Virtio-serial API: Difference between revisions
From KVM
(update links to git trees) |
(→Guest API: add links to guest agent src code for reference) |
||
Line 70: | Line 70: | ||
For an example of a C program that uses the virtio-serial Linux guest API, see [http://fedorapeople.org/cgit/amitshah/public_git/test-virtserial.git/tree/auto-virtserial-guest.c auto-virtserial-guest.c] | For an example of a C program that uses the virtio-serial Linux guest API, see [http://fedorapeople.org/cgit/amitshah/public_git/test-virtserial.git/tree/auto-virtserial-guest.c auto-virtserial-guest.c] and the [http://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=blob;f=qga/channel-posix.c;hb=HEAD qemu guest agent]. The Windows guest API can be seen in action in the [http://git.qemu.org/?p=qemu.git;a=blob;f=qga/channel-win32.c;hb=HEAD qemu guest agent] as well. | ||
== Host API == | == Host API == |
Latest revision as of 02:51, 28 June 2016
Guest API
Function | Linux guest | Windows guest |
---|---|---|
Port discovery | symlinks from /dev/virtio-port/<portname> to /dev/vportNpn as mentioned in Invocation and How To Test
|
In Windows, port enumeration can be done using SetupAPI functions. For
more information please see GetDevicePath or visit MSDN site Setup API |
Opening port | open(2)
|
HANDLE WINAPI CreateFile(
|
Reading | read(2)
|
BOOL WINAPI ReadFile(
|
Writing | write(2)
|
BOOL WINAPI WriteFile(
|
Poll | poll()
| |
Asynchronous notifications | signal(7)
|
For an example of a C program that uses the virtio-serial Linux guest API, see auto-virtserial-guest.c and the qemu guest agent. The Windows guest API can be seen in action in the qemu guest agent as well.
Host API
There's an in-qemu host API exposed by the virtio-serial code. The following is true for the in-qemu API for qemu version 0.13 and for the qemu version found in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.0, straight from hw/virtio-serial.h:
|
In addition to this, the VirtIOSerialPortInfo struct has a function pointer for a callback to be called when guest writes some data to the port:
|
For an example use of this API, see hw/virtio-console.c
Caveats
- Live Migration
- When a VM uses the qemu chardev interface to talk to guest virtio-serial ports, the chardev file will be closed on the source (and may be opened on the destination). Host applications have to be aware of such migration and either collaborate with libvirt or have their own mechanism to re-connect to the destination host and continue the communication.
- A future version of qemu may introduce 'migration notifiers' that may help chardevs let apps know of migration start / stop.
- qemu chardevs
- qemu's chardevs are notoriously out of date from the state-of-the-art and need a complete rewrite to be pleasurable to use.
- However respecting the return values from the various read/write calls to chardevs will help in ensuring data is never lost. The various backends (unix, tcp sockets, file, etc.) do work well when used with care.