1 QEMU Monitor Protocol Specification - Version 0.1
6 This document specifies the QEMU Monitor Protocol (QMP), a JSON-based protocol
7 which is available for applications to control QEMU at the machine-level.
9 To enable QMP support, QEMU has to be run in "control mode". This is done by
10 starting QEMU with the appropriate command-line options. Please, refer to the
11 QEMU manual page for more information.
13 2. Protocol Specification
14 =========================
16 This section details the protocol format. For the purpose of this document
17 "Client" is any application which is communicating with QEMU in control mode,
18 and "Server" is QEMU itself.
20 JSON data structures, when mentioned in this document, are always in the
23 json-DATA-STRUCTURE-NAME
25 Where DATA-STRUCTURE-NAME is any valid JSON data structure, as defined by
28 http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc4627.txt
30 For convenience, json-object members and json-array elements mentioned in
31 this document will be in a certain order. However, in real protocol usage
32 they can be in ANY order, thus no particular order should be assumed.
34 2.1 General Definitions
35 -----------------------
37 2.1.1 All interactions transmitted by the Server are json-objects, always
40 2.1.2 All json-objects members are mandatory when not specified otherwise
45 Right when connected the Server will issue a greeting message, which signals
46 that the connection has been successfully established and that the Server is
47 ready for capabilities negotiation (for more information refer to section
48 '4. Capabilities Negotiation').
52 { "QMP": { "version": json-object, "capabilities": json-array } }
56 - The "version" member contains the Server's version information (the format
57 is the same of the 'query-version' command)
58 - The "capabilities" member specify the availability of features beyond the
59 baseline specification
64 The format for command execution is:
66 { "execute": json-string, "arguments": json-object, "id": json-value }
70 - The "execute" member identifies the command to be executed by the Server
71 - The "arguments" member is used to pass any arguments required for the
72 execution of the command, it is optional when no arguments are required
73 - The "id" member is a transaction identification associated with the
74 command execution, it is optional and will be part of the response if
77 2.4 Commands Responses
78 ----------------------
80 There are two possible responses which the Server will issue as the result
81 of a command execution: success or error.
86 The success response is issued when the command execution has finished
91 { "return": json-object, "id": json-value }
95 - The "return" member contains the command returned data, which is defined
96 in a per-command basis or an empty json-object if the command does not
98 - The "id" member contains the transaction identification associated
99 with the command execution (if issued by the Client)
104 The error response is issued when the command execution could not be
105 completed because of an error condition.
109 { "error": { "class": json-string, "data": json-object, "desc": json-string },
114 - The "class" member contains the error class name (eg. "ServiceUnavailable")
115 - The "data" member contains specific error data and is defined in a
116 per-command basis, it will be an empty json-object if the error has no data
117 - The "desc" member is a human-readable error message. Clients should
118 not attempt to parse this message.
119 - The "id" member contains the transaction identification associated with
120 the command execution (if issued by the Client)
122 NOTE: Some errors can occur before the Server is able to read the "id" member,
123 in these cases the "id" member will not be part of the error response, even
124 if provided by the client.
126 2.5 Asynchronous events
127 -----------------------
129 As a result of state changes, the Server may send messages unilaterally
130 to the Client at any time. They are called 'asynchronous events'.
134 { "event": json-string, "data": json-object,
135 "timestamp": { "seconds": json-number, "microseconds": json-number } }
139 - The "event" member contains the event's name
140 - The "data" member contains event specific data, which is defined in a
141 per-event basis, it is optional
142 - The "timestamp" member contains the exact time of when the event occurred
143 in the Server. It is a fixed json-object with time in seconds and
146 For a listing of supported asynchronous events, please, refer to the
152 This section provides some examples of real QMP usage, in all of them
153 'C' stands for 'Client' and 'S' stands for 'Server'.
158 S: {"QMP": {"version": {"qemu": "0.12.50", "package": ""}, "capabilities": []}}
160 3.2 Simple 'stop' execution
161 ---------------------------
163 C: { "execute": "stop" }
169 C: { "execute": "query-kvm", "id": "example" }
170 S: {"return": {"enabled": true, "present": true}, "id": "example"}
176 S: {"error": {"class": "JSONParsing", "desc": "Invalid JSON syntax", "data":
182 S: {"timestamp": {"seconds": 1258551470, "microseconds": 802384}, "event":
185 4. Capabilities Negotiation
186 ----------------------------
188 When a Client successfully establishes a connection, the Server is in
189 Capabilities Negotiation mode.
191 In this mode only the 'qmp_capabilities' command is allowed to run, all
192 other commands will return the CommandNotFound error. Asynchronous messages
193 are not delivered either.
195 Clients should use the 'qmp_capabilities' command to enable capabilities
196 advertised in the Server's greeting (section '2.2 Server Greeting') they
199 When the 'qmp_capabilities' command is issued, and if it does not return an
200 error, the Server enters in Command mode where capabilities changes take
201 effect, all commands (except 'qmp_capabilities') are allowed and asynchronous
202 messages are delivered.
204 5 Compatibility Considerations
205 ------------------------------
207 All protocol changes or new features which modify the protocol format in an
208 incompatible way are disabled by default and will be advertised by the
209 capabilities array (section '2.2 Server Greeting'). Thus, Clients can check
210 that array and enable the capabilities they support.
212 The QMP Server performs a type check on the arguments to a command. It
213 generates an error if a value does not have the expected type for its
214 key, or if it does not understand a key that the Client included. The
215 strictness of the Server catches wrong assumptions of Clients about
216 the Server's schema. Clients can assume that, when such validation
217 errors occur, they will be reported before the command generated any
220 However, Clients must not assume any particular:
222 - Length of json-arrays
223 - Size of json-objects; in particular, future versions of QEMU may add
224 new keys and Clients should be able to ignore them.
225 - Order of json-object members or json-array elements
226 - Amount of errors generated by a command, that is, new errors can be added
227 to any existing command in newer versions of the Server
229 Of course, the Server does guarantee to send valid JSON. But apart from
230 this, a Client should be "conservative in what they send, and liberal in
233 6. Downstream extension of QMP
234 ------------------------------
236 We recommend that downstream consumers of QEMU do *not* modify QMP.
237 Management tools should be able to support both upstream and downstream
238 versions of QMP without special logic, and downstream extensions are
239 inherently at odds with that.
241 However, we recognize that it is sometimes impossible for downstreams to
242 avoid modifying QMP. Both upstream and downstream need to take care to
243 preserve long-term compatibility and interoperability.
245 To help with that, QMP reserves JSON object member names beginning with
246 '__' (double underscore) for downstream use ("downstream names"). This
247 means upstream will never use any downstream names for its commands,
248 arguments, errors, asynchronous events, and so forth.
250 Any new names downstream wishes to add must begin with '__'. To
251 ensure compatibility with other downstreams, it is strongly
252 recommended that you prefix your downstram names with '__RFQDN_' where
253 RFQDN is a valid, reverse fully qualified domain name which you
254 control. For example, a qemu-kvm specific monitor command would be:
256 (qemu) __org.linux-kvm_enable_irqchip
258 Downstream must not change the server greeting (section 2.2) other than
259 to offer additional capabilities. But see below for why even that is
262 Section '5 Compatibility Considerations' applies to downstream as well
263 as to upstream, obviously. It follows that downstream must behave
264 exactly like upstream for any input not containing members with
265 downstream names ("downstream members"), except it may add members
266 with downstream names to its output.
268 Thus, a client should not be able to distinguish downstream from
269 upstream as long as it doesn't send input with downstream members, and
270 properly ignores any downstream members in the output it receives.
272 Advice on downstream modifications:
274 1. Introducing new commands is okay. If you want to extend an existing
275 command, consider introducing a new one with the new behaviour
278 2. Introducing new asynchronous messages is okay. If you want to extend
279 an existing message, consider adding a new one instead.
281 3. Introducing new errors for use in new commands is okay. Adding new
282 errors to existing commands counts as extension, so 1. applies.
284 4. New capabilities are strongly discouraged. Capabilities are for
285 evolving the basic protocol, and multiple diverging basic protocol
286 dialects are most undesirable.