QEMU-STORAGE-DAEMON(1) | QEMU | QEMU-STORAGE-DAEMON(1) |
qemu-storage-daemon - QEMU storage daemon
qemu-storage-daemon [options]
qemu-storage-daemon provides disk image functionality from QEMU, qemu-img, and qemu-nbd in a long-running process controlled via QMP commands without running a virtual machine. It can export disk images, run block job operations, and perform other disk-related operations. The daemon is controlled via a QMP monitor and initial configuration from the command-line.
The daemon offers the following subset of QEMU features:
Commands can be sent over a QEMU Monitor Protocol (QMP) connection. See the qemu-storage-daemon-qmp-ref(7) manual page for a description of the commands.
The daemon runs until it is stopped using the quit QMP command or SIGINT/SIGHUP/SIGTERM.
Warning: Never modify images in use by a running virtual machine or any other process; this may destroy the image. Also, be aware that querying an image that is being modified by another process may encounter inconsistent state.
Standard options:
[enable=]PATTERN
Use -trace help to print a list of names of trace points.
events=FILE
file=FILE
--chardev socket,id=char1,path=/var/run/qsd-qmp.sock,server=on,wait=off
The nbd export type requires --nbd-server (see below). name is the NBD export name (if not specified, it defaults to the given node-name). bitmap is the name of a dirty bitmap reachable from the block node, so the NBD client can use NBD_OPT_SET_META_CONTEXT with the metadata context name "qemu:dirty-bitmap:BITMAP" to inspect the bitmap.
The vhost-user-blk export type takes a vhost-user socket address on which it accept incoming connections. Both addr.type=unix,addr.path=<socket-path> for UNIX domain sockets and addr.type=fd,addr.str=<fd> for file descriptor passing are supported. logical-block-size sets the logical block size in bytes (the default is 512). num-queues sets the number of virtqueues (the default is 1).
The fuse export type takes a mount point, which must be a regular file, on which to export the given block node. That file will not be changed, it will just appear to have the block node's content while the export is active (very much like mounting a filesystem on a directory does not change what the directory contains, it only shows a different content while the filesystem is mounted). Consequently, applications that have opened the given file before the export became active will continue to see its original content. If growable is set, writes after the end of the exported file will grow the block node to fit. The allow-other option controls whether users other than the user running the process will be allowed to access the export. Note that enabling this option as a non-root user requires enabling the user_allow_other option in the global fuse.conf configuration file. Setting allow-other to auto (the default) will try enabling this option, and on error fall back to disabling it.
The vduse-blk export type takes a name (must be unique across the host) to create the VDUSE device. num-queues sets the number of virtqueues (the default is 1). queue-size sets the virtqueue descriptor table size (the default is 256).
The instantiated VDUSE device must then be added to the vDPA bus using the vdpa(8) command from the iproute2 project:
# vdpa dev add name <id> mgmtdev vduse
The device can be removed from the vDPA bus later as follows:
# vdpa dev del <id>
For more information about attaching vDPA devices to the host with virtio_vdpa.ko or attaching them to guests with vhost_vdpa.ko, see https://vdpa-dev.gitlab.io/.
For more information about VDUSE, see https://docs.kernel.org/userspace-api/vduse.html.
--monitor chardev=char1
To configure an NBD server on UNIX domain socket path /var/run/qsd-nbd.sock:
--nbd-server addr.type=unix,addr.path=/var/run/qsd-nbd.sock
$ kill -SIGTERM $(<path/to/qsd.pid)
A file lock is applied to the file so only one instance of the daemon can run with a given pid file path. The daemon unlinks its pid file when terminating.
The pid file is written after chardevs, exports, and NBD servers have been created but before accepting connections. The daemon has started successfully when the pid file is written and clients may begin connecting.
Launch the daemon with QMP monitor socket qmp.sock so clients can execute QMP commands:
$ qemu-storage-daemon \
--chardev socket,path=qmp.sock,server=on,wait=off,id=char1 \
--monitor chardev=char1
Launch the daemon from Python with a QMP monitor socket using file descriptor passing so there is no need to busy wait for the QMP monitor to become available:
#!/usr/bin/env python3 import subprocess import socket sock_path = '/var/run/qmp.sock' with socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX, socket.SOCK_STREAM) as listen_sock:
listen_sock.bind(sock_path)
listen_sock.listen()
fd = listen_sock.fileno()
subprocess.Popen(
['qemu-storage-daemon',
'--chardev', f'socket,fd={fd},server=on,id=char1',
'--monitor', 'chardev=char1'],
pass_fds=[fd],
) # listen_sock was automatically closed when leaving the 'with' statement # body. If the daemon process terminated early then the following connect() # will fail with "Connection refused" because no process has the listen # socket open anymore. Launch errors can be detected this way. qmp_sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_UNIX, socket.SOCK_STREAM) qmp_sock.connect(sock_path) ...QMP interaction...
The same socket spawning approach also works with the --nbd-server addr.type=fd,addr.str=<fd> and --export type=vhost-user-blk,addr.type=fd,addr.str=<fd> options.
Export raw image file disk.img over NBD UNIX domain socket nbd.sock:
$ qemu-storage-daemon \
--blockdev driver=file,node-name=disk,filename=disk.img \
--nbd-server addr.type=unix,addr.path=nbd.sock \
--export type=nbd,id=export,node-name=disk,writable=on
Export a qcow2 image file disk.qcow2 as a vhost-user-blk device over UNIX domain socket vhost-user-blk.sock:
$ qemu-storage-daemon \
--blockdev driver=file,node-name=file,filename=disk.qcow2 \
--blockdev driver=qcow2,node-name=qcow2,file=file \
--export type=vhost-user-blk,id=export,addr.type=unix,addr.path=vhost-user-blk.sock,node-name=qcow2
Export a qcow2 image file disk.qcow2 via FUSE on itself, so the disk image file will then appear as a raw image:
$ qemu-storage-daemon \
--blockdev driver=file,node-name=file,filename=disk.qcow2 \
--blockdev driver=qcow2,node-name=qcow2,file=file \
--export type=fuse,id=export,node-name=qcow2,mountpoint=disk.qcow2,writable=on
qemu(1), qemu-block-drivers(7), qemu-storage-daemon-qmp-ref(7)
2024, The QEMU Project Developers
February 6, 2024 | 7.2.9 |