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[Qemu-devel] Re: [libvirt] Re: [PATCH 2/3] Introduce monitor 'wait' comm


From: Gerd Hoffmann
Subject: [Qemu-devel] Re: [libvirt] Re: [PATCH 2/3] Introduce monitor 'wait' command
Date: Wed, 08 Apr 2009 17:03:26 +0200
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On 04/08/09 16:33, Daniel P. Berrange wrote:
On Wed, Apr 08, 2009 at 09:16:43AM -0500, Anthony Liguori wrote:
The wait command will pause the monitor the command was issued in until a new
event becomes available.  Events are queued if there isn't a waiter present.
The wait command completes after a single event is available.

Today, we queue events indefinitely but in the future, I suspect we'll drop
events that are older than a certain amount of time to avoid infinitely
allocating memory for long running VMs.

To make use of the new notification mechanism, this patch introduces a
qemu_notify_event() API.  This API takes three parameters: a class which is
meant to classify the type of event being generated, a name which is meant to
distinguish which event in the class that has been generated, and a details
parameters which is meant to allow events to send arbitrary data with a given
event.

Perhaps we should have the ability to turn on/off events, via a 'notify EVENT'
command, and a way turn off the prompt on the channel used for receiving
events.

That would nicely solve the "queue events indefinitely" issue. By default no events are generated. Apps which want receive them (and thus receive them) can enable them as needed.

And then in the 2nd monitor channel, a single 'wait' command would turn
off the monitor prompt and make the channel dedicated for just events,
one per line

   (qemu) wait
   rtc-change UTC+0100
   vnc-client connect 192.46.12.4:9353
   vnc-client disconnect 192.46.12.4:9353
   vnc-client connect 192.46.12.2:9353
   vnc-client disconnect 192.46.12.2:9353

IMHO this is more useful than having "wait" just get one event. You'll need a dedicated monitor channel for events anyway, so with one-event-per-wait the management app would have to issue wait in a loop.

BTW: "wait" is quite generic. Maybe we should name the commands notify-*, i.e. have

  notify-enable $class
  notify-disable $class
  notify-getevents

cheers,
  Gerd




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