Documentation/QMP: Difference between revisions
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TODO: describe [http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/KVM-Autotest kvm-autotest] QMP support. | TODO: describe [http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/KVM-Autotest kvm-autotest] QMP support. | ||
== Other information == | |||
* Luiz's QMP talk on KVM Forum 2010 can be found [http://www.cpu.eti.br/talks/qmp-talk-kvm-forum-2010.pdf here] | |||
* Old QMP page can be accessed [http://www.linux-kvm.org/wiki/index.php?title=MonitorProtocol&direction=prev&oldid=3232 here] |
Revision as of 14:10, 9 September 2010
QEMU Monitor Protocol
The QEMU Monitor Protocol (QMP) is a JSON-based protocol which allows applications to communicate with QEMU's Monitor the right way.
QMP's main features are:
- Lightweight, text-based, easy to parse data format
- Asynchronous messages support (ie. events)
- Capabilities negotiation
- API/ABI stability guarantees
Please, check the README file for more information.
Status
A supported version of QMP is available since QEMU 0.13 (and a "feature preview" version was available in QEMU 0.12), however several commands in the current API have badly defined semantics.
This means that we will be introducing a deprecation policy soon. Users should always check QMP's documentation as soon as a new release of QEMU is out, so that they don't run in the risk of using a deprecated command which may be removed in a future release.
Examples
In the following examples, 'C' stands for 'Client' and 'S' stands for 'Server'.
Server Greeting
S: { "QMP": { "version": { "qemu": { "micro": 50, "minor": 13, "major": 0 }, "package": "" }, "capabilities": []}}
Query VM status
C: { "execute": "query-status" } S: { "return": { "singlestep": false, "running": true } }
Eject a medium
C: { "execute": "eject", "arguments": { "device": "ide1-cd0" } } S: { "return": {}}
Asynchronous message
S: { "event": "BLOCK_IO_ERROR", "data": { "device": "ide0-hd1", "operation": "write", "action": "stop" }, "timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
Development
Main developers are Luiz Capitulino and Markus Armbruster, but all QMP-related discussions happen on the qemu-devel mailing list.
Next features, hot fixes and other patches are stored in the QMP unstable repository:
http://repo.or.cz/w/qemu/qmp-unstable.git
IMPORTANT: all branches in this repository are constantly rebased (master inclusive).
TODO
short term
- Decouple HMP and QMP (see Features/QMP_0.14)
- Re-work the error infrastructure
- HMP passthrough via QMP
- Improve QMP testing (unit-tests, kvm-autoest and libvirt-TCK)
medium/long term
- Self-description & improved user documentation
- Asynchronous commands support
- Keep adding well defined commands
Testing
This section describes the following ways of testing QMP:
- By hand (cumbersome, only worth it if you're chasing a specific bug)
- qmp-shell script (automates part of the job)
- Libvirt integration (assumes familiarity with libvirt)
- libvirt-TCK
- kvm-autotest
Please, note that it's very recommended to read the README and spec files, as some of the testing procedures may require knowledge about the protocol format.
By hand
1. Start QMP on a TCP socket, so that telnet can be used
# qemu [...] -qmp tcp:localhost:4444,server
2. Run telnet
$ telnet localhost 4444
3. You should see QMP's greeting banner
{"QMP": {"version": {"qemu": {"micro": 50, "minor": 13, "major": 0}, "package": ""}, "capabilities": []}}
4. Issue the qmp_capabilities command, so that QMP enters command mode
{ "execute": "qmp_capabilities" }
5. You can now issue commands. For example, to get a list of QMP supported commands, issue query-commands
{ "execute": "query-commands" }
NOTE: all "info" commands are available under QMP as "query-", for example "info vnc" is "query-vnc"
There's an optimization to this procedure in case you plan to use it often (eg. QMP development):
1. Install programs socat and rlwrap. If you're running Fedora, you can do
# yum install socat rlwrap
2. Add the following sections to your QEMU config file (or create a qemu-qmp.conf one):
[chardev "qmp"] backend = "socket" path = "path to the QMP unix socket" server = "on" wait = "off" [mon "qmp"] mode = "control" chardev = "qmp"
3. Run QEMU
# qemu [...] -readconfig qemu-qmp.conf
4. Run rlwrap
# rlwrap -C qmp socat STDIO UNIX:path-to-the-QMP-unix-socket
You can now issue commands, rlwrap will give you readline support (including persistent history).
qmp-shell script
This script is available under the QMP directory in QEMU's source-tree. It automates a bit the testing work, as it can construct commands objects for you.
1. Start QMP on a unix socket
# qemu [...] -qmp unix:./qmp-sock,server
2. Run the script
# qmp-shell ./qmp-sock
3. You should get the following prompt
(QEMU)
4. You can now issue commands. For example, let's add a new device
(QEMU) device_add driver=e1000 id=net1
Libvirt
Libvirt already got QMP support, but it's currently disabled. This test procedure explains how to enable it, so that you can have libvirt running on top of QMP.
1. Install yajl-devel (If you're running Fedora 12 or above just do 'yum install yajl-devel')
2. From a fresh checkout of libvirt master branch run the following:
./autogen.sh --system --enable-compile-warnings=error
NOTE (1): The '--system' flag is a shortcut for compiling with the --prefix and other directories matching a system RPM build.
NOTE (2): Make sure the final summary of autogen.sh tells you that it found the yajl library
3. To enable QMP support, edit src/qemu/qemu_conf.c and find:
#if 0 if (version >= 13000) flags |= QEMUD_CMD_FLAG_MONITOR_JSON; #endif
Change to '#if 1', and change the version to 12000 so it detects your GIT build of QEMU
4. Run 'make' to build. There is no need to 'make install' anything especially since that would overwrite your RPM based install
5. As root simply stop the current daemon & start the one you built
/etc/init.d/libvirtd stop $HOME/your/git/checkout/of/libvirt/daemon/libvirtd
6. As root you can use the newly built virsh too
cd $HOME/your/git/checkout/of/libvirt/src ./virsh <BLAH>
Libvirt-TCK
TODO: describe libvirt's testing tool.
kvm-autotest
TODO: describe kvm-autotest QMP support.