blob: 65b6dc2f6f4ba70267d29f68f939084813239ddb [file] [log] [blame]
# -*- Mode: Python -*-
##
# = Introduction
#
# This document describes all commands currently supported by QMP.
#
# Most of the time their usage is exactly the same as in the user Monitor, this
# means that any other document which also describe commands (the manpage,
# QEMU's manual, etc) can and should be consulted.
#
# QMP has two types of commands: regular and query commands. Regular commands
# usually change the Virtual Machine's state someway, while query commands just
# return information. The sections below are divided accordingly.
#
# It's important to observe that all communication examples are formatted in
# a reader-friendly way, so that they're easier to understand. However, in real
# protocol usage, they're emitted as a single line.
#
# Also, the following notation is used to denote data flow:
#
# Example:
#
# | -> data issued by the Client
# | <- Server data response
#
# Please, refer to the QMP specification (docs/interop/qmp-spec.txt) for
# detailed information on the Server command and response formats.
#
# = Stability Considerations
#
# The current QMP command set (described in this file) may be useful for a
# number of use cases, however it's limited and several commands have bad
# defined semantics, specially with regard to command completion.
#
# These problems are going to be solved incrementally in the next QEMU releases
# and we're going to establish a deprecation policy for badly defined commands.
#
# If you're planning to adopt QMP, please observe the following:
#
# 1. The deprecation policy will take effect and be documented soon, please
# check the documentation of each used command as soon as a new release of
# QEMU is available
#
# 2. DO NOT rely on anything which is not explicit documented
#
# 3. Errors, in special, are not documented. Applications should NOT check
# for specific errors classes or data (it's strongly recommended to only
# check for the "error" key)
#
##
{ 'pragma': { 'doc-required': true } }
# Whitelists to permit QAPI rule violations; think twice before you
# add to them!
{ 'pragma': {
# Commands allowed to return a non-dictionary:
'returns-whitelist': [
'human-monitor-command',
'qom-get',
'query-migrate-cache-size',
'query-tpm-models',
'query-tpm-types',
'ringbuf-read' ],
'name-case-whitelist': [
'ACPISlotType', # DIMM, visible through query-acpi-ospm-status
'CpuInfoMIPS', # PC, visible through query-cpu
'CpuInfoTricore', # PC, visible through query-cpu
'QapiErrorClass', # all members, visible through errors
'UuidInfo', # UUID, visible through query-uuid
'X86CPURegister32', # all members, visible indirectly through qom-get
'q_obj_CpuInfo-base' # CPU, visible through query-cpu
] } }
# Documentation generated with qapi-gen.py is in source order, with
# included sub-schemas inserted at the first include directive
# (subsequent include directives have no effect). To get a sane and
# stable order, it's best to include each sub-schema just once, or
# include it first right here.
{ 'include': 'common.json' }
{ 'include': 'sockets.json' }
{ 'include': 'run-state.json' }
{ 'include': 'crypto.json' }
{ 'include': 'block.json' }
{ 'include': 'char.json' }
{ 'include': 'job.json' }
{ 'include': 'net.json' }
{ 'include': 'rocker.json' }
{ 'include': 'tpm.json' }
{ 'include': 'ui.json' }
{ 'include': 'migration.json' }
{ 'include': 'transaction.json' }
{ 'include': 'trace.json' }
{ 'include': 'introspect.json' }
{ 'include': 'misc.json' }