Virtio-serial API
From KVM
Guest API
Function | Linux guest | Windows guest |
---|---|---|
Port discovery | symlinks from /dev/virtio-port/<portname> to /dev/vportNpn | |
Opening port | open(2). Returns >= 0 on success. Only one open allowed at a time for a port. | |
Reading | read(2). Blocking as well as non-blocking reads available. Return 0 if host is not connected. Block or -EINTR otherwise. Return -ENODEV if port or device get hot-unplugged | |
Writing | write(2). Blocking as well as non-blocking. If host is not connected, write blocks or returns -EINTR. Return -ENODEV if port or device get hot-unplugged. | |
Poll | poll(). POLLIN, POLLOUT with usual meaning. POLLHUP when host is not connected or when port or device got unplugged | |
Signals | From kernel 2.6.37, SIGIO will be sent to guest apps that set O_ASYNC flag on the fd. SIGIO will be sent on host connection up, down and port unplug events. |
For an example of a C program that uses the virtio-serial Linux guest API, see auto-virtserial-guest.c
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:
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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:
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For an example use of this API, see hw/virtio-console.c