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1 | = How to write QMP commands using the QAPI framework = |
2 | ||
3 | This document is a step-by-step guide on how to write new QMP commands using | |
4 | the QAPI framework. It also shows how to implement new style HMP commands. | |
5 | ||
6 | This document doesn't discuss QMP protocol level details, nor does it dive | |
7 | into the QAPI framework implementation. | |
8 | ||
9 | For an in-depth introduction to the QAPI framework, please refer to | |
77a6da26 | 10 | docs/qapi-code-gen.txt. For documentation about the QMP protocol, |
cfb41b88 | 11 | start with docs/interop/qmp-intro.txt. |
4b389b5d LC |
12 | |
13 | == Overview == | |
14 | ||
15 | Generally speaking, the following steps should be taken in order to write a | |
16 | new QMP command. | |
17 | ||
18 | 1. Write the command's and type(s) specification in the QAPI schema file | |
19 | (qapi-schema.json in the root source directory) | |
20 | ||
21 | 2. Write the QMP command itself, which is a regular C function. Preferably, | |
22 | the command should be exported by some QEMU subsystem. But it can also be | |
23 | added to the qmp.c file | |
24 | ||
25 | 3. At this point the command can be tested under the QMP protocol | |
26 | ||
27 | 4. Write the HMP command equivalent. This is not required and should only be | |
28 | done if it does make sense to have the functionality in HMP. The HMP command | |
29 | is implemented in terms of the QMP command | |
30 | ||
31 | The following sections will demonstrate each of the steps above. We will start | |
32 | very simple and get more complex as we progress. | |
33 | ||
34 | === Testing === | |
35 | ||
36 | For all the examples in the next sections, the test setup is the same and is | |
37 | shown here. | |
38 | ||
39 | First, QEMU should be started as: | |
40 | ||
41 | # /path/to/your/source/qemu [...] \ | |
42 | -chardev socket,id=qmp,port=4444,host=localhost,server \ | |
43 | -mon chardev=qmp,mode=control,pretty=on | |
44 | ||
45 | Then, in a different terminal: | |
46 | ||
47 | $ telnet localhost 4444 | |
48 | Trying 127.0.0.1... | |
49 | Connected to localhost. | |
50 | Escape character is '^]'. | |
51 | { | |
52 | "QMP": { | |
53 | "version": { | |
54 | "qemu": { | |
55 | "micro": 50, | |
56 | "minor": 15, | |
57 | "major": 0 | |
58 | }, | |
59 | "package": "" | |
60 | }, | |
61 | "capabilities": [ | |
62 | ] | |
63 | } | |
64 | } | |
65 | ||
66 | The above output is the QMP server saying you're connected. The server is | |
67 | actually in capabilities negotiation mode. To enter in command mode type: | |
68 | ||
69 | { "execute": "qmp_capabilities" } | |
70 | ||
71 | Then the server should respond: | |
72 | ||
73 | { | |
74 | "return": { | |
75 | } | |
76 | } | |
77 | ||
78 | Which is QMP's way of saying "the latest command executed OK and didn't return | |
79 | any data". Now you're ready to enter the QMP example commands as explained in | |
80 | the following sections. | |
81 | ||
82 | == Writing a command that doesn't return data == | |
83 | ||
84 | That's the most simple QMP command that can be written. Usually, this kind of | |
85 | command carries some meaningful action in QEMU but here it will just print | |
86 | "Hello, world" to the standard output. | |
87 | ||
88 | Our command will be called "hello-world". It takes no arguments, nor does it | |
89 | return any data. | |
90 | ||
91 | The first step is to add the following line to the bottom of the | |
92 | qapi-schema.json file: | |
93 | ||
94 | { 'command': 'hello-world' } | |
95 | ||
96 | The "command" keyword defines a new QMP command. It's an JSON object. All | |
97 | schema entries are JSON objects. The line above will instruct the QAPI to | |
98 | generate any prototypes and the necessary code to marshal and unmarshal | |
99 | protocol data. | |
100 | ||
101 | The next step is to write the "hello-world" implementation. As explained | |
102 | earlier, it's preferable for commands to live in QEMU subsystems. But | |
103 | "hello-world" doesn't pertain to any, so we put its implementation in qmp.c: | |
104 | ||
105 | void qmp_hello_world(Error **errp) | |
106 | { | |
107 | printf("Hello, world!\n"); | |
108 | } | |
109 | ||
110 | There are a few things to be noticed: | |
111 | ||
112 | 1. QMP command implementation functions must be prefixed with "qmp_" | |
113 | 2. qmp_hello_world() returns void, this is in accordance with the fact that the | |
114 | command doesn't return any data | |
115 | 3. It takes an "Error **" argument. This is required. Later we will see how to | |
116 | return errors and take additional arguments. The Error argument should not | |
117 | be touched if the command doesn't return errors | |
118 | 4. We won't add the function's prototype. That's automatically done by the QAPI | |
119 | 5. Printing to the terminal is discouraged for QMP commands, we do it here | |
120 | because it's the easiest way to demonstrate a QMP command | |
121 | ||
4b389b5d LC |
122 | You're done. Now build qemu, run it as suggested in the "Testing" section, |
123 | and then type the following QMP command: | |
124 | ||
125 | { "execute": "hello-world" } | |
126 | ||
127 | Then check the terminal running qemu and look for the "Hello, world" string. If | |
128 | you don't see it then something went wrong. | |
129 | ||
130 | === Arguments === | |
131 | ||
132 | Let's add an argument called "message" to our "hello-world" command. The new | |
133 | argument will contain the string to be printed to stdout. It's an optional | |
134 | argument, if it's not present we print our default "Hello, World" string. | |
135 | ||
136 | The first change we have to do is to modify the command specification in the | |
137 | schema file to the following: | |
138 | ||
139 | { 'command': 'hello-world', 'data': { '*message': 'str' } } | |
140 | ||
141 | Notice the new 'data' member in the schema. It's an JSON object whose each | |
142 | element is an argument to the command in question. Also notice the asterisk, | |
143 | it's used to mark the argument optional (that means that you shouldn't use it | |
144 | for mandatory arguments). Finally, 'str' is the argument's type, which | |
145 | stands for "string". The QAPI also supports integers, booleans, enumerations | |
146 | and user defined types. | |
147 | ||
148 | Now, let's update our C implementation in qmp.c: | |
149 | ||
150 | void qmp_hello_world(bool has_message, const char *message, Error **errp) | |
151 | { | |
152 | if (has_message) { | |
153 | printf("%s\n", message); | |
154 | } else { | |
155 | printf("Hello, world\n"); | |
156 | } | |
157 | } | |
158 | ||
159 | There are two important details to be noticed: | |
160 | ||
161 | 1. All optional arguments are accompanied by a 'has_' boolean, which is set | |
162 | if the optional argument is present or false otherwise | |
163 | 2. The C implementation signature must follow the schema's argument ordering, | |
164 | which is defined by the "data" member | |
165 | ||
4b389b5d LC |
166 | Time to test our new version of the "hello-world" command. Build qemu, run it as |
167 | described in the "Testing" section and then send two commands: | |
168 | ||
169 | { "execute": "hello-world" } | |
170 | { | |
171 | "return": { | |
172 | } | |
173 | } | |
174 | ||
175 | { "execute": "hello-world", "arguments": { "message": "We love qemu" } } | |
176 | { | |
177 | "return": { | |
178 | } | |
179 | } | |
180 | ||
181 | You should see "Hello, world" and "we love qemu" in the terminal running qemu, | |
182 | if you don't see these strings, then something went wrong. | |
183 | ||
184 | === Errors === | |
185 | ||
186 | QMP commands should use the error interface exported by the error.h header | |
455b0fde | 187 | file. Basically, most errors are set by calling the error_setg() function. |
4b389b5d LC |
188 | |
189 | Let's say we don't accept the string "message" to contain the word "love". If | |
adb2072e | 190 | it does contain it, we want the "hello-world" command to return an error: |
4b389b5d LC |
191 | |
192 | void qmp_hello_world(bool has_message, const char *message, Error **errp) | |
193 | { | |
194 | if (has_message) { | |
195 | if (strstr(message, "love")) { | |
455b0fde | 196 | error_setg(errp, "the word 'love' is not allowed"); |
4b389b5d LC |
197 | return; |
198 | } | |
199 | printf("%s\n", message); | |
200 | } else { | |
201 | printf("Hello, world\n"); | |
202 | } | |
203 | } | |
204 | ||
455b0fde EB |
205 | The first argument to the error_setg() function is the Error pointer |
206 | to pointer, which is passed to all QMP functions. The next argument is a human | |
adb2072e LC |
207 | description of the error, this is a free-form printf-like string. |
208 | ||
209 | Let's test the example above. Build qemu, run it as defined in the "Testing" | |
210 | section, and then issue the following command: | |
4b389b5d | 211 | |
adb2072e | 212 | { "execute": "hello-world", "arguments": { "message": "all you need is love" } } |
4b389b5d LC |
213 | |
214 | The QMP server's response should be: | |
215 | ||
216 | { | |
217 | "error": { | |
adb2072e LC |
218 | "class": "GenericError", |
219 | "desc": "the word 'love' is not allowed" | |
4b389b5d LC |
220 | } |
221 | } | |
222 | ||
455b0fde EB |
223 | As a general rule, all QMP errors should use ERROR_CLASS_GENERIC_ERROR |
224 | (done by default when using error_setg()). There are two exceptions to | |
225 | this rule: | |
adb2072e LC |
226 | |
227 | 1. A non-generic ErrorClass value exists* for the failure you want to report | |
228 | (eg. DeviceNotFound) | |
229 | ||
230 | 2. Management applications have to take special action on the failure you | |
231 | want to report, hence you have to add a new ErrorClass value so that they | |
232 | can check for it | |
4b389b5d | 233 | |
455b0fde EB |
234 | If the failure you want to report falls into one of the two cases above, |
235 | use error_set() with a second argument of an ErrorClass value. | |
4b389b5d | 236 | |
adb2072e | 237 | * All existing ErrorClass values are defined in the qapi-schema.json file |
4b389b5d LC |
238 | |
239 | === Command Documentation === | |
240 | ||
241 | There's only one step missing to make "hello-world"'s implementation complete, | |
242 | and that's its documentation in the schema file. | |
243 | ||
244 | This is very important. No QMP command will be accepted in QEMU without proper | |
245 | documentation. | |
246 | ||
247 | There are many examples of such documentation in the schema file already, but | |
248 | here goes "hello-world"'s new entry for the qapi-schema.json file: | |
249 | ||
250 | ## | |
251 | # @hello-world | |
252 | # | |
253 | # Print a client provided string to the standard output stream. | |
254 | # | |
1d8bda12 | 255 | # @message: string to be printed |
4b389b5d LC |
256 | # |
257 | # Returns: Nothing on success. | |
4b389b5d LC |
258 | # |
259 | # Notes: if @message is not provided, the "Hello, world" string will | |
260 | # be printed instead | |
261 | # | |
262 | # Since: <next qemu stable release, eg. 1.0> | |
263 | ## | |
264 | { 'command': 'hello-world', 'data': { '*message': 'str' } } | |
265 | ||
266 | Please, note that the "Returns" clause is optional if a command doesn't return | |
267 | any data nor any errors. | |
268 | ||
269 | === Implementing the HMP command === | |
270 | ||
271 | Now that the QMP command is in place, we can also make it available in the human | |
272 | monitor (HMP). | |
273 | ||
274 | With the introduction of the QAPI, HMP commands make QMP calls. Most of the | |
275 | time HMP commands are simple wrappers. All HMP commands implementation exist in | |
276 | the hmp.c file. | |
277 | ||
278 | Here's the implementation of the "hello-world" HMP command: | |
279 | ||
280 | void hmp_hello_world(Monitor *mon, const QDict *qdict) | |
281 | { | |
282 | const char *message = qdict_get_try_str(qdict, "message"); | |
e940f543 | 283 | Error *err = NULL; |
4b389b5d | 284 | |
e940f543 MA |
285 | qmp_hello_world(!!message, message, &err); |
286 | if (err) { | |
287 | monitor_printf(mon, "%s\n", error_get_pretty(err)); | |
288 | error_free(err); | |
4b389b5d LC |
289 | return; |
290 | } | |
291 | } | |
292 | ||
293 | Also, you have to add the function's prototype to the hmp.h file. | |
294 | ||
295 | There are three important points to be noticed: | |
296 | ||
297 | 1. The "mon" and "qdict" arguments are mandatory for all HMP functions. The | |
298 | former is the monitor object. The latter is how the monitor passes | |
299 | arguments entered by the user to the command implementation | |
300 | 2. hmp_hello_world() performs error checking. In this example we just print | |
301 | the error description to the user, but we could do more, like taking | |
302 | different actions depending on the error qmp_hello_world() returns | |
e940f543 | 303 | 3. The "err" variable must be initialized to NULL before performing the |
4b389b5d LC |
304 | QMP call |
305 | ||
306 | There's one last step to actually make the command available to monitor users, | |
307 | we should add it to the hmp-commands.hx file: | |
308 | ||
309 | { | |
310 | .name = "hello-world", | |
311 | .args_type = "message:s?", | |
312 | .params = "hello-world [message]", | |
313 | .help = "Print message to the standard output", | |
2b9e3576 | 314 | .cmd = hmp_hello_world, |
4b389b5d LC |
315 | }, |
316 | ||
317 | STEXI | |
318 | @item hello_world @var{message} | |
319 | @findex hello_world | |
320 | Print message to the standard output | |
321 | ETEXI | |
322 | ||
323 | To test this you have to open a user monitor and issue the "hello-world" | |
324 | command. It might be instructive to check the command's documentation with | |
325 | HMP's "help" command. | |
326 | ||
327 | Please, check the "-monitor" command-line option to know how to open a user | |
328 | monitor. | |
329 | ||
330 | == Writing a command that returns data == | |
331 | ||
332 | A QMP command is capable of returning any data the QAPI supports like integers, | |
333 | strings, booleans, enumerations and user defined types. | |
334 | ||
335 | In this section we will focus on user defined types. Please, check the QAPI | |
336 | documentation for information about the other types. | |
337 | ||
338 | === User Defined Types === | |
339 | ||
e218052f MA |
340 | FIXME This example needs to be redone after commit 6d32717 |
341 | ||
4b389b5d LC |
342 | For this example we will write the query-alarm-clock command, which returns |
343 | information about QEMU's timer alarm. For more information about it, please | |
344 | check the "-clock" command-line option. | |
345 | ||
346 | We want to return two pieces of information. The first one is the alarm clock's | |
347 | name. The second one is when the next alarm will fire. The former information is | |
348 | returned as a string, the latter is an integer in nanoseconds (which is not | |
349 | very useful in practice, as the timer has probably already fired when the | |
350 | information reaches the client). | |
351 | ||
352 | The best way to return that data is to create a new QAPI type, as shown below: | |
353 | ||
354 | ## | |
355 | # @QemuAlarmClock | |
356 | # | |
357 | # QEMU alarm clock information. | |
358 | # | |
359 | # @clock-name: The alarm clock method's name. | |
360 | # | |
1d8bda12 | 361 | # @next-deadline: The time (in nanoseconds) the next alarm will fire. |
4b389b5d LC |
362 | # |
363 | # Since: 1.0 | |
364 | ## | |
365 | { 'type': 'QemuAlarmClock', | |
366 | 'data': { 'clock-name': 'str', '*next-deadline': 'int' } } | |
367 | ||
368 | The "type" keyword defines a new QAPI type. Its "data" member contains the | |
369 | type's members. In this example our members are the "clock-name" and the | |
370 | "next-deadline" one, which is optional. | |
371 | ||
372 | Now let's define the query-alarm-clock command: | |
373 | ||
374 | ## | |
375 | # @query-alarm-clock | |
376 | # | |
377 | # Return information about QEMU's alarm clock. | |
378 | # | |
379 | # Returns a @QemuAlarmClock instance describing the alarm clock method | |
380 | # being currently used by QEMU (this is usually set by the '-clock' | |
381 | # command-line option). | |
382 | # | |
383 | # Since: 1.0 | |
384 | ## | |
385 | { 'command': 'query-alarm-clock', 'returns': 'QemuAlarmClock' } | |
386 | ||
387 | Notice the "returns" keyword. As its name suggests, it's used to define the | |
388 | data returned by a command. | |
389 | ||
390 | It's time to implement the qmp_query_alarm_clock() function, you can put it | |
391 | in the qemu-timer.c file: | |
392 | ||
393 | QemuAlarmClock *qmp_query_alarm_clock(Error **errp) | |
394 | { | |
395 | QemuAlarmClock *clock; | |
396 | int64_t deadline; | |
397 | ||
398 | clock = g_malloc0(sizeof(*clock)); | |
399 | ||
400 | deadline = qemu_next_alarm_deadline(); | |
401 | if (deadline > 0) { | |
402 | clock->has_next_deadline = true; | |
403 | clock->next_deadline = deadline; | |
404 | } | |
405 | clock->clock_name = g_strdup(alarm_timer->name); | |
406 | ||
407 | return clock; | |
408 | } | |
409 | ||
410 | There are a number of things to be noticed: | |
411 | ||
412 | 1. The QemuAlarmClock type is automatically generated by the QAPI framework, | |
413 | its members correspond to the type's specification in the schema file | |
414 | 2. As specified in the schema file, the function returns a QemuAlarmClock | |
415 | instance and takes no arguments (besides the "errp" one, which is mandatory | |
416 | for all QMP functions) | |
417 | 3. The "clock" variable (which will point to our QAPI type instance) is | |
418 | allocated by the regular g_malloc0() function. Note that we chose to | |
dabdf394 | 419 | initialize the memory to zero. This is recommended for all QAPI types, as |
4b389b5d LC |
420 | it helps avoiding bad surprises (specially with booleans) |
421 | 4. Remember that "next_deadline" is optional? All optional members have a | |
422 | 'has_TYPE_NAME' member that should be properly set by the implementation, | |
423 | as shown above | |
424 | 5. Even static strings, such as "alarm_timer->name", should be dynamically | |
425 | allocated by the implementation. This is so because the QAPI also generates | |
426 | a function to free its types and it cannot distinguish between dynamically | |
427 | or statically allocated strings | |
428 | 6. You have to include the "qmp-commands.h" header file in qemu-timer.c, | |
429 | otherwise qemu won't build | |
430 | ||
4b389b5d LC |
431 | Time to test the new command. Build qemu, run it as described in the "Testing" |
432 | section and try this: | |
433 | ||
434 | { "execute": "query-alarm-clock" } | |
435 | { | |
436 | "return": { | |
437 | "next-deadline": 2368219, | |
438 | "clock-name": "dynticks" | |
439 | } | |
440 | } | |
441 | ||
442 | ==== The HMP command ==== | |
443 | ||
444 | Here's the HMP counterpart of the query-alarm-clock command: | |
445 | ||
446 | void hmp_info_alarm_clock(Monitor *mon) | |
447 | { | |
448 | QemuAlarmClock *clock; | |
e940f543 | 449 | Error *err = NULL; |
4b389b5d | 450 | |
e940f543 MA |
451 | clock = qmp_query_alarm_clock(&err); |
452 | if (err) { | |
4b389b5d | 453 | monitor_printf(mon, "Could not query alarm clock information\n"); |
e940f543 | 454 | error_free(err); |
4b389b5d LC |
455 | return; |
456 | } | |
457 | ||
458 | monitor_printf(mon, "Alarm clock method in use: '%s'\n", clock->clock_name); | |
459 | if (clock->has_next_deadline) { | |
460 | monitor_printf(mon, "Next alarm will fire in %" PRId64 " nanoseconds\n", | |
461 | clock->next_deadline); | |
462 | } | |
463 | ||
464 | qapi_free_QemuAlarmClock(clock); | |
465 | } | |
466 | ||
467 | It's important to notice that hmp_info_alarm_clock() calls | |
468 | qapi_free_QemuAlarmClock() to free the data returned by qmp_query_alarm_clock(). | |
469 | For user defined types, the QAPI will generate a qapi_free_QAPI_TYPE_NAME() | |
470 | function and that's what you have to use to free the types you define and | |
471 | qapi_free_QAPI_TYPE_NAMEList() for list types (explained in the next section). | |
472 | If the QMP call returns a string, then you should g_free() to free it. | |
473 | ||
474 | Also note that hmp_info_alarm_clock() performs error handling. That's not | |
475 | strictly required if you're sure the QMP function doesn't return errors, but | |
476 | it's good practice to always check for errors. | |
477 | ||
478 | Another important detail is that HMP's "info" commands don't go into the | |
479 | hmp-commands.hx. Instead, they go into the info_cmds[] table, which is defined | |
480 | in the monitor.c file. The entry for the "info alarmclock" follows: | |
481 | ||
482 | { | |
483 | .name = "alarmclock", | |
484 | .args_type = "", | |
485 | .params = "", | |
486 | .help = "show information about the alarm clock", | |
2b9e3576 | 487 | .cmd = hmp_info_alarm_clock, |
4b389b5d LC |
488 | }, |
489 | ||
490 | To test this, run qemu and type "info alarmclock" in the user monitor. | |
491 | ||
492 | === Returning Lists === | |
493 | ||
494 | For this example, we're going to return all available methods for the timer | |
495 | alarm, which is pretty much what the command-line option "-clock ?" does, | |
496 | except that we're also going to inform which method is in use. | |
497 | ||
498 | This first step is to define a new type: | |
499 | ||
500 | ## | |
501 | # @TimerAlarmMethod | |
502 | # | |
503 | # Timer alarm method information. | |
504 | # | |
505 | # @method-name: The method's name. | |
506 | # | |
507 | # @current: true if this alarm method is currently in use, false otherwise | |
508 | # | |
509 | # Since: 1.0 | |
510 | ## | |
511 | { 'type': 'TimerAlarmMethod', | |
512 | 'data': { 'method-name': 'str', 'current': 'bool' } } | |
513 | ||
514 | The command will be called "query-alarm-methods", here is its schema | |
515 | specification: | |
516 | ||
517 | ## | |
518 | # @query-alarm-methods | |
519 | # | |
520 | # Returns information about available alarm methods. | |
521 | # | |
522 | # Returns: a list of @TimerAlarmMethod for each method | |
523 | # | |
524 | # Since: 1.0 | |
525 | ## | |
526 | { 'command': 'query-alarm-methods', 'returns': ['TimerAlarmMethod'] } | |
527 | ||
528 | Notice the syntax for returning lists "'returns': ['TimerAlarmMethod']", this | |
529 | should be read as "returns a list of TimerAlarmMethod instances". | |
530 | ||
531 | The C implementation follows: | |
532 | ||
533 | TimerAlarmMethodList *qmp_query_alarm_methods(Error **errp) | |
534 | { | |
535 | TimerAlarmMethodList *method_list = NULL; | |
536 | const struct qemu_alarm_timer *p; | |
537 | bool current = true; | |
538 | ||
539 | for (p = alarm_timers; p->name; p++) { | |
540 | TimerAlarmMethodList *info = g_malloc0(sizeof(*info)); | |
541 | info->value = g_malloc0(sizeof(*info->value)); | |
542 | info->value->method_name = g_strdup(p->name); | |
543 | info->value->current = current; | |
544 | ||
545 | current = false; | |
546 | ||
547 | info->next = method_list; | |
548 | method_list = info; | |
549 | } | |
550 | ||
551 | return method_list; | |
552 | } | |
553 | ||
554 | The most important difference from the previous examples is the | |
555 | TimerAlarmMethodList type, which is automatically generated by the QAPI from | |
556 | the TimerAlarmMethod type. | |
557 | ||
558 | Each list node is represented by a TimerAlarmMethodList instance. We have to | |
559 | allocate it, and that's done inside the for loop: the "info" pointer points to | |
560 | an allocated node. We also have to allocate the node's contents, which is | |
561 | stored in its "value" member. In our example, the "value" member is a pointer | |
562 | to an TimerAlarmMethod instance. | |
563 | ||
564 | Notice that the "current" variable is used as "true" only in the first | |
5708b2b7 | 565 | iteration of the loop. That's because the alarm timer method in use is the |
4b389b5d LC |
566 | first element of the alarm_timers array. Also notice that QAPI lists are handled |
567 | by hand and we return the head of the list. | |
568 | ||
4b389b5d LC |
569 | Now Build qemu, run it as explained in the "Testing" section and try our new |
570 | command: | |
571 | ||
572 | { "execute": "query-alarm-methods" } | |
573 | { | |
574 | "return": [ | |
575 | { | |
576 | "current": false, | |
577 | "method-name": "unix" | |
578 | }, | |
579 | { | |
580 | "current": true, | |
581 | "method-name": "dynticks" | |
582 | } | |
583 | ] | |
584 | } | |
585 | ||
586 | The HMP counterpart is a bit more complex than previous examples because it | |
587 | has to traverse the list, it's shown below for reference: | |
588 | ||
589 | void hmp_info_alarm_methods(Monitor *mon) | |
590 | { | |
591 | TimerAlarmMethodList *method_list, *method; | |
e940f543 | 592 | Error *err = NULL; |
4b389b5d | 593 | |
e940f543 MA |
594 | method_list = qmp_query_alarm_methods(&err); |
595 | if (err) { | |
4b389b5d | 596 | monitor_printf(mon, "Could not query alarm methods\n"); |
e940f543 | 597 | error_free(err); |
4b389b5d LC |
598 | return; |
599 | } | |
600 | ||
601 | for (method = method_list; method; method = method->next) { | |
602 | monitor_printf(mon, "%c %s\n", method->value->current ? '*' : ' ', | |
603 | method->value->method_name); | |
604 | } | |
605 | ||
606 | qapi_free_TimerAlarmMethodList(method_list); | |
607 | } |