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1 # -*- Mode: Python -*-
2
3 ##
4 # == Block core (VM unrelated)
5 ##
6
7 { 'include': 'common.json' }
8 { 'include': 'crypto.json' }
9 { 'include': 'job.json' }
10 { 'include': 'sockets.json' }
11
12 ##
13 # @SnapshotInfo:
14 #
15 # @id: unique snapshot id
16 #
17 # @name: user chosen name
18 #
19 # @vm-state-size: size of the VM state
20 #
21 # @date-sec: UTC date of the snapshot in seconds
22 #
23 # @date-nsec: fractional part in nano seconds to be used with date-sec
24 #
25 # @vm-clock-sec: VM clock relative to boot in seconds
26 #
27 # @vm-clock-nsec: fractional part in nano seconds to be used with vm-clock-sec
28 #
29 # Since: 1.3
30 #
31 ##
32 { 'struct': 'SnapshotInfo',
33 'data': { 'id': 'str', 'name': 'str', 'vm-state-size': 'int',
34 'date-sec': 'int', 'date-nsec': 'int',
35 'vm-clock-sec': 'int', 'vm-clock-nsec': 'int' } }
36
37 ##
38 # @ImageInfoSpecificQCow2EncryptionBase:
39 #
40 # @format: The encryption format
41 #
42 # Since: 2.10
43 ##
44 { 'struct': 'ImageInfoSpecificQCow2EncryptionBase',
45 'data': { 'format': 'BlockdevQcow2EncryptionFormat'}}
46
47 ##
48 # @ImageInfoSpecificQCow2Encryption:
49 #
50 # Since: 2.10
51 ##
52 { 'union': 'ImageInfoSpecificQCow2Encryption',
53 'base': 'ImageInfoSpecificQCow2EncryptionBase',
54 'discriminator': 'format',
55 'data': { 'luks': 'QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS' } }
56
57 ##
58 # @ImageInfoSpecificQCow2:
59 #
60 # @compat: compatibility level
61 #
62 # @data-file: the filename of the external data file that is stored in the
63 # image and used as a default for opening the image (since: 4.0)
64 #
65 # @data-file-raw: True if the external data file must stay valid as a
66 # standalone (read-only) raw image without looking at qcow2
67 # metadata (since: 4.0)
68 #
69 # @lazy-refcounts: on or off; only valid for compat >= 1.1
70 #
71 # @corrupt: true if the image has been marked corrupt; only valid for
72 # compat >= 1.1 (since 2.2)
73 #
74 # @refcount-bits: width of a refcount entry in bits (since 2.3)
75 #
76 # @encrypt: details about encryption parameters; only set if image
77 # is encrypted (since 2.10)
78 #
79 # @bitmaps: A list of qcow2 bitmap details (since 4.0)
80 #
81 # Since: 1.7
82 ##
83 { 'struct': 'ImageInfoSpecificQCow2',
84 'data': {
85 'compat': 'str',
86 '*data-file': 'str',
87 '*data-file-raw': 'bool',
88 '*lazy-refcounts': 'bool',
89 '*corrupt': 'bool',
90 'refcount-bits': 'int',
91 '*encrypt': 'ImageInfoSpecificQCow2Encryption',
92 '*bitmaps': ['Qcow2BitmapInfo']
93 } }
94
95 ##
96 # @ImageInfoSpecificVmdk:
97 #
98 # @create-type: The create type of VMDK image
99 #
100 # @cid: Content id of image
101 #
102 # @parent-cid: Parent VMDK image's cid
103 #
104 # @extents: List of extent files
105 #
106 # Since: 1.7
107 ##
108 { 'struct': 'ImageInfoSpecificVmdk',
109 'data': {
110 'create-type': 'str',
111 'cid': 'int',
112 'parent-cid': 'int',
113 'extents': ['ImageInfo']
114 } }
115
116 ##
117 # @ImageInfoSpecific:
118 #
119 # A discriminated record of image format specific information structures.
120 #
121 # Since: 1.7
122 ##
123 { 'union': 'ImageInfoSpecific',
124 'data': {
125 'qcow2': 'ImageInfoSpecificQCow2',
126 'vmdk': 'ImageInfoSpecificVmdk',
127 # If we need to add block driver specific parameters for
128 # LUKS in future, then we'll subclass QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS
129 # to define a ImageInfoSpecificLUKS
130 'luks': 'QCryptoBlockInfoLUKS'
131 } }
132
133 ##
134 # @ImageInfo:
135 #
136 # Information about a QEMU image file
137 #
138 # @filename: name of the image file
139 #
140 # @format: format of the image file
141 #
142 # @virtual-size: maximum capacity in bytes of the image
143 #
144 # @actual-size: actual size on disk in bytes of the image
145 #
146 # @dirty-flag: true if image is not cleanly closed
147 #
148 # @cluster-size: size of a cluster in bytes
149 #
150 # @encrypted: true if the image is encrypted
151 #
152 # @compressed: true if the image is compressed (Since 1.7)
153 #
154 # @backing-filename: name of the backing file
155 #
156 # @full-backing-filename: full path of the backing file
157 #
158 # @backing-filename-format: the format of the backing file
159 #
160 # @snapshots: list of VM snapshots
161 #
162 # @backing-image: info of the backing image (since 1.6)
163 #
164 # @format-specific: structure supplying additional format-specific
165 # information (since 1.7)
166 #
167 # Since: 1.3
168 #
169 ##
170 { 'struct': 'ImageInfo',
171 'data': {'filename': 'str', 'format': 'str', '*dirty-flag': 'bool',
172 '*actual-size': 'int', 'virtual-size': 'int',
173 '*cluster-size': 'int', '*encrypted': 'bool', '*compressed': 'bool',
174 '*backing-filename': 'str', '*full-backing-filename': 'str',
175 '*backing-filename-format': 'str', '*snapshots': ['SnapshotInfo'],
176 '*backing-image': 'ImageInfo',
177 '*format-specific': 'ImageInfoSpecific' } }
178
179 ##
180 # @ImageCheck:
181 #
182 # Information about a QEMU image file check
183 #
184 # @filename: name of the image file checked
185 #
186 # @format: format of the image file checked
187 #
188 # @check-errors: number of unexpected errors occurred during check
189 #
190 # @image-end-offset: offset (in bytes) where the image ends, this
191 # field is present if the driver for the image format
192 # supports it
193 #
194 # @corruptions: number of corruptions found during the check if any
195 #
196 # @leaks: number of leaks found during the check if any
197 #
198 # @corruptions-fixed: number of corruptions fixed during the check
199 # if any
200 #
201 # @leaks-fixed: number of leaks fixed during the check if any
202 #
203 # @total-clusters: total number of clusters, this field is present
204 # if the driver for the image format supports it
205 #
206 # @allocated-clusters: total number of allocated clusters, this
207 # field is present if the driver for the image format
208 # supports it
209 #
210 # @fragmented-clusters: total number of fragmented clusters, this
211 # field is present if the driver for the image format
212 # supports it
213 #
214 # @compressed-clusters: total number of compressed clusters, this
215 # field is present if the driver for the image format
216 # supports it
217 #
218 # Since: 1.4
219 #
220 ##
221 { 'struct': 'ImageCheck',
222 'data': {'filename': 'str', 'format': 'str', 'check-errors': 'int',
223 '*image-end-offset': 'int', '*corruptions': 'int', '*leaks': 'int',
224 '*corruptions-fixed': 'int', '*leaks-fixed': 'int',
225 '*total-clusters': 'int', '*allocated-clusters': 'int',
226 '*fragmented-clusters': 'int', '*compressed-clusters': 'int' } }
227
228 ##
229 # @MapEntry:
230 #
231 # Mapping information from a virtual block range to a host file range
232 #
233 # @start: the start byte of the mapped virtual range
234 #
235 # @length: the number of bytes of the mapped virtual range
236 #
237 # @data: whether the mapped range has data
238 #
239 # @zero: whether the virtual blocks are zeroed
240 #
241 # @depth: the depth of the mapping
242 #
243 # @offset: the offset in file that the virtual sectors are mapped to
244 #
245 # @filename: filename that is referred to by @offset
246 #
247 # Since: 2.6
248 #
249 ##
250 { 'struct': 'MapEntry',
251 'data': {'start': 'int', 'length': 'int', 'data': 'bool',
252 'zero': 'bool', 'depth': 'int', '*offset': 'int',
253 '*filename': 'str' } }
254
255 ##
256 # @BlockdevCacheInfo:
257 #
258 # Cache mode information for a block device
259 #
260 # @writeback: true if writeback mode is enabled
261 # @direct: true if the host page cache is bypassed (O_DIRECT)
262 # @no-flush: true if flush requests are ignored for the device
263 #
264 # Since: 2.3
265 ##
266 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCacheInfo',
267 'data': { 'writeback': 'bool',
268 'direct': 'bool',
269 'no-flush': 'bool' } }
270
271 ##
272 # @BlockDeviceInfo:
273 #
274 # Information about the backing device for a block device.
275 #
276 # @file: the filename of the backing device
277 #
278 # @node-name: the name of the block driver node (Since 2.0)
279 #
280 # @ro: true if the backing device was open read-only
281 #
282 # @drv: the name of the block format used to open the backing device. As of
283 # 0.14.0 this can be: 'blkdebug', 'bochs', 'cloop', 'cow', 'dmg',
284 # 'file', 'file', 'ftp', 'ftps', 'host_cdrom', 'host_device',
285 # 'http', 'https', 'luks', 'nbd', 'parallels', 'qcow',
286 # 'qcow2', 'raw', 'vdi', 'vmdk', 'vpc', 'vvfat'
287 # 2.2: 'archipelago' added, 'cow' dropped
288 # 2.3: 'host_floppy' deprecated
289 # 2.5: 'host_floppy' dropped
290 # 2.6: 'luks' added
291 # 2.8: 'replication' added, 'tftp' dropped
292 # 2.9: 'archipelago' dropped
293 #
294 # @backing_file: the name of the backing file (for copy-on-write)
295 #
296 # @backing_file_depth: number of files in the backing file chain (since: 1.2)
297 #
298 # @encrypted: true if the backing device is encrypted
299 #
300 # @encryption_key_missing: Deprecated; always false
301 #
302 # @detect_zeroes: detect and optimize zero writes (Since 2.1)
303 #
304 # @bps: total throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
305 #
306 # @bps_rd: read throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
307 #
308 # @bps_wr: write throughput limit in bytes per second is specified
309 #
310 # @iops: total I/O operations per second is specified
311 #
312 # @iops_rd: read I/O operations per second is specified
313 #
314 # @iops_wr: write I/O operations per second is specified
315 #
316 # @image: the info of image used (since: 1.6)
317 #
318 # @bps_max: total throughput limit during bursts,
319 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
320 #
321 # @bps_rd_max: read throughput limit during bursts,
322 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
323 #
324 # @bps_wr_max: write throughput limit during bursts,
325 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
326 #
327 # @iops_max: total I/O operations per second during bursts,
328 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
329 #
330 # @iops_rd_max: read I/O operations per second during bursts,
331 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
332 #
333 # @iops_wr_max: write I/O operations per second during bursts,
334 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
335 #
336 # @bps_max_length: maximum length of the @bps_max burst
337 # period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
338 #
339 # @bps_rd_max_length: maximum length of the @bps_rd_max
340 # burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
341 #
342 # @bps_wr_max_length: maximum length of the @bps_wr_max
343 # burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
344 #
345 # @iops_max_length: maximum length of the @iops burst
346 # period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
347 #
348 # @iops_rd_max_length: maximum length of the @iops_rd_max
349 # burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
350 #
351 # @iops_wr_max_length: maximum length of the @iops_wr_max
352 # burst period, in seconds. (Since 2.6)
353 #
354 # @iops_size: an I/O size in bytes (Since 1.7)
355 #
356 # @group: throttle group name (Since 2.4)
357 #
358 # @cache: the cache mode used for the block device (since: 2.3)
359 #
360 # @write_threshold: configured write threshold for the device.
361 # 0 if disabled. (Since 2.3)
362 #
363 # Since: 0.14.0
364 #
365 ##
366 { 'struct': 'BlockDeviceInfo',
367 'data': { 'file': 'str', '*node-name': 'str', 'ro': 'bool', 'drv': 'str',
368 '*backing_file': 'str', 'backing_file_depth': 'int',
369 'encrypted': 'bool', 'encryption_key_missing': 'bool',
370 'detect_zeroes': 'BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions',
371 'bps': 'int', 'bps_rd': 'int', 'bps_wr': 'int',
372 'iops': 'int', 'iops_rd': 'int', 'iops_wr': 'int',
373 'image': 'ImageInfo',
374 '*bps_max': 'int', '*bps_rd_max': 'int',
375 '*bps_wr_max': 'int', '*iops_max': 'int',
376 '*iops_rd_max': 'int', '*iops_wr_max': 'int',
377 '*bps_max_length': 'int', '*bps_rd_max_length': 'int',
378 '*bps_wr_max_length': 'int', '*iops_max_length': 'int',
379 '*iops_rd_max_length': 'int', '*iops_wr_max_length': 'int',
380 '*iops_size': 'int', '*group': 'str', 'cache': 'BlockdevCacheInfo',
381 'write_threshold': 'int' } }
382
383 ##
384 # @BlockDeviceIoStatus:
385 #
386 # An enumeration of block device I/O status.
387 #
388 # @ok: The last I/O operation has succeeded
389 #
390 # @failed: The last I/O operation has failed
391 #
392 # @nospace: The last I/O operation has failed due to a no-space condition
393 #
394 # Since: 1.0
395 ##
396 { 'enum': 'BlockDeviceIoStatus', 'data': [ 'ok', 'failed', 'nospace' ] }
397
398 ##
399 # @BlockDeviceMapEntry:
400 #
401 # Entry in the metadata map of the device (returned by "qemu-img map")
402 #
403 # @start: Offset in the image of the first byte described by this entry
404 # (in bytes)
405 #
406 # @length: Length of the range described by this entry (in bytes)
407 #
408 # @depth: Number of layers (0 = top image, 1 = top image's backing file, etc.)
409 # before reaching one for which the range is allocated. The value is
410 # in the range 0 to the depth of the image chain - 1.
411 #
412 # @zero: the sectors in this range read as zeros
413 #
414 # @data: reading the image will actually read data from a file (in particular,
415 # if @offset is present this means that the sectors are not simply
416 # preallocated, but contain actual data in raw format)
417 #
418 # @offset: if present, the image file stores the data for this range in
419 # raw format at the given offset.
420 #
421 # Since: 1.7
422 ##
423 { 'struct': 'BlockDeviceMapEntry',
424 'data': { 'start': 'int', 'length': 'int', 'depth': 'int', 'zero': 'bool',
425 'data': 'bool', '*offset': 'int' } }
426
427 ##
428 # @DirtyBitmapStatus:
429 #
430 # An enumeration of possible states that a dirty bitmap can report to the user.
431 #
432 # @frozen: The bitmap is currently in-use by some operation and is immutable.
433 # If the bitmap was @active prior to the operation, new writes by the
434 # guest are being recorded in a temporary buffer, and will not be lost.
435 # Generally, bitmaps are cleared on successful use in an operation and
436 # the temporary buffer is committed into the bitmap. On failure, the
437 # temporary buffer is merged back into the bitmap without first
438 # clearing it.
439 # Please refer to the documentation for each bitmap-using operation,
440 # See also @blockdev-backup, @drive-backup.
441 #
442 # @disabled: The bitmap is not currently recording new writes by the guest.
443 # This is requested explicitly via @block-dirty-bitmap-disable.
444 # It can still be cleared, deleted, or used for backup operations.
445 #
446 # @active: The bitmap is actively monitoring for new writes, and can be cleared,
447 # deleted, or used for backup operations.
448 #
449 # @locked: The bitmap is currently in-use by some operation and is immutable.
450 # If the bitmap was @active prior to the operation, it is still
451 # recording new writes. If the bitmap was @disabled, it is not
452 # recording new writes. (Since 2.12)
453 #
454 # @inconsistent: This is a persistent dirty bitmap that was marked in-use on
455 # disk, and is unusable by QEMU. It can only be deleted.
456 # Please rely on the inconsistent field in @BlockDirtyInfo
457 # instead, as the status field is deprecated. (Since 4.0)
458 #
459 # Since: 2.4
460 ##
461 { 'enum': 'DirtyBitmapStatus',
462 'data': ['active', 'disabled', 'frozen', 'locked', 'inconsistent'] }
463
464 ##
465 # @BlockDirtyInfo:
466 #
467 # Block dirty bitmap information.
468 #
469 # @name: the name of the dirty bitmap (Since 2.4)
470 #
471 # @count: number of dirty bytes according to the dirty bitmap
472 #
473 # @granularity: granularity of the dirty bitmap in bytes (since 1.4)
474 #
475 # @status: Deprecated in favor of @recording and @locked. (since 2.4)
476 #
477 # @recording: true if the bitmap is recording new writes from the guest.
478 # Replaces `active` and `disabled` statuses. (since 4.0)
479 #
480 # @busy: true if the bitmap is in-use by some operation (NBD or jobs)
481 # and cannot be modified via QMP or used by another operation.
482 # Replaces `locked` and `frozen` statuses. (since 4.0)
483 #
484 # @persistent: true if the bitmap was stored on disk, is scheduled to be stored
485 # on disk, or both. (since 4.0)
486 #
487 # @inconsistent: true if this is a persistent bitmap that was improperly
488 # stored. Implies @persistent to be true; @recording and
489 # @busy to be false. This bitmap cannot be used. To remove
490 # it, use @block-dirty-bitmap-remove. (Since 4.0)
491 #
492 # Since: 1.3
493 ##
494 { 'struct': 'BlockDirtyInfo',
495 'data': {'*name': 'str', 'count': 'int', 'granularity': 'uint32',
496 'recording': 'bool', 'busy': 'bool', 'status': 'DirtyBitmapStatus',
497 'persistent': 'bool', '*inconsistent': 'bool' } }
498
499 ##
500 # @Qcow2BitmapInfoFlags:
501 #
502 # An enumeration of flags that a bitmap can report to the user.
503 #
504 # @in-use: This flag is set by any process actively modifying the qcow2 file,
505 # and cleared when the updated bitmap is flushed to the qcow2 image.
506 # The presence of this flag in an offline image means that the bitmap
507 # was not saved correctly after its last usage, and may contain
508 # inconsistent data.
509 #
510 # @auto: The bitmap must reflect all changes of the virtual disk by any
511 # application that would write to this qcow2 file.
512 #
513 # Since: 4.0
514 ##
515 { 'enum': 'Qcow2BitmapInfoFlags',
516 'data': ['in-use', 'auto'] }
517
518 ##
519 # @Qcow2BitmapInfo:
520 #
521 # Qcow2 bitmap information.
522 #
523 # @name: the name of the bitmap
524 #
525 # @granularity: granularity of the bitmap in bytes
526 #
527 # @flags: flags of the bitmap
528 #
529 # Since: 4.0
530 ##
531 { 'struct': 'Qcow2BitmapInfo',
532 'data': {'name': 'str', 'granularity': 'uint32',
533 'flags': ['Qcow2BitmapInfoFlags'] } }
534
535 ##
536 # @BlockLatencyHistogramInfo:
537 #
538 # Block latency histogram.
539 #
540 # @boundaries: list of interval boundary values in nanoseconds, all greater
541 # than zero and in ascending order.
542 # For example, the list [10, 50, 100] produces the following
543 # histogram intervals: [0, 10), [10, 50), [50, 100), [100, +inf).
544 #
545 # @bins: list of io request counts corresponding to histogram intervals.
546 # len(@bins) = len(@boundaries) + 1
547 # For the example above, @bins may be something like [3, 1, 5, 2],
548 # and corresponding histogram looks like:
549 #
550 # 5| *
551 # 4| *
552 # 3| * *
553 # 2| * * *
554 # 1| * * * *
555 # +------------------
556 # 10 50 100
557 #
558 # Since: 4.0
559 ##
560 { 'struct': 'BlockLatencyHistogramInfo',
561 'data': {'boundaries': ['uint64'], 'bins': ['uint64'] } }
562
563 ##
564 # @block-latency-histogram-set:
565 #
566 # Manage read, write and flush latency histograms for the device.
567 #
568 # If only @id parameter is specified, remove all present latency histograms
569 # for the device. Otherwise, add/reset some of (or all) latency histograms.
570 #
571 # @id: The name or QOM path of the guest device.
572 #
573 # @boundaries: list of interval boundary values (see description in
574 # BlockLatencyHistogramInfo definition). If specified, all
575 # latency histograms are removed, and empty ones created for all
576 # io types with intervals corresponding to @boundaries (except for
577 # io types, for which specific boundaries are set through the
578 # following parameters).
579 #
580 # @boundaries-read: list of interval boundary values for read latency
581 # histogram. If specified, old read latency histogram is
582 # removed, and empty one created with intervals
583 # corresponding to @boundaries-read. The parameter has higher
584 # priority then @boundaries.
585 #
586 # @boundaries-write: list of interval boundary values for write latency
587 # histogram.
588 #
589 # @boundaries-flush: list of interval boundary values for flush latency
590 # histogram.
591 #
592 # Returns: error if device is not found or any boundary arrays are invalid.
593 #
594 # Since: 4.0
595 #
596 # Example: set new histograms for all io types with intervals
597 # [0, 10), [10, 50), [50, 100), [100, +inf):
598 #
599 # -> { "execute": "block-latency-histogram-set",
600 # "arguments": { "id": "drive0",
601 # "boundaries": [10, 50, 100] } }
602 # <- { "return": {} }
603 #
604 # Example: set new histogram only for write, other histograms will remain
605 # not changed (or not created):
606 #
607 # -> { "execute": "block-latency-histogram-set",
608 # "arguments": { "id": "drive0",
609 # "boundaries-write": [10, 50, 100] } }
610 # <- { "return": {} }
611 #
612 # Example: set new histograms with the following intervals:
613 # read, flush: [0, 10), [10, 50), [50, 100), [100, +inf)
614 # write: [0, 1000), [1000, 5000), [5000, +inf)
615 #
616 # -> { "execute": "block-latency-histogram-set",
617 # "arguments": { "id": "drive0",
618 # "boundaries": [10, 50, 100],
619 # "boundaries-write": [1000, 5000] } }
620 # <- { "return": {} }
621 #
622 # Example: remove all latency histograms:
623 #
624 # -> { "execute": "block-latency-histogram-set",
625 # "arguments": { "id": "drive0" } }
626 # <- { "return": {} }
627 ##
628 { 'command': 'block-latency-histogram-set',
629 'data': {'id': 'str',
630 '*boundaries': ['uint64'],
631 '*boundaries-read': ['uint64'],
632 '*boundaries-write': ['uint64'],
633 '*boundaries-flush': ['uint64'] } }
634
635 ##
636 # @BlockInfo:
637 #
638 # Block device information. This structure describes a virtual device and
639 # the backing device associated with it.
640 #
641 # @device: The device name associated with the virtual device.
642 #
643 # @qdev: The qdev ID, or if no ID is assigned, the QOM path of the block
644 # device. (since 2.10)
645 #
646 # @type: This field is returned only for compatibility reasons, it should
647 # not be used (always returns 'unknown')
648 #
649 # @removable: True if the device supports removable media.
650 #
651 # @locked: True if the guest has locked this device from having its media
652 # removed
653 #
654 # @tray_open: True if the device's tray is open
655 # (only present if it has a tray)
656 #
657 # @dirty-bitmaps: dirty bitmaps information (only present if the
658 # driver has one or more dirty bitmaps) (Since 2.0)
659 #
660 # @io-status: @BlockDeviceIoStatus. Only present if the device
661 # supports it and the VM is configured to stop on errors
662 # (supported device models: virtio-blk, IDE, SCSI except
663 # scsi-generic)
664 #
665 # @inserted: @BlockDeviceInfo describing the device if media is
666 # present
667 #
668 # Since: 0.14.0
669 ##
670 { 'struct': 'BlockInfo',
671 'data': {'device': 'str', '*qdev': 'str', 'type': 'str', 'removable': 'bool',
672 'locked': 'bool', '*inserted': 'BlockDeviceInfo',
673 '*tray_open': 'bool', '*io-status': 'BlockDeviceIoStatus',
674 '*dirty-bitmaps': ['BlockDirtyInfo'] } }
675
676 ##
677 # @BlockMeasureInfo:
678 #
679 # Image file size calculation information. This structure describes the size
680 # requirements for creating a new image file.
681 #
682 # The size requirements depend on the new image file format. File size always
683 # equals virtual disk size for the 'raw' format, even for sparse POSIX files.
684 # Compact formats such as 'qcow2' represent unallocated and zero regions
685 # efficiently so file size may be smaller than virtual disk size.
686 #
687 # The values are upper bounds that are guaranteed to fit the new image file.
688 # Subsequent modification, such as internal snapshot or bitmap creation, may
689 # require additional space and is not covered here.
690 #
691 # @required: Size required for a new image file, in bytes.
692 #
693 # @fully-allocated: Image file size, in bytes, once data has been written
694 # to all sectors.
695 #
696 # Since: 2.10
697 ##
698 { 'struct': 'BlockMeasureInfo',
699 'data': {'required': 'int', 'fully-allocated': 'int'} }
700
701 ##
702 # @query-block:
703 #
704 # Get a list of BlockInfo for all virtual block devices.
705 #
706 # Returns: a list of @BlockInfo describing each virtual block device. Filter
707 # nodes that were created implicitly are skipped over.
708 #
709 # Since: 0.14.0
710 #
711 # Example:
712 #
713 # -> { "execute": "query-block" }
714 # <- {
715 # "return":[
716 # {
717 # "io-status": "ok",
718 # "device":"ide0-hd0",
719 # "locked":false,
720 # "removable":false,
721 # "inserted":{
722 # "ro":false,
723 # "drv":"qcow2",
724 # "encrypted":false,
725 # "file":"disks/test.qcow2",
726 # "backing_file_depth":1,
727 # "bps":1000000,
728 # "bps_rd":0,
729 # "bps_wr":0,
730 # "iops":1000000,
731 # "iops_rd":0,
732 # "iops_wr":0,
733 # "bps_max": 8000000,
734 # "bps_rd_max": 0,
735 # "bps_wr_max": 0,
736 # "iops_max": 0,
737 # "iops_rd_max": 0,
738 # "iops_wr_max": 0,
739 # "iops_size": 0,
740 # "detect_zeroes": "on",
741 # "write_threshold": 0,
742 # "image":{
743 # "filename":"disks/test.qcow2",
744 # "format":"qcow2",
745 # "virtual-size":2048000,
746 # "backing_file":"base.qcow2",
747 # "full-backing-filename":"disks/base.qcow2",
748 # "backing-filename-format":"qcow2",
749 # "snapshots":[
750 # {
751 # "id": "1",
752 # "name": "snapshot1",
753 # "vm-state-size": 0,
754 # "date-sec": 10000200,
755 # "date-nsec": 12,
756 # "vm-clock-sec": 206,
757 # "vm-clock-nsec": 30
758 # }
759 # ],
760 # "backing-image":{
761 # "filename":"disks/base.qcow2",
762 # "format":"qcow2",
763 # "virtual-size":2048000
764 # }
765 # }
766 # },
767 # "qdev": "ide_disk",
768 # "type":"unknown"
769 # },
770 # {
771 # "io-status": "ok",
772 # "device":"ide1-cd0",
773 # "locked":false,
774 # "removable":true,
775 # "qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[23]",
776 # "tray_open": false,
777 # "type":"unknown"
778 # },
779 # {
780 # "device":"floppy0",
781 # "locked":false,
782 # "removable":true,
783 # "qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[20]",
784 # "type":"unknown"
785 # },
786 # {
787 # "device":"sd0",
788 # "locked":false,
789 # "removable":true,
790 # "type":"unknown"
791 # }
792 # ]
793 # }
794 #
795 ##
796 { 'command': 'query-block', 'returns': ['BlockInfo'] }
797
798
799 ##
800 # @BlockDeviceTimedStats:
801 #
802 # Statistics of a block device during a given interval of time.
803 #
804 # @interval_length: Interval used for calculating the statistics,
805 # in seconds.
806 #
807 # @min_rd_latency_ns: Minimum latency of read operations in the
808 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
809 #
810 # @min_wr_latency_ns: Minimum latency of write operations in the
811 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
812 #
813 # @min_flush_latency_ns: Minimum latency of flush operations in the
814 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
815 #
816 # @max_rd_latency_ns: Maximum latency of read operations in the
817 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
818 #
819 # @max_wr_latency_ns: Maximum latency of write operations in the
820 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
821 #
822 # @max_flush_latency_ns: Maximum latency of flush operations in the
823 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
824 #
825 # @avg_rd_latency_ns: Average latency of read operations in the
826 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
827 #
828 # @avg_wr_latency_ns: Average latency of write operations in the
829 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
830 #
831 # @avg_flush_latency_ns: Average latency of flush operations in the
832 # defined interval, in nanoseconds.
833 #
834 # @avg_rd_queue_depth: Average number of pending read operations
835 # in the defined interval.
836 #
837 # @avg_wr_queue_depth: Average number of pending write operations
838 # in the defined interval.
839 #
840 # Since: 2.5
841 ##
842 { 'struct': 'BlockDeviceTimedStats',
843 'data': { 'interval_length': 'int', 'min_rd_latency_ns': 'int',
844 'max_rd_latency_ns': 'int', 'avg_rd_latency_ns': 'int',
845 'min_wr_latency_ns': 'int', 'max_wr_latency_ns': 'int',
846 'avg_wr_latency_ns': 'int', 'min_flush_latency_ns': 'int',
847 'max_flush_latency_ns': 'int', 'avg_flush_latency_ns': 'int',
848 'avg_rd_queue_depth': 'number', 'avg_wr_queue_depth': 'number' } }
849
850 ##
851 # @BlockDeviceStats:
852 #
853 # Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device.
854 #
855 # @rd_bytes: The number of bytes read by the device.
856 #
857 # @wr_bytes: The number of bytes written by the device.
858 #
859 # @rd_operations: The number of read operations performed by the device.
860 #
861 # @wr_operations: The number of write operations performed by the device.
862 #
863 # @flush_operations: The number of cache flush operations performed by the
864 # device (since 0.15.0)
865 #
866 # @flush_total_time_ns: Total time spend on cache flushes in nano-seconds
867 # (since 0.15.0).
868 #
869 # @wr_total_time_ns: Total time spend on writes in nano-seconds (since 0.15.0).
870 #
871 # @rd_total_time_ns: Total_time_spend on reads in nano-seconds (since 0.15.0).
872 #
873 # @wr_highest_offset: The offset after the greatest byte written to the
874 # device. The intended use of this information is for
875 # growable sparse files (like qcow2) that are used on top
876 # of a physical device.
877 #
878 # @rd_merged: Number of read requests that have been merged into another
879 # request (Since 2.3).
880 #
881 # @wr_merged: Number of write requests that have been merged into another
882 # request (Since 2.3).
883 #
884 # @idle_time_ns: Time since the last I/O operation, in
885 # nanoseconds. If the field is absent it means that
886 # there haven't been any operations yet (Since 2.5).
887 #
888 # @failed_rd_operations: The number of failed read operations
889 # performed by the device (Since 2.5)
890 #
891 # @failed_wr_operations: The number of failed write operations
892 # performed by the device (Since 2.5)
893 #
894 # @failed_flush_operations: The number of failed flush operations
895 # performed by the device (Since 2.5)
896 #
897 # @invalid_rd_operations: The number of invalid read operations
898 # performed by the device (Since 2.5)
899 #
900 # @invalid_wr_operations: The number of invalid write operations
901 # performed by the device (Since 2.5)
902 #
903 # @invalid_flush_operations: The number of invalid flush operations
904 # performed by the device (Since 2.5)
905 #
906 # @account_invalid: Whether invalid operations are included in the
907 # last access statistics (Since 2.5)
908 #
909 # @account_failed: Whether failed operations are included in the
910 # latency and last access statistics (Since 2.5)
911 #
912 # @timed_stats: Statistics specific to the set of previously defined
913 # intervals of time (Since 2.5)
914 #
915 # @rd_latency_histogram: @BlockLatencyHistogramInfo. (Since 4.0)
916 #
917 # @wr_latency_histogram: @BlockLatencyHistogramInfo. (Since 4.0)
918 #
919 # @flush_latency_histogram: @BlockLatencyHistogramInfo. (Since 4.0)
920 #
921 # Since: 0.14.0
922 ##
923 { 'struct': 'BlockDeviceStats',
924 'data': {'rd_bytes': 'int', 'wr_bytes': 'int', 'rd_operations': 'int',
925 'wr_operations': 'int', 'flush_operations': 'int',
926 'flush_total_time_ns': 'int', 'wr_total_time_ns': 'int',
927 'rd_total_time_ns': 'int', 'wr_highest_offset': 'int',
928 'rd_merged': 'int', 'wr_merged': 'int', '*idle_time_ns': 'int',
929 'failed_rd_operations': 'int', 'failed_wr_operations': 'int',
930 'failed_flush_operations': 'int', 'invalid_rd_operations': 'int',
931 'invalid_wr_operations': 'int', 'invalid_flush_operations': 'int',
932 'account_invalid': 'bool', 'account_failed': 'bool',
933 'timed_stats': ['BlockDeviceTimedStats'],
934 '*rd_latency_histogram': 'BlockLatencyHistogramInfo',
935 '*wr_latency_histogram': 'BlockLatencyHistogramInfo',
936 '*flush_latency_histogram': 'BlockLatencyHistogramInfo' } }
937
938 ##
939 # @BlockStats:
940 #
941 # Statistics of a virtual block device or a block backing device.
942 #
943 # @device: If the stats are for a virtual block device, the name
944 # corresponding to the virtual block device.
945 #
946 # @node-name: The node name of the device. (Since 2.3)
947 #
948 # @qdev: The qdev ID, or if no ID is assigned, the QOM path of the block
949 # device. (since 3.0)
950 #
951 # @stats: A @BlockDeviceStats for the device.
952 #
953 # @parent: This describes the file block device if it has one.
954 # Contains recursively the statistics of the underlying
955 # protocol (e.g. the host file for a qcow2 image). If there is
956 # no underlying protocol, this field is omitted
957 #
958 # @backing: This describes the backing block device if it has one.
959 # (Since 2.0)
960 #
961 # Since: 0.14.0
962 ##
963 { 'struct': 'BlockStats',
964 'data': {'*device': 'str', '*qdev': 'str', '*node-name': 'str',
965 'stats': 'BlockDeviceStats',
966 '*parent': 'BlockStats',
967 '*backing': 'BlockStats'} }
968
969 ##
970 # @query-blockstats:
971 #
972 # Query the @BlockStats for all virtual block devices.
973 #
974 # @query-nodes: If true, the command will query all the block nodes
975 # that have a node name, in a list which will include "parent"
976 # information, but not "backing".
977 # If false or omitted, the behavior is as before - query all the
978 # device backends, recursively including their "parent" and
979 # "backing". Filter nodes that were created implicitly are
980 # skipped over in this mode. (Since 2.3)
981 #
982 # Returns: A list of @BlockStats for each virtual block devices.
983 #
984 # Since: 0.14.0
985 #
986 # Example:
987 #
988 # -> { "execute": "query-blockstats" }
989 # <- {
990 # "return":[
991 # {
992 # "device":"ide0-hd0",
993 # "parent":{
994 # "stats":{
995 # "wr_highest_offset":3686448128,
996 # "wr_bytes":9786368,
997 # "wr_operations":751,
998 # "rd_bytes":122567168,
999 # "rd_operations":36772
1000 # "wr_total_times_ns":313253456
1001 # "rd_total_times_ns":3465673657
1002 # "flush_total_times_ns":49653
1003 # "flush_operations":61,
1004 # "rd_merged":0,
1005 # "wr_merged":0,
1006 # "idle_time_ns":2953431879,
1007 # "account_invalid":true,
1008 # "account_failed":false
1009 # }
1010 # },
1011 # "stats":{
1012 # "wr_highest_offset":2821110784,
1013 # "wr_bytes":9786368,
1014 # "wr_operations":692,
1015 # "rd_bytes":122739200,
1016 # "rd_operations":36604
1017 # "flush_operations":51,
1018 # "wr_total_times_ns":313253456
1019 # "rd_total_times_ns":3465673657
1020 # "flush_total_times_ns":49653,
1021 # "rd_merged":0,
1022 # "wr_merged":0,
1023 # "idle_time_ns":2953431879,
1024 # "account_invalid":true,
1025 # "account_failed":false
1026 # },
1027 # "qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[23]"
1028 # },
1029 # {
1030 # "device":"ide1-cd0",
1031 # "stats":{
1032 # "wr_highest_offset":0,
1033 # "wr_bytes":0,
1034 # "wr_operations":0,
1035 # "rd_bytes":0,
1036 # "rd_operations":0
1037 # "flush_operations":0,
1038 # "wr_total_times_ns":0
1039 # "rd_total_times_ns":0
1040 # "flush_total_times_ns":0,
1041 # "rd_merged":0,
1042 # "wr_merged":0,
1043 # "account_invalid":false,
1044 # "account_failed":false
1045 # },
1046 # "qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[24]"
1047 # },
1048 # {
1049 # "device":"floppy0",
1050 # "stats":{
1051 # "wr_highest_offset":0,
1052 # "wr_bytes":0,
1053 # "wr_operations":0,
1054 # "rd_bytes":0,
1055 # "rd_operations":0
1056 # "flush_operations":0,
1057 # "wr_total_times_ns":0
1058 # "rd_total_times_ns":0
1059 # "flush_total_times_ns":0,
1060 # "rd_merged":0,
1061 # "wr_merged":0,
1062 # "account_invalid":false,
1063 # "account_failed":false
1064 # },
1065 # "qdev": "/machine/unattached/device[16]"
1066 # },
1067 # {
1068 # "device":"sd0",
1069 # "stats":{
1070 # "wr_highest_offset":0,
1071 # "wr_bytes":0,
1072 # "wr_operations":0,
1073 # "rd_bytes":0,
1074 # "rd_operations":0
1075 # "flush_operations":0,
1076 # "wr_total_times_ns":0
1077 # "rd_total_times_ns":0
1078 # "flush_total_times_ns":0,
1079 # "rd_merged":0,
1080 # "wr_merged":0,
1081 # "account_invalid":false,
1082 # "account_failed":false
1083 # }
1084 # }
1085 # ]
1086 # }
1087 #
1088 ##
1089 { 'command': 'query-blockstats',
1090 'data': { '*query-nodes': 'bool' },
1091 'returns': ['BlockStats'] }
1092
1093 ##
1094 # @BlockdevOnError:
1095 #
1096 # An enumeration of possible behaviors for errors on I/O operations.
1097 # The exact meaning depends on whether the I/O was initiated by a guest
1098 # or by a block job
1099 #
1100 # @report: for guest operations, report the error to the guest;
1101 # for jobs, cancel the job
1102 #
1103 # @ignore: ignore the error, only report a QMP event (BLOCK_IO_ERROR
1104 # or BLOCK_JOB_ERROR)
1105 #
1106 # @enospc: same as @stop on ENOSPC, same as @report otherwise.
1107 #
1108 # @stop: for guest operations, stop the virtual machine;
1109 # for jobs, pause the job
1110 #
1111 # @auto: inherit the error handling policy of the backend (since: 2.7)
1112 #
1113 # Since: 1.3
1114 ##
1115 { 'enum': 'BlockdevOnError',
1116 'data': ['report', 'ignore', 'enospc', 'stop', 'auto'] }
1117
1118 ##
1119 # @MirrorSyncMode:
1120 #
1121 # An enumeration of possible behaviors for the initial synchronization
1122 # phase of storage mirroring.
1123 #
1124 # @top: copies data in the topmost image to the destination
1125 #
1126 # @full: copies data from all images to the destination
1127 #
1128 # @none: only copy data written from now on
1129 #
1130 # @incremental: only copy data described by the dirty bitmap. Since: 2.4
1131 #
1132 # Since: 1.3
1133 ##
1134 { 'enum': 'MirrorSyncMode',
1135 'data': ['top', 'full', 'none', 'incremental'] }
1136
1137 ##
1138 # @MirrorCopyMode:
1139 #
1140 # An enumeration whose values tell the mirror block job when to
1141 # trigger writes to the target.
1142 #
1143 # @background: copy data in background only.
1144 #
1145 # @write-blocking: when data is written to the source, write it
1146 # (synchronously) to the target as well. In
1147 # addition, data is copied in background just like in
1148 # @background mode.
1149 #
1150 # Since: 3.0
1151 ##
1152 { 'enum': 'MirrorCopyMode',
1153 'data': ['background', 'write-blocking'] }
1154
1155 ##
1156 # @BlockJobInfo:
1157 #
1158 # Information about a long-running block device operation.
1159 #
1160 # @type: the job type ('stream' for image streaming)
1161 #
1162 # @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other
1163 # values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
1164 #
1165 # @len: Estimated @offset value at the completion of the job. This value can
1166 # arbitrarily change while the job is running, in both directions.
1167 #
1168 # @offset: Progress made until now. The unit is arbitrary and the value can
1169 # only meaningfully be used for the ratio of @offset to @len. The
1170 # value is monotonically increasing.
1171 #
1172 # @busy: false if the job is known to be in a quiescent state, with
1173 # no pending I/O. Since 1.3.
1174 #
1175 # @paused: whether the job is paused or, if @busy is true, will
1176 # pause itself as soon as possible. Since 1.3.
1177 #
1178 # @speed: the rate limit, bytes per second
1179 #
1180 # @io-status: the status of the job (since 1.3)
1181 #
1182 # @ready: true if the job may be completed (since 2.2)
1183 #
1184 # @status: Current job state/status (since 2.12)
1185 #
1186 # @auto-finalize: Job will finalize itself when PENDING, moving to
1187 # the CONCLUDED state. (since 2.12)
1188 #
1189 # @auto-dismiss: Job will dismiss itself when CONCLUDED, moving to the NULL
1190 # state and disappearing from the query list. (since 2.12)
1191 #
1192 # @error: Error information if the job did not complete successfully.
1193 # Not set if the job completed successfully. (since 2.12.1)
1194 #
1195 # Since: 1.1
1196 ##
1197 { 'struct': 'BlockJobInfo',
1198 'data': {'type': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'len': 'int',
1199 'offset': 'int', 'busy': 'bool', 'paused': 'bool', 'speed': 'int',
1200 'io-status': 'BlockDeviceIoStatus', 'ready': 'bool',
1201 'status': 'JobStatus',
1202 'auto-finalize': 'bool', 'auto-dismiss': 'bool',
1203 '*error': 'str' } }
1204
1205 ##
1206 # @query-block-jobs:
1207 #
1208 # Return information about long-running block device operations.
1209 #
1210 # Returns: a list of @BlockJobInfo for each active block job
1211 #
1212 # Since: 1.1
1213 ##
1214 { 'command': 'query-block-jobs', 'returns': ['BlockJobInfo'] }
1215
1216 ##
1217 # @block_passwd:
1218 #
1219 # This command sets the password of a block device that has not been open
1220 # with a password and requires one.
1221 #
1222 # This command is now obsolete and will always return an error since 2.10
1223 #
1224 ##
1225 { 'command': 'block_passwd',
1226 'data': { '*device': 'str',
1227 '*node-name': 'str',
1228 'password': 'str' } }
1229
1230 ##
1231 # @block_resize:
1232 #
1233 # Resize a block image while a guest is running.
1234 #
1235 # Either @device or @node-name must be set but not both.
1236 #
1237 # @device: the name of the device to get the image resized
1238 #
1239 # @node-name: graph node name to get the image resized (Since 2.0)
1240 #
1241 # @size: new image size in bytes
1242 #
1243 # Returns: nothing on success
1244 # If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
1245 #
1246 # Since: 0.14.0
1247 #
1248 # Example:
1249 #
1250 # -> { "execute": "block_resize",
1251 # "arguments": { "device": "scratch", "size": 1073741824 } }
1252 # <- { "return": {} }
1253 #
1254 ##
1255 { 'command': 'block_resize',
1256 'data': { '*device': 'str',
1257 '*node-name': 'str',
1258 'size': 'int' } }
1259
1260 ##
1261 # @NewImageMode:
1262 #
1263 # An enumeration that tells QEMU how to set the backing file path in
1264 # a new image file.
1265 #
1266 # @existing: QEMU should look for an existing image file.
1267 #
1268 # @absolute-paths: QEMU should create a new image with absolute paths
1269 # for the backing file. If there is no backing file available, the new
1270 # image will not be backed either.
1271 #
1272 # Since: 1.1
1273 ##
1274 { 'enum': 'NewImageMode',
1275 'data': [ 'existing', 'absolute-paths' ] }
1276
1277 ##
1278 # @BlockdevSnapshotSync:
1279 #
1280 # Either @device or @node-name must be set but not both.
1281 #
1282 # @device: the name of the device to take a snapshot of.
1283 #
1284 # @node-name: graph node name to generate the snapshot from (Since 2.0)
1285 #
1286 # @snapshot-file: the target of the new overlay image. If the file
1287 # exists, or if it is a device, the overlay will be created in the
1288 # existing file/device. Otherwise, a new file will be created.
1289 #
1290 # @snapshot-node-name: the graph node name of the new image (Since 2.0)
1291 #
1292 # @format: the format of the overlay image, default is 'qcow2'.
1293 #
1294 # @mode: whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is
1295 # 'absolute-paths'.
1296 ##
1297 { 'struct': 'BlockdevSnapshotSync',
1298 'data': { '*device': 'str', '*node-name': 'str',
1299 'snapshot-file': 'str', '*snapshot-node-name': 'str',
1300 '*format': 'str', '*mode': 'NewImageMode' } }
1301
1302 ##
1303 # @BlockdevSnapshot:
1304 #
1305 # @node: device or node name that will have a snapshot taken.
1306 #
1307 # @overlay: reference to the existing block device that will become
1308 # the overlay of @node, as part of taking the snapshot.
1309 # It must not have a current backing file (this can be
1310 # achieved by passing "backing": null to blockdev-add).
1311 #
1312 # Since: 2.5
1313 ##
1314 { 'struct': 'BlockdevSnapshot',
1315 'data': { 'node': 'str', 'overlay': 'str' } }
1316
1317 ##
1318 # @DriveBackup:
1319 #
1320 # @job-id: identifier for the newly-created block job. If
1321 # omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
1322 #
1323 # @device: the device name or node-name of a root node which should be copied.
1324 #
1325 # @target: the target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it
1326 # is a device, the existing file/device will be used as the new
1327 # destination. If it does not exist, a new file will be created.
1328 #
1329 # @format: the format of the new destination, default is to
1330 # probe if @mode is 'existing', else the format of the source
1331 #
1332 # @sync: what parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination
1333 # (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, from a
1334 # dirty bitmap, or only new I/O).
1335 #
1336 # @mode: whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is
1337 # 'absolute-paths'.
1338 #
1339 # @speed: the maximum speed, in bytes per second
1340 #
1341 # @bitmap: the name of dirty bitmap if sync is "incremental".
1342 # Must be present if sync is "incremental", must NOT be present
1343 # otherwise. (Since 2.4)
1344 #
1345 # @compress: true to compress data, if the target format supports it.
1346 # (default: false) (since 2.8)
1347 #
1348 # @on-source-error: the action to take on an error on the source,
1349 # default 'report'. 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used
1350 # if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo).
1351 #
1352 # @on-target-error: the action to take on an error on the target,
1353 # default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to
1354 # a different block device than @device).
1355 #
1356 # @auto-finalize: When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has
1357 # finished its work, waiting for @block-job-finalize before
1358 # making any block graph changes.
1359 # When true, this job will automatically
1360 # perform its abort or commit actions.
1361 # Defaults to true. (Since 2.12)
1362 #
1363 # @auto-dismiss: When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it
1364 # has completely ceased all work, and awaits @block-job-dismiss.
1365 # When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query
1366 # list without user intervention.
1367 # Defaults to true. (Since 2.12)
1368 #
1369 # Note: @on-source-error and @on-target-error only affect background
1370 # I/O. If an error occurs during a guest write request, the device's
1371 # rerror/werror actions will be used.
1372 #
1373 # Since: 1.6
1374 ##
1375 { 'struct': 'DriveBackup',
1376 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'target': 'str',
1377 '*format': 'str', 'sync': 'MirrorSyncMode',
1378 '*mode': 'NewImageMode', '*speed': 'int',
1379 '*bitmap': 'str', '*compress': 'bool',
1380 '*on-source-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
1381 '*on-target-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
1382 '*auto-finalize': 'bool', '*auto-dismiss': 'bool' } }
1383
1384 ##
1385 # @BlockdevBackup:
1386 #
1387 # @job-id: identifier for the newly-created block job. If
1388 # omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
1389 #
1390 # @device: the device name or node-name of a root node which should be copied.
1391 #
1392 # @target: the device name or node-name of the backup target node.
1393 #
1394 # @sync: what parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination
1395 # (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or
1396 # only new I/O).
1397 #
1398 # @speed: the maximum speed, in bytes per second. The default is 0,
1399 # for unlimited.
1400 #
1401 # @bitmap: the name of dirty bitmap if sync is "incremental".
1402 # Must be present if sync is "incremental", must NOT be present
1403 # otherwise. (Since 3.1)
1404 #
1405 # @compress: true to compress data, if the target format supports it.
1406 # (default: false) (since 2.8)
1407 #
1408 # @on-source-error: the action to take on an error on the source,
1409 # default 'report'. 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used
1410 # if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo).
1411 #
1412 # @on-target-error: the action to take on an error on the target,
1413 # default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to
1414 # a different block device than @device).
1415 #
1416 # @auto-finalize: When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has
1417 # finished its work, waiting for @block-job-finalize before
1418 # making any block graph changes.
1419 # When true, this job will automatically
1420 # perform its abort or commit actions.
1421 # Defaults to true. (Since 2.12)
1422 #
1423 # @auto-dismiss: When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it
1424 # has completely ceased all work, and awaits @block-job-dismiss.
1425 # When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query
1426 # list without user intervention.
1427 # Defaults to true. (Since 2.12)
1428 #
1429 # Note: @on-source-error and @on-target-error only affect background
1430 # I/O. If an error occurs during a guest write request, the device's
1431 # rerror/werror actions will be used.
1432 #
1433 # Since: 2.3
1434 ##
1435 { 'struct': 'BlockdevBackup',
1436 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'target': 'str',
1437 'sync': 'MirrorSyncMode', '*speed': 'int',
1438 '*bitmap': 'str', '*compress': 'bool',
1439 '*on-source-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
1440 '*on-target-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
1441 '*auto-finalize': 'bool', '*auto-dismiss': 'bool' } }
1442
1443 ##
1444 # @blockdev-snapshot-sync:
1445 #
1446 # Takes a synchronous snapshot of a block device.
1447 #
1448 # For the arguments, see the documentation of BlockdevSnapshotSync.
1449 #
1450 # Returns: nothing on success
1451 # If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
1452 #
1453 # Since: 0.14.0
1454 #
1455 # Example:
1456 #
1457 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot-sync",
1458 # "arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
1459 # "snapshot-file":
1460 # "/some/place/my-image",
1461 # "format": "qcow2" } }
1462 # <- { "return": {} }
1463 #
1464 ##
1465 { 'command': 'blockdev-snapshot-sync',
1466 'data': 'BlockdevSnapshotSync' }
1467
1468
1469 ##
1470 # @blockdev-snapshot:
1471 #
1472 # Takes a snapshot of a block device.
1473 #
1474 # Take a snapshot, by installing 'node' as the backing image of
1475 # 'overlay'. Additionally, if 'node' is associated with a block
1476 # device, the block device changes to using 'overlay' as its new active
1477 # image.
1478 #
1479 # For the arguments, see the documentation of BlockdevSnapshot.
1480 #
1481 # Since: 2.5
1482 #
1483 # Example:
1484 #
1485 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
1486 # "arguments": { "driver": "qcow2",
1487 # "node-name": "node1534",
1488 # "file": { "driver": "file",
1489 # "filename": "hd1.qcow2" },
1490 # "backing": null } }
1491 #
1492 # <- { "return": {} }
1493 #
1494 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-snapshot",
1495 # "arguments": { "node": "ide-hd0",
1496 # "overlay": "node1534" } }
1497 # <- { "return": {} }
1498 #
1499 ##
1500 { 'command': 'blockdev-snapshot',
1501 'data': 'BlockdevSnapshot' }
1502
1503 ##
1504 # @change-backing-file:
1505 #
1506 # Change the backing file in the image file metadata. This does not
1507 # cause QEMU to reopen the image file to reparse the backing filename
1508 # (it may, however, perform a reopen to change permissions from
1509 # r/o -> r/w -> r/o, if needed). The new backing file string is written
1510 # into the image file metadata, and the QEMU internal strings are
1511 # updated.
1512 #
1513 # @image-node-name: The name of the block driver state node of the
1514 # image to modify. The "device" argument is used
1515 # to verify "image-node-name" is in the chain
1516 # described by "device".
1517 #
1518 # @device: The device name or node-name of the root node that owns
1519 # image-node-name.
1520 #
1521 # @backing-file: The string to write as the backing file. This
1522 # string is not validated, so care should be taken
1523 # when specifying the string or the image chain may
1524 # not be able to be reopened again.
1525 #
1526 # Returns: Nothing on success
1527 #
1528 # If "device" does not exist or cannot be determined, DeviceNotFound
1529 #
1530 # Since: 2.1
1531 ##
1532 { 'command': 'change-backing-file',
1533 'data': { 'device': 'str', 'image-node-name': 'str',
1534 'backing-file': 'str' } }
1535
1536 ##
1537 # @block-commit:
1538 #
1539 # Live commit of data from overlay image nodes into backing nodes - i.e.,
1540 # writes data between 'top' and 'base' into 'base'.
1541 #
1542 # @job-id: identifier for the newly-created block job. If
1543 # omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
1544 #
1545 # @device: the device name or node-name of a root node
1546 #
1547 # @base-node: The node name of the backing image to write data into.
1548 # If not specified, this is the deepest backing image.
1549 # (since: 3.1)
1550 #
1551 # @base: Same as @base-node, except that it is a file name rather than a node
1552 # name. This must be the exact filename string that was used to open the
1553 # node; other strings, even if addressing the same file, are not
1554 # accepted (deprecated, use @base-node instead)
1555 #
1556 # @top-node: The node name of the backing image within the image chain
1557 # which contains the topmost data to be committed down. If
1558 # not specified, this is the active layer. (since: 3.1)
1559 #
1560 # @top: Same as @top-node, except that it is a file name rather than a node
1561 # name. This must be the exact filename string that was used to open the
1562 # node; other strings, even if addressing the same file, are not
1563 # accepted (deprecated, use @base-node instead)
1564 #
1565 # @backing-file: The backing file string to write into the overlay
1566 # image of 'top'. If 'top' is the active layer,
1567 # specifying a backing file string is an error. This
1568 # filename is not validated.
1569 #
1570 # If a pathname string is such that it cannot be
1571 # resolved by QEMU, that means that subsequent QMP or
1572 # HMP commands must use node-names for the image in
1573 # question, as filename lookup methods will fail.
1574 #
1575 # If not specified, QEMU will automatically determine
1576 # the backing file string to use, or error out if
1577 # there is no obvious choice. Care should be taken
1578 # when specifying the string, to specify a valid
1579 # filename or protocol.
1580 # (Since 2.1)
1581 #
1582 # If top == base, that is an error.
1583 # If top == active, the job will not be completed by itself,
1584 # user needs to complete the job with the block-job-complete
1585 # command after getting the ready event. (Since 2.0)
1586 #
1587 # If the base image is smaller than top, then the base image
1588 # will be resized to be the same size as top. If top is
1589 # smaller than the base image, the base will not be
1590 # truncated. If you want the base image size to match the
1591 # size of the smaller top, you can safely truncate it
1592 # yourself once the commit operation successfully completes.
1593 #
1594 # @speed: the maximum speed, in bytes per second
1595 #
1596 # @filter-node-name: the node name that should be assigned to the
1597 # filter driver that the commit job inserts into the graph
1598 # above @top. If this option is not given, a node name is
1599 # autogenerated. (Since: 2.9)
1600 #
1601 # @auto-finalize: When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has
1602 # finished its work, waiting for @block-job-finalize before
1603 # making any block graph changes.
1604 # When true, this job will automatically
1605 # perform its abort or commit actions.
1606 # Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
1607 #
1608 # @auto-dismiss: When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it
1609 # has completely ceased all work, and awaits @block-job-dismiss.
1610 # When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query
1611 # list without user intervention.
1612 # Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
1613 #
1614 # Returns: Nothing on success
1615 # If @device does not exist, DeviceNotFound
1616 # Any other error returns a GenericError.
1617 #
1618 # Since: 1.3
1619 #
1620 # Example:
1621 #
1622 # -> { "execute": "block-commit",
1623 # "arguments": { "device": "virtio0",
1624 # "top": "/tmp/snap1.qcow2" } }
1625 # <- { "return": {} }
1626 #
1627 ##
1628 { 'command': 'block-commit',
1629 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', '*base-node': 'str',
1630 '*base': 'str', '*top-node': 'str', '*top': 'str',
1631 '*backing-file': 'str', '*speed': 'int',
1632 '*filter-node-name': 'str',
1633 '*auto-finalize': 'bool', '*auto-dismiss': 'bool' } }
1634
1635 ##
1636 # @drive-backup:
1637 #
1638 # Start a point-in-time copy of a block device to a new destination. The
1639 # status of ongoing drive-backup operations can be checked with
1640 # query-block-jobs where the BlockJobInfo.type field has the value 'backup'.
1641 # The operation can be stopped before it has completed using the
1642 # block-job-cancel command.
1643 #
1644 # Returns: nothing on success
1645 # If @device is not a valid block device, GenericError
1646 #
1647 # Since: 1.6
1648 #
1649 # Example:
1650 #
1651 # -> { "execute": "drive-backup",
1652 # "arguments": { "device": "drive0",
1653 # "sync": "full",
1654 # "target": "backup.img" } }
1655 # <- { "return": {} }
1656 #
1657 ##
1658 { 'command': 'drive-backup', 'boxed': true,
1659 'data': 'DriveBackup' }
1660
1661 ##
1662 # @blockdev-backup:
1663 #
1664 # Start a point-in-time copy of a block device to a new destination. The
1665 # status of ongoing blockdev-backup operations can be checked with
1666 # query-block-jobs where the BlockJobInfo.type field has the value 'backup'.
1667 # The operation can be stopped before it has completed using the
1668 # block-job-cancel command.
1669 #
1670 # Returns: nothing on success
1671 # If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
1672 #
1673 # Since: 2.3
1674 #
1675 # Example:
1676 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-backup",
1677 # "arguments": { "device": "src-id",
1678 # "sync": "full",
1679 # "target": "tgt-id" } }
1680 # <- { "return": {} }
1681 #
1682 ##
1683 { 'command': 'blockdev-backup', 'boxed': true,
1684 'data': 'BlockdevBackup' }
1685
1686
1687 ##
1688 # @query-named-block-nodes:
1689 #
1690 # Get the named block driver list
1691 #
1692 # Returns: the list of BlockDeviceInfo
1693 #
1694 # Since: 2.0
1695 #
1696 # Example:
1697 #
1698 # -> { "execute": "query-named-block-nodes" }
1699 # <- { "return": [ { "ro":false,
1700 # "drv":"qcow2",
1701 # "encrypted":false,
1702 # "file":"disks/test.qcow2",
1703 # "node-name": "my-node",
1704 # "backing_file_depth":1,
1705 # "bps":1000000,
1706 # "bps_rd":0,
1707 # "bps_wr":0,
1708 # "iops":1000000,
1709 # "iops_rd":0,
1710 # "iops_wr":0,
1711 # "bps_max": 8000000,
1712 # "bps_rd_max": 0,
1713 # "bps_wr_max": 0,
1714 # "iops_max": 0,
1715 # "iops_rd_max": 0,
1716 # "iops_wr_max": 0,
1717 # "iops_size": 0,
1718 # "write_threshold": 0,
1719 # "image":{
1720 # "filename":"disks/test.qcow2",
1721 # "format":"qcow2",
1722 # "virtual-size":2048000,
1723 # "backing_file":"base.qcow2",
1724 # "full-backing-filename":"disks/base.qcow2",
1725 # "backing-filename-format":"qcow2",
1726 # "snapshots":[
1727 # {
1728 # "id": "1",
1729 # "name": "snapshot1",
1730 # "vm-state-size": 0,
1731 # "date-sec": 10000200,
1732 # "date-nsec": 12,
1733 # "vm-clock-sec": 206,
1734 # "vm-clock-nsec": 30
1735 # }
1736 # ],
1737 # "backing-image":{
1738 # "filename":"disks/base.qcow2",
1739 # "format":"qcow2",
1740 # "virtual-size":2048000
1741 # }
1742 # } } ] }
1743 #
1744 ##
1745 { 'command': 'query-named-block-nodes', 'returns': [ 'BlockDeviceInfo' ] }
1746
1747 ##
1748 # @XDbgBlockGraphNodeType:
1749 #
1750 # @block-backend: corresponds to BlockBackend
1751 #
1752 # @block-job: corresonds to BlockJob
1753 #
1754 # @block-driver: corresponds to BlockDriverState
1755 #
1756 # Since: 4.0
1757 ##
1758 { 'enum': 'XDbgBlockGraphNodeType',
1759 'data': [ 'block-backend', 'block-job', 'block-driver' ] }
1760
1761 ##
1762 # @XDbgBlockGraphNode:
1763 #
1764 # @id: Block graph node identifier. This @id is generated only for
1765 # x-debug-query-block-graph and does not relate to any other identifiers in
1766 # Qemu.
1767 #
1768 # @type: Type of graph node. Can be one of block-backend, block-job or
1769 # block-driver-state.
1770 #
1771 # @name: Human readable name of the node. Corresponds to node-name for
1772 # block-driver-state nodes; is not guaranteed to be unique in the whole
1773 # graph (with block-jobs and block-backends).
1774 #
1775 # Since: 4.0
1776 ##
1777 { 'struct': 'XDbgBlockGraphNode',
1778 'data': { 'id': 'uint64', 'type': 'XDbgBlockGraphNodeType', 'name': 'str' } }
1779
1780 ##
1781 # @BlockPermission:
1782 #
1783 # Enum of base block permissions.
1784 #
1785 # @consistent-read: A user that has the "permission" of consistent reads is
1786 # guaranteed that their view of the contents of the block
1787 # device is complete and self-consistent, representing the
1788 # contents of a disk at a specific point.
1789 # For most block devices (including their backing files) this
1790 # is true, but the property cannot be maintained in a few
1791 # situations like for intermediate nodes of a commit block
1792 # job.
1793 #
1794 # @write: This permission is required to change the visible disk contents.
1795 #
1796 # @write-unchanged: This permission (which is weaker than BLK_PERM_WRITE) is
1797 # both enough and required for writes to the block node when
1798 # the caller promises that the visible disk content doesn't
1799 # change.
1800 # As the BLK_PERM_WRITE permission is strictly stronger,
1801 # either is sufficient to perform an unchanging write.
1802 #
1803 # @resize: This permission is required to change the size of a block node.
1804 #
1805 # @graph-mod: This permission is required to change the node that this
1806 # BdrvChild points to.
1807 #
1808 # Since: 4.0
1809 ##
1810 { 'enum': 'BlockPermission',
1811 'data': [ 'consistent-read', 'write', 'write-unchanged', 'resize',
1812 'graph-mod' ] }
1813 ##
1814 # @XDbgBlockGraphEdge:
1815 #
1816 # Block Graph edge description for x-debug-query-block-graph.
1817 #
1818 # @parent: parent id
1819 #
1820 # @child: child id
1821 #
1822 # @name: name of the relation (examples are 'file' and 'backing')
1823 #
1824 # @perm: granted permissions for the parent operating on the child
1825 #
1826 # @shared-perm: permissions that can still be granted to other users of the
1827 # child while it is still attached to this parent
1828 #
1829 # Since: 4.0
1830 ##
1831 { 'struct': 'XDbgBlockGraphEdge',
1832 'data': { 'parent': 'uint64', 'child': 'uint64',
1833 'name': 'str', 'perm': [ 'BlockPermission' ],
1834 'shared-perm': [ 'BlockPermission' ] } }
1835
1836 ##
1837 # @XDbgBlockGraph:
1838 #
1839 # Block Graph - list of nodes and list of edges.
1840 #
1841 # Since: 4.0
1842 ##
1843 { 'struct': 'XDbgBlockGraph',
1844 'data': { 'nodes': ['XDbgBlockGraphNode'], 'edges': ['XDbgBlockGraphEdge'] } }
1845
1846 ##
1847 # @x-debug-query-block-graph:
1848 #
1849 # Get the block graph.
1850 #
1851 # Since: 4.0
1852 ##
1853 { 'command': 'x-debug-query-block-graph', 'returns': 'XDbgBlockGraph' }
1854
1855 ##
1856 # @drive-mirror:
1857 #
1858 # Start mirroring a block device's writes to a new destination. target
1859 # specifies the target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it
1860 # is a device, it will be used as the new destination for writes. If
1861 # it does not exist, a new file will be created. format specifies the
1862 # format of the mirror image, default is to probe if mode='existing',
1863 # else the format of the source.
1864 #
1865 # Returns: nothing on success
1866 # If @device is not a valid block device, GenericError
1867 #
1868 # Since: 1.3
1869 #
1870 # Example:
1871 #
1872 # -> { "execute": "drive-mirror",
1873 # "arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
1874 # "target": "/some/place/my-image",
1875 # "sync": "full",
1876 # "format": "qcow2" } }
1877 # <- { "return": {} }
1878 #
1879 ##
1880 { 'command': 'drive-mirror', 'boxed': true,
1881 'data': 'DriveMirror' }
1882
1883 ##
1884 # @DriveMirror:
1885 #
1886 # A set of parameters describing drive mirror setup.
1887 #
1888 # @job-id: identifier for the newly-created block job. If
1889 # omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
1890 #
1891 # @device: the device name or node-name of a root node whose writes should be
1892 # mirrored.
1893 #
1894 # @target: the target of the new image. If the file exists, or if it
1895 # is a device, the existing file/device will be used as the new
1896 # destination. If it does not exist, a new file will be created.
1897 #
1898 # @format: the format of the new destination, default is to
1899 # probe if @mode is 'existing', else the format of the source
1900 #
1901 # @node-name: the new block driver state node name in the graph
1902 # (Since 2.1)
1903 #
1904 # @replaces: with sync=full graph node name to be replaced by the new
1905 # image when a whole image copy is done. This can be used to repair
1906 # broken Quorum files. (Since 2.1)
1907 #
1908 # @mode: whether and how QEMU should create a new image, default is
1909 # 'absolute-paths'.
1910 #
1911 # @speed: the maximum speed, in bytes per second
1912 #
1913 # @sync: what parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination
1914 # (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or
1915 # only new I/O).
1916 #
1917 # @granularity: granularity of the dirty bitmap, default is 64K
1918 # if the image format doesn't have clusters, 4K if the clusters
1919 # are smaller than that, else the cluster size. Must be a
1920 # power of 2 between 512 and 64M (since 1.4).
1921 #
1922 # @buf-size: maximum amount of data in flight from source to
1923 # target (since 1.4).
1924 #
1925 # @on-source-error: the action to take on an error on the source,
1926 # default 'report'. 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used
1927 # if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo).
1928 #
1929 # @on-target-error: the action to take on an error on the target,
1930 # default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to
1931 # a different block device than @device).
1932 # @unmap: Whether to try to unmap target sectors where source has
1933 # only zero. If true, and target unallocated sectors will read as zero,
1934 # target image sectors will be unmapped; otherwise, zeroes will be
1935 # written. Both will result in identical contents.
1936 # Default is true. (Since 2.4)
1937 #
1938 # @copy-mode: when to copy data to the destination; defaults to 'background'
1939 # (Since: 3.0)
1940 #
1941 # @auto-finalize: When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has
1942 # finished its work, waiting for @block-job-finalize before
1943 # making any block graph changes.
1944 # When true, this job will automatically
1945 # perform its abort or commit actions.
1946 # Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
1947 #
1948 # @auto-dismiss: When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it
1949 # has completely ceased all work, and awaits @block-job-dismiss.
1950 # When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query
1951 # list without user intervention.
1952 # Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
1953 # Since: 1.3
1954 ##
1955 { 'struct': 'DriveMirror',
1956 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'target': 'str',
1957 '*format': 'str', '*node-name': 'str', '*replaces': 'str',
1958 'sync': 'MirrorSyncMode', '*mode': 'NewImageMode',
1959 '*speed': 'int', '*granularity': 'uint32',
1960 '*buf-size': 'int', '*on-source-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
1961 '*on-target-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
1962 '*unmap': 'bool', '*copy-mode': 'MirrorCopyMode',
1963 '*auto-finalize': 'bool', '*auto-dismiss': 'bool' } }
1964
1965 ##
1966 # @BlockDirtyBitmap:
1967 #
1968 # @node: name of device/node which the bitmap is tracking
1969 #
1970 # @name: name of the dirty bitmap
1971 #
1972 # Since: 2.4
1973 ##
1974 { 'struct': 'BlockDirtyBitmap',
1975 'data': { 'node': 'str', 'name': 'str' } }
1976
1977 ##
1978 # @BlockDirtyBitmapAdd:
1979 #
1980 # @node: name of device/node which the bitmap is tracking
1981 #
1982 # @name: name of the dirty bitmap
1983 #
1984 # @granularity: the bitmap granularity, default is 64k for
1985 # block-dirty-bitmap-add
1986 #
1987 # @persistent: the bitmap is persistent, i.e. it will be saved to the
1988 # corresponding block device image file on its close. For now only
1989 # Qcow2 disks support persistent bitmaps. Default is false for
1990 # block-dirty-bitmap-add. (Since: 2.10)
1991 #
1992 # @autoload: ignored and deprecated since 2.12.
1993 # Currently, all dirty tracking bitmaps are loaded from Qcow2 on
1994 # open.
1995 #
1996 # @disabled: the bitmap is created in the disabled state, which means that
1997 # it will not track drive changes. The bitmap may be enabled with
1998 # block-dirty-bitmap-enable. Default is false. (Since: 4.0)
1999 #
2000 # Since: 2.4
2001 ##
2002 { 'struct': 'BlockDirtyBitmapAdd',
2003 'data': { 'node': 'str', 'name': 'str', '*granularity': 'uint32',
2004 '*persistent': 'bool', '*autoload': 'bool', '*disabled': 'bool' } }
2005
2006 ##
2007 # @BlockDirtyBitmapMergeSource:
2008 #
2009 # @local: name of the bitmap, attached to the same node as target bitmap.
2010 #
2011 # @external: bitmap with specified node
2012 #
2013 # Since: 4.1
2014 ##
2015 { 'alternate': 'BlockDirtyBitmapMergeSource',
2016 'data': { 'local': 'str',
2017 'external': 'BlockDirtyBitmap' } }
2018
2019 ##
2020 # @BlockDirtyBitmapMerge:
2021 #
2022 # @node: name of device/node which the @target bitmap is tracking
2023 #
2024 # @target: name of the destination dirty bitmap
2025 #
2026 # @bitmaps: name(s) of the source dirty bitmap(s) at @node and/or fully
2027 # specifed BlockDirtyBitmap elements. The latter are supported
2028 # since 4.1.
2029 #
2030 # Since: 4.0
2031 ##
2032 { 'struct': 'BlockDirtyBitmapMerge',
2033 'data': { 'node': 'str', 'target': 'str',
2034 'bitmaps': ['BlockDirtyBitmapMergeSource'] } }
2035
2036 ##
2037 # @block-dirty-bitmap-add:
2038 #
2039 # Create a dirty bitmap with a name on the node, and start tracking the writes.
2040 #
2041 # Returns: nothing on success
2042 # If @node is not a valid block device or node, DeviceNotFound
2043 # If @name is already taken, GenericError with an explanation
2044 #
2045 # Since: 2.4
2046 #
2047 # Example:
2048 #
2049 # -> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-add",
2050 # "arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } }
2051 # <- { "return": {} }
2052 #
2053 ##
2054 { 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-add',
2055 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmapAdd' }
2056
2057 ##
2058 # @block-dirty-bitmap-remove:
2059 #
2060 # Stop write tracking and remove the dirty bitmap that was created
2061 # with block-dirty-bitmap-add. If the bitmap is persistent, remove it from its
2062 # storage too.
2063 #
2064 # Returns: nothing on success
2065 # If @node is not a valid block device or node, DeviceNotFound
2066 # If @name is not found, GenericError with an explanation
2067 # if @name is frozen by an operation, GenericError
2068 #
2069 # Since: 2.4
2070 #
2071 # Example:
2072 #
2073 # -> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-remove",
2074 # "arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } }
2075 # <- { "return": {} }
2076 #
2077 ##
2078 { 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-remove',
2079 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmap' }
2080
2081 ##
2082 # @block-dirty-bitmap-clear:
2083 #
2084 # Clear (reset) a dirty bitmap on the device, so that an incremental
2085 # backup from this point in time forward will only backup clusters
2086 # modified after this clear operation.
2087 #
2088 # Returns: nothing on success
2089 # If @node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
2090 # If @name is not found, GenericError with an explanation
2091 #
2092 # Since: 2.4
2093 #
2094 # Example:
2095 #
2096 # -> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-clear",
2097 # "arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } }
2098 # <- { "return": {} }
2099 #
2100 ##
2101 { 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-clear',
2102 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmap' }
2103
2104 ##
2105 # @block-dirty-bitmap-enable:
2106 #
2107 # Enables a dirty bitmap so that it will begin tracking disk changes.
2108 #
2109 # Returns: nothing on success
2110 # If @node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
2111 # If @name is not found, GenericError with an explanation
2112 #
2113 # Since: 4.0
2114 #
2115 # Example:
2116 #
2117 # -> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-enable",
2118 # "arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } }
2119 # <- { "return": {} }
2120 #
2121 ##
2122 { 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-enable',
2123 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmap' }
2124
2125 ##
2126 # @block-dirty-bitmap-disable:
2127 #
2128 # Disables a dirty bitmap so that it will stop tracking disk changes.
2129 #
2130 # Returns: nothing on success
2131 # If @node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
2132 # If @name is not found, GenericError with an explanation
2133 #
2134 # Since: 4.0
2135 #
2136 # Example:
2137 #
2138 # -> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-disable",
2139 # "arguments": { "node": "drive0", "name": "bitmap0" } }
2140 # <- { "return": {} }
2141 #
2142 ##
2143 { 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-disable',
2144 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmap' }
2145
2146 ##
2147 # @block-dirty-bitmap-merge:
2148 #
2149 # Merge dirty bitmaps listed in @bitmaps to the @target dirty bitmap.
2150 # Dirty bitmaps in @bitmaps will be unchanged, except if it also appears
2151 # as the @target bitmap. Any bits already set in @target will still be
2152 # set after the merge, i.e., this operation does not clear the target.
2153 # On error, @target is unchanged.
2154 #
2155 # The resulting bitmap will count as dirty any clusters that were dirty in any
2156 # of the source bitmaps. This can be used to achieve backup checkpoints, or in
2157 # simpler usages, to copy bitmaps.
2158 #
2159 # Returns: nothing on success
2160 # If @node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
2161 # If any bitmap in @bitmaps or @target is not found, GenericError
2162 # If any of the bitmaps have different sizes or granularities,
2163 # GenericError
2164 #
2165 # Since: 4.0
2166 #
2167 # Example:
2168 #
2169 # -> { "execute": "block-dirty-bitmap-merge",
2170 # "arguments": { "node": "drive0", "target": "bitmap0",
2171 # "bitmaps": ["bitmap1"] } }
2172 # <- { "return": {} }
2173 #
2174 ##
2175 { 'command': 'block-dirty-bitmap-merge',
2176 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmapMerge' }
2177
2178 ##
2179 # @BlockDirtyBitmapSha256:
2180 #
2181 # SHA256 hash of dirty bitmap data
2182 #
2183 # @sha256: ASCII representation of SHA256 bitmap hash
2184 #
2185 # Since: 2.10
2186 ##
2187 { 'struct': 'BlockDirtyBitmapSha256',
2188 'data': {'sha256': 'str'} }
2189
2190 ##
2191 # @x-debug-block-dirty-bitmap-sha256:
2192 #
2193 # Get bitmap SHA256.
2194 #
2195 # Returns: BlockDirtyBitmapSha256 on success
2196 # If @node is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
2197 # If @name is not found or if hashing has failed, GenericError with an
2198 # explanation
2199 #
2200 # Since: 2.10
2201 ##
2202 { 'command': 'x-debug-block-dirty-bitmap-sha256',
2203 'data': 'BlockDirtyBitmap', 'returns': 'BlockDirtyBitmapSha256' }
2204
2205 ##
2206 # @blockdev-mirror:
2207 #
2208 # Start mirroring a block device's writes to a new destination.
2209 #
2210 # @job-id: identifier for the newly-created block job. If
2211 # omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
2212 #
2213 # @device: The device name or node-name of a root node whose writes should be
2214 # mirrored.
2215 #
2216 # @target: the id or node-name of the block device to mirror to. This mustn't be
2217 # attached to guest.
2218 #
2219 # @replaces: with sync=full graph node name to be replaced by the new
2220 # image when a whole image copy is done. This can be used to repair
2221 # broken Quorum files.
2222 #
2223 # @speed: the maximum speed, in bytes per second
2224 #
2225 # @sync: what parts of the disk image should be copied to the destination
2226 # (all the disk, only the sectors allocated in the topmost image, or
2227 # only new I/O).
2228 #
2229 # @granularity: granularity of the dirty bitmap, default is 64K
2230 # if the image format doesn't have clusters, 4K if the clusters
2231 # are smaller than that, else the cluster size. Must be a
2232 # power of 2 between 512 and 64M
2233 #
2234 # @buf-size: maximum amount of data in flight from source to
2235 # target
2236 #
2237 # @on-source-error: the action to take on an error on the source,
2238 # default 'report'. 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used
2239 # if the block device supports io-status (see BlockInfo).
2240 #
2241 # @on-target-error: the action to take on an error on the target,
2242 # default 'report' (no limitations, since this applies to
2243 # a different block device than @device).
2244 #
2245 # @filter-node-name: the node name that should be assigned to the
2246 # filter driver that the mirror job inserts into the graph
2247 # above @device. If this option is not given, a node name is
2248 # autogenerated. (Since: 2.9)
2249 #
2250 # @copy-mode: when to copy data to the destination; defaults to 'background'
2251 # (Since: 3.0)
2252 #
2253 # @auto-finalize: When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has
2254 # finished its work, waiting for @block-job-finalize before
2255 # making any block graph changes.
2256 # When true, this job will automatically
2257 # perform its abort or commit actions.
2258 # Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
2259 #
2260 # @auto-dismiss: When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it
2261 # has completely ceased all work, and awaits @block-job-dismiss.
2262 # When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query
2263 # list without user intervention.
2264 # Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
2265 # Returns: nothing on success.
2266 #
2267 # Since: 2.6
2268 #
2269 # Example:
2270 #
2271 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-mirror",
2272 # "arguments": { "device": "ide-hd0",
2273 # "target": "target0",
2274 # "sync": "full" } }
2275 # <- { "return": {} }
2276 #
2277 ##
2278 { 'command': 'blockdev-mirror',
2279 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', 'target': 'str',
2280 '*replaces': 'str',
2281 'sync': 'MirrorSyncMode',
2282 '*speed': 'int', '*granularity': 'uint32',
2283 '*buf-size': 'int', '*on-source-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
2284 '*on-target-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
2285 '*filter-node-name': 'str',
2286 '*copy-mode': 'MirrorCopyMode',
2287 '*auto-finalize': 'bool', '*auto-dismiss': 'bool' } }
2288
2289 ##
2290 # @block_set_io_throttle:
2291 #
2292 # Change I/O throttle limits for a block drive.
2293 #
2294 # Since QEMU 2.4, each device with I/O limits is member of a throttle
2295 # group.
2296 #
2297 # If two or more devices are members of the same group, the limits
2298 # will apply to the combined I/O of the whole group in a round-robin
2299 # fashion. Therefore, setting new I/O limits to a device will affect
2300 # the whole group.
2301 #
2302 # The name of the group can be specified using the 'group' parameter.
2303 # If the parameter is unset, it is assumed to be the current group of
2304 # that device. If it's not in any group yet, the name of the device
2305 # will be used as the name for its group.
2306 #
2307 # The 'group' parameter can also be used to move a device to a
2308 # different group. In this case the limits specified in the parameters
2309 # will be applied to the new group only.
2310 #
2311 # I/O limits can be disabled by setting all of them to 0. In this case
2312 # the device will be removed from its group and the rest of its
2313 # members will not be affected. The 'group' parameter is ignored.
2314 #
2315 # Returns: Nothing on success
2316 # If @device is not a valid block device, DeviceNotFound
2317 #
2318 # Since: 1.1
2319 #
2320 # Example:
2321 #
2322 # -> { "execute": "block_set_io_throttle",
2323 # "arguments": { "id": "virtio-blk-pci0/virtio-backend",
2324 # "bps": 0,
2325 # "bps_rd": 0,
2326 # "bps_wr": 0,
2327 # "iops": 512,
2328 # "iops_rd": 0,
2329 # "iops_wr": 0,
2330 # "bps_max": 0,
2331 # "bps_rd_max": 0,
2332 # "bps_wr_max": 0,
2333 # "iops_max": 0,
2334 # "iops_rd_max": 0,
2335 # "iops_wr_max": 0,
2336 # "bps_max_length": 0,
2337 # "iops_size": 0 } }
2338 # <- { "return": {} }
2339 #
2340 # -> { "execute": "block_set_io_throttle",
2341 # "arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0",
2342 # "bps": 1000000,
2343 # "bps_rd": 0,
2344 # "bps_wr": 0,
2345 # "iops": 0,
2346 # "iops_rd": 0,
2347 # "iops_wr": 0,
2348 # "bps_max": 8000000,
2349 # "bps_rd_max": 0,
2350 # "bps_wr_max": 0,
2351 # "iops_max": 0,
2352 # "iops_rd_max": 0,
2353 # "iops_wr_max": 0,
2354 # "bps_max_length": 60,
2355 # "iops_size": 0 } }
2356 # <- { "return": {} }
2357 ##
2358 { 'command': 'block_set_io_throttle', 'boxed': true,
2359 'data': 'BlockIOThrottle' }
2360
2361 ##
2362 # @BlockIOThrottle:
2363 #
2364 # A set of parameters describing block throttling.
2365 #
2366 # @device: Block device name (deprecated, use @id instead)
2367 #
2368 # @id: The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
2369 #
2370 # @bps: total throughput limit in bytes per second
2371 #
2372 # @bps_rd: read throughput limit in bytes per second
2373 #
2374 # @bps_wr: write throughput limit in bytes per second
2375 #
2376 # @iops: total I/O operations per second
2377 #
2378 # @iops_rd: read I/O operations per second
2379 #
2380 # @iops_wr: write I/O operations per second
2381 #
2382 # @bps_max: total throughput limit during bursts,
2383 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
2384 #
2385 # @bps_rd_max: read throughput limit during bursts,
2386 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
2387 #
2388 # @bps_wr_max: write throughput limit during bursts,
2389 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
2390 #
2391 # @iops_max: total I/O operations per second during bursts,
2392 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
2393 #
2394 # @iops_rd_max: read I/O operations per second during bursts,
2395 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
2396 #
2397 # @iops_wr_max: write I/O operations per second during bursts,
2398 # in bytes (Since 1.7)
2399 #
2400 # @bps_max_length: maximum length of the @bps_max burst
2401 # period, in seconds. It must only
2402 # be set if @bps_max is set as well.
2403 # Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
2404 #
2405 # @bps_rd_max_length: maximum length of the @bps_rd_max
2406 # burst period, in seconds. It must only
2407 # be set if @bps_rd_max is set as well.
2408 # Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
2409 #
2410 # @bps_wr_max_length: maximum length of the @bps_wr_max
2411 # burst period, in seconds. It must only
2412 # be set if @bps_wr_max is set as well.
2413 # Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
2414 #
2415 # @iops_max_length: maximum length of the @iops burst
2416 # period, in seconds. It must only
2417 # be set if @iops_max is set as well.
2418 # Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
2419 #
2420 # @iops_rd_max_length: maximum length of the @iops_rd_max
2421 # burst period, in seconds. It must only
2422 # be set if @iops_rd_max is set as well.
2423 # Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
2424 #
2425 # @iops_wr_max_length: maximum length of the @iops_wr_max
2426 # burst period, in seconds. It must only
2427 # be set if @iops_wr_max is set as well.
2428 # Defaults to 1. (Since 2.6)
2429 #
2430 # @iops_size: an I/O size in bytes (Since 1.7)
2431 #
2432 # @group: throttle group name (Since 2.4)
2433 #
2434 # Since: 1.1
2435 ##
2436 { 'struct': 'BlockIOThrottle',
2437 'data': { '*device': 'str', '*id': 'str', 'bps': 'int', 'bps_rd': 'int',
2438 'bps_wr': 'int', 'iops': 'int', 'iops_rd': 'int', 'iops_wr': 'int',
2439 '*bps_max': 'int', '*bps_rd_max': 'int',
2440 '*bps_wr_max': 'int', '*iops_max': 'int',
2441 '*iops_rd_max': 'int', '*iops_wr_max': 'int',
2442 '*bps_max_length': 'int', '*bps_rd_max_length': 'int',
2443 '*bps_wr_max_length': 'int', '*iops_max_length': 'int',
2444 '*iops_rd_max_length': 'int', '*iops_wr_max_length': 'int',
2445 '*iops_size': 'int', '*group': 'str' } }
2446
2447 ##
2448 # @ThrottleLimits:
2449 #
2450 # Limit parameters for throttling.
2451 # Since some limit combinations are illegal, limits should always be set in one
2452 # transaction. All fields are optional. When setting limits, if a field is
2453 # missing the current value is not changed.
2454 #
2455 # @iops-total: limit total I/O operations per second
2456 # @iops-total-max: I/O operations burst
2457 # @iops-total-max-length: length of the iops-total-max burst period, in seconds
2458 # It must only be set if @iops-total-max is set as well.
2459 # @iops-read: limit read operations per second
2460 # @iops-read-max: I/O operations read burst
2461 # @iops-read-max-length: length of the iops-read-max burst period, in seconds
2462 # It must only be set if @iops-read-max is set as well.
2463 # @iops-write: limit write operations per second
2464 # @iops-write-max: I/O operations write burst
2465 # @iops-write-max-length: length of the iops-write-max burst period, in seconds
2466 # It must only be set if @iops-write-max is set as well.
2467 # @bps-total: limit total bytes per second
2468 # @bps-total-max: total bytes burst
2469 # @bps-total-max-length: length of the bps-total-max burst period, in seconds.
2470 # It must only be set if @bps-total-max is set as well.
2471 # @bps-read: limit read bytes per second
2472 # @bps-read-max: total bytes read burst
2473 # @bps-read-max-length: length of the bps-read-max burst period, in seconds
2474 # It must only be set if @bps-read-max is set as well.
2475 # @bps-write: limit write bytes per second
2476 # @bps-write-max: total bytes write burst
2477 # @bps-write-max-length: length of the bps-write-max burst period, in seconds
2478 # It must only be set if @bps-write-max is set as well.
2479 # @iops-size: when limiting by iops max size of an I/O in bytes
2480 #
2481 # Since: 2.11
2482 ##
2483 { 'struct': 'ThrottleLimits',
2484 'data': { '*iops-total' : 'int', '*iops-total-max' : 'int',
2485 '*iops-total-max-length' : 'int', '*iops-read' : 'int',
2486 '*iops-read-max' : 'int', '*iops-read-max-length' : 'int',
2487 '*iops-write' : 'int', '*iops-write-max' : 'int',
2488 '*iops-write-max-length' : 'int', '*bps-total' : 'int',
2489 '*bps-total-max' : 'int', '*bps-total-max-length' : 'int',
2490 '*bps-read' : 'int', '*bps-read-max' : 'int',
2491 '*bps-read-max-length' : 'int', '*bps-write' : 'int',
2492 '*bps-write-max' : 'int', '*bps-write-max-length' : 'int',
2493 '*iops-size' : 'int' } }
2494
2495 ##
2496 # @block-stream:
2497 #
2498 # Copy data from a backing file into a block device.
2499 #
2500 # The block streaming operation is performed in the background until the entire
2501 # backing file has been copied. This command returns immediately once streaming
2502 # has started. The status of ongoing block streaming operations can be checked
2503 # with query-block-jobs. The operation can be stopped before it has completed
2504 # using the block-job-cancel command.
2505 #
2506 # The node that receives the data is called the top image, can be located in
2507 # any part of the chain (but always above the base image; see below) and can be
2508 # specified using its device or node name. Earlier qemu versions only allowed
2509 # 'device' to name the top level node; presence of the 'base-node' parameter
2510 # during introspection can be used as a witness of the enhanced semantics
2511 # of 'device'.
2512 #
2513 # If a base file is specified then sectors are not copied from that base file and
2514 # its backing chain. When streaming completes the image file will have the base
2515 # file as its backing file. This can be used to stream a subset of the backing
2516 # file chain instead of flattening the entire image.
2517 #
2518 # On successful completion the image file is updated to drop the backing file
2519 # and the BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED event is emitted.
2520 #
2521 # @job-id: identifier for the newly-created block job. If
2522 # omitted, the device name will be used. (Since 2.7)
2523 #
2524 # @device: the device or node name of the top image
2525 #
2526 # @base: the common backing file name.
2527 # It cannot be set if @base-node is also set.
2528 #
2529 # @base-node: the node name of the backing file.
2530 # It cannot be set if @base is also set. (Since 2.8)
2531 #
2532 # @backing-file: The backing file string to write into the top
2533 # image. This filename is not validated.
2534 #
2535 # If a pathname string is such that it cannot be
2536 # resolved by QEMU, that means that subsequent QMP or
2537 # HMP commands must use node-names for the image in
2538 # question, as filename lookup methods will fail.
2539 #
2540 # If not specified, QEMU will automatically determine
2541 # the backing file string to use, or error out if there
2542 # is no obvious choice. Care should be taken when
2543 # specifying the string, to specify a valid filename or
2544 # protocol.
2545 # (Since 2.1)
2546 #
2547 # @speed: the maximum speed, in bytes per second
2548 #
2549 # @on-error: the action to take on an error (default report).
2550 # 'stop' and 'enospc' can only be used if the block device
2551 # supports io-status (see BlockInfo). Since 1.3.
2552 #
2553 # @auto-finalize: When false, this job will wait in a PENDING state after it has
2554 # finished its work, waiting for @block-job-finalize before
2555 # making any block graph changes.
2556 # When true, this job will automatically
2557 # perform its abort or commit actions.
2558 # Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
2559 #
2560 # @auto-dismiss: When false, this job will wait in a CONCLUDED state after it
2561 # has completely ceased all work, and awaits @block-job-dismiss.
2562 # When true, this job will automatically disappear from the query
2563 # list without user intervention.
2564 # Defaults to true. (Since 3.1)
2565 #
2566 # Returns: Nothing on success. If @device does not exist, DeviceNotFound.
2567 #
2568 # Since: 1.1
2569 #
2570 # Example:
2571 #
2572 # -> { "execute": "block-stream",
2573 # "arguments": { "device": "virtio0",
2574 # "base": "/tmp/master.qcow2" } }
2575 # <- { "return": {} }
2576 #
2577 ##
2578 { 'command': 'block-stream',
2579 'data': { '*job-id': 'str', 'device': 'str', '*base': 'str',
2580 '*base-node': 'str', '*backing-file': 'str', '*speed': 'int',
2581 '*on-error': 'BlockdevOnError',
2582 '*auto-finalize': 'bool', '*auto-dismiss': 'bool' } }
2583
2584 ##
2585 # @block-job-set-speed:
2586 #
2587 # Set maximum speed for a background block operation.
2588 #
2589 # This command can only be issued when there is an active block job.
2590 #
2591 # Throttling can be disabled by setting the speed to 0.
2592 #
2593 # @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence
2594 # the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have
2595 # other values.
2596 #
2597 # @speed: the maximum speed, in bytes per second, or 0 for unlimited.
2598 # Defaults to 0.
2599 #
2600 # Returns: Nothing on success
2601 # If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
2602 #
2603 # Since: 1.1
2604 ##
2605 { 'command': 'block-job-set-speed',
2606 'data': { 'device': 'str', 'speed': 'int' } }
2607
2608 ##
2609 # @block-job-cancel:
2610 #
2611 # Stop an active background block operation.
2612 #
2613 # This command returns immediately after marking the active background block
2614 # operation for cancellation. It is an error to call this command if no
2615 # operation is in progress.
2616 #
2617 # The operation will cancel as soon as possible and then emit the
2618 # BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED event. Before that happens the job is still visible when
2619 # enumerated using query-block-jobs.
2620 #
2621 # Note that if you issue 'block-job-cancel' after 'drive-mirror' has indicated
2622 # (via the event BLOCK_JOB_READY) that the source and destination are
2623 # synchronized, then the event triggered by this command changes to
2624 # BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED, to indicate that the mirroring has ended and the
2625 # destination now has a point-in-time copy tied to the time of the cancellation.
2626 #
2627 # For streaming, the image file retains its backing file unless the streaming
2628 # operation happens to complete just as it is being cancelled. A new streaming
2629 # operation can be started at a later time to finish copying all data from the
2630 # backing file.
2631 #
2632 # @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence
2633 # the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have
2634 # other values.
2635 #
2636 # @force: If true, and the job has already emitted the event BLOCK_JOB_READY,
2637 # abandon the job immediately (even if it is paused) instead of waiting
2638 # for the destination to complete its final synchronization (since 1.3)
2639 #
2640 # Returns: Nothing on success
2641 # If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
2642 #
2643 # Since: 1.1
2644 ##
2645 { 'command': 'block-job-cancel', 'data': { 'device': 'str', '*force': 'bool' } }
2646
2647 ##
2648 # @block-job-pause:
2649 #
2650 # Pause an active background block operation.
2651 #
2652 # This command returns immediately after marking the active background block
2653 # operation for pausing. It is an error to call this command if no
2654 # operation is in progress or if the job is already paused.
2655 #
2656 # The operation will pause as soon as possible. No event is emitted when
2657 # the operation is actually paused. Cancelling a paused job automatically
2658 # resumes it.
2659 #
2660 # @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence
2661 # the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have
2662 # other values.
2663 #
2664 # Returns: Nothing on success
2665 # If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
2666 #
2667 # Since: 1.3
2668 ##
2669 { 'command': 'block-job-pause', 'data': { 'device': 'str' } }
2670
2671 ##
2672 # @block-job-resume:
2673 #
2674 # Resume an active background block operation.
2675 #
2676 # This command returns immediately after resuming a paused background block
2677 # operation. It is an error to call this command if no operation is in
2678 # progress or if the job is not paused.
2679 #
2680 # This command also clears the error status of the job.
2681 #
2682 # @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence
2683 # the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have
2684 # other values.
2685 #
2686 # Returns: Nothing on success
2687 # If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
2688 #
2689 # Since: 1.3
2690 ##
2691 { 'command': 'block-job-resume', 'data': { 'device': 'str' } }
2692
2693 ##
2694 # @block-job-complete:
2695 #
2696 # Manually trigger completion of an active background block operation. This
2697 # is supported for drive mirroring, where it also switches the device to
2698 # write to the target path only. The ability to complete is signaled with
2699 # a BLOCK_JOB_READY event.
2700 #
2701 # This command completes an active background block operation synchronously.
2702 # The ordering of this command's return with the BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED event
2703 # is not defined. Note that if an I/O error occurs during the processing of
2704 # this command: 1) the command itself will fail; 2) the error will be processed
2705 # according to the rerror/werror arguments that were specified when starting
2706 # the operation.
2707 #
2708 # A cancelled or paused job cannot be completed.
2709 #
2710 # @device: The job identifier. This used to be a device name (hence
2711 # the name of the parameter), but since QEMU 2.7 it can have
2712 # other values.
2713 #
2714 # Returns: Nothing on success
2715 # If no background operation is active on this device, DeviceNotActive
2716 #
2717 # Since: 1.3
2718 ##
2719 { 'command': 'block-job-complete', 'data': { 'device': 'str' } }
2720
2721 ##
2722 # @block-job-dismiss:
2723 #
2724 # For jobs that have already concluded, remove them from the block-job-query
2725 # list. This command only needs to be run for jobs which were started with
2726 # QEMU 2.12+ job lifetime management semantics.
2727 #
2728 # This command will refuse to operate on any job that has not yet reached
2729 # its terminal state, JOB_STATUS_CONCLUDED. For jobs that make use of the
2730 # BLOCK_JOB_READY event, block-job-cancel or block-job-complete will still need
2731 # to be used as appropriate.
2732 #
2733 # @id: The job identifier.
2734 #
2735 # Returns: Nothing on success
2736 #
2737 # Since: 2.12
2738 ##
2739 { 'command': 'block-job-dismiss', 'data': { 'id': 'str' } }
2740
2741 ##
2742 # @block-job-finalize:
2743 #
2744 # Once a job that has manual=true reaches the pending state, it can be
2745 # instructed to finalize any graph changes and do any necessary cleanup
2746 # via this command.
2747 # For jobs in a transaction, instructing one job to finalize will force
2748 # ALL jobs in the transaction to finalize, so it is only necessary to instruct
2749 # a single member job to finalize.
2750 #
2751 # @id: The job identifier.
2752 #
2753 # Returns: Nothing on success
2754 #
2755 # Since: 2.12
2756 ##
2757 { 'command': 'block-job-finalize', 'data': { 'id': 'str' } }
2758
2759 ##
2760 # @BlockdevDiscardOptions:
2761 #
2762 # Determines how to handle discard requests.
2763 #
2764 # @ignore: Ignore the request
2765 # @unmap: Forward as an unmap request
2766 #
2767 # Since: 2.9
2768 ##
2769 { 'enum': 'BlockdevDiscardOptions',
2770 'data': [ 'ignore', 'unmap' ] }
2771
2772 ##
2773 # @BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions:
2774 #
2775 # Describes the operation mode for the automatic conversion of plain
2776 # zero writes by the OS to driver specific optimized zero write commands.
2777 #
2778 # @off: Disabled (default)
2779 # @on: Enabled
2780 # @unmap: Enabled and even try to unmap blocks if possible. This requires
2781 # also that @BlockdevDiscardOptions is set to unmap for this device.
2782 #
2783 # Since: 2.1
2784 ##
2785 { 'enum': 'BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions',
2786 'data': [ 'off', 'on', 'unmap' ] }
2787
2788 ##
2789 # @BlockdevAioOptions:
2790 #
2791 # Selects the AIO backend to handle I/O requests
2792 #
2793 # @threads: Use qemu's thread pool
2794 # @native: Use native AIO backend (only Linux and Windows)
2795 #
2796 # Since: 2.9
2797 ##
2798 { 'enum': 'BlockdevAioOptions',
2799 'data': [ 'threads', 'native' ] }
2800
2801 ##
2802 # @BlockdevCacheOptions:
2803 #
2804 # Includes cache-related options for block devices
2805 #
2806 # @direct: enables use of O_DIRECT (bypass the host page cache;
2807 # default: false)
2808 # @no-flush: ignore any flush requests for the device (default:
2809 # false)
2810 #
2811 # Since: 2.9
2812 ##
2813 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCacheOptions',
2814 'data': { '*direct': 'bool',
2815 '*no-flush': 'bool' } }
2816
2817 ##
2818 # @BlockdevDriver:
2819 #
2820 # Drivers that are supported in block device operations.
2821 #
2822 # @vxhs: Since 2.10
2823 # @throttle: Since 2.11
2824 # @nvme: Since 2.12
2825 # @copy-on-read: Since 3.0
2826 # @blklogwrites: Since 3.0
2827 #
2828 # Since: 2.9
2829 ##
2830 { 'enum': 'BlockdevDriver',
2831 'data': [ 'blkdebug', 'blklogwrites', 'blkverify', 'bochs', 'cloop',
2832 'copy-on-read', 'dmg', 'file', 'ftp', 'ftps', 'gluster',
2833 'host_cdrom', 'host_device', 'http', 'https', 'iscsi', 'luks',
2834 'nbd', 'nfs', 'null-aio', 'null-co', 'nvme', 'parallels', 'qcow',
2835 'qcow2', 'qed', 'quorum', 'raw', 'rbd',
2836 { 'name': 'replication', 'if': 'defined(CONFIG_REPLICATION)' },
2837 'sheepdog',
2838 'ssh', 'throttle', 'vdi', 'vhdx', 'vmdk', 'vpc', 'vvfat', 'vxhs' ] }
2839
2840 ##
2841 # @BlockdevOptionsFile:
2842 #
2843 # Driver specific block device options for the file backend.
2844 #
2845 # @filename: path to the image file
2846 # @pr-manager: the id for the object that will handle persistent reservations
2847 # for this device (default: none, forward the commands via SG_IO;
2848 # since 2.11)
2849 # @aio: AIO backend (default: threads) (since: 2.8)
2850 # @locking: whether to enable file locking. If set to 'auto', only enable
2851 # when Open File Descriptor (OFD) locking API is available
2852 # (default: auto, since 2.10)
2853 # @drop-cache: invalidate page cache during live migration. This prevents
2854 # stale data on the migration destination with cache.direct=off.
2855 # Currently only supported on Linux hosts.
2856 # (default: on, since: 4.0)
2857 # @x-check-cache-dropped: whether to check that page cache was dropped on live
2858 # migration. May cause noticeable delays if the image
2859 # file is large, do not use in production.
2860 # (default: off) (since: 3.0)
2861 #
2862 # Features:
2863 # @dynamic-auto-read-only: If present, enabled auto-read-only means that the
2864 # driver will open the image read-only at first,
2865 # dynamically reopen the image file read-write when
2866 # the first writer is attached to the node and reopen
2867 # read-only when the last writer is detached. This
2868 # allows giving QEMU write permissions only on demand
2869 # when an operation actually needs write access.
2870 #
2871 # Since: 2.9
2872 ##
2873 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsFile',
2874 'data': { 'filename': 'str',
2875 '*pr-manager': 'str',
2876 '*locking': 'OnOffAuto',
2877 '*aio': 'BlockdevAioOptions',
2878 '*drop-cache': {'type': 'bool',
2879 'if': 'defined(CONFIG_LINUX)'},
2880 '*x-check-cache-dropped': 'bool' },
2881 'features': [ { 'name': 'dynamic-auto-read-only',
2882 'if': 'defined(CONFIG_POSIX)' } ] }
2883
2884 ##
2885 # @BlockdevOptionsNull:
2886 #
2887 # Driver specific block device options for the null backend.
2888 #
2889 # @size: size of the device in bytes.
2890 # @latency-ns: emulated latency (in nanoseconds) in processing
2891 # requests. Default to zero which completes requests immediately.
2892 # (Since 2.4)
2893 # @read-zeroes: if true, reads from the device produce zeroes; if false, the
2894 # buffer is left unchanged. (default: false; since: 4.1)
2895 #
2896 # Since: 2.9
2897 ##
2898 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsNull',
2899 'data': { '*size': 'int', '*latency-ns': 'uint64', '*read-zeroes': 'bool' } }
2900
2901 ##
2902 # @BlockdevOptionsNVMe:
2903 #
2904 # Driver specific block device options for the NVMe backend.
2905 #
2906 # @device: controller address of the NVMe device.
2907 # @namespace: namespace number of the device, starting from 1.
2908 #
2909 # Since: 2.12
2910 ##
2911 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsNVMe',
2912 'data': { 'device': 'str', 'namespace': 'int' } }
2913
2914 ##
2915 # @BlockdevOptionsVVFAT:
2916 #
2917 # Driver specific block device options for the vvfat protocol.
2918 #
2919 # @dir: directory to be exported as FAT image
2920 # @fat-type: FAT type: 12, 16 or 32
2921 # @floppy: whether to export a floppy image (true) or
2922 # partitioned hard disk (false; default)
2923 # @label: set the volume label, limited to 11 bytes. FAT16 and
2924 # FAT32 traditionally have some restrictions on labels, which are
2925 # ignored by most operating systems. Defaults to "QEMU VVFAT".
2926 # (since 2.4)
2927 # @rw: whether to allow write operations (default: false)
2928 #
2929 # Since: 2.9
2930 ##
2931 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsVVFAT',
2932 'data': { 'dir': 'str', '*fat-type': 'int', '*floppy': 'bool',
2933 '*label': 'str', '*rw': 'bool' } }
2934
2935 ##
2936 # @BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat:
2937 #
2938 # Driver specific block device options for image format that have no option
2939 # besides their data source.
2940 #
2941 # @file: reference to or definition of the data source block device
2942 #
2943 # Since: 2.9
2944 ##
2945 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
2946 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef' } }
2947
2948 ##
2949 # @BlockdevOptionsLUKS:
2950 #
2951 # Driver specific block device options for LUKS.
2952 #
2953 # @key-secret: the ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing
2954 # the decryption key (since 2.6). Mandatory except when
2955 # doing a metadata-only probe of the image.
2956 #
2957 # Since: 2.9
2958 ##
2959 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsLUKS',
2960 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
2961 'data': { '*key-secret': 'str' } }
2962
2963
2964 ##
2965 # @BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat:
2966 #
2967 # Driver specific block device options for image format that have no option
2968 # besides their data source and an optional backing file.
2969 #
2970 # @backing: reference to or definition of the backing file block
2971 # device, null disables the backing file entirely.
2972 # Defaults to the backing file stored the image file.
2973 #
2974 # Since: 2.9
2975 ##
2976 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat',
2977 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
2978 'data': { '*backing': 'BlockdevRefOrNull' } }
2979
2980 ##
2981 # @Qcow2OverlapCheckMode:
2982 #
2983 # General overlap check modes.
2984 #
2985 # @none: Do not perform any checks
2986 #
2987 # @constant: Perform only checks which can be done in constant time and
2988 # without reading anything from disk
2989 #
2990 # @cached: Perform only checks which can be done without reading anything
2991 # from disk
2992 #
2993 # @all: Perform all available overlap checks
2994 #
2995 # Since: 2.9
2996 ##
2997 { 'enum': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckMode',
2998 'data': [ 'none', 'constant', 'cached', 'all' ] }
2999
3000 ##
3001 # @Qcow2OverlapCheckFlags:
3002 #
3003 # Structure of flags for each metadata structure. Setting a field to 'true'
3004 # makes qemu guard that structure against unintended overwriting. The default
3005 # value is chosen according to the template given.
3006 #
3007 # @template: Specifies a template mode which can be adjusted using the other
3008 # flags, defaults to 'cached'
3009 #
3010 # @bitmap-directory: since 3.0
3011 #
3012 # Since: 2.9
3013 ##
3014 { 'struct': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckFlags',
3015 'data': { '*template': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckMode',
3016 '*main-header': 'bool',
3017 '*active-l1': 'bool',
3018 '*active-l2': 'bool',
3019 '*refcount-table': 'bool',
3020 '*refcount-block': 'bool',
3021 '*snapshot-table': 'bool',
3022 '*inactive-l1': 'bool',
3023 '*inactive-l2': 'bool',
3024 '*bitmap-directory': 'bool' } }
3025
3026 ##
3027 # @Qcow2OverlapChecks:
3028 #
3029 # Specifies which metadata structures should be guarded against unintended
3030 # overwriting.
3031 #
3032 # @flags: set of flags for separate specification of each metadata structure
3033 # type
3034 #
3035 # @mode: named mode which chooses a specific set of flags
3036 #
3037 # Since: 2.9
3038 ##
3039 { 'alternate': 'Qcow2OverlapChecks',
3040 'data': { 'flags': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckFlags',
3041 'mode': 'Qcow2OverlapCheckMode' } }
3042
3043 ##
3044 # @BlockdevQcowEncryptionFormat:
3045 #
3046 # @aes: AES-CBC with plain64 initialization vectors
3047 #
3048 # Since: 2.10
3049 ##
3050 { 'enum': 'BlockdevQcowEncryptionFormat',
3051 'data': [ 'aes' ] }
3052
3053 ##
3054 # @BlockdevQcowEncryption:
3055 #
3056 # Since: 2.10
3057 ##
3058 { 'union': 'BlockdevQcowEncryption',
3059 'base': { 'format': 'BlockdevQcowEncryptionFormat' },
3060 'discriminator': 'format',
3061 'data': { 'aes': 'QCryptoBlockOptionsQCow' } }
3062
3063 ##
3064 # @BlockdevOptionsQcow:
3065 #
3066 # Driver specific block device options for qcow.
3067 #
3068 # @encrypt: Image decryption options. Mandatory for
3069 # encrypted images, except when doing a metadata-only
3070 # probe of the image.
3071 #
3072 # Since: 2.10
3073 ##
3074 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsQcow',
3075 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat',
3076 'data': { '*encrypt': 'BlockdevQcowEncryption' } }
3077
3078
3079
3080 ##
3081 # @BlockdevQcow2EncryptionFormat:
3082 # @aes: AES-CBC with plain64 initialization vectors
3083 #
3084 # Since: 2.10
3085 ##
3086 { 'enum': 'BlockdevQcow2EncryptionFormat',
3087 'data': [ 'aes', 'luks' ] }
3088
3089 ##
3090 # @BlockdevQcow2Encryption:
3091 #
3092 # Since: 2.10
3093 ##
3094 { 'union': 'BlockdevQcow2Encryption',
3095 'base': { 'format': 'BlockdevQcow2EncryptionFormat' },
3096 'discriminator': 'format',
3097 'data': { 'aes': 'QCryptoBlockOptionsQCow',
3098 'luks': 'QCryptoBlockOptionsLUKS'} }
3099
3100 ##
3101 # @BlockdevOptionsQcow2:
3102 #
3103 # Driver specific block device options for qcow2.
3104 #
3105 # @lazy-refcounts: whether to enable the lazy refcounts
3106 # feature (default is taken from the image file)
3107 #
3108 # @pass-discard-request: whether discard requests to the qcow2
3109 # device should be forwarded to the data source
3110 #
3111 # @pass-discard-snapshot: whether discard requests for the data source
3112 # should be issued when a snapshot operation (e.g.
3113 # deleting a snapshot) frees clusters in the qcow2 file
3114 #
3115 # @pass-discard-other: whether discard requests for the data source
3116 # should be issued on other occasions where a cluster
3117 # gets freed
3118 #
3119 # @overlap-check: which overlap checks to perform for writes
3120 # to the image, defaults to 'cached' (since 2.2)
3121 #
3122 # @cache-size: the maximum total size of the L2 table and
3123 # refcount block caches in bytes (since 2.2)
3124 #
3125 # @l2-cache-size: the maximum size of the L2 table cache in
3126 # bytes (since 2.2)
3127 #
3128 # @l2-cache-entry-size: the size of each entry in the L2 cache in
3129 # bytes. It must be a power of two between 512
3130 # and the cluster size. The default value is
3131 # the cluster size (since 2.12)
3132 #
3133 # @refcount-cache-size: the maximum size of the refcount block cache
3134 # in bytes (since 2.2)
3135 #
3136 # @cache-clean-interval: clean unused entries in the L2 and refcount
3137 # caches. The interval is in seconds. The default value
3138 # is 600 on supporting platforms, and 0 on other
3139 # platforms. 0 disables this feature. (since 2.5)
3140 #
3141 # @encrypt: Image decryption options. Mandatory for
3142 # encrypted images, except when doing a metadata-only
3143 # probe of the image. (since 2.10)
3144 #
3145 # @data-file: reference to or definition of the external data file.
3146 # This may only be specified for images that require an
3147 # external data file. If it is not specified for such
3148 # an image, the data file name is loaded from the image
3149 # file. (since 4.0)
3150 #
3151 # Since: 2.9
3152 ##
3153 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsQcow2',
3154 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat',
3155 'data': { '*lazy-refcounts': 'bool',
3156 '*pass-discard-request': 'bool',
3157 '*pass-discard-snapshot': 'bool',
3158 '*pass-discard-other': 'bool',
3159 '*overlap-check': 'Qcow2OverlapChecks',
3160 '*cache-size': 'int',
3161 '*l2-cache-size': 'int',
3162 '*l2-cache-entry-size': 'int',
3163 '*refcount-cache-size': 'int',
3164 '*cache-clean-interval': 'int',
3165 '*encrypt': 'BlockdevQcow2Encryption',
3166 '*data-file': 'BlockdevRef' } }
3167
3168 ##
3169 # @SshHostKeyCheckMode:
3170 #
3171 # @none Don't check the host key at all
3172 # @hash Compare the host key with a given hash
3173 # @known_hosts Check the host key against the known_hosts file
3174 #
3175 # Since: 2.12
3176 ##
3177 { 'enum': 'SshHostKeyCheckMode',
3178 'data': [ 'none', 'hash', 'known_hosts' ] }
3179
3180 ##
3181 # @SshHostKeyCheckHashType:
3182 #
3183 # @md5 The given hash is an md5 hash
3184 # @sha1 The given hash is an sha1 hash
3185 #
3186 # Since: 2.12
3187 ##
3188 { 'enum': 'SshHostKeyCheckHashType',
3189 'data': [ 'md5', 'sha1' ] }
3190
3191 ##
3192 # @SshHostKeyHash:
3193 #
3194 # @type The hash algorithm used for the hash
3195 # @hash The expected hash value
3196 #
3197 # Since: 2.12
3198 ##
3199 { 'struct': 'SshHostKeyHash',
3200 'data': { 'type': 'SshHostKeyCheckHashType',
3201 'hash': 'str' }}
3202
3203 ##
3204 # @SshHostKeyCheck:
3205 #
3206 # Since: 2.12
3207 ##
3208 { 'union': 'SshHostKeyCheck',
3209 'base': { 'mode': 'SshHostKeyCheckMode' },
3210 'discriminator': 'mode',
3211 'data': { 'hash': 'SshHostKeyHash' } }
3212
3213 ##
3214 # @BlockdevOptionsSsh:
3215 #
3216 # @server: host address
3217 #
3218 # @path: path to the image on the host
3219 #
3220 # @user: user as which to connect, defaults to current
3221 # local user name
3222 #
3223 # @host-key-check: Defines how and what to check the host key against
3224 # (default: known_hosts)
3225 #
3226 # Since: 2.9
3227 ##
3228 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsSsh',
3229 'data': { 'server': 'InetSocketAddress',
3230 'path': 'str',
3231 '*user': 'str',
3232 '*host-key-check': 'SshHostKeyCheck' } }
3233
3234
3235 ##
3236 # @BlkdebugEvent:
3237 #
3238 # Trigger events supported by blkdebug.
3239 #
3240 # @l1_shrink_write_table: write zeros to the l1 table to shrink image.
3241 # (since 2.11)
3242 #
3243 # @l1_shrink_free_l2_clusters: discard the l2 tables. (since 2.11)
3244 #
3245 # @cor_write: a write due to copy-on-read (since 2.11)
3246 #
3247 # @cluster_alloc_space: an allocation of file space for a cluster (since 4.1)
3248 #
3249 # @none: triggers once at creation of the blkdebug node (since 4.1)
3250 #
3251 # Since: 2.9
3252 ##
3253 { 'enum': 'BlkdebugEvent', 'prefix': 'BLKDBG',
3254 'data': [ 'l1_update', 'l1_grow_alloc_table', 'l1_grow_write_table',
3255 'l1_grow_activate_table', 'l2_load', 'l2_update',
3256 'l2_update_compressed', 'l2_alloc_cow_read', 'l2_alloc_write',
3257 'read_aio', 'read_backing_aio', 'read_compressed', 'write_aio',
3258 'write_compressed', 'vmstate_load', 'vmstate_save', 'cow_read',
3259 'cow_write', 'reftable_load', 'reftable_grow', 'reftable_update',
3260 'refblock_load', 'refblock_update', 'refblock_update_part',
3261 'refblock_alloc', 'refblock_alloc_hookup', 'refblock_alloc_write',
3262 'refblock_alloc_write_blocks', 'refblock_alloc_write_table',
3263 'refblock_alloc_switch_table', 'cluster_alloc',
3264 'cluster_alloc_bytes', 'cluster_free', 'flush_to_os',
3265 'flush_to_disk', 'pwritev_rmw_head', 'pwritev_rmw_after_head',
3266 'pwritev_rmw_tail', 'pwritev_rmw_after_tail', 'pwritev',
3267 'pwritev_zero', 'pwritev_done', 'empty_image_prepare',
3268 'l1_shrink_write_table', 'l1_shrink_free_l2_clusters',
3269 'cor_write', 'cluster_alloc_space', 'none'] }
3270
3271 ##
3272 # @BlkdebugIOType:
3273 #
3274 # Kinds of I/O that blkdebug can inject errors in.
3275 #
3276 # @read: .bdrv_co_preadv()
3277 #
3278 # @write: .bdrv_co_pwritev()
3279 #
3280 # @write-zeroes: .bdrv_co_pwrite_zeroes()
3281 #
3282 # @discard: .bdrv_co_pdiscard()
3283 #
3284 # @flush: .bdrv_co_flush_to_disk()
3285 #
3286 # @block-status: .bdrv_co_block_status()
3287 #
3288 # Since: 4.1
3289 ##
3290 { 'enum': 'BlkdebugIOType', 'prefix': 'BLKDEBUG_IO_TYPE',
3291 'data': [ 'read', 'write', 'write-zeroes', 'discard', 'flush',
3292 'block-status' ] }
3293
3294 ##
3295 # @BlkdebugInjectErrorOptions:
3296 #
3297 # Describes a single error injection for blkdebug.
3298 #
3299 # @event: trigger event
3300 #
3301 # @state: the state identifier blkdebug needs to be in to
3302 # actually trigger the event; defaults to "any"
3303 #
3304 # @iotype: the type of I/O operations on which this error should
3305 # be injected; defaults to "all read, write,
3306 # write-zeroes, discard, and flush operations"
3307 # (since: 4.1)
3308 #
3309 # @errno: error identifier (errno) to be returned; defaults to
3310 # EIO
3311 #
3312 # @sector: specifies the sector index which has to be affected
3313 # in order to actually trigger the event; defaults to "any
3314 # sector"
3315 #
3316 # @once: disables further events after this one has been
3317 # triggered; defaults to false
3318 #
3319 # @immediately: fail immediately; defaults to false
3320 #
3321 # Since: 2.9
3322 ##
3323 { 'struct': 'BlkdebugInjectErrorOptions',
3324 'data': { 'event': 'BlkdebugEvent',
3325 '*state': 'int',
3326 '*iotype': 'BlkdebugIOType',
3327 '*errno': 'int',
3328 '*sector': 'int',
3329 '*once': 'bool',
3330 '*immediately': 'bool' } }
3331
3332 ##
3333 # @BlkdebugSetStateOptions:
3334 #
3335 # Describes a single state-change event for blkdebug.
3336 #
3337 # @event: trigger event
3338 #
3339 # @state: the current state identifier blkdebug needs to be in;
3340 # defaults to "any"
3341 #
3342 # @new_state: the state identifier blkdebug is supposed to assume if
3343 # this event is triggered
3344 #
3345 # Since: 2.9
3346 ##
3347 { 'struct': 'BlkdebugSetStateOptions',
3348 'data': { 'event': 'BlkdebugEvent',
3349 '*state': 'int',
3350 'new_state': 'int' } }
3351
3352 ##
3353 # @BlockdevOptionsBlkdebug:
3354 #
3355 # Driver specific block device options for blkdebug.
3356 #
3357 # @image: underlying raw block device (or image file)
3358 #
3359 # @config: filename of the configuration file
3360 #
3361 # @align: required alignment for requests in bytes, must be
3362 # positive power of 2, or 0 for default
3363 #
3364 # @max-transfer: maximum size for I/O transfers in bytes, must be
3365 # positive multiple of @align and of the underlying
3366 # file's request alignment (but need not be a power of
3367 # 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
3368 #
3369 # @opt-write-zero: preferred alignment for write zero requests in bytes,
3370 # must be positive multiple of @align and of the
3371 # underlying file's request alignment (but need not be a
3372 # power of 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
3373 #
3374 # @max-write-zero: maximum size for write zero requests in bytes, must be
3375 # positive multiple of @align, of @opt-write-zero, and of
3376 # the underlying file's request alignment (but need not
3377 # be a power of 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
3378 #
3379 # @opt-discard: preferred alignment for discard requests in bytes, must
3380 # be positive multiple of @align and of the underlying
3381 # file's request alignment (but need not be a power of
3382 # 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
3383 #
3384 # @max-discard: maximum size for discard requests in bytes, must be
3385 # positive multiple of @align, of @opt-discard, and of
3386 # the underlying file's request alignment (but need not
3387 # be a power of 2), or 0 for default (since 2.10)
3388 #
3389 # @inject-error: array of error injection descriptions
3390 #
3391 # @set-state: array of state-change descriptions
3392 #
3393 # Since: 2.9
3394 ##
3395 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsBlkdebug',
3396 'data': { 'image': 'BlockdevRef',
3397 '*config': 'str',
3398 '*align': 'int', '*max-transfer': 'int32',
3399 '*opt-write-zero': 'int32', '*max-write-zero': 'int32',
3400 '*opt-discard': 'int32', '*max-discard': 'int32',
3401 '*inject-error': ['BlkdebugInjectErrorOptions'],
3402 '*set-state': ['BlkdebugSetStateOptions'] } }
3403
3404 ##
3405 # @BlockdevOptionsBlklogwrites:
3406 #
3407 # Driver specific block device options for blklogwrites.
3408 #
3409 # @file: block device
3410 #
3411 # @log: block device used to log writes to @file
3412 #
3413 # @log-sector-size: sector size used in logging writes to @file, determines
3414 # granularity of offsets and sizes of writes (default: 512)
3415 #
3416 # @log-append: append to an existing log (default: false)
3417 #
3418 # @log-super-update-interval: interval of write requests after which the log
3419 # super block is updated to disk (default: 4096)
3420 #
3421 # Since: 3.0
3422 ##
3423 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsBlklogwrites',
3424 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
3425 'log': 'BlockdevRef',
3426 '*log-sector-size': 'uint32',
3427 '*log-append': 'bool',
3428 '*log-super-update-interval': 'uint64' } }
3429
3430 ##
3431 # @BlockdevOptionsBlkverify:
3432 #
3433 # Driver specific block device options for blkverify.
3434 #
3435 # @test: block device to be tested
3436 #
3437 # @raw: raw image used for verification
3438 #
3439 # Since: 2.9
3440 ##
3441 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsBlkverify',
3442 'data': { 'test': 'BlockdevRef',
3443 'raw': 'BlockdevRef' } }
3444
3445 ##
3446 # @QuorumReadPattern:
3447 #
3448 # An enumeration of quorum read patterns.
3449 #
3450 # @quorum: read all the children and do a quorum vote on reads
3451 #
3452 # @fifo: read only from the first child that has not failed
3453 #
3454 # Since: 2.9
3455 ##
3456 { 'enum': 'QuorumReadPattern', 'data': [ 'quorum', 'fifo' ] }
3457
3458 ##
3459 # @BlockdevOptionsQuorum:
3460 #
3461 # Driver specific block device options for Quorum
3462 #
3463 # @blkverify: true if the driver must print content mismatch
3464 # set to false by default
3465 #
3466 # @children: the children block devices to use
3467 #
3468 # @vote-threshold: the vote limit under which a read will fail
3469 #
3470 # @rewrite-corrupted: rewrite corrupted data when quorum is reached
3471 # (Since 2.1)
3472 #
3473 # @read-pattern: choose read pattern and set to quorum by default
3474 # (Since 2.2)
3475 #
3476 # Since: 2.9
3477 ##
3478 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsQuorum',
3479 'data': { '*blkverify': 'bool',
3480 'children': [ 'BlockdevRef' ],
3481 'vote-threshold': 'int',
3482 '*rewrite-corrupted': 'bool',
3483 '*read-pattern': 'QuorumReadPattern' } }
3484
3485 ##
3486 # @BlockdevOptionsGluster:
3487 #
3488 # Driver specific block device options for Gluster
3489 #
3490 # @volume: name of gluster volume where VM image resides
3491 #
3492 # @path: absolute path to image file in gluster volume
3493 #
3494 # @server: gluster servers description
3495 #
3496 # @debug: libgfapi log level (default '4' which is Error)
3497 # (Since 2.8)
3498 #
3499 # @logfile: libgfapi log file (default /dev/stderr) (Since 2.8)
3500 #
3501 # Since: 2.9
3502 ##
3503 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsGluster',
3504 'data': { 'volume': 'str',
3505 'path': 'str',
3506 'server': ['SocketAddress'],
3507 '*debug': 'int',
3508 '*logfile': 'str' } }
3509
3510 ##
3511 # @IscsiTransport:
3512 #
3513 # An enumeration of libiscsi transport types
3514 #
3515 # Since: 2.9
3516 ##
3517 { 'enum': 'IscsiTransport',
3518 'data': [ 'tcp', 'iser' ] }
3519
3520 ##
3521 # @IscsiHeaderDigest:
3522 #
3523 # An enumeration of header digests supported by libiscsi
3524 #
3525 # Since: 2.9
3526 ##
3527 { 'enum': 'IscsiHeaderDigest',
3528 'prefix': 'QAPI_ISCSI_HEADER_DIGEST',
3529 'data': [ 'crc32c', 'none', 'crc32c-none', 'none-crc32c' ] }
3530
3531 ##
3532 # @BlockdevOptionsIscsi:
3533 #
3534 # @transport: The iscsi transport type
3535 #
3536 # @portal: The address of the iscsi portal
3537 #
3538 # @target: The target iqn name
3539 #
3540 # @lun: LUN to connect to. Defaults to 0.
3541 #
3542 # @user: User name to log in with. If omitted, no CHAP
3543 # authentication is performed.
3544 #
3545 # @password-secret: The ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing
3546 # the password for the login. This option is required if
3547 # @user is specified.
3548 #
3549 # @initiator-name: The iqn name we want to identify to the target
3550 # as. If this option is not specified, an initiator name is
3551 # generated automatically.
3552 #
3553 # @header-digest: The desired header digest. Defaults to
3554 # none-crc32c.
3555 #
3556 # @timeout: Timeout in seconds after which a request will
3557 # timeout. 0 means no timeout and is the default.
3558 #
3559 # Driver specific block device options for iscsi
3560 #
3561 # Since: 2.9
3562 ##
3563 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsIscsi',
3564 'data': { 'transport': 'IscsiTransport',
3565 'portal': 'str',
3566 'target': 'str',
3567 '*lun': 'int',
3568 '*user': 'str',
3569 '*password-secret': 'str',
3570 '*initiator-name': 'str',
3571 '*header-digest': 'IscsiHeaderDigest',
3572 '*timeout': 'int' } }
3573
3574
3575 ##
3576 # @RbdAuthMode:
3577 #
3578 # Since: 3.0
3579 ##
3580 { 'enum': 'RbdAuthMode',
3581 'data': [ 'cephx', 'none' ] }
3582
3583 ##
3584 # @BlockdevOptionsRbd:
3585 #
3586 # @pool: Ceph pool name.
3587 #
3588 # @image: Image name in the Ceph pool.
3589 #
3590 # @conf: path to Ceph configuration file. Values
3591 # in the configuration file will be overridden by
3592 # options specified via QAPI.
3593 #
3594 # @snapshot: Ceph snapshot name.
3595 #
3596 # @user: Ceph id name.
3597 #
3598 # @auth-client-required: Acceptable authentication modes.
3599 # This maps to Ceph configuration option
3600 # "auth_client_required". (Since 3.0)
3601 #
3602 # @key-secret: ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a key
3603 # for cephx authentication.
3604 # This maps to Ceph configuration option
3605 # "key". (Since 3.0)
3606 #
3607 # @server: Monitor host address and port. This maps
3608 # to the "mon_host" Ceph option.
3609 #
3610 # Since: 2.9
3611 ##
3612 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsRbd',
3613 'data': { 'pool': 'str',
3614 'image': 'str',
3615 '*conf': 'str',
3616 '*snapshot': 'str',
3617 '*user': 'str',
3618 '*auth-client-required': ['RbdAuthMode'],
3619 '*key-secret': 'str',
3620 '*server': ['InetSocketAddressBase'] } }
3621
3622 ##
3623 # @BlockdevOptionsSheepdog:
3624 #
3625 # Driver specific block device options for sheepdog
3626 #
3627 # @vdi: Virtual disk image name
3628 # @server: The Sheepdog server to connect to
3629 # @snap-id: Snapshot ID
3630 # @tag: Snapshot tag name
3631 #
3632 # Only one of @snap-id and @tag may be present.
3633 #
3634 # Since: 2.9
3635 ##
3636 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsSheepdog',
3637 'data': { 'server': 'SocketAddress',
3638 'vdi': 'str',
3639 '*snap-id': 'uint32',
3640 '*tag': 'str' } }
3641
3642 ##
3643 # @ReplicationMode:
3644 #
3645 # An enumeration of replication modes.
3646 #
3647 # @primary: Primary mode, the vm's state will be sent to secondary QEMU.
3648 #
3649 # @secondary: Secondary mode, receive the vm's state from primary QEMU.
3650 #
3651 # Since: 2.9
3652 ##
3653 { 'enum' : 'ReplicationMode', 'data' : [ 'primary', 'secondary' ],
3654 'if': 'defined(CONFIG_REPLICATION)' }
3655
3656 ##
3657 # @BlockdevOptionsReplication:
3658 #
3659 # Driver specific block device options for replication
3660 #
3661 # @mode: the replication mode
3662 #
3663 # @top-id: In secondary mode, node name or device ID of the root
3664 # node who owns the replication node chain. Must not be given in
3665 # primary mode.
3666 #
3667 # Since: 2.9
3668 ##
3669 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsReplication',
3670 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3671 'data': { 'mode': 'ReplicationMode',
3672 '*top-id': 'str' },
3673 'if': 'defined(CONFIG_REPLICATION)' }
3674
3675 ##
3676 # @NFSTransport:
3677 #
3678 # An enumeration of NFS transport types
3679 #
3680 # @inet: TCP transport
3681 #
3682 # Since: 2.9
3683 ##
3684 { 'enum': 'NFSTransport',
3685 'data': [ 'inet' ] }
3686
3687 ##
3688 # @NFSServer:
3689 #
3690 # Captures the address of the socket
3691 #
3692 # @type: transport type used for NFS (only TCP supported)
3693 #
3694 # @host: host address for NFS server
3695 #
3696 # Since: 2.9
3697 ##
3698 { 'struct': 'NFSServer',
3699 'data': { 'type': 'NFSTransport',
3700 'host': 'str' } }
3701
3702 ##
3703 # @BlockdevOptionsNfs:
3704 #
3705 # Driver specific block device option for NFS
3706 #
3707 # @server: host address
3708 #
3709 # @path: path of the image on the host
3710 #
3711 # @user: UID value to use when talking to the
3712 # server (defaults to 65534 on Windows and getuid()
3713 # on unix)
3714 #
3715 # @group: GID value to use when talking to the
3716 # server (defaults to 65534 on Windows and getgid()
3717 # in unix)
3718 #
3719 # @tcp-syn-count: number of SYNs during the session
3720 # establishment (defaults to libnfs default)
3721 #
3722 # @readahead-size: set the readahead size in bytes (defaults
3723 # to libnfs default)
3724 #
3725 # @page-cache-size: set the pagecache size in bytes (defaults
3726 # to libnfs default)
3727 #
3728 # @debug: set the NFS debug level (max 2) (defaults
3729 # to libnfs default)
3730 #
3731 # Since: 2.9
3732 ##
3733 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsNfs',
3734 'data': { 'server': 'NFSServer',
3735 'path': 'str',
3736 '*user': 'int',
3737 '*group': 'int',
3738 '*tcp-syn-count': 'int',
3739 '*readahead-size': 'int',
3740 '*page-cache-size': 'int',
3741 '*debug': 'int' } }
3742
3743 ##
3744 # @BlockdevOptionsCurlBase:
3745 #
3746 # Driver specific block device options shared by all protocols supported by the
3747 # curl backend.
3748 #
3749 # @url: URL of the image file
3750 #
3751 # @readahead: Size of the read-ahead cache; must be a multiple of
3752 # 512 (defaults to 256 kB)
3753 #
3754 # @timeout: Timeout for connections, in seconds (defaults to 5)
3755 #
3756 # @username: Username for authentication (defaults to none)
3757 #
3758 # @password-secret: ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a password
3759 # for authentication (defaults to no password)
3760 #
3761 # @proxy-username: Username for proxy authentication (defaults to none)
3762 #
3763 # @proxy-password-secret: ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing a password
3764 # for proxy authentication (defaults to no password)
3765 #
3766 # Since: 2.9
3767 ##
3768 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlBase',
3769 'data': { 'url': 'str',
3770 '*readahead': 'int',
3771 '*timeout': 'int',
3772 '*username': 'str',
3773 '*password-secret': 'str',
3774 '*proxy-username': 'str',
3775 '*proxy-password-secret': 'str' } }
3776
3777 ##
3778 # @BlockdevOptionsCurlHttp:
3779 #
3780 # Driver specific block device options for HTTP connections over the curl
3781 # backend. URLs must start with "http://".
3782 #
3783 # @cookie: List of cookies to set; format is
3784 # "name1=content1; name2=content2;" as explained by
3785 # CURLOPT_COOKIE(3). Defaults to no cookies.
3786 #
3787 # @cookie-secret: ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the cookie data in a
3788 # secure way. See @cookie for the format. (since 2.10)
3789 #
3790 # Since: 2.9
3791 ##
3792 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlHttp',
3793 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlBase',
3794 'data': { '*cookie': 'str',
3795 '*cookie-secret': 'str'} }
3796
3797 ##
3798 # @BlockdevOptionsCurlHttps:
3799 #
3800 # Driver specific block device options for HTTPS connections over the curl
3801 # backend. URLs must start with "https://".
3802 #
3803 # @cookie: List of cookies to set; format is
3804 # "name1=content1; name2=content2;" as explained by
3805 # CURLOPT_COOKIE(3). Defaults to no cookies.
3806 #
3807 # @sslverify: Whether to verify the SSL certificate's validity (defaults to
3808 # true)
3809 #
3810 # @cookie-secret: ID of a QCryptoSecret object providing the cookie data in a
3811 # secure way. See @cookie for the format. (since 2.10)
3812 #
3813 # Since: 2.9
3814 ##
3815 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlHttps',
3816 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlBase',
3817 'data': { '*cookie': 'str',
3818 '*sslverify': 'bool',
3819 '*cookie-secret': 'str'} }
3820
3821 ##
3822 # @BlockdevOptionsCurlFtp:
3823 #
3824 # Driver specific block device options for FTP connections over the curl
3825 # backend. URLs must start with "ftp://".
3826 #
3827 # Since: 2.9
3828 ##
3829 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlFtp',
3830 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlBase',
3831 'data': { } }
3832
3833 ##
3834 # @BlockdevOptionsCurlFtps:
3835 #
3836 # Driver specific block device options for FTPS connections over the curl
3837 # backend. URLs must start with "ftps://".
3838 #
3839 # @sslverify: Whether to verify the SSL certificate's validity (defaults to
3840 # true)
3841 #
3842 # Since: 2.9
3843 ##
3844 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlFtps',
3845 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlBase',
3846 'data': { '*sslverify': 'bool' } }
3847
3848 ##
3849 # @BlockdevOptionsNbd:
3850 #
3851 # Driver specific block device options for NBD.
3852 #
3853 # @server: NBD server address
3854 #
3855 # @export: export name
3856 #
3857 # @tls-creds: TLS credentials ID
3858 #
3859 # @x-dirty-bitmap: A "qemu:dirty-bitmap:NAME" string to query in place of
3860 # traditional "base:allocation" block status (see
3861 # NBD_OPT_LIST_META_CONTEXT in the NBD protocol) (since 3.0)
3862 #
3863 # Since: 2.9
3864 ##
3865 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsNbd',
3866 'data': { 'server': 'SocketAddress',
3867 '*export': 'str',
3868 '*tls-creds': 'str',
3869 '*x-dirty-bitmap': 'str' } }
3870
3871 ##
3872 # @BlockdevOptionsRaw:
3873 #
3874 # Driver specific block device options for the raw driver.
3875 #
3876 # @offset: position where the block device starts
3877 # @size: the assumed size of the device
3878 #
3879 # Since: 2.9
3880 ##
3881 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsRaw',
3882 'base': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3883 'data': { '*offset': 'int', '*size': 'int' } }
3884
3885 ##
3886 # @BlockdevOptionsVxHS:
3887 #
3888 # Driver specific block device options for VxHS
3889 #
3890 # @vdisk-id: UUID of VxHS volume
3891 # @server: vxhs server IP, port
3892 # @tls-creds: TLS credentials ID
3893 #
3894 # Since: 2.10
3895 ##
3896 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsVxHS',
3897 'data': { 'vdisk-id': 'str',
3898 'server': 'InetSocketAddressBase',
3899 '*tls-creds': 'str' } }
3900
3901 ##
3902 # @BlockdevOptionsThrottle:
3903 #
3904 # Driver specific block device options for the throttle driver
3905 #
3906 # @throttle-group: the name of the throttle-group object to use. It
3907 # must already exist.
3908 # @file: reference to or definition of the data source block device
3909 # Since: 2.11
3910 ##
3911 { 'struct': 'BlockdevOptionsThrottle',
3912 'data': { 'throttle-group': 'str',
3913 'file' : 'BlockdevRef'
3914 } }
3915 ##
3916 # @BlockdevOptions:
3917 #
3918 # Options for creating a block device. Many options are available for all
3919 # block devices, independent of the block driver:
3920 #
3921 # @driver: block driver name
3922 # @node-name: the node name of the new node (Since 2.0).
3923 # This option is required on the top level of blockdev-add.
3924 # Valid node names start with an alphabetic character and may
3925 # contain only alphanumeric characters, '-', '.' and '_'. Their
3926 # maximum length is 31 characters.
3927 # @discard: discard-related options (default: ignore)
3928 # @cache: cache-related options
3929 # @read-only: whether the block device should be read-only (default: false).
3930 # Note that some block drivers support only read-only access,
3931 # either generally or in certain configurations. In this case,
3932 # the default value does not work and the option must be
3933 # specified explicitly.
3934 # @auto-read-only: if true and @read-only is false, QEMU may automatically
3935 # decide not to open the image read-write as requested, but
3936 # fall back to read-only instead (and switch between the modes
3937 # later), e.g. depending on whether the image file is writable
3938 # or whether a writing user is attached to the node
3939 # (default: false, since 3.1)
3940 # @detect-zeroes: detect and optimize zero writes (Since 2.1)
3941 # (default: off)
3942 # @force-share: force share all permission on added nodes.
3943 # Requires read-only=true. (Since 2.10)
3944 #
3945 # Remaining options are determined by the block driver.
3946 #
3947 # Since: 2.9
3948 ##
3949 { 'union': 'BlockdevOptions',
3950 'base': { 'driver': 'BlockdevDriver',
3951 '*node-name': 'str',
3952 '*discard': 'BlockdevDiscardOptions',
3953 '*cache': 'BlockdevCacheOptions',
3954 '*read-only': 'bool',
3955 '*auto-read-only': 'bool',
3956 '*force-share': 'bool',
3957 '*detect-zeroes': 'BlockdevDetectZeroesOptions' },
3958 'discriminator': 'driver',
3959 'data': {
3960 'blkdebug': 'BlockdevOptionsBlkdebug',
3961 'blklogwrites':'BlockdevOptionsBlklogwrites',
3962 'blkverify': 'BlockdevOptionsBlkverify',
3963 'bochs': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3964 'cloop': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3965 'copy-on-read':'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3966 'dmg': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3967 'file': 'BlockdevOptionsFile',
3968 'ftp': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlFtp',
3969 'ftps': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlFtps',
3970 'gluster': 'BlockdevOptionsGluster',
3971 'host_cdrom': 'BlockdevOptionsFile',
3972 'host_device':'BlockdevOptionsFile',
3973 'http': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlHttp',
3974 'https': 'BlockdevOptionsCurlHttps',
3975 'iscsi': 'BlockdevOptionsIscsi',
3976 'luks': 'BlockdevOptionsLUKS',
3977 'nbd': 'BlockdevOptionsNbd',
3978 'nfs': 'BlockdevOptionsNfs',
3979 'null-aio': 'BlockdevOptionsNull',
3980 'null-co': 'BlockdevOptionsNull',
3981 'nvme': 'BlockdevOptionsNVMe',
3982 'parallels': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3983 'qcow2': 'BlockdevOptionsQcow2',
3984 'qcow': 'BlockdevOptionsQcow',
3985 'qed': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat',
3986 'quorum': 'BlockdevOptionsQuorum',
3987 'raw': 'BlockdevOptionsRaw',
3988 'rbd': 'BlockdevOptionsRbd',
3989 'replication': { 'type': 'BlockdevOptionsReplication',
3990 'if': 'defined(CONFIG_REPLICATION)' },
3991 'sheepdog': 'BlockdevOptionsSheepdog',
3992 'ssh': 'BlockdevOptionsSsh',
3993 'throttle': 'BlockdevOptionsThrottle',
3994 'vdi': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3995 'vhdx': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3996 'vmdk': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericCOWFormat',
3997 'vpc': 'BlockdevOptionsGenericFormat',
3998 'vvfat': 'BlockdevOptionsVVFAT',
3999 'vxhs': 'BlockdevOptionsVxHS'
4000 } }
4001
4002 ##
4003 # @BlockdevRef:
4004 #
4005 # Reference to a block device.
4006 #
4007 # @definition: defines a new block device inline
4008 # @reference: references the ID of an existing block device
4009 #
4010 # Since: 2.9
4011 ##
4012 { 'alternate': 'BlockdevRef',
4013 'data': { 'definition': 'BlockdevOptions',
4014 'reference': 'str' } }
4015
4016 ##
4017 # @BlockdevRefOrNull:
4018 #
4019 # Reference to a block device.
4020 #
4021 # @definition: defines a new block device inline
4022 # @reference: references the ID of an existing block device.
4023 # An empty string means that no block device should
4024 # be referenced. Deprecated; use null instead.
4025 # @null: No block device should be referenced (since 2.10)
4026 #
4027 # Since: 2.9
4028 ##
4029 { 'alternate': 'BlockdevRefOrNull',
4030 'data': { 'definition': 'BlockdevOptions',
4031 'reference': 'str',
4032 'null': 'null' } }
4033
4034 ##
4035 # @blockdev-add:
4036 #
4037 # Creates a new block device. If the @id option is given at the top level, a
4038 # BlockBackend will be created; otherwise, @node-name is mandatory at the top
4039 # level and no BlockBackend will be created.
4040 #
4041 # Since: 2.9
4042 #
4043 # Example:
4044 #
4045 # 1.
4046 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
4047 # "arguments": {
4048 # "driver": "qcow2",
4049 # "node-name": "test1",
4050 # "file": {
4051 # "driver": "file",
4052 # "filename": "test.qcow2"
4053 # }
4054 # }
4055 # }
4056 # <- { "return": {} }
4057 #
4058 # 2.
4059 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
4060 # "arguments": {
4061 # "driver": "qcow2",
4062 # "node-name": "node0",
4063 # "discard": "unmap",
4064 # "cache": {
4065 # "direct": true
4066 # },
4067 # "file": {
4068 # "driver": "file",
4069 # "filename": "/tmp/test.qcow2"
4070 # },
4071 # "backing": {
4072 # "driver": "raw",
4073 # "file": {
4074 # "driver": "file",
4075 # "filename": "/dev/fdset/4"
4076 # }
4077 # }
4078 # }
4079 # }
4080 #
4081 # <- { "return": {} }
4082 #
4083 ##
4084 { 'command': 'blockdev-add', 'data': 'BlockdevOptions', 'boxed': true }
4085
4086 ##
4087 # @x-blockdev-reopen:
4088 #
4089 # Reopens a block device using the given set of options. Any option
4090 # not specified will be reset to its default value regardless of its
4091 # previous status. If an option cannot be changed or a particular
4092 # driver does not support reopening then the command will return an
4093 # error.
4094 #
4095 # The top-level @node-name option (from BlockdevOptions) must be
4096 # specified and is used to select the block device to be reopened.
4097 # Other @node-name options must be either omitted or set to the
4098 # current name of the appropriate node. This command won't change any
4099 # node name and any attempt to do it will result in an error.
4100 #
4101 # In the case of options that refer to child nodes, the behavior of
4102 # this command depends on the value:
4103 #
4104 # 1) A set of options (BlockdevOptions): the child is reopened with
4105 # the specified set of options.
4106 #
4107 # 2) A reference to the current child: the child is reopened using
4108 # its existing set of options.
4109 #
4110 # 3) A reference to a different node: the current child is replaced
4111 # with the specified one.
4112 #
4113 # 4) NULL: the current child (if any) is detached.
4114 #
4115 # Options (1) and (2) are supported in all cases, but at the moment
4116 # only @backing allows replacing or detaching an existing child.
4117 #
4118 # Unlike with blockdev-add, the @backing option must always be present
4119 # unless the node being reopened does not have a backing file and its
4120 # image does not have a default backing file name as part of its
4121 # metadata.
4122 #
4123 # Since: 4.0
4124 ##
4125 { 'command': 'x-blockdev-reopen',
4126 'data': 'BlockdevOptions', 'boxed': true }
4127
4128 ##
4129 # @blockdev-del:
4130 #
4131 # Deletes a block device that has been added using blockdev-add.
4132 # The command will fail if the node is attached to a device or is
4133 # otherwise being used.
4134 #
4135 # @node-name: Name of the graph node to delete.
4136 #
4137 # Since: 2.9
4138 #
4139 # Example:
4140 #
4141 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
4142 # "arguments": {
4143 # "driver": "qcow2",
4144 # "node-name": "node0",
4145 # "file": {
4146 # "driver": "file",
4147 # "filename": "test.qcow2"
4148 # }
4149 # }
4150 # }
4151 # <- { "return": {} }
4152 #
4153 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-del",
4154 # "arguments": { "node-name": "node0" }
4155 # }
4156 # <- { "return": {} }
4157 #
4158 ##
4159 { 'command': 'blockdev-del', 'data': { 'node-name': 'str' } }
4160
4161 ##
4162 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsFile:
4163 #
4164 # Driver specific image creation options for file.
4165 #
4166 # @filename Filename for the new image file
4167 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4168 # @preallocation Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off;
4169 # allowed values: off,
4170 # falloc (if defined CONFIG_POSIX_FALLOCATE),
4171 # full (if defined CONFIG_POSIX))
4172 # @nocow Turn off copy-on-write (valid only on btrfs; default: off)
4173 #
4174 # Since: 2.12
4175 ##
4176 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsFile',
4177 'data': { 'filename': 'str',
4178 'size': 'size',
4179 '*preallocation': 'PreallocMode',
4180 '*nocow': 'bool' } }
4181
4182 ##
4183 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsGluster:
4184 #
4185 # Driver specific image creation options for gluster.
4186 #
4187 # @location Where to store the new image file
4188 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4189 # @preallocation Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off;
4190 # allowed values: off,
4191 # falloc (if defined CONFIG_GLUSTERFS_FALLOCATE),
4192 # full (if defined CONFIG_GLUSTERFS_ZEROFILL))
4193 #
4194 # Since: 2.12
4195 ##
4196 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsGluster',
4197 'data': { 'location': 'BlockdevOptionsGluster',
4198 'size': 'size',
4199 '*preallocation': 'PreallocMode' } }
4200
4201 ##
4202 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsLUKS:
4203 #
4204 # Driver specific image creation options for LUKS.
4205 #
4206 # @file Node to create the image format on
4207 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4208 #
4209 # Since: 2.12
4210 ##
4211 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsLUKS',
4212 'base': 'QCryptoBlockCreateOptionsLUKS',
4213 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4214 'size': 'size' } }
4215
4216 ##
4217 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsNfs:
4218 #
4219 # Driver specific image creation options for NFS.
4220 #
4221 # @location Where to store the new image file
4222 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4223 #
4224 # Since: 2.12
4225 ##
4226 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsNfs',
4227 'data': { 'location': 'BlockdevOptionsNfs',
4228 'size': 'size' } }
4229
4230 ##
4231 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsParallels:
4232 #
4233 # Driver specific image creation options for parallels.
4234 #
4235 # @file Node to create the image format on
4236 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4237 # @cluster-size Cluster size in bytes (default: 1 MB)
4238 #
4239 # Since: 2.12
4240 ##
4241 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsParallels',
4242 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4243 'size': 'size',
4244 '*cluster-size': 'size' } }
4245
4246 ##
4247 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsQcow:
4248 #
4249 # Driver specific image creation options for qcow.
4250 #
4251 # @file Node to create the image format on
4252 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4253 # @backing-file File name of the backing file if a backing file
4254 # should be used
4255 # @encrypt Encryption options if the image should be encrypted
4256 #
4257 # Since: 2.12
4258 ##
4259 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsQcow',
4260 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4261 'size': 'size',
4262 '*backing-file': 'str',
4263 '*encrypt': 'QCryptoBlockCreateOptions' } }
4264
4265 ##
4266 # @BlockdevQcow2Version:
4267 #
4268 # @v2: The original QCOW2 format as introduced in qemu 0.10 (version 2)
4269 # @v3: The extended QCOW2 format as introduced in qemu 1.1 (version 3)
4270 #
4271 # Since: 2.12
4272 ##
4273 { 'enum': 'BlockdevQcow2Version',
4274 'data': [ 'v2', 'v3' ] }
4275
4276
4277 ##
4278 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsQcow2:
4279 #
4280 # Driver specific image creation options for qcow2.
4281 #
4282 # @file Node to create the image format on
4283 # @data-file Node to use as an external data file in which all guest
4284 # data is stored so that only metadata remains in the qcow2
4285 # file (since: 4.0)
4286 # @data-file-raw True if the external data file must stay valid as a
4287 # standalone (read-only) raw image without looking at qcow2
4288 # metadata (default: false; since: 4.0)
4289 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4290 # @version Compatibility level (default: v3)
4291 # @backing-file File name of the backing file if a backing file
4292 # should be used
4293 # @backing-fmt Name of the block driver to use for the backing file
4294 # @encrypt Encryption options if the image should be encrypted
4295 # @cluster-size qcow2 cluster size in bytes (default: 65536)
4296 # @preallocation Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off;
4297 # allowed values: off, falloc, full, metadata)
4298 # @lazy-refcounts True if refcounts may be updated lazily (default: off)
4299 # @refcount-bits Width of reference counts in bits (default: 16)
4300 #
4301 # Since: 2.12
4302 ##
4303 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsQcow2',
4304 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4305 '*data-file': 'BlockdevRef',
4306 '*data-file-raw': 'bool',
4307 'size': 'size',
4308 '*version': 'BlockdevQcow2Version',
4309 '*backing-file': 'str',
4310 '*backing-fmt': 'BlockdevDriver',
4311 '*encrypt': 'QCryptoBlockCreateOptions',
4312 '*cluster-size': 'size',
4313 '*preallocation': 'PreallocMode',
4314 '*lazy-refcounts': 'bool',
4315 '*refcount-bits': 'int' } }
4316
4317 ##
4318 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsQed:
4319 #
4320 # Driver specific image creation options for qed.
4321 #
4322 # @file Node to create the image format on
4323 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4324 # @backing-file File name of the backing file if a backing file
4325 # should be used
4326 # @backing-fmt Name of the block driver to use for the backing file
4327 # @cluster-size Cluster size in bytes (default: 65536)
4328 # @table-size L1/L2 table size (in clusters)
4329 #
4330 # Since: 2.12
4331 ##
4332 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsQed',
4333 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4334 'size': 'size',
4335 '*backing-file': 'str',
4336 '*backing-fmt': 'BlockdevDriver',
4337 '*cluster-size': 'size',
4338 '*table-size': 'int' } }
4339
4340 ##
4341 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsRbd:
4342 #
4343 # Driver specific image creation options for rbd/Ceph.
4344 #
4345 # @location Where to store the new image file. This location cannot
4346 # point to a snapshot.
4347 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4348 # @cluster-size RBD object size
4349 #
4350 # Since: 2.12
4351 ##
4352 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsRbd',
4353 'data': { 'location': 'BlockdevOptionsRbd',
4354 'size': 'size',
4355 '*cluster-size' : 'size' } }
4356
4357 ##
4358 # @BlockdevVmdkSubformat:
4359 #
4360 # Subformat options for VMDK images
4361 #
4362 # @monolithicSparse: Single file image with sparse cluster allocation
4363 #
4364 # @monolithicFlat: Single flat data image and a descriptor file
4365 #
4366 # @twoGbMaxExtentSparse: Data is split into 2GB (per virtual LBA) sparse extent
4367 # files, in addition to a descriptor file
4368 #
4369 # @twoGbMaxExtentFlat: Data is split into 2GB (per virtual LBA) flat extent
4370 # files, in addition to a descriptor file
4371 #
4372 # @streamOptimized: Single file image sparse cluster allocation, optimized
4373 # for streaming over network.
4374 #
4375 # Since: 4.0
4376 ##
4377 { 'enum': 'BlockdevVmdkSubformat',
4378 'data': [ 'monolithicSparse', 'monolithicFlat', 'twoGbMaxExtentSparse',
4379 'twoGbMaxExtentFlat', 'streamOptimized'] }
4380
4381 ##
4382 # @BlockdevVmdkAdapterType:
4383 #
4384 # Adapter type info for VMDK images
4385 #
4386 # Since: 4.0
4387 ##
4388 { 'enum': 'BlockdevVmdkAdapterType',
4389 'data': [ 'ide', 'buslogic', 'lsilogic', 'legacyESX'] }
4390
4391 ##
4392 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsVmdk:
4393 #
4394 # Driver specific image creation options for VMDK.
4395 #
4396 # @file Where to store the new image file. This refers to the image
4397 # file for monolithcSparse and streamOptimized format, or the
4398 # descriptor file for other formats.
4399 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4400 # @extents Where to store the data extents. Required for monolithcFlat,
4401 # twoGbMaxExtentSparse and twoGbMaxExtentFlat formats. For
4402 # monolithicFlat, only one entry is required; for
4403 # twoGbMaxExtent* formats, the number of entries required is
4404 # calculated as extent_number = virtual_size / 2GB. Providing
4405 # more extents than will be used is an error.
4406 # @subformat The subformat of the VMDK image. Default: "monolithicSparse".
4407 # @backing-file The path of backing file. Default: no backing file is used.
4408 # @adapter-type The adapter type used to fill in the descriptor. Default: ide.
4409 # @hwversion Hardware version. The meaningful options are "4" or "6".
4410 # Default: "4".
4411 # @zeroed-grain Whether to enable zeroed-grain feature for sparse subformats.
4412 # Default: false.
4413 #
4414 # Since: 4.0
4415 ##
4416 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsVmdk',
4417 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4418 'size': 'size',
4419 '*extents': ['BlockdevRef'],
4420 '*subformat': 'BlockdevVmdkSubformat',
4421 '*backing-file': 'str',
4422 '*adapter-type': 'BlockdevVmdkAdapterType',
4423 '*hwversion': 'str',
4424 '*zeroed-grain': 'bool' } }
4425
4426
4427 ##
4428 # @SheepdogRedundancyType:
4429 #
4430 # @full Create a fully replicated vdi with x copies
4431 # @erasure-coded Create an erasure coded vdi with x data strips and
4432 # y parity strips
4433 #
4434 # Since: 2.12
4435 ##
4436 { 'enum': 'SheepdogRedundancyType',
4437 'data': [ 'full', 'erasure-coded' ] }
4438
4439 ##
4440 # @SheepdogRedundancyFull:
4441 #
4442 # @copies Number of copies to use (between 1 and 31)
4443 #
4444 # Since: 2.12
4445 ##
4446 { 'struct': 'SheepdogRedundancyFull',
4447 'data': { 'copies': 'int' }}
4448
4449 ##
4450 # @SheepdogRedundancyErasureCoded:
4451 #
4452 # @data-strips Number of data strips to use (one of {2,4,8,16})
4453 # @parity-strips Number of parity strips to use (between 1 and 15)
4454 #
4455 # Since: 2.12
4456 ##
4457 { 'struct': 'SheepdogRedundancyErasureCoded',
4458 'data': { 'data-strips': 'int',
4459 'parity-strips': 'int' }}
4460
4461 ##
4462 # @SheepdogRedundancy:
4463 #
4464 # Since: 2.12
4465 ##
4466 { 'union': 'SheepdogRedundancy',
4467 'base': { 'type': 'SheepdogRedundancyType' },
4468 'discriminator': 'type',
4469 'data': { 'full': 'SheepdogRedundancyFull',
4470 'erasure-coded': 'SheepdogRedundancyErasureCoded' } }
4471
4472 ##
4473 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsSheepdog:
4474 #
4475 # Driver specific image creation options for Sheepdog.
4476 #
4477 # @location Where to store the new image file
4478 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4479 # @backing-file File name of a base image
4480 # @preallocation Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off;
4481 # allowed values: off, full)
4482 # @redundancy Redundancy of the image
4483 # @object-size Object size of the image
4484 #
4485 # Since: 2.12
4486 ##
4487 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsSheepdog',
4488 'data': { 'location': 'BlockdevOptionsSheepdog',
4489 'size': 'size',
4490 '*backing-file': 'str',
4491 '*preallocation': 'PreallocMode',
4492 '*redundancy': 'SheepdogRedundancy',
4493 '*object-size': 'size' } }
4494
4495 ##
4496 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsSsh:
4497 #
4498 # Driver specific image creation options for SSH.
4499 #
4500 # @location Where to store the new image file
4501 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4502 #
4503 # Since: 2.12
4504 ##
4505 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsSsh',
4506 'data': { 'location': 'BlockdevOptionsSsh',
4507 'size': 'size' } }
4508
4509 ##
4510 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsVdi:
4511 #
4512 # Driver specific image creation options for VDI.
4513 #
4514 # @file Node to create the image format on
4515 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4516 # @preallocation Preallocation mode for the new image (default: off;
4517 # allowed values: off, metadata)
4518 #
4519 # Since: 2.12
4520 ##
4521 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsVdi',
4522 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4523 'size': 'size',
4524 '*preallocation': 'PreallocMode' } }
4525
4526 ##
4527 # @BlockdevVhdxSubformat:
4528 #
4529 # @dynamic: Growing image file
4530 # @fixed: Preallocated fixed-size image file
4531 #
4532 # Since: 2.12
4533 ##
4534 { 'enum': 'BlockdevVhdxSubformat',
4535 'data': [ 'dynamic', 'fixed' ] }
4536
4537 ##
4538 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsVhdx:
4539 #
4540 # Driver specific image creation options for vhdx.
4541 #
4542 # @file Node to create the image format on
4543 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4544 # @log-size Log size in bytes, must be a multiple of 1 MB
4545 # (default: 1 MB)
4546 # @block-size Block size in bytes, must be a multiple of 1 MB and not
4547 # larger than 256 MB (default: automatically choose a block
4548 # size depending on the image size)
4549 # @subformat vhdx subformat (default: dynamic)
4550 # @block-state-zero Force use of payload blocks of type 'ZERO'. Non-standard,
4551 # but default. Do not set to 'off' when using 'qemu-img
4552 # convert' with subformat=dynamic.
4553 #
4554 # Since: 2.12
4555 ##
4556 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsVhdx',
4557 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4558 'size': 'size',
4559 '*log-size': 'size',
4560 '*block-size': 'size',
4561 '*subformat': 'BlockdevVhdxSubformat',
4562 '*block-state-zero': 'bool' } }
4563
4564 ##
4565 # @BlockdevVpcSubformat:
4566 #
4567 # @dynamic: Growing image file
4568 # @fixed: Preallocated fixed-size image file
4569 #
4570 # Since: 2.12
4571 ##
4572 { 'enum': 'BlockdevVpcSubformat',
4573 'data': [ 'dynamic', 'fixed' ] }
4574
4575 ##
4576 # @BlockdevCreateOptionsVpc:
4577 #
4578 # Driver specific image creation options for vpc (VHD).
4579 #
4580 # @file Node to create the image format on
4581 # @size Size of the virtual disk in bytes
4582 # @subformat vhdx subformat (default: dynamic)
4583 # @force-size Force use of the exact byte size instead of rounding to the
4584 # next size that can be represented in CHS geometry
4585 # (default: false)
4586 #
4587 # Since: 2.12
4588 ##
4589 { 'struct': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsVpc',
4590 'data': { 'file': 'BlockdevRef',
4591 'size': 'size',
4592 '*subformat': 'BlockdevVpcSubformat',
4593 '*force-size': 'bool' } }
4594
4595 ##
4596 # @BlockdevCreateOptions:
4597 #
4598 # Options for creating an image format on a given node.
4599 #
4600 # @driver block driver to create the image format
4601 #
4602 # Since: 2.12
4603 ##
4604 { 'union': 'BlockdevCreateOptions',
4605 'base': {
4606 'driver': 'BlockdevDriver' },
4607 'discriminator': 'driver',
4608 'data': {
4609 'file': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsFile',
4610 'gluster': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsGluster',
4611 'luks': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsLUKS',
4612 'nfs': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsNfs',
4613 'parallels': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsParallels',
4614 'qcow': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsQcow',
4615 'qcow2': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsQcow2',
4616 'qed': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsQed',
4617 'rbd': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsRbd',
4618 'sheepdog': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsSheepdog',
4619 'ssh': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsSsh',
4620 'vdi': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsVdi',
4621 'vhdx': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsVhdx',
4622 'vmdk': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsVmdk',
4623 'vpc': 'BlockdevCreateOptionsVpc'
4624 } }
4625
4626 ##
4627 # @blockdev-create:
4628 #
4629 # Starts a job to create an image format on a given node. The job is
4630 # automatically finalized, but a manual job-dismiss is required.
4631 #
4632 # @job-id: Identifier for the newly created job.
4633 #
4634 # @options: Options for the image creation.
4635 #
4636 # Since: 3.0
4637 ##
4638 { 'command': 'blockdev-create',
4639 'data': { 'job-id': 'str',
4640 'options': 'BlockdevCreateOptions' } }
4641
4642 ##
4643 # @blockdev-open-tray:
4644 #
4645 # Opens a block device's tray. If there is a block driver state tree inserted as
4646 # a medium, it will become inaccessible to the guest (but it will remain
4647 # associated to the block device, so closing the tray will make it accessible
4648 # again).
4649 #
4650 # If the tray was already open before, this will be a no-op.
4651 #
4652 # Once the tray opens, a DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED event is emitted. There are cases in
4653 # which no such event will be generated, these include:
4654 # - if the guest has locked the tray, @force is false and the guest does not
4655 # respond to the eject request
4656 # - if the BlockBackend denoted by @device does not have a guest device attached
4657 # to it
4658 # - if the guest device does not have an actual tray
4659 #
4660 # @device: Block device name (deprecated, use @id instead)
4661 #
4662 # @id: The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
4663 #
4664 # @force: if false (the default), an eject request will be sent to
4665 # the guest if it has locked the tray (and the tray will not be opened
4666 # immediately); if true, the tray will be opened regardless of whether
4667 # it is locked
4668 #
4669 # Since: 2.5
4670 #
4671 # Example:
4672 #
4673 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-open-tray",
4674 # "arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
4675 #
4676 # <- { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1418751016,
4677 # "microseconds": 716996 },
4678 # "event": "DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED",
4679 # "data": { "device": "ide1-cd0",
4680 # "id": "ide0-1-0",
4681 # "tray-open": true } }
4682 #
4683 # <- { "return": {} }
4684 #
4685 ##
4686 { 'command': 'blockdev-open-tray',
4687 'data': { '*device': 'str',
4688 '*id': 'str',
4689 '*force': 'bool' } }
4690
4691 ##
4692 # @blockdev-close-tray:
4693 #
4694 # Closes a block device's tray. If there is a block driver state tree associated
4695 # with the block device (which is currently ejected), that tree will be loaded
4696 # as the medium.
4697 #
4698 # If the tray was already closed before, this will be a no-op.
4699 #
4700 # @device: Block device name (deprecated, use @id instead)
4701 #
4702 # @id: The name or QOM path of the guest device (since: 2.8)
4703 #
4704 # Since: 2.5
4705 #
4706 # Example:
4707 #
4708 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-close-tray",
4709 # "arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
4710 #
4711 # <- { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1418751345,
4712 # "microseconds": 272147 },
4713 # "event": "DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED",
4714 # "data": { "device": "ide1-cd0",
4715 # "id": "ide0-1-0",
4716 # "tray-open": false } }
4717 #
4718 # <- { "return": {} }
4719 #
4720 ##
4721 { 'command': 'blockdev-close-tray',
4722 'data': { '*device': 'str',
4723 '*id': 'str' } }
4724
4725 ##
4726 # @blockdev-remove-medium:
4727 #
4728 # Removes a medium (a block driver state tree) from a block device. That block
4729 # device's tray must currently be open (unless there is no attached guest
4730 # device).
4731 #
4732 # If the tray is open and there is no medium inserted, this will be a no-op.
4733 #
4734 # @id: The name or QOM path of the guest device
4735 #
4736 # Since: 2.12
4737 #
4738 # Example:
4739 #
4740 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-remove-medium",
4741 # "arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
4742 #
4743 # <- { "error": { "class": "GenericError",
4744 # "desc": "Tray of device 'ide0-1-0' is not open" } }
4745 #
4746 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-open-tray",
4747 # "arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
4748 #
4749 # <- { "timestamp": { "seconds": 1418751627,
4750 # "microseconds": 549958 },
4751 # "event": "DEVICE_TRAY_MOVED",
4752 # "data": { "device": "ide1-cd0",
4753 # "id": "ide0-1-0",
4754 # "tray-open": true } }
4755 #
4756 # <- { "return": {} }
4757 #
4758 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-remove-medium",
4759 # "arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0" } }
4760 #
4761 # <- { "return": {} }
4762 #
4763 ##
4764 { 'command': 'blockdev-remove-medium',
4765 'data': { 'id': 'str' } }
4766
4767 ##
4768 # @blockdev-insert-medium:
4769 #
4770 # Inserts a medium (a block driver state tree) into a block device. That block
4771 # device's tray must currently be open (unless there is no attached guest
4772 # device) and there must be no medium inserted already.
4773 #
4774 # @id: The name or QOM path of the guest device
4775 #
4776 # @node-name: name of a node in the block driver state graph
4777 #
4778 # Since: 2.12
4779 #
4780 # Example:
4781 #
4782 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
4783 # "arguments": {
4784 # "node-name": "node0",
4785 # "driver": "raw",
4786 # "file": { "driver": "file",
4787 # "filename": "fedora.iso" } } }
4788 # <- { "return": {} }
4789 #
4790 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-insert-medium",
4791 # "arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0",
4792 # "node-name": "node0" } }
4793 #
4794 # <- { "return": {} }
4795 #
4796 ##
4797 { 'command': 'blockdev-insert-medium',
4798 'data': { 'id': 'str',
4799 'node-name': 'str'} }
4800
4801
4802 ##
4803 # @BlockdevChangeReadOnlyMode:
4804 #
4805 # Specifies the new read-only mode of a block device subject to the
4806 # @blockdev-change-medium command.
4807 #
4808 # @retain: Retains the current read-only mode
4809 #
4810 # @read-only: Makes the device read-only
4811 #
4812 # @read-write: Makes the device writable
4813 #
4814 # Since: 2.3
4815 #
4816 ##
4817 { 'enum': 'BlockdevChangeReadOnlyMode',
4818 'data': ['retain', 'read-only', 'read-write'] }
4819
4820
4821 ##
4822 # @blockdev-change-medium:
4823 #
4824 # Changes the medium inserted into a block device by ejecting the current medium
4825 # and loading a new image file which is inserted as the new medium (this command
4826 # combines blockdev-open-tray, blockdev-remove-medium, blockdev-insert-medium
4827 # and blockdev-close-tray).
4828 #
4829 # @device: Block device name (deprecated, use @id instead)
4830 #
4831 # @id: The name or QOM path of the guest device
4832 # (since: 2.8)
4833 #
4834 # @filename: filename of the new image to be loaded
4835 #
4836 # @format: format to open the new image with (defaults to
4837 # the probed format)
4838 #
4839 # @read-only-mode: change the read-only mode of the device; defaults
4840 # to 'retain'
4841 #
4842 # Since: 2.5
4843 #
4844 # Examples:
4845 #
4846 # 1. Change a removable medium
4847 #
4848 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-change-medium",
4849 # "arguments": { "id": "ide0-1-0",
4850 # "filename": "/srv/images/Fedora-12-x86_64-DVD.iso",
4851 # "format": "raw" } }
4852 # <- { "return": {} }
4853 #
4854 # 2. Load a read-only medium into a writable drive
4855 #
4856 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-change-medium",
4857 # "arguments": { "id": "floppyA",
4858 # "filename": "/srv/images/ro.img",
4859 # "format": "raw",
4860 # "read-only-mode": "retain" } }
4861 #
4862 # <- { "error":
4863 # { "class": "GenericError",
4864 # "desc": "Could not open '/srv/images/ro.img': Permission denied" } }
4865 #
4866 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-change-medium",
4867 # "arguments": { "id": "floppyA",
4868 # "filename": "/srv/images/ro.img",
4869 # "format": "raw",
4870 # "read-only-mode": "read-only" } }
4871 #
4872 # <- { "return": {} }
4873 #
4874 ##
4875 { 'command': 'blockdev-change-medium',
4876 'data': { '*device': 'str',
4877 '*id': 'str',
4878 'filename': 'str',
4879 '*format': 'str',
4880 '*read-only-mode': 'BlockdevChangeReadOnlyMode' } }
4881
4882
4883 ##
4884 # @BlockErrorAction:
4885 #
4886 # An enumeration of action that has been taken when a DISK I/O occurs
4887 #
4888 # @ignore: error has been ignored
4889 #
4890 # @report: error has been reported to the device
4891 #
4892 # @stop: error caused VM to be stopped
4893 #
4894 # Since: 2.1
4895 ##
4896 { 'enum': 'BlockErrorAction',
4897 'data': [ 'ignore', 'report', 'stop' ] }
4898
4899
4900 ##
4901 # @BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED:
4902 #
4903 # Emitted when a disk image is being marked corrupt. The image can be
4904 # identified by its device or node name. The 'device' field is always
4905 # present for compatibility reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the
4906 # image does not have a device name associated.
4907 #
4908 # @device: device name. This is always present for compatibility
4909 # reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the image does not
4910 # have a device name associated.
4911 #
4912 # @node-name: node name (Since: 2.4)
4913 #
4914 # @msg: informative message for human consumption, such as the kind of
4915 # corruption being detected. It should not be parsed by machine as it is
4916 # not guaranteed to be stable
4917 #
4918 # @offset: if the corruption resulted from an image access, this is
4919 # the host's access offset into the image
4920 #
4921 # @size: if the corruption resulted from an image access, this is
4922 # the access size
4923 #
4924 # @fatal: if set, the image is marked corrupt and therefore unusable after this
4925 # event and must be repaired (Since 2.2; before, every
4926 # BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED event was fatal)
4927 #
4928 # Note: If action is "stop", a STOP event will eventually follow the
4929 # BLOCK_IO_ERROR event.
4930 #
4931 # Example:
4932 #
4933 # <- { "event": "BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED",
4934 # "data": { "device": "ide0-hd0", "node-name": "node0",
4935 # "msg": "Prevented active L1 table overwrite", "offset": 196608,
4936 # "size": 65536 },
4937 # "timestamp": { "seconds": 1378126126, "microseconds": 966463 } }
4938 #
4939 # Since: 1.7
4940 ##
4941 { 'event': 'BLOCK_IMAGE_CORRUPTED',
4942 'data': { 'device' : 'str',
4943 '*node-name' : 'str',
4944 'msg' : 'str',
4945 '*offset' : 'int',
4946 '*size' : 'int',
4947 'fatal' : 'bool' } }
4948
4949 ##
4950 # @BLOCK_IO_ERROR:
4951 #
4952 # Emitted when a disk I/O error occurs
4953 #
4954 # @device: device name. This is always present for compatibility
4955 # reasons, but it can be empty ("") if the image does not
4956 # have a device name associated.
4957 #
4958 # @node-name: node name. Note that errors may be reported for the root node
4959 # that is directly attached to a guest device rather than for the
4960 # node where the error occurred. The node name is not present if
4961 # the drive is empty. (Since: 2.8)
4962 #
4963 # @operation: I/O operation
4964 #
4965 # @action: action that has been taken
4966 #
4967 # @nospace: true if I/O error was caused due to a no-space
4968 # condition. This key is only present if query-block's
4969 # io-status is present, please see query-block documentation
4970 # for more information (since: 2.2)
4971 #
4972 # @reason: human readable string describing the error cause.
4973 # (This field is a debugging aid for humans, it should not
4974 # be parsed by applications) (since: 2.2)
4975 #
4976 # Note: If action is "stop", a STOP event will eventually follow the
4977 # BLOCK_IO_ERROR event
4978 #
4979 # Since: 0.13.0
4980 #
4981 # Example:
4982 #
4983 # <- { "event": "BLOCK_IO_ERROR",
4984 # "data": { "device": "ide0-hd1",
4985 # "node-name": "#block212",
4986 # "operation": "write",
4987 # "action": "stop" },
4988 # "timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
4989 #
4990 ##
4991 { 'event': 'BLOCK_IO_ERROR',
4992 'data': { 'device': 'str', '*node-name': 'str',
4993 'operation': 'IoOperationType',
4994 'action': 'BlockErrorAction', '*nospace': 'bool',
4995 'reason': 'str' } }
4996
4997 ##
4998 # @BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED:
4999 #
5000 # Emitted when a block job has completed
5001 #
5002 # @type: job type
5003 #
5004 # @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other
5005 # values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
5006 #
5007 # @len: maximum progress value
5008 #
5009 # @offset: current progress value. On success this is equal to len.
5010 # On failure this is less than len
5011 #
5012 # @speed: rate limit, bytes per second
5013 #
5014 # @error: error message. Only present on failure. This field
5015 # contains a human-readable error message. There are no semantics
5016 # other than that streaming has failed and clients should not try to
5017 # interpret the error string
5018 #
5019 # Since: 1.1
5020 #
5021 # Example:
5022 #
5023 # <- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED",
5024 # "data": { "type": "stream", "device": "virtio-disk0",
5025 # "len": 10737418240, "offset": 10737418240,
5026 # "speed": 0 },
5027 # "timestamp": { "seconds": 1267061043, "microseconds": 959568 } }
5028 #
5029 ##
5030 { 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED',
5031 'data': { 'type' : 'JobType',
5032 'device': 'str',
5033 'len' : 'int',
5034 'offset': 'int',
5035 'speed' : 'int',
5036 '*error': 'str' } }
5037
5038 ##
5039 # @BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED:
5040 #
5041 # Emitted when a block job has been cancelled
5042 #
5043 # @type: job type
5044 #
5045 # @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other
5046 # values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
5047 #
5048 # @len: maximum progress value
5049 #
5050 # @offset: current progress value. On success this is equal to len.
5051 # On failure this is less than len
5052 #
5053 # @speed: rate limit, bytes per second
5054 #
5055 # Since: 1.1
5056 #
5057 # Example:
5058 #
5059 # <- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED",
5060 # "data": { "type": "stream", "device": "virtio-disk0",
5061 # "len": 10737418240, "offset": 134217728,
5062 # "speed": 0 },
5063 # "timestamp": { "seconds": 1267061043, "microseconds": 959568 } }
5064 #
5065 ##
5066 { 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED',
5067 'data': { 'type' : 'JobType',
5068 'device': 'str',
5069 'len' : 'int',
5070 'offset': 'int',
5071 'speed' : 'int' } }
5072
5073 ##
5074 # @BLOCK_JOB_ERROR:
5075 #
5076 # Emitted when a block job encounters an error
5077 #
5078 # @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other
5079 # values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
5080 #
5081 # @operation: I/O operation
5082 #
5083 # @action: action that has been taken
5084 #
5085 # Since: 1.3
5086 #
5087 # Example:
5088 #
5089 # <- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_ERROR",
5090 # "data": { "device": "ide0-hd1",
5091 # "operation": "write",
5092 # "action": "stop" },
5093 # "timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
5094 #
5095 ##
5096 { 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_ERROR',
5097 'data': { 'device' : 'str',
5098 'operation': 'IoOperationType',
5099 'action' : 'BlockErrorAction' } }
5100
5101 ##
5102 # @BLOCK_JOB_READY:
5103 #
5104 # Emitted when a block job is ready to complete
5105 #
5106 # @type: job type
5107 #
5108 # @device: The job identifier. Originally the device name but other
5109 # values are allowed since QEMU 2.7
5110 #
5111 # @len: maximum progress value
5112 #
5113 # @offset: current progress value. On success this is equal to len.
5114 # On failure this is less than len
5115 #
5116 # @speed: rate limit, bytes per second
5117 #
5118 # Note: The "ready to complete" status is always reset by a @BLOCK_JOB_ERROR
5119 # event
5120 #
5121 # Since: 1.3
5122 #
5123 # Example:
5124 #
5125 # <- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_READY",
5126 # "data": { "device": "drive0", "type": "mirror", "speed": 0,
5127 # "len": 2097152, "offset": 2097152 }
5128 # "timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
5129 #
5130 ##
5131 { 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_READY',
5132 'data': { 'type' : 'JobType',
5133 'device': 'str',
5134 'len' : 'int',
5135 'offset': 'int',
5136 'speed' : 'int' } }
5137
5138 ##
5139 # @BLOCK_JOB_PENDING:
5140 #
5141 # Emitted when a block job is awaiting explicit authorization to finalize graph
5142 # changes via @block-job-finalize. If this job is part of a transaction, it will
5143 # not emit this event until the transaction has converged first.
5144 #
5145 # @type: job type
5146 #
5147 # @id: The job identifier.
5148 #
5149 # Since: 2.12
5150 #
5151 # Example:
5152 #
5153 # <- { "event": "BLOCK_JOB_WAITING",
5154 # "data": { "device": "drive0", "type": "mirror" },
5155 # "timestamp": { "seconds": 1265044230, "microseconds": 450486 } }
5156 #
5157 ##
5158 { 'event': 'BLOCK_JOB_PENDING',
5159 'data': { 'type' : 'JobType',
5160 'id' : 'str' } }
5161
5162 ##
5163 # @PreallocMode:
5164 #
5165 # Preallocation mode of QEMU image file
5166 #
5167 # @off: no preallocation
5168 # @metadata: preallocate only for metadata
5169 # @falloc: like @full preallocation but allocate disk space by
5170 # posix_fallocate() rather than writing zeros.
5171 # @full: preallocate all data by writing zeros to device to ensure disk
5172 # space is really available. @full preallocation also sets up
5173 # metadata correctly.
5174 #
5175 # Since: 2.2
5176 ##
5177 { 'enum': 'PreallocMode',
5178 'data': [ 'off', 'metadata', 'falloc', 'full' ] }
5179
5180 ##
5181 # @BLOCK_WRITE_THRESHOLD:
5182 #
5183 # Emitted when writes on block device reaches or exceeds the
5184 # configured write threshold. For thin-provisioned devices, this
5185 # means the device should be extended to avoid pausing for
5186 # disk exhaustion.
5187 # The event is one shot. Once triggered, it needs to be
5188 # re-registered with another block-set-write-threshold command.
5189 #
5190 # @node-name: graph node name on which the threshold was exceeded.
5191 #
5192 # @amount-exceeded: amount of data which exceeded the threshold, in bytes.
5193 #
5194 # @write-threshold: last configured threshold, in bytes.
5195 #
5196 # Since: 2.3
5197 ##
5198 { 'event': 'BLOCK_WRITE_THRESHOLD',
5199 'data': { 'node-name': 'str',
5200 'amount-exceeded': 'uint64',
5201 'write-threshold': 'uint64' } }
5202
5203 ##
5204 # @block-set-write-threshold:
5205 #
5206 # Change the write threshold for a block drive. An event will be
5207 # delivered if a write to this block drive crosses the configured
5208 # threshold. The threshold is an offset, thus must be
5209 # non-negative. Default is no write threshold. Setting the threshold
5210 # to zero disables it.
5211 #
5212 # This is useful to transparently resize thin-provisioned drives without
5213 # the guest OS noticing.
5214 #
5215 # @node-name: graph node name on which the threshold must be set.
5216 #
5217 # @write-threshold: configured threshold for the block device, bytes.
5218 # Use 0 to disable the threshold.
5219 #
5220 # Since: 2.3
5221 #
5222 # Example:
5223 #
5224 # -> { "execute": "block-set-write-threshold",
5225 # "arguments": { "node-name": "mydev",
5226 # "write-threshold": 17179869184 } }
5227 # <- { "return": {} }
5228 #
5229 ##
5230 { 'command': 'block-set-write-threshold',
5231 'data': { 'node-name': 'str', 'write-threshold': 'uint64' } }
5232
5233 ##
5234 # @x-blockdev-change:
5235 #
5236 # Dynamically reconfigure the block driver state graph. It can be used
5237 # to add, remove, insert or replace a graph node. Currently only the
5238 # Quorum driver implements this feature to add or remove its child. This
5239 # is useful to fix a broken quorum child.
5240 #
5241 # If @node is specified, it will be inserted under @parent. @child
5242 # may not be specified in this case. If both @parent and @child are
5243 # specified but @node is not, @child will be detached from @parent.
5244 #
5245 # @parent: the id or name of the parent node.
5246 #
5247 # @child: the name of a child under the given parent node.
5248 #
5249 # @node: the name of the node that will be added.
5250 #
5251 # Note: this command is experimental, and its API is not stable. It
5252 # does not support all kinds of operations, all kinds of children, nor
5253 # all block drivers.
5254 #
5255 # FIXME Removing children from a quorum node means introducing gaps in the
5256 # child indices. This cannot be represented in the 'children' list of
5257 # BlockdevOptionsQuorum, as returned by .bdrv_refresh_filename().
5258 #
5259 # Warning: The data in a new quorum child MUST be consistent with that of
5260 # the rest of the array.
5261 #
5262 # Since: 2.7
5263 #
5264 # Example:
5265 #
5266 # 1. Add a new node to a quorum
5267 # -> { "execute": "blockdev-add",
5268 # "arguments": {
5269 # "driver": "raw",
5270 # "node-name": "new_node",
5271 # "file": { "driver": "file",
5272 # "filename": "test.raw" } } }
5273 # <- { "return": {} }
5274 # -> { "execute": "x-blockdev-change",
5275 # "arguments": { "parent": "disk1",
5276 # "node": "new_node" } }
5277 # <- { "return": {} }
5278 #
5279 # 2. Delete a quorum's node
5280 # -> { "execute": "x-blockdev-change",
5281 # "arguments": { "parent": "disk1",
5282 # "child": "children.1" } }
5283 # <- { "return": {} }
5284 #
5285 ##
5286 { 'command': 'x-blockdev-change',
5287 'data' : { 'parent': 'str',
5288 '*child': 'str',
5289 '*node': 'str' } }
5290
5291 ##
5292 # @x-blockdev-set-iothread:
5293 #
5294 # Move @node and its children into the @iothread. If @iothread is null then
5295 # move @node and its children into the main loop.
5296 #
5297 # The node must not be attached to a BlockBackend.
5298 #
5299 # @node-name: the name of the block driver node
5300 #
5301 # @iothread: the name of the IOThread object or null for the main loop
5302 #
5303 # @force: true if the node and its children should be moved when a BlockBackend
5304 # is already attached
5305 #
5306 # Note: this command is experimental and intended for test cases that need
5307 # control over IOThreads only.
5308 #
5309 # Since: 2.12
5310 #
5311 # Example:
5312 #
5313 # 1. Move a node into an IOThread
5314 # -> { "execute": "x-blockdev-set-iothread",
5315 # "arguments": { "node-name": "disk1",
5316 # "iothread": "iothread0" } }
5317 # <- { "return": {} }
5318 #
5319 # 2. Move a node into the main loop
5320 # -> { "execute": "x-blockdev-set-iothread",
5321 # "arguments": { "node-name": "disk1",
5322 # "iothread": null } }
5323 # <- { "return": {} }
5324 #
5325 ##
5326 { 'command': 'x-blockdev-set-iothread',
5327 'data' : { 'node-name': 'str',
5328 'iothread': 'StrOrNull',
5329 '*force': 'bool' } }