spaces between the ':' and the text is not significant. |
| |
| .. admonition:: FIXME |
| |
| The parser accepts these things in almost any order. |
| |
| .. admonition:: FIXME |
| |
| union branches should be described, too. |
| |
| Extensions added after the definition was first released carry a |
| '(since x.y.z)' comment. |
| |
| The feature descriptions must be preceded by a line "Features:", like |
| this:: |
| |
| # Features: |
| # @feature: Description text |
| |
| A tagged section starts with one of the following words: |
| "Note:"/"Notes:", "Since:", "Example"/"Examples", "Returns:", "TODO:". |
| The section ends with the start of a new section. |
| |
| The text of a section can start on a new line, in |
| which case it must not be indented at all. It can also start |
| on the same line as the 'Note:', 'Returns:', etc tag. In this |
| case if it spans multiple lines then second and subsequent |
| lines must be indented to match the first, in the same way as |
| multiline argument descriptions. |
| |
| A 'Since: x.y.z' tagged section lists the release that introduced the |
| definition. |
| |
| An 'Example' or 'Examples' section is automatically rendered |
| entirely as literal fixed-width text. In other sections, |
| the text is formatted, and rST markup can be used. |
| |
| For example:: |
| |
| ## |
| # @BlockStats: |
| # |
| # Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device. |
| # |
| # @device: If the stats are for a virtual block device, the name |
| # corresponding to the virtual block device. |
| # |
| # @node-name: The node name of the device. (since 2.3) |
| # |
| # ... more members ... |
| # |
| # Since: 0.14.0 |
| ## |
| { 'struct': 'BlockStats', |
| 'data': {'*device': 'str', '*node-name': 'str', |
| ... more members ... } } |
| |
| ## |
| # @query-blockstats: |
| # |
| # Query the @BlockStats for all virtual block devices. |
| # |
| # @query-nodes: If true, the command will query all the |
| # block nodes ... explain, explain ... (since 2.3) |
| # |
| # Returns: A list of @BlockStats for each virtual block devices. |
| # |
| # Since: 0.14.0 |
| # |
| # Example: |
| # |
| # -> { "execute": "query-blockstats" } |
| # <- { |
| # ... lots of output ... |
| # } |
| # |
| ## |
| { 'command': 'query-blockstats', |
| 'data': { '*query-nodes': 'bool' }, |
| 'returns': ['BlockStats'] } |
| |
| |
| Client JSON Protocol introspection |
| ================================== |
| |
| Clients of a Client JSON Protocol commonly need to figure out what |
| exactly the server (QEMU) supports. |
| |
| For this purpose, QMP provides introspection via command |
| query-qmp-schema. QGA currently doesn't support introspection. |
| |
| While Client JSON Protocol wire compatibility should be maintained |
| between qemu versions, we cannot make the same guarantees for |
| introspection stability. For example, one version of qemu may provide |
| a non-variant optional member of a struct, and a later version rework |
| the member to instead be non-optional and associated with a variant. |
| Likewise, one version of qemu may list a member with open-ended type |
| 'str', and a later version could convert it to a finite set of strings |
| via an enum type; or a member may be converted from a specific type to |
| an alternate that represents a choice between the original type and |
| something else. |
| |
| query-qmp-schema returns a JSON array of SchemaInfo objects. These |
| objects together describe the wire ABI, as defined in the QAPI schema. |
| There is no specified order to the SchemaInfo objects returned; a |
| client must search for a particular name throughout the entire array |
| to learn more about that name, but is at least guaranteed that there |
| will be no collisions between type, command, and event names. |
| |
| However, the SchemaInfo can't reflect all the rules and restrictions |
| that apply to QMP. It's interface introspection (figuring out what's |
| there), not interface specification. The specification is in the QAPI |
| schema. To understand how QMP is to be used, you need to study the |
| QAPI schema. |
| |
| Like any other command, query-qmp-schema is itself defined in the QAPI |
| schema, along with the SchemaInfo type. This text attempts to give an |
| overview how things work. For details you need to consult the QAPI |
| schema. |
| |
| SchemaInfo objects have common members "name", "meta-type", |
| "features", and additional variant members depending on the value of |
| meta-type. |
| |
| Each SchemaInfo object describes a wire ABI entity of a certain |
| meta-type: a command, event or one of several kinds of type. |
| |
| SchemaInfo for commands and events have the same name as in the QAPI |
| schema. |
| |
| Command and event names are part of the wire ABI, but type names are |
| not. Therefore, the SchemaInfo for types have auto-generated |
| meaningless names. For readability, the examples in this section use |
| meaningful type names instead. |
| |
| Optional member "features" exposes the entity's feature strings as a |
| JSON array of strings. |
| |
| To examine a type, start with a command or event using it, then follow |
| references by name. |
| |
| QAPI schema definitions not reachable that way are omitted. |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for a command has meta-type "command", and variant |
| members "arg-type", "ret-type" and "allow-oob". On the wire, the |
| "arguments" member of a client's "execute" command must conform to the |
| object type named by "arg-type". The "return" member that the server |
| passes in a success response conforms to the type named by "ret-type". |
| When "allow-oob" is true, it means the command supports out-of-band |
| execution. It defaults to false. |
| |
| If the command takes no arguments, "arg-type" names an object type |
| without members. Likewise, if the command returns nothing, "ret-type" |
| names an object type without members. |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for command query-qmp-schema :: |
| |
| { "name": "query-qmp-schema", "meta-type": "command", |
| "arg-type": "q_empty", "ret-type": "SchemaInfoList" } |
| |
| Type "q_empty" is an automatic object type without members, and type |
| "SchemaInfoList" is the array of SchemaInfo type. |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for an event has meta-type "event", and variant member |
| "arg-type". On the wire, a "data" member that the server passes in an |
| event conforms to the object type named by "arg-type". |
| |
| If the event carries no additional information, "arg-type" names an |
| object type without members. The event may not have a data member on |
| the wire then. |
| |
| Each command or event defined with 'data' as MEMBERS object in the |
| QAPI schema implicitly defines an object type. |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for EVENT_C from section Events_ :: |
| |
| { "name": "EVENT_C", "meta-type": "event", |
| "arg-type": "q_obj-EVENT_C-arg" } |
| |
| Type "q_obj-EVENT_C-arg" is an implicitly defined object type with |
| the two members from the event's definition. |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for struct and union types has meta-type "object". |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for a struct type has variant member "members". |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for a union type additionally has variant members "tag" |
| and "variants". |
| |
| "members" is a JSON array describing the object's common members, if |
| any. Each element is a JSON object with members "name" (the member's |
| name), "type" (the name of its type), "features" (a JSON array of |
| feature strings), and "default". The latter two are optional. The |
| member is optional if "default" is present. Currently, "default" can |
| only have value null. Other values are reserved for future |
| extensions. The "members" array is in no particular order; clients |
| must search the entire object when learning whether a particular |
| member is supported. |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for MyType from section `Struct types`_ :: |
| |
| { "name": "MyType", "meta-type": "object", |
| "members": [ |
| { "name": "member1", "type": "str" }, |
| { "name": "member2", "type": "int" }, |
| { "name": "member3", "type": "str", "default": null } ] } |
| |
| "features" exposes the command's feature strings as a JSON array of |
| strings. |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for TestType from section Features_:: |
| |
| { "name": "TestType", "meta-type": "object", |
| "members": [ |
| { "name": "number", "type": "int" } ], |
| "features": ["allow-negative-numbers"] } |
| |
| "tag" is the name of the common member serving as type tag. |
| "variants" is a JSON array describing the object's variant members. |
| Each element is a JSON object with members "case" (the value of type |
| tag this element applies to) and "type" (the name of an object type |
| that provides the variant members for this type tag value). The |
| "variants" array is in no particular order, and is not guaranteed to |
| list cases in the same order as the corresponding "tag" enum type. |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for union BlockdevOptions from section |
| `Union types`_ :: |
| |
| { "name": "BlockdevOptions", "meta-type": "object", |
| "members": [ |
| { "name": "driver", "type": "BlockdevDriver" }, |
| { "name": "read-only", "type": "bool", "default": null } ], |
| "tag": "driver", |
| "variants": [ |
| { "case": "file", "type": "BlockdevOptionsFile" }, |
| { "case": "qcow2", "type": "BlockdevOptionsQcow2" } ] } |
| |
| Note that base types are "flattened": its members are included in the |
| "members" array. |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for an alternate type has meta-type "alternate", and |
| variant member "members". "members" is a JSON array. Each element is |
| a JSON object with member "type", which names a type. Values of the |
| alternate type conform to exactly one of its member types. There is |
| no guarantee on the order in which "members" will be listed. |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for BlockdevRef from section `Alternate types`_ :: |
| |
| { "name": "BlockdevRef", "meta-type": "alternate", |
| "members": [ |
| { "type": "BlockdevOptions" }, |
| { "type": "str" } ] } |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for an array type has meta-type "array", and variant |
| member "element-type", which names the array's element type. Array |
| types are implicitly defined. For convenience, the array's name may |
| resemble the element type; however, clients should examine member |
| "element-type" instead of making assumptions based on parsing member |
| "name". |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for ['str'] :: |
| |
| { "name": "[str]", "meta-type": "array", |
| "element-type": "str" } |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for an enumeration type has meta-type "enum" and |
| variant member "members". |
| |
| "members" is a JSON array describing the enumeration values. Each |
| element is a JSON object with member "name" (the member's name), and |
| optionally "features" (a JSON array of feature strings). The |
| "members" array is in no particular order; clients must search the |
| entire array when learning whether a particular value is supported. |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for MyEnum from section `Enumeration types`_ :: |
| |
| { "name": "MyEnum", "meta-type": "enum", |
| "members": [ |
| { "name": "value1" }, |
| { "name": "value2" }, |
| { "name": "value3" } |
| ] } |
| |
| The SchemaInfo for a built-in type has the same name as the type in |
| the QAPI schema (see section `Built-in Types`_), with one exception |
| detailed below. It has variant member "json-type" that shows how |
| values of this type are encoded on the wire. |
| |
| Example: the SchemaInfo for str :: |
| |
| { "name": "str", "meta-type": "builtin", "json-type": "string" } |
| |
| The QAPI schema supports a number of integer types that only differ in |
| how they map to C. They are identical as far as SchemaInfo is |
| concerned. Therefore, they get all mapped to a single type "int" in |
| SchemaInfo. |
| |
| As explained above, type names are not part of the wire ABI. Not even |
| the names of built-in types. Clients should examine member |
| "json-type" instead of hard-coding names of built-in types. |
| |
| |
| Compatibility considerations |
| ============================ |
| |
| Maintaining backward compatibility at the Client JSON Protocol level |
| while evolving the schema requires some care. This section is about |
| syntactic compatibility, which is necessary, but not sufficient, for |
| actual compatibility. |
| |
| Clients send commands with argument data, and receive command |
| responses with return data and events with event data. |
| |
| Adding opt-in functionality to the send direction is backwards |
| compatible: adding commands, optional arguments, enumeration values, |
| union and alternate branches; turning an argument type into an |
| alternate of that type; making mandatory arguments optional. Clients |
| oblivious of the new functionality continue to work. |
| |
| Incompatible changes include removing commands, command arguments, |
| enumeration values, union and alternate branches, adding mandatory |
| command arguments, and making optional arguments mandatory. |
| |
| The specified behavior of an absent optional argument should remain |
| the same. With proper documentation, this policy still allows some |
| flexibility; for example, when an optional 'buffer-size' argument is |
| specified to default to a sensible buffer size, the actual default |
| value can still be changed. The specified default behavior is not the |
| exact size of the buffer, only that the default size is sensible. |
| |
| Adding functionality to the receive direction is generally backwards |
| compatible: adding events, adding return and event data members. |
| Clients are expected to ignore the ones they don't know. |
| |
| Removing "unreachable" stuff like events that can't be triggered |
| anymore, optional return or event data members that can't be sent |
| anymore, and return or event data member (enumeration) values that |
| can't be sent anymore makes no difference to clients, except for |
| introspection. The latter can conceivably confuse clients, so tread |
| carefully. |
| |
| Incompatible changes include removing return and event data members. |
| |
| Any change to a command definition's 'data' or one of the types used |
| there (recursively) needs to consider send direction compatibility. |
| |
| Any change to a command definition's 'return', an event definition's |
| 'data', or one of the types used there (recursively) needs to consider |
| receive direction compatibility. |
| |
| Any change to types used in both contexts need to consider both. |
| |
| Enumeration type values and complex and alternate type members may be |
| reordered freely. For enumerations and alternate types, this doesn't |
| affect the wire encoding. For complex types, this might make the |
| implementation emit JSON object members in a different order, which |
| the Client JSON Protocol permits. |
| |
| Since type names are not visible in the Client JSON Protocol, types |
| may be freely renamed. Even certain refactorings are invisible, such |
| as splitting members from one type into a common base type. |
| |
| |
| Code generation |
| =============== |
| |
| The QAPI code generator qapi-gen.py generates code and documentation |
| from the schema. Together with the core QAPI libraries, this code |
| provides everything required to take JSON commands read in by a Client |
| JSON Protocol server, unmarshal the arguments into the underlying C |
| types, call into the corresponding C function, map the response back |
| to a Client JSON Protocol response to be returned to the user, and |
| introspect the commands. |
| |
| As an example, we'll use the following schema, which describes a |
| single complex user-defined type, along with command which takes a |
| list of that type as a parameter, and returns a single element of that |
| type. The user is responsible for writing the implementation of |
| qmp_my_command(); everything else is produced by the generator. :: |
| |
| $ cat example-schema.json |
| { 'struct': 'UserDefOne', |
| 'data': { 'integer': 'int', '*string': 'str', '*flag': 'bool' } } |
| |
| { 'command': 'my-command', |
| 'data': { 'arg1': ['UserDefOne'] }, |
| 'returns': 'UserDefOne' } |
| |
| { 'event': 'MY_EVENT' } |
| |
| We run qapi-gen.py like this:: |
| |
| $ python scripts/qapi-gen.py --output-dir="qapi-generated" \ |
| --prefix="example-" example-schema.json |
| |
| For a more thorough look at generated code, the testsuite includes |
| tests/qapi-schema/qapi-schema-tests.json that covers more examples of |
| what the generator will accept, and compiles the resulting C code as |
| part of 'make check-unit'. |
| |
| |
| Code generated for QAPI types |
| ----------------------------- |
| |
| The following files are created: |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-types.h`` |
| C types corresponding to types defined in the schema |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-types.c`` |
| Cleanup functions for the above C types |
| |
| The $(prefix) is an optional parameter used as a namespace to keep the |
| generated code from one schema/code-generation separated from others so code |
| can be generated/used from multiple schemas without clobbering previously |
| created code. |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-types.h |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| #ifndef EXAMPLE_QAPI_TYPES_H |
| #define EXAMPLE_QAPI_TYPES_H |
| |
| #include "qapi/qapi-builtin-types.h" |
| |
| typedef struct UserDefOne UserDefOne; |
| |
| typedef struct UserDefOneList UserDefOneList; |
| |
| typedef struct q_obj_my_command_arg q_obj_my_command_arg; |
| |
| struct UserDefOne { |
| int64_t integer; |
| char *string; |
| bool has_flag; |
| bool flag; |
| }; |
| |
| void qapi_free_UserDefOne(UserDefOne *obj); |
| G_DEFINE_AUTOPTR_CLEANUP_FUNC(UserDefOne, qapi_free_UserDefOne) |
| |
| struct UserDefOneList { |
| UserDefOneList *next; |
| UserDefOne *value; |
| }; |
| |
| void qapi_free_UserDefOneList(UserDefOneList *obj); |
| G_DEFINE_AUTOPTR_CLEANUP_FUNC(UserDefOneList, qapi_free_UserDefOneList) |
| |
| struct q_obj_my_command_arg { |
| UserDefOneList *arg1; |
| }; |
| |
| #endif /* EXAMPLE_QAPI_TYPES_H */ |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-types.c |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| void qapi_free_UserDefOne(UserDefOne *obj) |
| { |
| Visitor *v; |
| |
| if (!obj) { |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| v = qapi_dealloc_visitor_new(); |
| visit_type_UserDefOne(v, NULL, &obj, NULL); |
| visit_free(v); |
| } |
| |
| void qapi_free_UserDefOneList(UserDefOneList *obj) |
| { |
| Visitor *v; |
| |
| if (!obj) { |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| v = qapi_dealloc_visitor_new(); |
| visit_type_UserDefOneList(v, NULL, &obj, NULL); |
| visit_free(v); |
| } |
| |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| For a modular QAPI schema (see section `Include directives`_), code for |
| each sub-module SUBDIR/SUBMODULE.json is actually generated into :: |
| |
| SUBDIR/$(prefix)qapi-types-SUBMODULE.h |
| SUBDIR/$(prefix)qapi-types-SUBMODULE.c |
| |
| If qapi-gen.py is run with option --builtins, additional files are |
| created: |
| |
| ``qapi-builtin-types.h`` |
| C types corresponding to built-in types |
| |
| ``qapi-builtin-types.c`` |
| Cleanup functions for the above C types |
| |
| |
| Code generated for visiting QAPI types |
| -------------------------------------- |
| |
| These are the visitor functions used to walk through and convert |
| between a native QAPI C data structure and some other format (such as |
| QObject); the generated functions are named visit_type_FOO() and |
| visit_type_FOO_members(). |
| |
| The following files are generated: |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-visit.c`` |
| Visitor function for a particular C type, used to automagically |
| convert QObjects into the corresponding C type and vice-versa, as |
| well as for deallocating memory for an existing C type |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-visit.h`` |
| Declarations for previously mentioned visitor functions |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-visit.h |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| #ifndef EXAMPLE_QAPI_VISIT_H |
| #define EXAMPLE_QAPI_VISIT_H |
| |
| #include "qapi/qapi-builtin-visit.h" |
| #include "example-qapi-types.h" |
| |
| |
| bool visit_type_UserDefOne_members(Visitor *v, UserDefOne *obj, Error **errp); |
| |
| bool visit_type_UserDefOne(Visitor *v, const char *name, |
| UserDefOne **obj, Error **errp); |
| |
| bool visit_type_UserDefOneList(Visitor *v, const char *name, |
| UserDefOneList **obj, Error **errp); |
| |
| bool visit_type_q_obj_my_command_arg_members(Visitor *v, q_obj_my_command_arg *obj, Error **errp); |
| |
| #endif /* EXAMPLE_QAPI_VISIT_H */ |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-visit.c |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| bool visit_type_UserDefOne_members(Visitor *v, UserDefOne *obj, Error **errp) |
| { |
| bool has_string = !!obj->string; |
| |
| if (!visit_type_int(v, "integer", &obj->integer, errp)) { |
| return false; |
| } |
| if (visit_optional(v, "string", &has_string)) { |
| if (!visit_type_str(v, "string", &obj->string, errp)) { |
| return false; |
| } |
| } |
| if (visit_optional(v, "flag", &obj->has_flag)) { |
| if (!visit_type_bool(v, "flag", &obj->flag, errp)) { |
| return false; |
| } |
| } |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| bool visit_type_UserDefOne(Visitor *v, const char *name, |
| UserDefOne **obj, Error **errp) |
| { |
| bool ok = false; |
| |
| if (!visit_start_struct(v, name, (void **)obj, sizeof(UserDefOne), errp)) { |
| return false; |
| } |
| if (!*obj) { |
| /* incomplete */ |
| assert(visit_is_dealloc(v)); |
| ok = true; |
| goto out_obj; |
| } |
| if (!visit_type_UserDefOne_members(v, *obj, errp)) { |
| goto out_obj; |
| } |
| ok = visit_check_struct(v, errp); |
| out_obj: |
| visit_end_struct(v, (void **)obj); |
| if (!ok && visit_is_input(v)) { |
| qapi_free_UserDefOne(*obj); |
| *obj = NULL; |
| } |
| return ok; |
| } |
| |
| bool visit_type_UserDefOneList(Visitor *v, const char *name, |
| UserDefOneList **obj, Error **errp) |
| { |
| bool ok = false; |
| UserDefOneList *tail; |
| size_t size = sizeof(**obj); |
| |
| if (!visit_start_list(v, name, (GenericList **)obj, size, errp)) { |
| return false; |
| } |
| |
| for (tail = *obj; tail; |
| tail = (UserDefOneList *)visit_next_list(v, (GenericList *)tail, size)) { |
| if (!visit_type_UserDefOne(v, NULL, &tail->value, errp)) { |
| goto out_obj; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| ok = visit_check_list(v, errp); |
| out_obj: |
| visit_end_list(v, (void **)obj); |
| if (!ok && visit_is_input(v)) { |
| qapi_free_UserDefOneList(*obj); |
| *obj = NULL; |
| } |
| return ok; |
| } |
| |
| bool visit_type_q_obj_my_command_arg_members(Visitor *v, q_obj_my_command_arg *obj, Error **errp) |
| { |
| if (!visit_type_UserDefOneList(v, "arg1", &obj->arg1, errp)) { |
| return false; |
| } |
| return true; |
| } |
| |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| For a modular QAPI schema (see section `Include directives`_), code for |
| each sub-module SUBDIR/SUBMODULE.json is actually generated into :: |
| |
| SUBDIR/$(prefix)qapi-visit-SUBMODULE.h |
| SUBDIR/$(prefix)qapi-visit-SUBMODULE.c |
| |
| If qapi-gen.py is run with option --builtins, additional files are |
| created: |
| |
| ``qapi-builtin-visit.h`` |
| Visitor functions for built-in types |
| |
| ``qapi-builtin-visit.c`` |
| Declarations for these visitor functions |
| |
| |
| Code generated for commands |
| --------------------------- |
| |
| These are the marshaling/dispatch functions for the commands defined |
| in the schema. The generated code provides qmp_marshal_COMMAND(), and |
| declares qmp_COMMAND() that the user must implement. |
| |
| The following files are generated: |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-commands.c`` |
| Command marshal/dispatch functions for each QMP command defined in |
| the schema |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-commands.h`` |
| Function prototypes for the QMP commands specified in the schema |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-commands.trace-events`` |
| Trace event declarations, see :ref:`tracing`. |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-init-commands.h`` |
| Command initialization prototype |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-init-commands.c`` |
| Command initialization code |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-commands.h |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| #ifndef EXAMPLE_QAPI_COMMANDS_H |
| #define EXAMPLE_QAPI_COMMANDS_H |
| |
| #include "example-qapi-types.h" |
| |
| UserDefOne *qmp_my_command(UserDefOneList *arg1, Error **errp); |
| void qmp_marshal_my_command(QDict *args, QObject **ret, Error **errp); |
| |
| #endif /* EXAMPLE_QAPI_COMMANDS_H */ |
| |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-commands.trace-events |
| # AUTOMATICALLY GENERATED, DO NOT MODIFY |
| |
| qmp_enter_my_command(const char *json) "%s" |
| qmp_exit_my_command(const char *result, bool succeeded) "%s %d" |
| |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-commands.c |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| static void qmp_marshal_output_UserDefOne(UserDefOne *ret_in, |
| QObject **ret_out, Error **errp) |
| { |
| Visitor *v; |
| |
| v = qobject_output_visitor_new_qmp(ret_out); |
| if (visit_type_UserDefOne(v, "unused", &ret_in, errp)) { |
| visit_complete(v, ret_out); |
| } |
| visit_free(v); |
| v = qapi_dealloc_visitor_new(); |
| visit_type_UserDefOne(v, "unused", &ret_in, NULL); |
| visit_free(v); |
| } |
| |
| void qmp_marshal_my_command(QDict *args, QObject **ret, Error **errp) |
| { |
| Error *err = NULL; |
| bool ok = false; |
| Visitor *v; |
| UserDefOne *retval; |
| q_obj_my_command_arg arg = {0}; |
| |
| v = qobject_input_visitor_new_qmp(QOBJECT(args)); |
| if (!visit_start_struct(v, NULL, NULL, 0, errp)) { |
| goto out; |
| } |
| if (visit_type_q_obj_my_command_arg_members(v, &arg, errp)) { |
| ok = visit_check_struct(v, errp); |
| } |
| visit_end_struct(v, NULL); |
| if (!ok) { |
| goto out; |
| } |
| |
| if (trace_event_get_state_backends(TRACE_QMP_ENTER_MY_COMMAND)) { |
| g_autoptr(GString) req_json = qobject_to_json(QOBJECT(args)); |
| |
| trace_qmp_enter_my_command(req_json->str); |
| } |
| |
| retval = qmp_my_command(arg.arg1, &err); |
| if (err) { |
| trace_qmp_exit_my_command(error_get_pretty(err), false); |
| error_propagate(errp, err); |
| goto out; |
| } |
| |
| qmp_marshal_output_UserDefOne(retval, ret, errp); |
| |
| if (trace_event_get_state_backends(TRACE_QMP_EXIT_MY_COMMAND)) { |
| g_autoptr(GString) ret_json = qobject_to_json(*ret); |
| |
| trace_qmp_exit_my_command(ret_json->str, true); |
| } |
| |
| out: |
| visit_free(v); |
| v = qapi_dealloc_visitor_new(); |
| visit_start_struct(v, NULL, NULL, 0, NULL); |
| visit_type_q_obj_my_command_arg_members(v, &arg, NULL); |
| visit_end_struct(v, NULL); |
| visit_free(v); |
| } |
| |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-init-commands.h |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| #ifndef EXAMPLE_QAPI_INIT_COMMANDS_H |
| #define EXAMPLE_QAPI_INIT_COMMANDS_H |
| |
| #include "qapi/qmp/dispatch.h" |
| |
| void example_qmp_init_marshal(QmpCommandList *cmds); |
| |
| #endif /* EXAMPLE_QAPI_INIT_COMMANDS_H */ |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-init-commands.c |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| void example_qmp_init_marshal(QmpCommandList *cmds) |
| { |
| QTAILQ_INIT(cmds); |
| |
| qmp_register_command(cmds, "my-command", |
| qmp_marshal_my_command, 0, 0); |
| } |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| For a modular QAPI schema (see section `Include directives`_), code for |
| each sub-module SUBDIR/SUBMODULE.json is actually generated into:: |
| |
| SUBDIR/$(prefix)qapi-commands-SUBMODULE.h |
| SUBDIR/$(prefix)qapi-commands-SUBMODULE.c |
| |
| |
| Code generated for events |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| This is the code related to events defined in the schema, providing |
| qapi_event_send_EVENT(). |
| |
| The following files are created: |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-events.h`` |
| Function prototypes for each event type |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-events.c`` |
| Implementation of functions to send an event |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-emit-events.h`` |
| Enumeration of all event names, and common event code declarations |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-emit-events.c`` |
| Common event code definitions |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-events.h |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| #ifndef EXAMPLE_QAPI_EVENTS_H |
| #define EXAMPLE_QAPI_EVENTS_H |
| |
| #include "qapi/util.h" |
| #include "example-qapi-types.h" |
| |
| void qapi_event_send_my_event(void); |
| |
| #endif /* EXAMPLE_QAPI_EVENTS_H */ |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-events.c |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| void qapi_event_send_my_event(void) |
| { |
| QDict *qmp; |
| |
| qmp = qmp_event_build_dict("MY_EVENT"); |
| |
| example_qapi_event_emit(EXAMPLE_QAPI_EVENT_MY_EVENT, qmp); |
| |
| qobject_unref(qmp); |
| } |
| |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-emit-events.h |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| #ifndef EXAMPLE_QAPI_EMIT_EVENTS_H |
| #define EXAMPLE_QAPI_EMIT_EVENTS_H |
| |
| #include "qapi/util.h" |
| |
| typedef enum example_QAPIEvent { |
| EXAMPLE_QAPI_EVENT_MY_EVENT, |
| EXAMPLE_QAPI_EVENT__MAX, |
| } example_QAPIEvent; |
| |
| #define example_QAPIEvent_str(val) \ |
| qapi_enum_lookup(&example_QAPIEvent_lookup, (val)) |
| |
| extern const QEnumLookup example_QAPIEvent_lookup; |
| |
| void example_qapi_event_emit(example_QAPIEvent event, QDict *qdict); |
| |
| #endif /* EXAMPLE_QAPI_EMIT_EVENTS_H */ |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-emit-events.c |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| const QEnumLookup example_QAPIEvent_lookup = { |
| .array = (const char *const[]) { |
| [EXAMPLE_QAPI_EVENT_MY_EVENT] = "MY_EVENT", |
| }, |
| .size = EXAMPLE_QAPI_EVENT__MAX |
| }; |
| |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| For a modular QAPI schema (see section `Include directives`_), code for |
| each sub-module SUBDIR/SUBMODULE.json is actually generated into :: |
| |
| SUBDIR/$(prefix)qapi-events-SUBMODULE.h |
| SUBDIR/$(prefix)qapi-events-SUBMODULE.c |
| |
| |
| Code generated for introspection |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| The following files are created: |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-introspect.c`` |
| Defines a string holding a JSON description of the schema |
| |
| ``$(prefix)qapi-introspect.h`` |
| Declares the above string |
| |
| Example:: |
| |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-introspect.h |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| #ifndef EXAMPLE_QAPI_INTROSPECT_H |
| #define EXAMPLE_QAPI_INTROSPECT_H |
| |
| #include "qapi/qmp/qlit.h" |
| |
| extern const QLitObject example_qmp_schema_qlit; |
| |
| #endif /* EXAMPLE_QAPI_INTROSPECT_H */ |
| $ cat qapi-generated/example-qapi-introspect.c |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |
| |
| const QLitObject example_qmp_schema_qlit = QLIT_QLIST(((QLitObject[]) { |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "arg-type", QLIT_QSTR("0"), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("command"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("my-command"), }, |
| { "ret-type", QLIT_QSTR("1"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "arg-type", QLIT_QSTR("2"), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("event"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("MY_EVENT"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| /* "0" = q_obj_my-command-arg */ |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "members", QLIT_QLIST(((QLitObject[]) { |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("arg1"), }, |
| { "type", QLIT_QSTR("[1]"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| {} |
| })), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("object"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("0"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| /* "1" = UserDefOne */ |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "members", QLIT_QLIST(((QLitObject[]) { |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("integer"), }, |
| { "type", QLIT_QSTR("int"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "default", QLIT_QNULL, }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("string"), }, |
| { "type", QLIT_QSTR("str"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "default", QLIT_QNULL, }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("flag"), }, |
| { "type", QLIT_QSTR("bool"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| {} |
| })), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("object"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("1"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| /* "2" = q_empty */ |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "members", QLIT_QLIST(((QLitObject[]) { |
| {} |
| })), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("object"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("2"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "element-type", QLIT_QSTR("1"), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("array"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("[1]"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "json-type", QLIT_QSTR("int"), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("builtin"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("int"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "json-type", QLIT_QSTR("string"), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("builtin"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("str"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| QLIT_QDICT(((QLitDictEntry[]) { |
| { "json-type", QLIT_QSTR("boolean"), }, |
| { "meta-type", QLIT_QSTR("builtin"), }, |
| { "name", QLIT_QSTR("bool"), }, |
| {} |
| })), |
| {} |
| })); |
| |
| [Uninteresting stuff omitted...] |