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5824d651
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1HXCOMM Use DEFHEADING() to define headings in both help text and texi
2HXCOMM Text between STEXI and ETEXI are copied to texi version and
3HXCOMM discarded from C version
ad96090a
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4HXCOMM DEF(option, HAS_ARG/0, opt_enum, opt_help, arch_mask) is used to
5HXCOMM construct option structures, enums and help message for specified
6HXCOMM architectures.
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7HXCOMM HXCOMM can be used for comments, discarded from both texi and C
8
de6b4f90 9DEFHEADING(Standard options:)
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10STEXI
11@table @option
12ETEXI
13
14DEF("help", 0, QEMU_OPTION_h,
ad96090a 15 "-h or -help display this help and exit\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
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16STEXI
17@item -h
6616b2ad 18@findex -h
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19Display help and exit
20ETEXI
21
9bd7e6d9 22DEF("version", 0, QEMU_OPTION_version,
ad96090a 23 "-version display version information and exit\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
9bd7e6d9
PB
24STEXI
25@item -version
6616b2ad 26@findex -version
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27Display version information and exit
28ETEXI
29
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30DEF("machine", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_machine, \
31 "-machine [type=]name[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
585f6036 32 " selects emulated machine ('-machine help' for list)\n"
80f52a66 33 " property accel=accel1[:accel2[:...]] selects accelerator\n"
d661d9a4 34 " supported accelerators are kvm, xen, hax, hvf, whpx or tcg (default: tcg)\n"
32c18a2d 35 " kernel_irqchip=on|off|split controls accelerated irqchip support (default=off)\n"
d1048bef 36 " vmport=on|off|auto controls emulation of vmport (default: auto)\n"
96404013 37 " kvm_shadow_mem=size of KVM shadow MMU in bytes\n"
8490fc78 38 " dump-guest-core=on|off include guest memory in a core dump (default=on)\n"
a52a7fdf 39 " mem-merge=on|off controls memory merge support (default: on)\n"
79814179 40 " igd-passthru=on|off controls IGD GFX passthrough support (default=off)\n"
2eb1cd07 41 " aes-key-wrap=on|off controls support for AES key wrapping (default=on)\n"
9850c604 42 " dea-key-wrap=on|off controls support for DEA key wrapping (default=on)\n"
87252e1b 43 " suppress-vmdesc=on|off disables self-describing migration (default=off)\n"
902c053d 44 " nvdimm=on|off controls NVDIMM support (default=off)\n"
274250c3 45 " enforce-config-section=on|off enforce configuration section migration (default=off)\n"
db588194 46 " memory-encryption=@var{} memory encryption object to use (default=none)\n",
80f52a66 47 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 48STEXI
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49@item -machine [type=]@var{name}[,prop=@var{value}[,...]]
50@findex -machine
585f6036 51Select the emulated machine by @var{name}. Use @code{-machine help} to list
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52available machines.
53
54For architectures which aim to support live migration compatibility
55across releases, each release will introduce a new versioned machine
56type. For example, the 2.8.0 release introduced machine types
57``pc-i440fx-2.8'' and ``pc-q35-2.8'' for the x86_64/i686 architectures.
58
59To allow live migration of guests from QEMU version 2.8.0, to QEMU
60version 2.9.0, the 2.9.0 version must support the ``pc-i440fx-2.8''
61and ``pc-q35-2.8'' machines too. To allow users live migrating VMs
62to skip multiple intermediate releases when upgrading, new releases
63of QEMU will support machine types from many previous versions.
64
65Supported machine properties are:
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66@table @option
67@item accel=@var{accels1}[:@var{accels2}[:...]]
68This is used to enable an accelerator. Depending on the target architecture,
d661d9a4 69kvm, xen, hax, hvf, whpx or tcg can be available. By default, tcg is used. If there is
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70more than one accelerator specified, the next one is used if the previous one
71fails to initialize.
6a48ffaa 72@item kernel_irqchip=on|off
32c18a2d 73Controls in-kernel irqchip support for the chosen accelerator when available.
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74@item gfx_passthru=on|off
75Enables IGD GFX passthrough support for the chosen machine when available.
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76@item vmport=on|off|auto
77Enables emulation of VMWare IO port, for vmmouse etc. auto says to select the
78value based on accel. For accel=xen the default is off otherwise the default
79is on.
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80@item kvm_shadow_mem=size
81Defines the size of the KVM shadow MMU.
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82@item dump-guest-core=on|off
83Include guest memory in a core dump. The default is on.
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84@item mem-merge=on|off
85Enables or disables memory merge support. This feature, when supported by
86the host, de-duplicates identical memory pages among VMs instances
87(enabled by default).
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88@item aes-key-wrap=on|off
89Enables or disables AES key wrapping support on s390-ccw hosts. This feature
90controls whether AES wrapping keys will be created to allow
91execution of AES cryptographic functions. The default is on.
92@item dea-key-wrap=on|off
93Enables or disables DEA key wrapping support on s390-ccw hosts. This feature
94controls whether DEA wrapping keys will be created to allow
95execution of DEA cryptographic functions. The default is on.
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96@item nvdimm=on|off
97Enables or disables NVDIMM support. The default is off.
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98@item enforce-config-section=on|off
99If @option{enforce-config-section} is set to @var{on}, force migration
100code to send configuration section even if the machine-type sets the
101@option{migration.send-configuration} property to @var{off}.
102NOTE: this parameter is deprecated. Please use @option{-global}
103@option{migration.send-configuration}=@var{on|off} instead.
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104@item memory-encryption=@var{}
105Memory encryption object to use. The default is none.
80f52a66 106@end table
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107ETEXI
108
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109HXCOMM Deprecated by -machine
110DEF("M", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_M, "", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
111
5824d651 112DEF("cpu", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_cpu,
585f6036 113 "-cpu cpu select CPU ('-cpu help' for list)\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
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114STEXI
115@item -cpu @var{model}
6616b2ad 116@findex -cpu
585f6036 117Select CPU model (@code{-cpu help} for list and additional feature selection)
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118ETEXI
119
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120DEF("accel", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_accel,
121 "-accel [accel=]accelerator[,thread=single|multi]\n"
d661d9a4 122 " select accelerator (kvm, xen, hax, hvf, whpx or tcg; use 'help' for a list)\n"
0b3c5c81 123 " thread=single|multi (enable multi-threaded TCG)\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
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124STEXI
125@item -accel @var{name}[,prop=@var{value}[,...]]
126@findex -accel
127This is used to enable an accelerator. Depending on the target architecture,
d661d9a4 128kvm, xen, hax, hvf, whpx or tcg can be available. By default, tcg is used. If there is
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129more than one accelerator specified, the next one is used if the previous one
130fails to initialize.
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131@table @option
132@item thread=single|multi
133Controls number of TCG threads. When the TCG is multi-threaded there will be one
134thread per vCPU therefor taking advantage of additional host cores. The default
135is to enable multi-threading where both the back-end and front-ends support it and
136no incompatible TCG features have been enabled (e.g. icount/replay).
137@end table
138ETEXI
139
5824d651 140DEF("smp", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_smp,
1b458422 141 "-smp [cpus=]n[,maxcpus=cpus][,cores=cores][,threads=threads][,dies=dies][,sockets=sockets]\n"
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142 " set the number of CPUs to 'n' [default=1]\n"
143 " maxcpus= maximum number of total cpus, including\n"
ca1a8a06 144 " offline CPUs for hotplug, etc\n"
1b458422 145 " cores= number of CPU cores on one socket (for PC, it's on one die)\n"
58a04db1 146 " threads= number of threads on one CPU core\n"
1b458422 147 " dies= number of CPU dies on one socket (for PC only)\n"
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148 " sockets= number of discrete sockets in the system\n",
149 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 150STEXI
1b458422 151@item -smp [cpus=]@var{n}[,cores=@var{cores}][,threads=@var{threads}][,dies=dies][,sockets=@var{sockets}][,maxcpus=@var{maxcpus}]
6616b2ad 152@findex -smp
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153Simulate an SMP system with @var{n} CPUs. On the PC target, up to 255
154CPUs are supported. On Sparc32 target, Linux limits the number of usable CPUs
155to 4.
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156For the PC target, the number of @var{cores} per die, the number of @var{threads}
157per cores, the number of @var{dies} per packages and the total number of
158@var{sockets} can be specified. Missing values will be computed.
159If any on the three values is given, the total number of CPUs @var{n} can be omitted.
160@var{maxcpus} specifies the maximum number of hotpluggable CPUs.
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161ETEXI
162
268a362c 163DEF("numa", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_numa,
e0ee9fd0 164 "-numa node[,mem=size][,cpus=firstcpu[-lastcpu]][,nodeid=node]\n"
0f203430 165 "-numa node[,memdev=id][,cpus=firstcpu[-lastcpu]][,nodeid=node]\n"
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166 "-numa dist,src=source,dst=destination,val=distance\n"
167 "-numa cpu,node-id=node[,socket-id=x][,core-id=y][,thread-id=z]\n",
168 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
268a362c 169STEXI
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170@item -numa node[,mem=@var{size}][,cpus=@var{firstcpu}[-@var{lastcpu}]][,nodeid=@var{node}]
171@itemx -numa node[,memdev=@var{id}][,cpus=@var{firstcpu}[-@var{lastcpu}]][,nodeid=@var{node}]
0f203430 172@itemx -numa dist,src=@var{source},dst=@var{destination},val=@var{distance}
419fcdec 173@itemx -numa cpu,node-id=@var{node}[,socket-id=@var{x}][,core-id=@var{y}][,thread-id=@var{z}]
6616b2ad 174@findex -numa
4b9a5dd7 175Define a NUMA node and assign RAM and VCPUs to it.
0f203430 176Set the NUMA distance from a source node to a destination node.
4b9a5dd7 177
419fcdec 178Legacy VCPU assignment uses @samp{cpus} option where
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179@var{firstcpu} and @var{lastcpu} are CPU indexes. Each
180@samp{cpus} option represent a contiguous range of CPU indexes
181(or a single VCPU if @var{lastcpu} is omitted). A non-contiguous
182set of VCPUs can be represented by providing multiple @samp{cpus}
183options. If @samp{cpus} is omitted on all nodes, VCPUs are automatically
184split between them.
185
186For example, the following option assigns VCPUs 0, 1, 2 and 5 to
187a NUMA node:
188@example
189-numa node,cpus=0-2,cpus=5
190@end example
191
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IM
192@samp{cpu} option is a new alternative to @samp{cpus} option
193which uses @samp{socket-id|core-id|thread-id} properties to assign
194CPU objects to a @var{node} using topology layout properties of CPU.
195The set of properties is machine specific, and depends on used
196machine type/@samp{smp} options. It could be queried with
197@samp{hotpluggable-cpus} monitor command.
198@samp{node-id} property specifies @var{node} to which CPU object
199will be assigned, it's required for @var{node} to be declared
200with @samp{node} option before it's used with @samp{cpu} option.
201
202For example:
203@example
204-M pc \
205-smp 1,sockets=2,maxcpus=2 \
206-numa node,nodeid=0 -numa node,nodeid=1 \
207-numa cpu,node-id=0,socket-id=0 -numa cpu,node-id=1,socket-id=1
208@end example
209
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210@samp{mem} assigns a given RAM amount to a node. @samp{memdev}
211assigns RAM from a given memory backend device to a node. If
212@samp{mem} and @samp{memdev} are omitted in all nodes, RAM is
213split equally between them.
214
215@samp{mem} and @samp{memdev} are mutually exclusive. Furthermore,
216if one node uses @samp{memdev}, all of them have to use it.
217
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218@var{source} and @var{destination} are NUMA node IDs.
219@var{distance} is the NUMA distance from @var{source} to @var{destination}.
220The distance from a node to itself is always 10. If any pair of nodes is
221given a distance, then all pairs must be given distances. Although, when
222distances are only given in one direction for each pair of nodes, then
223the distances in the opposite directions are assumed to be the same. If,
224however, an asymmetrical pair of distances is given for even one node
225pair, then all node pairs must be provided distance values for both
226directions, even when they are symmetrical. When a node is unreachable
227from another node, set the pair's distance to 255.
228
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229Note that the -@option{numa} option doesn't allocate any of the
230specified resources, it just assigns existing resources to NUMA
231nodes. This means that one still has to use the @option{-m},
232@option{-smp} options to allocate RAM and VCPUs respectively.
233
268a362c
AL
234ETEXI
235
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236DEF("add-fd", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_add_fd,
237 "-add-fd fd=fd,set=set[,opaque=opaque]\n"
238 " Add 'fd' to fd 'set'\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
239STEXI
240@item -add-fd fd=@var{fd},set=@var{set}[,opaque=@var{opaque}]
241@findex -add-fd
242
243Add a file descriptor to an fd set. Valid options are:
244
245@table @option
246@item fd=@var{fd}
247This option defines the file descriptor of which a duplicate is added to fd set.
248The file descriptor cannot be stdin, stdout, or stderr.
249@item set=@var{set}
250This option defines the ID of the fd set to add the file descriptor to.
251@item opaque=@var{opaque}
252This option defines a free-form string that can be used to describe @var{fd}.
253@end table
254
255You can open an image using pre-opened file descriptors from an fd set:
256@example
257qemu-system-i386
258-add-fd fd=3,set=2,opaque="rdwr:/path/to/file"
259-add-fd fd=4,set=2,opaque="rdonly:/path/to/file"
260-drive file=/dev/fdset/2,index=0,media=disk
261@end example
262ETEXI
263
6616b2ad
SW
264DEF("set", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_set,
265 "-set group.id.arg=value\n"
266 " set <arg> parameter for item <id> of type <group>\n"
ad96090a 267 " i.e. -set drive.$id.file=/path/to/image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
6616b2ad 268STEXI
6265c43b 269@item -set @var{group}.@var{id}.@var{arg}=@var{value}
6616b2ad 270@findex -set
e1f3b974 271Set parameter @var{arg} for item @var{id} of type @var{group}
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SW
272ETEXI
273
274DEF("global", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_global,
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PB
275 "-global driver.property=value\n"
276 "-global driver=driver,property=property,value=value\n"
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277 " set a global default for a driver property\n",
278 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
6616b2ad 279STEXI
3017b72c 280@item -global @var{driver}.@var{prop}=@var{value}
3751d7c4 281@itemx -global driver=@var{driver},property=@var{property},value=@var{value}
6616b2ad 282@findex -global
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283Set default value of @var{driver}'s property @var{prop} to @var{value}, e.g.:
284
285@example
1c9f3b88 286qemu-system-i386 -global ide-hd.physical_block_size=4096 disk-image.img
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287@end example
288
a295d244
MT
289In particular, you can use this to set driver properties for devices which are
290created automatically by the machine model. To create a device which is not
3017b72c 291created automatically and set properties on it, use -@option{device}.
3751d7c4 292
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293-global @var{driver}.@var{prop}=@var{value} is shorthand for -global
294driver=@var{driver},property=@var{prop},value=@var{value}. The
295longhand syntax works even when @var{driver} contains a dot.
6616b2ad
SW
296ETEXI
297
5824d651 298DEF("boot", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_boot,
2221dde5 299 "-boot [order=drives][,once=drives][,menu=on|off]\n"
c8a6ae8b 300 " [,splash=sp_name][,splash-time=sp_time][,reboot-timeout=rb_time][,strict=on|off]\n"
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301 " 'drives': floppy (a), hard disk (c), CD-ROM (d), network (n)\n"
302 " 'sp_name': the file's name that would be passed to bios as logo picture, if menu=on\n"
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303 " 'sp_time': the period that splash picture last if menu=on, unit is ms\n"
304 " 'rb_timeout': the timeout before guest reboot when boot failed, unit is ms\n",
ad96090a 305 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 306STEXI
c8a6ae8b 307@item -boot [order=@var{drives}][,once=@var{drives}][,menu=on|off][,splash=@var{sp_name}][,splash-time=@var{sp_time}][,reboot-timeout=@var{rb_timeout}][,strict=on|off]
6616b2ad 308@findex -boot
2221dde5 309Specify boot order @var{drives} as a string of drive letters. Valid
d274e07c 310drive letters depend on the target architecture. The x86 PC uses: a, b
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311(floppy 1 and 2), c (first hard disk), d (first CD-ROM), n-p (Etherboot
312from network adapter 1-4), hard disk boot is the default. To apply a
313particular boot order only on the first startup, specify it via
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TH
314@option{once}. Note that the @option{order} or @option{once} parameter
315should not be used together with the @option{bootindex} property of
316devices, since the firmware implementations normally do not support both
317at the same time.
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318
319Interactive boot menus/prompts can be enabled via @option{menu=on} as far
320as firmware/BIOS supports them. The default is non-interactive boot.
321
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322A splash picture could be passed to bios, enabling user to show it as logo,
323when option splash=@var{sp_name} is given and menu=on, If firmware/BIOS
324supports them. Currently Seabios for X86 system support it.
325limitation: The splash file could be a jpeg file or a BMP file in 24 BPP
326format(true color). The resolution should be supported by the SVGA mode, so
327the recommended is 320x240, 640x480, 800x640.
328
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329A timeout could be passed to bios, guest will pause for @var{rb_timeout} ms
330when boot failed, then reboot. If @var{rb_timeout} is '-1', guest will not
331reboot, qemu passes '-1' to bios by default. Currently Seabios for X86
332system support it.
333
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334Do strict boot via @option{strict=on} as far as firmware/BIOS
335supports it. This only effects when boot priority is changed by
336bootindex options. The default is non-strict boot.
337
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338@example
339# try to boot from network first, then from hard disk
3804da9d 340qemu-system-i386 -boot order=nc
2221dde5 341# boot from CD-ROM first, switch back to default order after reboot
3804da9d 342qemu-system-i386 -boot once=d
3d3b8303 343# boot with a splash picture for 5 seconds.
3804da9d 344qemu-system-i386 -boot menu=on,splash=/root/boot.bmp,splash-time=5000
2221dde5
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345@end example
346
347Note: The legacy format '-boot @var{drives}' is still supported but its
348use is discouraged as it may be removed from future versions.
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349ETEXI
350
5824d651 351DEF("m", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_m,
89f3ea2b 352 "-m [size=]megs[,slots=n,maxmem=size]\n"
6e1d3c1c 353 " configure guest RAM\n"
0daba1f0 354 " size: initial amount of guest memory\n"
c270fb9e 355 " slots: number of hotplug slots (default: none)\n"
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356 " maxmem: maximum amount of guest memory (default: none)\n"
357 "NOTE: Some architectures might enforce a specific granularity\n",
6e1d3c1c 358 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 359STEXI
9fcc0794 360@item -m [size=]@var{megs}[,slots=n,maxmem=size]
6616b2ad 361@findex -m
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LC
362Sets guest startup RAM size to @var{megs} megabytes. Default is 128 MiB.
363Optionally, a suffix of ``M'' or ``G'' can be used to signify a value in
364megabytes or gigabytes respectively. Optional pair @var{slots}, @var{maxmem}
365could be used to set amount of hotpluggable memory slots and maximum amount of
366memory. Note that @var{maxmem} must be aligned to the page size.
367
368For example, the following command-line sets the guest startup RAM size to
3691GB, creates 3 slots to hotplug additional memory and sets the maximum
370memory the guest can reach to 4GB:
371
372@example
373qemu-system-x86_64 -m 1G,slots=3,maxmem=4G
374@end example
375
376If @var{slots} and @var{maxmem} are not specified, memory hotplug won't
377be enabled and the guest startup RAM will never increase.
5824d651
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378ETEXI
379
c902760f 380DEF("mem-path", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_mempath,
ad96090a 381 "-mem-path FILE provide backing storage for guest RAM\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
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MT
382STEXI
383@item -mem-path @var{path}
b8f490eb 384@findex -mem-path
c902760f
MT
385Allocate guest RAM from a temporarily created file in @var{path}.
386ETEXI
387
c902760f 388DEF("mem-prealloc", 0, QEMU_OPTION_mem_prealloc,
ad96090a
BS
389 "-mem-prealloc preallocate guest memory (use with -mem-path)\n",
390 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
c902760f
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391STEXI
392@item -mem-prealloc
b8f490eb 393@findex -mem-prealloc
c902760f
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394Preallocate memory when using -mem-path.
395ETEXI
c902760f 396
5824d651 397DEF("k", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_k,
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398 "-k language use keyboard layout (for example 'fr' for French)\n",
399 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
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400STEXI
401@item -k @var{language}
6616b2ad 402@findex -k
5824d651
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403Use keyboard layout @var{language} (for example @code{fr} for
404French). This option is only needed where it is not easy to get raw PC
32945472 405keycodes (e.g. on Macs, with some X11 servers or with a VNC or curses
5824d651
BS
406display). You don't normally need to use it on PC/Linux or PC/Windows
407hosts.
408
409The available layouts are:
410@example
411ar de-ch es fo fr-ca hu ja mk no pt-br sv
412da en-gb et fr fr-ch is lt nl pl ru th
413de en-us fi fr-be hr it lv nl-be pt sl tr
414@end example
415
416The default is @code{en-us}.
417ETEXI
418
419
f0b3d811 420HXCOMM Deprecated by -audiodev
5824d651 421DEF("audio-help", 0, QEMU_OPTION_audio_help,
f0b3d811 422 "-audio-help show -audiodev equivalent of the currently specified audio settings\n",
ad96090a 423 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
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424STEXI
425@item -audio-help
6616b2ad 426@findex -audio-help
f0b3d811
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427Will show the -audiodev equivalent of the currently specified
428(deprecated) environment variables.
429ETEXI
430
431DEF("audiodev", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_audiodev,
432 "-audiodev [driver=]driver,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
433 " specifies the audio backend to use\n"
434 " id= identifier of the backend\n"
435 " timer-period= timer period in microseconds\n"
436 " in|out.fixed-settings= use fixed settings for host audio\n"
437 " in|out.frequency= frequency to use with fixed settings\n"
438 " in|out.channels= number of channels to use with fixed settings\n"
439 " in|out.format= sample format to use with fixed settings\n"
440 " valid values: s8, s16, s32, u8, u16, u32\n"
441 " in|out.voices= number of voices to use\n"
442 " in|out.buffer-len= length of buffer in microseconds\n"
443 "-audiodev none,id=id,[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
444 " dummy driver that discards all output\n"
445#ifdef CONFIG_AUDIO_ALSA
446 "-audiodev alsa,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
447 " in|out.dev= name of the audio device to use\n"
448 " in|out.period-len= length of period in microseconds\n"
449 " in|out.try-poll= attempt to use poll mode\n"
450 " threshold= threshold (in microseconds) when playback starts\n"
451#endif
452#ifdef CONFIG_AUDIO_COREAUDIO
453 "-audiodev coreaudio,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
454 " in|out.buffer-count= number of buffers\n"
455#endif
456#ifdef CONFIG_AUDIO_DSOUND
457 "-audiodev dsound,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
458 " latency= add extra latency to playback in microseconds\n"
459#endif
460#ifdef CONFIG_AUDIO_OSS
461 "-audiodev oss,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
462 " in|out.dev= path of the audio device to use\n"
463 " in|out.buffer-count= number of buffers\n"
464 " in|out.try-poll= attempt to use poll mode\n"
465 " try-mmap= try using memory mapped access\n"
466 " exclusive= open device in exclusive mode\n"
467 " dsp-policy= set timing policy (0..10), -1 to use fragment mode\n"
468#endif
469#ifdef CONFIG_AUDIO_PA
470 "-audiodev pa,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
471 " server= PulseAudio server address\n"
472 " in|out.name= source/sink device name\n"
473#endif
474#ifdef CONFIG_AUDIO_SDL
475 "-audiodev sdl,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
476#endif
477#ifdef CONFIG_SPICE
478 "-audiodev spice,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
479#endif
480 "-audiodev wav,id=id[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
481 " path= path of wav file to record\n",
482 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
483STEXI
484@item -audiodev [driver=]@var{driver},id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
485@findex -audiodev
486Adds a new audio backend @var{driver} identified by @var{id}. There are
487global and driver specific properties. Some values can be set
488differently for input and output, they're marked with @code{in|out.}.
489You can set the input's property with @code{in.@var{prop}} and the
490output's property with @code{out.@var{prop}}. For example:
491@example
492-audiodev alsa,id=example,in.frequency=44110,out.frequency=8000
493-audiodev alsa,id=example,out.channels=1 # leaves in.channels unspecified
494@end example
495
496Valid global options are:
497
498@table @option
499@item id=@var{identifier}
500Identifies the audio backend.
501
502@item timer-period=@var{period}
503Sets the timer @var{period} used by the audio subsystem in microseconds.
504Default is 10000 (10 ms).
505
506@item in|out.fixed-settings=on|off
507Use fixed settings for host audio. When off, it will change based on
508how the guest opens the sound card. In this case you must not specify
509@var{frequency}, @var{channels} or @var{format}. Default is on.
510
511@item in|out.frequency=@var{frequency}
512Specify the @var{frequency} to use when using @var{fixed-settings}.
513Default is 44100Hz.
514
515@item in|out.channels=@var{channels}
516Specify the number of @var{channels} to use when using
517@var{fixed-settings}. Default is 2 (stereo).
518
519@item in|out.format=@var{format}
520Specify the sample @var{format} to use when using @var{fixed-settings}.
521Valid values are: @code{s8}, @code{s16}, @code{s32}, @code{u8},
522@code{u16}, @code{u32}. Default is @code{s16}.
523
524@item in|out.voices=@var{voices}
525Specify the number of @var{voices} to use. Default is 1.
526
527@item in|out.buffer=@var{usecs}
528Sets the size of the buffer in microseconds.
529
530@end table
531
532@item -audiodev none,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
533Creates a dummy backend that discards all outputs. This backend has no
534backend specific properties.
535
536@item -audiodev alsa,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
537Creates backend using the ALSA. This backend is only available on
538Linux.
539
540ALSA specific options are:
541
542@table @option
543
544@item in|out.dev=@var{device}
545Specify the ALSA @var{device} to use for input and/or output. Default
546is @code{default}.
547
548@item in|out.period-len=@var{usecs}
549Sets the period length in microseconds.
550
551@item in|out.try-poll=on|off
552Attempt to use poll mode with the device. Default is on.
553
554@item threshold=@var{threshold}
555Threshold (in microseconds) when playback starts. Default is 0.
556
557@end table
558
559@item -audiodev coreaudio,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
560Creates a backend using Apple's Core Audio. This backend is only
561available on Mac OS and only supports playback.
562
563Core Audio specific options are:
564
565@table @option
566
567@item in|out.buffer-count=@var{count}
568Sets the @var{count} of the buffers.
569
570@end table
571
572@item -audiodev dsound,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
573Creates a backend using Microsoft's DirectSound. This backend is only
574available on Windows and only supports playback.
575
576DirectSound specific options are:
577
578@table @option
579
580@item latency=@var{usecs}
581Add extra @var{usecs} microseconds latency to playback. Default is
58210000 (10 ms).
583
584@end table
585
586@item -audiodev oss,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
587Creates a backend using OSS. This backend is available on most
588Unix-like systems.
589
590OSS specific options are:
591
592@table @option
593
594@item in|out.dev=@var{device}
595Specify the file name of the OSS @var{device} to use. Default is
596@code{/dev/dsp}.
597
598@item in|out.buffer-count=@var{count}
599Sets the @var{count} of the buffers.
600
601@item in|out.try-poll=on|of
602Attempt to use poll mode with the device. Default is on.
603
604@item try-mmap=on|off
605Try using memory mapped device access. Default is off.
606
607@item exclusive=on|off
608Open the device in exclusive mode (vmix won't work in this case).
609Default is off.
610
611@item dsp-policy=@var{policy}
612Sets the timing policy (between 0 and 10, where smaller number means
613smaller latency but higher CPU usage). Use -1 to use buffer sizes
614specified by @code{buffer} and @code{buffer-count}. This option is
615ignored if you do not have OSS 4. Default is 5.
616
617@end table
618
619@item -audiodev pa,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
620Creates a backend using PulseAudio. This backend is available on most
621systems.
622
623PulseAudio specific options are:
624
625@table @option
626
627@item server=@var{server}
628Sets the PulseAudio @var{server} to connect to.
629
630@item in|out.name=@var{sink}
631Use the specified source/sink for recording/playback.
632
633@end table
634
635@item -audiodev sdl,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
636Creates a backend using SDL. This backend is available on most systems,
637but you should use your platform's native backend if possible. This
638backend has no backend specific properties.
639
640@item -audiodev spice,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
641Creates a backend that sends audio through SPICE. This backend requires
642@code{-spice} and automatically selected in that case, so usually you
643can ignore this option. This backend has no backend specific
644properties.
645
646@item -audiodev wav,id=@var{id}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
647Creates a backend that writes audio to a WAV file.
648
649Backend specific options are:
650
651@table @option
652
653@item path=@var{path}
654Write recorded audio into the specified file. Default is
655@code{qemu.wav}.
656
657@end table
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658ETEXI
659
5824d651
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660DEF("soundhw", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_soundhw,
661 "-soundhw c1,... enable audio support\n"
662 " and only specified sound cards (comma separated list)\n"
585f6036
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663 " use '-soundhw help' to get the list of supported cards\n"
664 " use '-soundhw all' to enable all of them\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
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665STEXI
666@item -soundhw @var{card1}[,@var{card2},...] or -soundhw all
6616b2ad 667@findex -soundhw
585f6036 668Enable audio and selected sound hardware. Use 'help' to print all
5824d651
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669available sound hardware.
670
671@example
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672qemu-system-i386 -soundhw sb16,adlib disk.img
673qemu-system-i386 -soundhw es1370 disk.img
674qemu-system-i386 -soundhw ac97 disk.img
675qemu-system-i386 -soundhw hda disk.img
676qemu-system-i386 -soundhw all disk.img
677qemu-system-i386 -soundhw help
678@end example
679
680Note that Linux's i810_audio OSS kernel (for AC97) module might
681require manually specifying clocking.
682
683@example
684modprobe i810_audio clocking=48000
685@end example
686ETEXI
687
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688DEF("device", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_device,
689 "-device driver[,prop[=value][,...]]\n"
690 " add device (based on driver)\n"
691 " prop=value,... sets driver properties\n"
692 " use '-device help' to print all possible drivers\n"
693 " use '-device driver,help' to print all possible properties\n",
694 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
695STEXI
696@item -device @var{driver}[,@var{prop}[=@var{value}][,...]]
697@findex -device
698Add device @var{driver}. @var{prop}=@var{value} sets driver
699properties. Valid properties depend on the driver. To get help on
700possible drivers and properties, use @code{-device help} and
701@code{-device @var{driver},help}.
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702
703Some drivers are:
540c07d3 704@item -device ipmi-bmc-sim,id=@var{id}[,slave_addr=@var{val}][,sdrfile=@var{file}][,furareasize=@var{val}][,furdatafile=@var{file}]
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705
706Add an IPMI BMC. This is a simulation of a hardware management
707interface processor that normally sits on a system. It provides
708a watchdog and the ability to reset and power control the system.
709You need to connect this to an IPMI interface to make it useful
710
711The IPMI slave address to use for the BMC. The default is 0x20.
712This address is the BMC's address on the I2C network of management
713controllers. If you don't know what this means, it is safe to ignore
714it.
715
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716@table @option
717@item bmc=@var{id}
718The BMC to connect to, one of ipmi-bmc-sim or ipmi-bmc-extern above.
719@item slave_addr=@var{val}
720Define slave address to use for the BMC. The default is 0x20.
721@item sdrfile=@var{file}
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722file containing raw Sensor Data Records (SDR) data. The default is none.
723@item fruareasize=@var{val}
724size of a Field Replaceable Unit (FRU) area. The default is 1024.
725@item frudatafile=@var{file}
726file containing raw Field Replaceable Unit (FRU) inventory data. The default is none.
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727@end table
728
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729@item -device ipmi-bmc-extern,id=@var{id},chardev=@var{id}[,slave_addr=@var{val}]
730
731Add a connection to an external IPMI BMC simulator. Instead of
732locally emulating the BMC like the above item, instead connect
733to an external entity that provides the IPMI services.
734
735A connection is made to an external BMC simulator. If you do this, it
736is strongly recommended that you use the "reconnect=" chardev option
737to reconnect to the simulator if the connection is lost. Note that if
738this is not used carefully, it can be a security issue, as the
739interface has the ability to send resets, NMIs, and power off the VM.
740It's best if QEMU makes a connection to an external simulator running
741on a secure port on localhost, so neither the simulator nor QEMU is
742exposed to any outside network.
743
744See the "lanserv/README.vm" file in the OpenIPMI library for more
745details on the external interface.
746
747@item -device isa-ipmi-kcs,bmc=@var{id}[,ioport=@var{val}][,irq=@var{val}]
748
749Add a KCS IPMI interafce on the ISA bus. This also adds a
750corresponding ACPI and SMBIOS entries, if appropriate.
751
752@table @option
753@item bmc=@var{id}
754The BMC to connect to, one of ipmi-bmc-sim or ipmi-bmc-extern above.
755@item ioport=@var{val}
756Define the I/O address of the interface. The default is 0xca0 for KCS.
757@item irq=@var{val}
758Define the interrupt to use. The default is 5. To disable interrupts,
759set this to 0.
760@end table
761
762@item -device isa-ipmi-bt,bmc=@var{id}[,ioport=@var{val}][,irq=@var{val}]
763
764Like the KCS interface, but defines a BT interface. The default port is
7650xe4 and the default interrupt is 5.
766
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767ETEXI
768
769DEF("name", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_name,
8f480de0 770 "-name string1[,process=string2][,debug-threads=on|off]\n"
10adb8be 771 " set the name of the guest\n"
479a5747
RB
772 " string1 sets the window title and string2 the process name\n"
773 " When debug-threads is enabled, individual threads are given a separate name\n"
8f480de0 774 " NOTE: The thread names are for debugging and not a stable API.\n",
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775 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
776STEXI
777@item -name @var{name}
778@findex -name
779Sets the @var{name} of the guest.
780This name will be displayed in the SDL window caption.
781The @var{name} will also be used for the VNC server.
782Also optionally set the top visible process name in Linux.
8f480de0 783Naming of individual threads can also be enabled on Linux to aid debugging.
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784ETEXI
785
786DEF("uuid", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_uuid,
787 "-uuid %08x-%04x-%04x-%04x-%012x\n"
788 " specify machine UUID\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
789STEXI
790@item -uuid @var{uuid}
791@findex -uuid
792Set system UUID.
793ETEXI
794
795STEXI
796@end table
797ETEXI
798DEFHEADING()
799
de6b4f90 800DEFHEADING(Block device options:)
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801STEXI
802@table @option
803ETEXI
804
805DEF("fda", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_fda,
806 "-fda/-fdb file use 'file' as floppy disk 0/1 image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
807DEF("fdb", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_fdb, "", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
808STEXI
809@item -fda @var{file}
f9cfd655 810@itemx -fdb @var{file}
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MA
811@findex -fda
812@findex -fdb
92a539d2 813Use @var{file} as floppy disk 0/1 image (@pxref{disk_images}).
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MA
814ETEXI
815
816DEF("hda", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_hda,
817 "-hda/-hdb file use 'file' as IDE hard disk 0/1 image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
818DEF("hdb", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_hdb, "", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
819DEF("hdc", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_hdc,
820 "-hdc/-hdd file use 'file' as IDE hard disk 2/3 image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
821DEF("hdd", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_hdd, "", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
822STEXI
823@item -hda @var{file}
f9cfd655
MA
824@itemx -hdb @var{file}
825@itemx -hdc @var{file}
826@itemx -hdd @var{file}
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MA
827@findex -hda
828@findex -hdb
829@findex -hdc
830@findex -hdd
831Use @var{file} as hard disk 0, 1, 2 or 3 image (@pxref{disk_images}).
832ETEXI
833
834DEF("cdrom", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_cdrom,
835 "-cdrom file use 'file' as IDE cdrom image (cdrom is ide1 master)\n",
836 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
837STEXI
838@item -cdrom @var{file}
839@findex -cdrom
840Use @var{file} as CD-ROM image (you cannot use @option{-hdc} and
841@option{-cdrom} at the same time). You can use the host CD-ROM by
842using @file{/dev/cdrom} as filename (@pxref{host_drives}).
843ETEXI
844
42e5f393
MA
845DEF("blockdev", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_blockdev,
846 "-blockdev [driver=]driver[,node-name=N][,discard=ignore|unmap]\n"
847 " [,cache.direct=on|off][,cache.no-flush=on|off]\n"
848 " [,read-only=on|off][,detect-zeroes=on|off|unmap]\n"
849 " [,driver specific parameters...]\n"
850 " configure a block backend\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
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KW
851STEXI
852@item -blockdev @var{option}[,@var{option}[,@var{option}[,...]]]
853@findex -blockdev
854
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855Define a new block driver node. Some of the options apply to all block drivers,
856other options are only accepted for a specific block driver. See below for a
857list of generic options and options for the most common block drivers.
858
859Options that expect a reference to another node (e.g. @code{file}) can be
860given in two ways. Either you specify the node name of an already existing node
861(file=@var{node-name}), or you define a new node inline, adding options
862for the referenced node after a dot (file.filename=@var{path},file.aio=native).
863
864A block driver node created with @option{-blockdev} can be used for a guest
865device by specifying its node name for the @code{drive} property in a
866@option{-device} argument that defines a block device.
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867
868@table @option
869@item Valid options for any block driver node:
870
871@table @code
872@item driver
873Specifies the block driver to use for the given node.
874@item node-name
875This defines the name of the block driver node by which it will be referenced
876later. The name must be unique, i.e. it must not match the name of a different
877block driver node, or (if you use @option{-drive} as well) the ID of a drive.
878
879If no node name is specified, it is automatically generated. The generated node
880name is not intended to be predictable and changes between QEMU invocations.
881For the top level, an explicit node name must be specified.
882@item read-only
883Open the node read-only. Guest write attempts will fail.
884@item cache.direct
885The host page cache can be avoided with @option{cache.direct=on}. This will
886attempt to do disk IO directly to the guest's memory. QEMU may still perform an
887internal copy of the data.
888@item cache.no-flush
889In case you don't care about data integrity over host failures, you can use
890@option{cache.no-flush=on}. This option tells QEMU that it never needs to write
891any data to the disk but can instead keep things in cache. If anything goes
892wrong, like your host losing power, the disk storage getting disconnected
893accidentally, etc. your image will most probably be rendered unusable.
894@item discard=@var{discard}
895@var{discard} is one of "ignore" (or "off") or "unmap" (or "on") and controls
896whether @code{discard} (also known as @code{trim} or @code{unmap}) requests are
897ignored or passed to the filesystem. Some machine types may not support
898discard requests.
899@item detect-zeroes=@var{detect-zeroes}
900@var{detect-zeroes} is "off", "on" or "unmap" and enables the automatic
901conversion of plain zero writes by the OS to driver specific optimized
902zero write commands. You may even choose "unmap" if @var{discard} is set
903to "unmap" to allow a zero write to be converted to an @code{unmap} operation.
904@end table
905
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906@item Driver-specific options for @code{file}
907
908This is the protocol-level block driver for accessing regular files.
909
910@table @code
911@item filename
912The path to the image file in the local filesystem
913@item aio
914Specifies the AIO backend (threads/native, default: threads)
1878eaff
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915@item locking
916Specifies whether the image file is protected with Linux OFD / POSIX locks. The
917default is to use the Linux Open File Descriptor API if available, otherwise no
918lock is applied. (auto/on/off, default: auto)
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919@end table
920Example:
921@example
922-blockdev driver=file,node-name=disk,filename=disk.img
923@end example
924
925@item Driver-specific options for @code{raw}
926
927This is the image format block driver for raw images. It is usually
928stacked on top of a protocol level block driver such as @code{file}.
929
930@table @code
931@item file
932Reference to or definition of the data source block driver node
933(e.g. a @code{file} driver node)
934@end table
935Example 1:
936@example
937-blockdev driver=file,node-name=disk_file,filename=disk.img
938-blockdev driver=raw,node-name=disk,file=disk_file
939@end example
940Example 2:
941@example
942-blockdev driver=raw,node-name=disk,file.driver=file,file.filename=disk.img
943@end example
944
945@item Driver-specific options for @code{qcow2}
946
947This is the image format block driver for qcow2 images. It is usually
948stacked on top of a protocol level block driver such as @code{file}.
949
950@table @code
951@item file
952Reference to or definition of the data source block driver node
953(e.g. a @code{file} driver node)
954
955@item backing
956Reference to or definition of the backing file block device (default is taken
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957from the image file). It is allowed to pass @code{null} here in order to disable
958the default backing file.
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959
960@item lazy-refcounts
961Whether to enable the lazy refcounts feature (on/off; default is taken from the
962image file)
963
964@item cache-size
965The maximum total size of the L2 table and refcount block caches in bytes
40fb215d 966(default: the sum of l2-cache-size and refcount-cache-size)
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967
968@item l2-cache-size
969The maximum size of the L2 table cache in bytes
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970(default: if cache-size is not specified - 32M on Linux platforms, and 8M on
971non-Linux platforms; otherwise, as large as possible within the cache-size,
972while permitting the requested or the minimal refcount cache size)
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973
974@item refcount-cache-size
975The maximum size of the refcount block cache in bytes
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976(default: 4 times the cluster size; or if cache-size is specified, the part of
977it which is not used for the L2 cache)
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978
979@item cache-clean-interval
980Clean unused entries in the L2 and refcount caches. The interval is in seconds.
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981The default value is 600 on supporting platforms, and 0 on other platforms.
982Setting it to 0 disables this feature.
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983
984@item pass-discard-request
985Whether discard requests to the qcow2 device should be forwarded to the data
986source (on/off; default: on if discard=unmap is specified, off otherwise)
987
988@item pass-discard-snapshot
989Whether discard requests for the data source should be issued when a snapshot
990operation (e.g. deleting a snapshot) frees clusters in the qcow2 file (on/off;
991default: on)
992
993@item pass-discard-other
994Whether discard requests for the data source should be issued on other
995occasions where a cluster gets freed (on/off; default: off)
996
997@item overlap-check
998Which overlap checks to perform for writes to the image
999(none/constant/cached/all; default: cached). For details or finer
1000granularity control refer to the QAPI documentation of @code{blockdev-add}.
1001@end table
1002
1003Example 1:
1004@example
1005-blockdev driver=file,node-name=my_file,filename=/tmp/disk.qcow2
1006-blockdev driver=qcow2,node-name=hda,file=my_file,overlap-check=none,cache-size=16777216
1007@end example
1008Example 2:
1009@example
1010-blockdev driver=qcow2,node-name=disk,file.driver=http,file.filename=http://example.com/image.qcow2
1011@end example
1012
1013@item Driver-specific options for other drivers
1014Please refer to the QAPI documentation of the @code{blockdev-add} QMP command.
1015
dfaca464
KW
1016@end table
1017
1018ETEXI
42e5f393 1019
10adb8be
MA
1020DEF("drive", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_drive,
1021 "-drive [file=file][,if=type][,bus=n][,unit=m][,media=d][,index=i]\n"
10adb8be 1022 " [,cache=writethrough|writeback|none|directsync|unsafe][,format=f]\n"
572023f7 1023 " [,snapshot=on|off][,rerror=ignore|stop|report]\n"
d1db760d 1024 " [,werror=ignore|stop|report|enospc][,id=name][,aio=threads|native]\n"
10adb8be 1025 " [,readonly=on|off][,copy-on-read=on|off]\n"
2f7133b2 1026 " [,discard=ignore|unmap][,detect-zeroes=on|off|unmap]\n"
3e9fab69
BC
1027 " [[,bps=b]|[[,bps_rd=r][,bps_wr=w]]]\n"
1028 " [[,iops=i]|[[,iops_rd=r][,iops_wr=w]]]\n"
1029 " [[,bps_max=bm]|[[,bps_rd_max=rm][,bps_wr_max=wm]]]\n"
1030 " [[,iops_max=im]|[[,iops_rd_max=irm][,iops_wr_max=iwm]]]\n"
2024c1df 1031 " [[,iops_size=is]]\n"
76f4afb4 1032 " [[,group=g]]\n"
10adb8be
MA
1033 " use 'file' as a drive image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1034STEXI
1035@item -drive @var{option}[,@var{option}[,@var{option}[,...]]]
1036@findex -drive
1037
dfaca464
KW
1038Define a new drive. This includes creating a block driver node (the backend) as
1039well as a guest device, and is mostly a shortcut for defining the corresponding
1040@option{-blockdev} and @option{-device} options.
1041
1042@option{-drive} accepts all options that are accepted by @option{-blockdev}. In
1043addition, it knows the following options:
10adb8be
MA
1044
1045@table @option
1046@item file=@var{file}
1047This option defines which disk image (@pxref{disk_images}) to use with
1048this drive. If the filename contains comma, you must double it
1049(for instance, "file=my,,file" to use file "my,file").
1050
1051Special files such as iSCSI devices can be specified using protocol
1052specific URLs. See the section for "Device URL Syntax" for more information.
1053@item if=@var{interface}
1054This option defines on which type on interface the drive is connected.
ed1fcd00 1055Available types are: ide, scsi, sd, mtd, floppy, pflash, virtio, none.
10adb8be
MA
1056@item bus=@var{bus},unit=@var{unit}
1057These options define where is connected the drive by defining the bus number and
1058the unit id.
1059@item index=@var{index}
1060This option defines where is connected the drive by using an index in the list
1061of available connectors of a given interface type.
1062@item media=@var{media}
1063This option defines the type of the media: disk or cdrom.
10adb8be 1064@item snapshot=@var{snapshot}
9d85d557
MT
1065@var{snapshot} is "on" or "off" and controls snapshot mode for the given drive
1066(see @option{-snapshot}).
10adb8be 1067@item cache=@var{cache}
dfaca464
KW
1068@var{cache} is "none", "writeback", "unsafe", "directsync" or "writethrough"
1069and controls how the host cache is used to access block data. This is a
1070shortcut that sets the @option{cache.direct} and @option{cache.no-flush}
1071options (as in @option{-blockdev}), and additionally @option{cache.writeback},
1072which provides a default for the @option{write-cache} option of block guest
1073devices (as in @option{-device}). The modes correspond to the following
1074settings:
1075
1076@c Our texi2pod.pl script doesn't support @multitable, so fall back to using
1077@c plain ASCII art (well, UTF-8 art really). This looks okay both in the manpage
1078@c and the HTML output.
1079@example
1080@ │ cache.writeback cache.direct cache.no-flush
1081─────────────┼─────────────────────────────────────────────────
1082writeback │ on off off
1083none │ on on off
1084writethrough │ off off off
1085directsync │ off on off
1086unsafe │ on off on
1087@end example
1088
1089The default mode is @option{cache=writeback}.
1090
10adb8be
MA
1091@item aio=@var{aio}
1092@var{aio} is "threads", or "native" and selects between pthread based disk I/O and native Linux AIO.
1093@item format=@var{format}
1094Specify which disk @var{format} will be used rather than detecting
d33c8a7d 1095the format. Can be used to specify format=raw to avoid interpreting
10adb8be 1096an untrusted format header.
10adb8be
MA
1097@item werror=@var{action},rerror=@var{action}
1098Specify which @var{action} to take on write and read errors. Valid actions are:
1099"ignore" (ignore the error and try to continue), "stop" (pause QEMU),
1100"report" (report the error to the guest), "enospc" (pause QEMU only if the
1101host disk is full; report the error to the guest otherwise).
1102The default setting is @option{werror=enospc} and @option{rerror=report}.
10adb8be
MA
1103@item copy-on-read=@var{copy-on-read}
1104@var{copy-on-read} is "on" or "off" and enables whether to copy read backing
1105file sectors into the image file.
01f9cfab
SH
1106@item bps=@var{b},bps_rd=@var{r},bps_wr=@var{w}
1107Specify bandwidth throttling limits in bytes per second, either for all request
1108types or for reads or writes only. Small values can lead to timeouts or hangs
1109inside the guest. A safe minimum for disks is 2 MB/s.
1110@item bps_max=@var{bm},bps_rd_max=@var{rm},bps_wr_max=@var{wm}
1111Specify bursts in bytes per second, either for all request types or for reads
1112or writes only. Bursts allow the guest I/O to spike above the limit
1113temporarily.
1114@item iops=@var{i},iops_rd=@var{r},iops_wr=@var{w}
1115Specify request rate limits in requests per second, either for all request
1116types or for reads or writes only.
1117@item iops_max=@var{bm},iops_rd_max=@var{rm},iops_wr_max=@var{wm}
1118Specify bursts in requests per second, either for all request types or for reads
1119or writes only. Bursts allow the guest I/O to spike above the limit
1120temporarily.
1121@item iops_size=@var{is}
1122Let every @var{is} bytes of a request count as a new request for iops
1123throttling purposes. Use this option to prevent guests from circumventing iops
1124limits by sending fewer but larger requests.
1125@item group=@var{g}
1126Join a throttling quota group with given name @var{g}. All drives that are
1127members of the same group are accounted for together. Use this option to
1128prevent guests from circumventing throttling limits by using many small disks
1129instead of a single larger disk.
10adb8be
MA
1130@end table
1131
dfaca464 1132By default, the @option{cache.writeback=on} mode is used. It will report data
10adb8be
MA
1133writes as completed as soon as the data is present in the host page cache.
1134This is safe as long as your guest OS makes sure to correctly flush disk caches
1135where needed. If your guest OS does not handle volatile disk write caches
1136correctly and your host crashes or loses power, then the guest may experience
1137data corruption.
1138
dfaca464 1139For such guests, you should consider using @option{cache.writeback=off}. This
10adb8be
MA
1140means that the host page cache will be used to read and write data, but write
1141notification will be sent to the guest only after QEMU has made sure to flush
1142each write to the disk. Be aware that this has a major impact on performance.
1143
dfaca464 1144When using the @option{-snapshot} option, unsafe caching is always used.
10adb8be
MA
1145
1146Copy-on-read avoids accessing the same backing file sectors repeatedly and is
1147useful when the backing file is over a slow network. By default copy-on-read
1148is off.
1149
1150Instead of @option{-cdrom} you can use:
1151@example
1152qemu-system-i386 -drive file=file,index=2,media=cdrom
1153@end example
1154
1155Instead of @option{-hda}, @option{-hdb}, @option{-hdc}, @option{-hdd}, you can
1156use:
1157@example
1158qemu-system-i386 -drive file=file,index=0,media=disk
1159qemu-system-i386 -drive file=file,index=1,media=disk
1160qemu-system-i386 -drive file=file,index=2,media=disk
1161qemu-system-i386 -drive file=file,index=3,media=disk
1162@end example
1163
1164You can open an image using pre-opened file descriptors from an fd set:
1165@example
1166qemu-system-i386
1167-add-fd fd=3,set=2,opaque="rdwr:/path/to/file"
1168-add-fd fd=4,set=2,opaque="rdonly:/path/to/file"
1169-drive file=/dev/fdset/2,index=0,media=disk
1170@end example
1171
1172You can connect a CDROM to the slave of ide0:
1173@example
1174qemu-system-i386 -drive file=file,if=ide,index=1,media=cdrom
5824d651
BS
1175@end example
1176
10adb8be
MA
1177If you don't specify the "file=" argument, you define an empty drive:
1178@example
1179qemu-system-i386 -drive if=ide,index=1,media=cdrom
1180@end example
5824d651 1181
10adb8be
MA
1182Instead of @option{-fda}, @option{-fdb}, you can use:
1183@example
1184qemu-system-i386 -drive file=file,index=0,if=floppy
1185qemu-system-i386 -drive file=file,index=1,if=floppy
1186@end example
b1746ddd 1187
10adb8be
MA
1188By default, @var{interface} is "ide" and @var{index} is automatically
1189incremented:
1190@example
1191qemu-system-i386 -drive file=a -drive file=b"
1192@end example
1193is interpreted like:
1194@example
1195qemu-system-i386 -hda a -hdb b
1196@end example
84644c45
MA
1197ETEXI
1198
10adb8be
MA
1199DEF("mtdblock", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_mtdblock,
1200 "-mtdblock file use 'file' as on-board Flash memory image\n",
84644c45
MA
1201 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1202STEXI
10adb8be
MA
1203@item -mtdblock @var{file}
1204@findex -mtdblock
1205Use @var{file} as on-board Flash memory image.
84644c45
MA
1206ETEXI
1207
10adb8be
MA
1208DEF("sd", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_sd,
1209 "-sd file use 'file' as SecureDigital card image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 1210STEXI
10adb8be
MA
1211@item -sd @var{file}
1212@findex -sd
1213Use @var{file} as SecureDigital card image.
5824d651
BS
1214ETEXI
1215
10adb8be
MA
1216DEF("pflash", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_pflash,
1217 "-pflash file use 'file' as a parallel flash image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 1218STEXI
10adb8be
MA
1219@item -pflash @var{file}
1220@findex -pflash
1221Use @var{file} as a parallel flash image.
c70a01e4 1222ETEXI
5824d651 1223
10adb8be
MA
1224DEF("snapshot", 0, QEMU_OPTION_snapshot,
1225 "-snapshot write to temporary files instead of disk image files\n",
c70a01e4
MA
1226 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1227STEXI
10adb8be
MA
1228@item -snapshot
1229@findex -snapshot
1230Write to temporary files instead of disk image files. In this case,
1231the raw disk image you use is not written back. You can however force
1232the write back by pressing @key{C-a s} (@pxref{disk_images}).
5824d651
BS
1233ETEXI
1234
74db920c 1235DEF("fsdev", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_fsdev,
b44a6b09
GK
1236 "-fsdev local,id=id,path=path,security_model=mapped-xattr|mapped-file|passthrough|none\n"
1237 " [,writeout=immediate][,readonly][,fmode=fmode][,dmode=dmode]\n"
b8bbdb88
PJ
1238 " [[,throttling.bps-total=b]|[[,throttling.bps-read=r][,throttling.bps-write=w]]]\n"
1239 " [[,throttling.iops-total=i]|[[,throttling.iops-read=r][,throttling.iops-write=w]]]\n"
1240 " [[,throttling.bps-total-max=bm]|[[,throttling.bps-read-max=rm][,throttling.bps-write-max=wm]]]\n"
1241 " [[,throttling.iops-total-max=im]|[[,throttling.iops-read-max=irm][,throttling.iops-write-max=iwm]]]\n"
b44a6b09
GK
1242 " [[,throttling.iops-size=is]]\n"
1243 "-fsdev proxy,id=id,socket=socket[,writeout=immediate][,readonly]\n"
1244 "-fsdev proxy,id=id,sock_fd=sock_fd[,writeout=immediate][,readonly]\n"
1245 "-fsdev synth,id=id\n",
74db920c
GS
1246 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1247
1248STEXI
1249
b44a6b09
GK
1250@item -fsdev local,id=@var{id},path=@var{path},security_model=@var{security_model} [,writeout=@var{writeout}][,readonly][,fmode=@var{fmode}][,dmode=@var{dmode}] [,throttling.@var{option}=@var{value}[,throttling.@var{option}=@var{value}[,...]]]
1251@itemx -fsdev proxy,id=@var{id},socket=@var{socket}[,writeout=@var{writeout}][,readonly]
1252@itemx -fsdev proxy,id=@var{id},sock_fd=@var{sock_fd}[,writeout=@var{writeout}][,readonly]
1253@itemx -fsdev synth,id=@var{id}[,readonly]
74db920c 1254@findex -fsdev
7c92a3d2
AK
1255Define a new file system device. Valid options are:
1256@table @option
b44a6b09
GK
1257@item local
1258Accesses to the filesystem are done by QEMU.
1259@item proxy
1260Accesses to the filesystem are done by virtfs-proxy-helper(1).
1261@item synth
1262Synthetic filesystem, only used by QTests.
7c92a3d2 1263@item id=@var{id}
b44a6b09 1264Specifies identifier for this device.
7c92a3d2
AK
1265@item path=@var{path}
1266Specifies the export path for the file system device. Files under
1267this path will be available to the 9p client on the guest.
1268@item security_model=@var{security_model}
1269Specifies the security model to be used for this export path.
2c30dd74 1270Supported security models are "passthrough", "mapped-xattr", "mapped-file" and "none".
7c92a3d2 1271In "passthrough" security model, files are stored using the same
b65ee4fa 1272credentials as they are created on the guest. This requires QEMU
2c30dd74 1273to run as root. In "mapped-xattr" security model, some of the file
7c92a3d2 1274attributes like uid, gid, mode bits and link target are stored as
2c30dd74
AK
1275file attributes. For "mapped-file" these attributes are stored in the
1276hidden .virtfs_metadata directory. Directories exported by this security model cannot
7c92a3d2
AK
1277interact with other unix tools. "none" security model is same as
1278passthrough except the sever won't report failures if it fails to
d9b36a6e 1279set file attributes like ownership. Security model is mandatory
93aee84f 1280only for local fsdriver. Other fsdrivers (like proxy) don't take
d9b36a6e 1281security model as a parameter.
7c92a3d2
AK
1282@item writeout=@var{writeout}
1283This is an optional argument. The only supported value is "immediate".
1284This means that host page cache will be used to read and write data but
1285write notification will be sent to the guest only when the data has been
1286reported as written by the storage subsystem.
2c74c2cb
MK
1287@item readonly
1288Enables exporting 9p share as a readonly mount for guests. By default
1289read-write access is given.
84a87cc4
MK
1290@item socket=@var{socket}
1291Enables proxy filesystem driver to use passed socket file for communicating
b44a6b09 1292with virtfs-proxy-helper(1).
f67e3ffd
MK
1293@item sock_fd=@var{sock_fd}
1294Enables proxy filesystem driver to use passed socket descriptor for
b44a6b09
GK
1295communicating with virtfs-proxy-helper(1). Usually a helper like libvirt
1296will create socketpair and pass one of the fds as sock_fd.
b96feb2c
TS
1297@item fmode=@var{fmode}
1298Specifies the default mode for newly created files on the host. Works only
1299with security models "mapped-xattr" and "mapped-file".
1300@item dmode=@var{dmode}
1301Specifies the default mode for newly created directories on the host. Works
1302only with security models "mapped-xattr" and "mapped-file".
b44a6b09
GK
1303@item throttling.bps-total=@var{b},throttling.bps-read=@var{r},throttling.bps-write=@var{w}
1304Specify bandwidth throttling limits in bytes per second, either for all request
1305types or for reads or writes only.
1306@item throttling.bps-total-max=@var{bm},bps-read-max=@var{rm},bps-write-max=@var{wm}
1307Specify bursts in bytes per second, either for all request types or for reads
1308or writes only. Bursts allow the guest I/O to spike above the limit
1309temporarily.
1310@item throttling.iops-total=@var{i},throttling.iops-read=@var{r}, throttling.iops-write=@var{w}
1311Specify request rate limits in requests per second, either for all request
1312types or for reads or writes only.
1313@item throttling.iops-total-max=@var{im},throttling.iops-read-max=@var{irm}, throttling.iops-write-max=@var{iwm}
1314Specify bursts in requests per second, either for all request types or for reads
1315or writes only. Bursts allow the guest I/O to spike above the limit temporarily.
1316@item throttling.iops-size=@var{is}
1317Let every @var{is} bytes of a request count as a new request for iops
1318throttling purposes.
7c92a3d2 1319@end table
9ce56db6 1320
b44a6b09
GK
1321-fsdev option is used along with -device driver "virtio-9p-...".
1322@item -device virtio-9p-@var{type},fsdev=@var{id},mount_tag=@var{mount_tag}
1323Options for virtio-9p-... driver are:
7c92a3d2 1324@table @option
b44a6b09
GK
1325@item @var{type}
1326Specifies the variant to be used. Supported values are "pci", "ccw" or "device",
1327depending on the machine type.
7c92a3d2 1328@item fsdev=@var{id}
b44a6b09 1329Specifies the id value specified along with -fsdev option.
7c92a3d2 1330@item mount_tag=@var{mount_tag}
b44a6b09 1331Specifies the tag name to be used by the guest to mount this export point.
74db920c 1332@end table
7c92a3d2 1333
74db920c 1334ETEXI
74db920c 1335
3d54abc7 1336DEF("virtfs", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_virtfs,
b44a6b09
GK
1337 "-virtfs local,path=path,mount_tag=tag,security_model=mapped-xattr|mapped-file|passthrough|none\n"
1338 " [,id=id][,writeout=immediate][,readonly][,fmode=fmode][,dmode=dmode]\n"
1339 "-virtfs proxy,mount_tag=tag,socket=socket[,id=id][,writeout=immediate][,readonly]\n"
1340 "-virtfs proxy,mount_tag=tag,sock_fd=sock_fd[,id=id][,writeout=immediate][,readonly]\n"
1341 "-virtfs synth,mount_tag=tag[,id=id][,readonly]\n",
3d54abc7
GS
1342 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1343
1344STEXI
1345
b44a6b09
GK
1346@item -virtfs local,path=@var{path},mount_tag=@var{mount_tag} ,security_model=@var{security_model}[,writeout=@var{writeout}][,readonly] [,fmode=@var{fmode}][,dmode=@var{dmode}]
1347@itemx -virtfs proxy,socket=@var{socket},mount_tag=@var{mount_tag} [,writeout=@var{writeout}][,readonly]
1348@itemx -virtfs proxy,sock_fd=@var{sock_fd},mount_tag=@var{mount_tag} [,writeout=@var{writeout}][,readonly]
1349@itemx -virtfs synth,mount_tag=@var{mount_tag}
3d54abc7 1350@findex -virtfs
3d54abc7 1351
b44a6b09 1352Define a new filesystem device and expose it to the guest using a virtio-9p-device. The general form of a Virtual File system pass-through options are:
7c92a3d2 1353@table @option
b44a6b09
GK
1354@item local
1355Accesses to the filesystem are done by QEMU.
1356@item proxy
1357Accesses to the filesystem are done by virtfs-proxy-helper(1).
1358@item synth
1359Synthetic filesystem, only used by QTests.
7c92a3d2 1360@item id=@var{id}
b44a6b09 1361Specifies identifier for the filesystem device
7c92a3d2
AK
1362@item path=@var{path}
1363Specifies the export path for the file system device. Files under
1364this path will be available to the 9p client on the guest.
1365@item security_model=@var{security_model}
1366Specifies the security model to be used for this export path.
2c30dd74 1367Supported security models are "passthrough", "mapped-xattr", "mapped-file" and "none".
7c92a3d2 1368In "passthrough" security model, files are stored using the same
b65ee4fa 1369credentials as they are created on the guest. This requires QEMU
2c30dd74 1370to run as root. In "mapped-xattr" security model, some of the file
7c92a3d2 1371attributes like uid, gid, mode bits and link target are stored as
2c30dd74
AK
1372file attributes. For "mapped-file" these attributes are stored in the
1373hidden .virtfs_metadata directory. Directories exported by this security model cannot
7c92a3d2
AK
1374interact with other unix tools. "none" security model is same as
1375passthrough except the sever won't report failures if it fails to
d9b36a6e 1376set file attributes like ownership. Security model is mandatory only
93aee84f 1377for local fsdriver. Other fsdrivers (like proxy) don't take security
d9b36a6e 1378model as a parameter.
7c92a3d2
AK
1379@item writeout=@var{writeout}
1380This is an optional argument. The only supported value is "immediate".
1381This means that host page cache will be used to read and write data but
1382write notification will be sent to the guest only when the data has been
1383reported as written by the storage subsystem.
2c74c2cb
MK
1384@item readonly
1385Enables exporting 9p share as a readonly mount for guests. By default
1386read-write access is given.
84a87cc4
MK
1387@item socket=@var{socket}
1388Enables proxy filesystem driver to use passed socket file for
b44a6b09
GK
1389communicating with virtfs-proxy-helper(1). Usually a helper like libvirt
1390will create socketpair and pass one of the fds as sock_fd.
f67e3ffd
MK
1391@item sock_fd
1392Enables proxy filesystem driver to use passed 'sock_fd' as the socket
b44a6b09 1393descriptor for interfacing with virtfs-proxy-helper(1).
b96feb2c
TS
1394@item fmode=@var{fmode}
1395Specifies the default mode for newly created files on the host. Works only
1396with security models "mapped-xattr" and "mapped-file".
1397@item dmode=@var{dmode}
1398Specifies the default mode for newly created directories on the host. Works
1399only with security models "mapped-xattr" and "mapped-file".
b44a6b09
GK
1400@item mount_tag=@var{mount_tag}
1401Specifies the tag name to be used by the guest to mount this export point.
3d54abc7
GS
1402@end table
1403ETEXI
3d54abc7 1404
9db221ae
AK
1405DEF("virtfs_synth", 0, QEMU_OPTION_virtfs_synth,
1406 "-virtfs_synth Create synthetic file system image\n",
1407 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1408STEXI
1409@item -virtfs_synth
1410@findex -virtfs_synth
6e4199af
GK
1411Create synthetic file system image. Note that this option is now deprecated.
1412Please use @code{-fsdev synth} and @code{-device virtio-9p-...} instead.
9db221ae
AK
1413ETEXI
1414
61d70487
MA
1415DEF("iscsi", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_iscsi,
1416 "-iscsi [user=user][,password=password]\n"
1417 " [,header-digest=CRC32C|CR32C-NONE|NONE-CRC32C|NONE\n"
1418 " [,initiator-name=initiator-iqn][,id=target-iqn]\n"
1419 " [,timeout=timeout]\n"
1420 " iSCSI session parameters\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1421
44743148
MA
1422STEXI
1423@item -iscsi
1424@findex -iscsi
1425Configure iSCSI session parameters.
1426ETEXI
1427
5824d651
BS
1428STEXI
1429@end table
1430ETEXI
5824d651
BS
1431DEFHEADING()
1432
de6b4f90 1433DEFHEADING(USB options:)
10adb8be
MA
1434STEXI
1435@table @option
1436ETEXI
1437
1438DEF("usb", 0, QEMU_OPTION_usb,
a358a3af 1439 "-usb enable the USB driver (if it is not used by default yet)\n",
10adb8be
MA
1440 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1441STEXI
1442@item -usb
1443@findex -usb
a358a3af 1444Enable the USB driver (if it is not used by default yet).
10adb8be
MA
1445ETEXI
1446
1447DEF("usbdevice", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_usbdevice,
1448 "-usbdevice name add the host or guest USB device 'name'\n",
1449 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1450STEXI
1451
1452@item -usbdevice @var{devname}
1453@findex -usbdevice
a358a3af
TH
1454Add the USB device @var{devname}. Note that this option is deprecated,
1455please use @code{-device usb-...} instead. @xref{usb_devices}.
10adb8be
MA
1456
1457@table @option
1458
1459@item mouse
1460Virtual Mouse. This will override the PS/2 mouse emulation when activated.
1461
1462@item tablet
1463Pointer device that uses absolute coordinates (like a touchscreen). This
1464means QEMU is able to report the mouse position without having to grab the
1465mouse. Also overrides the PS/2 mouse emulation when activated.
1466
10adb8be
MA
1467@item braille
1468Braille device. This will use BrlAPI to display the braille output on a real
1469or fake device.
1470
10adb8be
MA
1471@end table
1472ETEXI
1473
1474STEXI
1475@end table
1476ETEXI
1477DEFHEADING()
1478
de6b4f90 1479DEFHEADING(Display options:)
5824d651
BS
1480STEXI
1481@table @option
1482ETEXI
1483
1472a95b 1484DEF("display", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_display,
d8aec9d9 1485 "-display spice-app[,gl=on|off]\n"
1472a95b 1486 "-display sdl[,frame=on|off][,alt_grab=on|off][,ctrl_grab=on|off]\n"
4867e47c 1487 " [,window_close=on|off][,gl=on|core|es|off]\n"
f04ec5af
RH
1488 "-display gtk[,grab_on_hover=on|off][,gl=on|off]|\n"
1489 "-display vnc=<display>[,<optargs>]\n"
2f8b7cd5 1490 "-display curses[,charset=<encoding>]\n"
144aaa99
ES
1491 "-display none\n"
1492 "-display egl-headless[,rendernode=<file>]"
f04ec5af
RH
1493 " select display type\n"
1494 "The default display is equivalent to\n"
1495#if defined(CONFIG_GTK)
1496 "\t\"-display gtk\"\n"
1497#elif defined(CONFIG_SDL)
1498 "\t\"-display sdl\"\n"
1499#elif defined(CONFIG_COCOA)
1500 "\t\"-display cocoa\"\n"
1501#elif defined(CONFIG_VNC)
1502 "\t\"-vnc localhost:0,to=99,id=default\"\n"
1503#else
1504 "\t\"-display none\"\n"
1505#endif
1506 , QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1472a95b
JS
1507STEXI
1508@item -display @var{type}
1509@findex -display
1510Select type of display to use. This option is a replacement for the
1511old style -sdl/-curses/... options. Valid values for @var{type} are
1512@table @option
1513@item sdl
1514Display video output via SDL (usually in a separate graphics
1515window; see the SDL documentation for other possibilities).
1516@item curses
1517Display video output via curses. For graphics device models which
1518support a text mode, QEMU can display this output using a
1519curses/ncurses interface. Nothing is displayed when the graphics
1520device is in graphical mode or if the graphics device does not support
1521a text mode. Generally only the VGA device models support text mode.
2f8b7cd5
ST
1522The font charset used by the guest can be specified with the
1523@code{charset} option, for example @code{charset=CP850} for IBM CP850
1524encoding. The default is @code{CP437}.
4171d32e
JS
1525@item none
1526Do not display video output. The guest will still see an emulated
1527graphics card, but its output will not be displayed to the QEMU
1528user. This option differs from the -nographic option in that it
1529only affects what is done with video output; -nographic also changes
1530the destination of the serial and parallel port data.
881249c7
JK
1531@item gtk
1532Display video output in a GTK window. This interface provides drop-down
1533menus and other UI elements to configure and control the VM during
1534runtime.
3264ff12
JS
1535@item vnc
1536Start a VNC server on display <arg>
144aaa99
ES
1537@item egl-headless
1538Offload all OpenGL operations to a local DRI device. For any graphical display,
1539this display needs to be paired with either VNC or SPICE displays.
d8aec9d9
MAL
1540@item spice-app
1541Start QEMU as a Spice server and launch the default Spice client
1542application. The Spice server will redirect the serial consoles and
1543QEMU monitors. (Since 4.0)
1472a95b
JS
1544@end table
1545ETEXI
1546
5824d651 1547DEF("nographic", 0, QEMU_OPTION_nographic,
ad96090a
BS
1548 "-nographic disable graphical output and redirect serial I/Os to console\n",
1549 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
1550STEXI
1551@item -nographic
6616b2ad 1552@findex -nographic
dc0a3e44
CL
1553Normally, if QEMU is compiled with graphical window support, it displays
1554output such as guest graphics, guest console, and the QEMU monitor in a
1555window. With this option, you can totally disable graphical output so
1556that QEMU is a simple command line application. The emulated serial port
1557is redirected on the console and muxed with the monitor (unless
1558redirected elsewhere explicitly). Therefore, you can still use QEMU to
1559debug a Linux kernel with a serial console. Use @key{C-a h} for help on
1560switching between the console and monitor.
5824d651
BS
1561ETEXI
1562
5824d651 1563DEF("curses", 0, QEMU_OPTION_curses,
f04ec5af 1564 "-curses shorthand for -display curses\n",
ad96090a 1565 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
1566STEXI
1567@item -curses
b8f490eb 1568@findex -curses
dc0a3e44
CL
1569Normally, if QEMU is compiled with graphical window support, it displays
1570output such as guest graphics, guest console, and the QEMU monitor in a
1571window. With this option, QEMU can display the VGA output when in text
1572mode using a curses/ncurses interface. Nothing is displayed in graphical
1573mode.
5824d651
BS
1574ETEXI
1575
5824d651 1576DEF("alt-grab", 0, QEMU_OPTION_alt_grab,
ad96090a
BS
1577 "-alt-grab use Ctrl-Alt-Shift to grab mouse (instead of Ctrl-Alt)\n",
1578 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
1579STEXI
1580@item -alt-grab
6616b2ad 1581@findex -alt-grab
de1db2a1
BH
1582Use Ctrl-Alt-Shift to grab mouse (instead of Ctrl-Alt). Note that this also
1583affects the special keys (for fullscreen, monitor-mode switching, etc).
5824d651
BS
1584ETEXI
1585
0ca9f8a4 1586DEF("ctrl-grab", 0, QEMU_OPTION_ctrl_grab,
ad96090a
BS
1587 "-ctrl-grab use Right-Ctrl to grab mouse (instead of Ctrl-Alt)\n",
1588 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
0ca9f8a4
DK
1589STEXI
1590@item -ctrl-grab
6616b2ad 1591@findex -ctrl-grab
de1db2a1
BH
1592Use Right-Ctrl to grab mouse (instead of Ctrl-Alt). Note that this also
1593affects the special keys (for fullscreen, monitor-mode switching, etc).
0ca9f8a4
DK
1594ETEXI
1595
5824d651 1596DEF("no-quit", 0, QEMU_OPTION_no_quit,
ad96090a 1597 "-no-quit disable SDL window close capability\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
1598STEXI
1599@item -no-quit
6616b2ad 1600@findex -no-quit
5824d651
BS
1601Disable SDL window close capability.
1602ETEXI
1603
5824d651 1604DEF("sdl", 0, QEMU_OPTION_sdl,
f04ec5af 1605 "-sdl shorthand for -display sdl\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
1606STEXI
1607@item -sdl
6616b2ad 1608@findex -sdl
5824d651
BS
1609Enable SDL.
1610ETEXI
1611
29b0040b 1612DEF("spice", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_spice,
27af7788
YH
1613 "-spice [port=port][,tls-port=secured-port][,x509-dir=<dir>]\n"
1614 " [,x509-key-file=<file>][,x509-key-password=<file>]\n"
1615 " [,x509-cert-file=<file>][,x509-cacert-file=<file>]\n"
fe4831b1 1616 " [,x509-dh-key-file=<file>][,addr=addr][,ipv4|ipv6|unix]\n"
27af7788
YH
1617 " [,tls-ciphers=<list>]\n"
1618 " [,tls-channel=[main|display|cursor|inputs|record|playback]]\n"
1619 " [,plaintext-channel=[main|display|cursor|inputs|record|playback]]\n"
1620 " [,sasl][,password=<secret>][,disable-ticketing]\n"
1621 " [,image-compression=[auto_glz|auto_lz|quic|glz|lz|off]]\n"
1622 " [,jpeg-wan-compression=[auto|never|always]]\n"
1623 " [,zlib-glz-wan-compression=[auto|never|always]]\n"
1624 " [,streaming-video=[off|all|filter]][,disable-copy-paste]\n"
5ad24e5f
HG
1625 " [,disable-agent-file-xfer][,agent-mouse=[on|off]]\n"
1626 " [,playback-compression=[on|off]][,seamless-migration=[on|off]]\n"
7b525508 1627 " [,gl=[on|off]][,rendernode=<file>]\n"
27af7788
YH
1628 " enable spice\n"
1629 " at least one of {port, tls-port} is mandatory\n",
1630 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
29b0040b
GH
1631STEXI
1632@item -spice @var{option}[,@var{option}[,...]]
1633@findex -spice
1634Enable the spice remote desktop protocol. Valid options are
1635
1636@table @option
1637
1638@item port=<nr>
c448e855 1639Set the TCP port spice is listening on for plaintext channels.
29b0040b 1640
333b0eeb
GH
1641@item addr=<addr>
1642Set the IP address spice is listening on. Default is any address.
1643
1644@item ipv4
f9cfd655
MA
1645@itemx ipv6
1646@itemx unix
333b0eeb
GH
1647Force using the specified IP version.
1648
29b0040b
GH
1649@item password=<secret>
1650Set the password you need to authenticate.
1651
48b3ed0a
MAL
1652@item sasl
1653Require that the client use SASL to authenticate with the spice.
1654The exact choice of authentication method used is controlled from the
1655system / user's SASL configuration file for the 'qemu' service. This
1656is typically found in /etc/sasl2/qemu.conf. If running QEMU as an
1657unprivileged user, an environment variable SASL_CONF_PATH can be used
1658to make it search alternate locations for the service config.
1659While some SASL auth methods can also provide data encryption (eg GSSAPI),
1660it is recommended that SASL always be combined with the 'tls' and
1661'x509' settings to enable use of SSL and server certificates. This
1662ensures a data encryption preventing compromise of authentication
1663credentials.
1664
29b0040b
GH
1665@item disable-ticketing
1666Allow client connects without authentication.
1667
d4970b07
HG
1668@item disable-copy-paste
1669Disable copy paste between the client and the guest.
1670
5ad24e5f
HG
1671@item disable-agent-file-xfer
1672Disable spice-vdagent based file-xfer between the client and the guest.
1673
c448e855
GH
1674@item tls-port=<nr>
1675Set the TCP port spice is listening on for encrypted channels.
1676
1677@item x509-dir=<dir>
1678Set the x509 file directory. Expects same filenames as -vnc $display,x509=$dir
1679
1680@item x509-key-file=<file>
f9cfd655
MA
1681@itemx x509-key-password=<file>
1682@itemx x509-cert-file=<file>
1683@itemx x509-cacert-file=<file>
1684@itemx x509-dh-key-file=<file>
c448e855
GH
1685The x509 file names can also be configured individually.
1686
1687@item tls-ciphers=<list>
1688Specify which ciphers to use.
1689
d70d6b31 1690@item tls-channel=[main|display|cursor|inputs|record|playback]
f9cfd655 1691@itemx plaintext-channel=[main|display|cursor|inputs|record|playback]
17b6dea0
GH
1692Force specific channel to be used with or without TLS encryption. The
1693options can be specified multiple times to configure multiple
1694channels. The special name "default" can be used to set the default
1695mode. For channels which are not explicitly forced into one mode the
1696spice client is allowed to pick tls/plaintext as he pleases.
1697
9f04e09e
YH
1698@item image-compression=[auto_glz|auto_lz|quic|glz|lz|off]
1699Configure image compression (lossless).
1700Default is auto_glz.
1701
1702@item jpeg-wan-compression=[auto|never|always]
f9cfd655 1703@itemx zlib-glz-wan-compression=[auto|never|always]
9f04e09e
YH
1704Configure wan image compression (lossy for slow links).
1705Default is auto.
1706
84a23f25 1707@item streaming-video=[off|all|filter]
93ca519e 1708Configure video stream detection. Default is off.
84a23f25
GH
1709
1710@item agent-mouse=[on|off]
1711Enable/disable passing mouse events via vdagent. Default is on.
1712
1713@item playback-compression=[on|off]
1714Enable/disable audio stream compression (using celt 0.5.1). Default is on.
1715
8c957053
YH
1716@item seamless-migration=[on|off]
1717Enable/disable spice seamless migration. Default is off.
1718
474114b7
GH
1719@item gl=[on|off]
1720Enable/disable OpenGL context. Default is off.
1721
7b525508
MAL
1722@item rendernode=<file>
1723DRM render node for OpenGL rendering. If not specified, it will pick
1724the first available. (Since 2.9)
1725
29b0040b
GH
1726@end table
1727ETEXI
1728
5824d651 1729DEF("portrait", 0, QEMU_OPTION_portrait,
ad96090a
BS
1730 "-portrait rotate graphical output 90 deg left (only PXA LCD)\n",
1731 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
1732STEXI
1733@item -portrait
6616b2ad 1734@findex -portrait
5824d651
BS
1735Rotate graphical output 90 deg left (only PXA LCD).
1736ETEXI
1737
9312805d
VK
1738DEF("rotate", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_rotate,
1739 "-rotate <deg> rotate graphical output some deg left (only PXA LCD)\n",
1740 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1741STEXI
6265c43b 1742@item -rotate @var{deg}
9312805d
VK
1743@findex -rotate
1744Rotate graphical output some deg left (only PXA LCD).
1745ETEXI
1746
5824d651 1747DEF("vga", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_vga,
a94f0c5c 1748 "-vga [std|cirrus|vmware|qxl|xenfb|tcx|cg3|virtio|none]\n"
ad96090a 1749 " select video card type\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 1750STEXI
e4558dca 1751@item -vga @var{type}
6616b2ad 1752@findex -vga
5824d651 1753Select type of VGA card to emulate. Valid values for @var{type} are
b3f046c2 1754@table @option
5824d651
BS
1755@item cirrus
1756Cirrus Logic GD5446 Video card. All Windows versions starting from
1757Windows 95 should recognize and use this graphic card. For optimal
1758performances, use 16 bit color depth in the guest and the host OS.
41eeb0e6 1759(This card was the default before QEMU 2.2)
5824d651
BS
1760@item std
1761Standard VGA card with Bochs VBE extensions. If your guest OS
1762supports the VESA 2.0 VBE extensions (e.g. Windows XP) and if you want
1763to use high resolution modes (>= 1280x1024x16) then you should use
41eeb0e6 1764this option. (This card is the default since QEMU 2.2)
5824d651
BS
1765@item vmware
1766VMWare SVGA-II compatible adapter. Use it if you have sufficiently
1767recent XFree86/XOrg server or Windows guest with a driver for this
1768card.
a19cbfb3
GH
1769@item qxl
1770QXL paravirtual graphic card. It is VGA compatible (including VESA
17712.0 VBE support). Works best with qxl guest drivers installed though.
1772Recommended choice when using the spice protocol.
33632788
MCA
1773@item tcx
1774(sun4m only) Sun TCX framebuffer. This is the default framebuffer for
1775sun4m machines and offers both 8-bit and 24-bit colour depths at a
1776fixed resolution of 1024x768.
1777@item cg3
1778(sun4m only) Sun cgthree framebuffer. This is a simple 8-bit framebuffer
1779for sun4m machines available in both 1024x768 (OpenBIOS) and 1152x900 (OBP)
1780resolutions aimed at people wishing to run older Solaris versions.
a94f0c5c
GH
1781@item virtio
1782Virtio VGA card.
5824d651
BS
1783@item none
1784Disable VGA card.
1785@end table
1786ETEXI
1787
1788DEF("full-screen", 0, QEMU_OPTION_full_screen,
ad96090a 1789 "-full-screen start in full screen\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
1790STEXI
1791@item -full-screen
6616b2ad 1792@findex -full-screen
5824d651
BS
1793Start in full screen.
1794ETEXI
1795
5824d651 1796DEF("g", 1, QEMU_OPTION_g ,
ad96090a
BS
1797 "-g WxH[xDEPTH] Set the initial graphical resolution and depth\n",
1798 QEMU_ARCH_PPC | QEMU_ARCH_SPARC)
5824d651 1799STEXI
95d5f08b 1800@item -g @var{width}x@var{height}[x@var{depth}]
6616b2ad 1801@findex -g
95d5f08b 1802Set the initial graphical resolution and depth (PPC, SPARC only).
5824d651
BS
1803ETEXI
1804
1805DEF("vnc", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_vnc ,
f04ec5af 1806 "-vnc <display> shorthand for -display vnc=<display>\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
1807STEXI
1808@item -vnc @var{display}[,@var{option}[,@var{option}[,...]]]
6616b2ad 1809@findex -vnc
dc0a3e44
CL
1810Normally, if QEMU is compiled with graphical window support, it displays
1811output such as guest graphics, guest console, and the QEMU monitor in a
1812window. With this option, you can have QEMU listen on VNC display
1813@var{display} and redirect the VGA display over the VNC session. It is
1814very useful to enable the usb tablet device when using this option
a358a3af 1815(option @option{-device usb-tablet}). When using the VNC display, you
dc0a3e44
CL
1816must use the @option{-k} parameter to set the keyboard layout if you are
1817not using en-us. Valid syntax for the @var{display} is
5824d651 1818
b3f046c2 1819@table @option
5824d651 1820
99a9a52a
RH
1821@item to=@var{L}
1822
1823With this option, QEMU will try next available VNC @var{display}s, until the
1824number @var{L}, if the origianlly defined "-vnc @var{display}" is not
1825available, e.g. port 5900+@var{display} is already used by another
1826application. By default, to=0.
1827
5824d651
BS
1828@item @var{host}:@var{d}
1829
1830TCP connections will only be allowed from @var{host} on display @var{d}.
1831By convention the TCP port is 5900+@var{d}. Optionally, @var{host} can
1832be omitted in which case the server will accept connections from any host.
1833
4e257e5e 1834@item unix:@var{path}
5824d651
BS
1835
1836Connections will be allowed over UNIX domain sockets where @var{path} is the
1837location of a unix socket to listen for connections on.
1838
1839@item none
1840
1841VNC is initialized but not started. The monitor @code{change} command
1842can be used to later start the VNC server.
1843
1844@end table
1845
1846Following the @var{display} value there may be one or more @var{option} flags
1847separated by commas. Valid options are
1848
b3f046c2 1849@table @option
5824d651
BS
1850
1851@item reverse
1852
1853Connect to a listening VNC client via a ``reverse'' connection. The
1854client is specified by the @var{display}. For reverse network
1855connections (@var{host}:@var{d},@code{reverse}), the @var{d} argument
1856is a TCP port number, not a display number.
1857
7536ee4b
TH
1858@item websocket
1859
1860Opens an additional TCP listening port dedicated to VNC Websocket connections.
275e0d61
DB
1861If a bare @var{websocket} option is given, the Websocket port is
18625700+@var{display}. An alternative port can be specified with the
1863syntax @code{websocket}=@var{port}.
1864
1865If @var{host} is specified connections will only be allowed from this host.
1866It is possible to control the websocket listen address independently, using
1867the syntax @code{websocket}=@var{host}:@var{port}.
1868
3e305e4a
DB
1869If no TLS credentials are provided, the websocket connection runs in
1870unencrypted mode. If TLS credentials are provided, the websocket connection
1871requires encrypted client connections.
7536ee4b 1872
5824d651
BS
1873@item password
1874
1875Require that password based authentication is used for client connections.
86ee5bc3
MN
1876
1877The password must be set separately using the @code{set_password} command in
1878the @ref{pcsys_monitor}. The syntax to change your password is:
1879@code{set_password <protocol> <password>} where <protocol> could be either
1880"vnc" or "spice".
1881
1882If you would like to change <protocol> password expiration, you should use
1883@code{expire_password <protocol> <expiration-time>} where expiration time could
1884be one of the following options: now, never, +seconds or UNIX time of
1885expiration, e.g. +60 to make password expire in 60 seconds, or 1335196800
1886to make password expire on "Mon Apr 23 12:00:00 EDT 2012" (UNIX time for this
1887date and time).
1888
1889You can also use keywords "now" or "never" for the expiration time to
1890allow <protocol> password to expire immediately or never expire.
5824d651 1891
3e305e4a
DB
1892@item tls-creds=@var{ID}
1893
1894Provides the ID of a set of TLS credentials to use to secure the
1895VNC server. They will apply to both the normal VNC server socket
1896and the websocket socket (if enabled). Setting TLS credentials
1897will cause the VNC server socket to enable the VeNCrypt auth
1898mechanism. The credentials should have been previously created
1899using the @option{-object tls-creds} argument.
1900
55cf09a0
DB
1901@item tls-authz=@var{ID}
1902
1903Provides the ID of the QAuthZ authorization object against which
1904the client's x509 distinguished name will validated. This object is
1905only resolved at time of use, so can be deleted and recreated on the
1906fly while the VNC server is active. If missing, it will default
1907to denying access.
1908
5824d651
BS
1909@item sasl
1910
1911Require that the client use SASL to authenticate with the VNC server.
1912The exact choice of authentication method used is controlled from the
1913system / user's SASL configuration file for the 'qemu' service. This
1914is typically found in /etc/sasl2/qemu.conf. If running QEMU as an
1915unprivileged user, an environment variable SASL_CONF_PATH can be used
1916to make it search alternate locations for the service config.
1917While some SASL auth methods can also provide data encryption (eg GSSAPI),
1918it is recommended that SASL always be combined with the 'tls' and
1919'x509' settings to enable use of SSL and server certificates. This
1920ensures a data encryption preventing compromise of authentication
1921credentials. See the @ref{vnc_security} section for details on using
1922SASL authentication.
1923
55cf09a0
DB
1924@item sasl-authz=@var{ID}
1925
1926Provides the ID of the QAuthZ authorization object against which
1927the client's SASL username will validated. This object is
1928only resolved at time of use, so can be deleted and recreated on the
1929fly while the VNC server is active. If missing, it will default
1930to denying access.
1931
5824d651
BS
1932@item acl
1933
55cf09a0
DB
1934Legacy method for enabling authorization of clients against the
1935x509 distinguished name and SASL username. It results in the creation
1936of two @code{authz-list} objects with IDs of @code{vnc.username} and
1937@code{vnc.x509dname}. The rules for these objects must be configured
1938with the HMP ACL commands.
1939
1940This option is deprecated and should no longer be used. The new
1941@option{sasl-authz} and @option{tls-authz} options are a
1942replacement.
5824d651 1943
6f9c78c1
CC
1944@item lossy
1945
1946Enable lossy compression methods (gradient, JPEG, ...). If this
1947option is set, VNC client may receive lossy framebuffer updates
1948depending on its encoding settings. Enabling this option can save
1949a lot of bandwidth at the expense of quality.
1950
80e0c8c3
CC
1951@item non-adaptive
1952
1953Disable adaptive encodings. Adaptive encodings are enabled by default.
1954An adaptive encoding will try to detect frequently updated screen regions,
1955and send updates in these regions using a lossy encoding (like JPEG).
61cc8701 1956This can be really helpful to save bandwidth when playing videos. Disabling
9d85d557 1957adaptive encodings restores the original static behavior of encodings
80e0c8c3
CC
1958like Tight.
1959
8cf36489
GH
1960@item share=[allow-exclusive|force-shared|ignore]
1961
1962Set display sharing policy. 'allow-exclusive' allows clients to ask
1963for exclusive access. As suggested by the rfb spec this is
1964implemented by dropping other connections. Connecting multiple
1965clients in parallel requires all clients asking for a shared session
1966(vncviewer: -shared switch). This is the default. 'force-shared'
1967disables exclusive client access. Useful for shared desktop sessions,
1968where you don't want someone forgetting specify -shared disconnect
1969everybody else. 'ignore' completely ignores the shared flag and
1970allows everybody connect unconditionally. Doesn't conform to the rfb
b65ee4fa 1971spec but is traditional QEMU behavior.
8cf36489 1972
c5ce8333
GH
1973@item key-delay-ms
1974
1975Set keyboard delay, for key down and key up events, in milliseconds.
d3b0db6d 1976Default is 10. Keyboards are low-bandwidth devices, so this slowdown
c5ce8333
GH
1977can help the device and guest to keep up and not lose events in case
1978events are arriving in bulk. Possible causes for the latter are flaky
1979network connections, or scripts for automated testing.
1980
f0b9f36d
KZ
1981@item audiodev=@var{audiodev}
1982
1983Use the specified @var{audiodev} when the VNC client requests audio
1984transmission. When not using an -audiodev argument, this option must
1985be omitted, otherwise is must be present and specify a valid audiodev.
1986
5824d651
BS
1987@end table
1988ETEXI
1989
1990STEXI
1991@end table
1992ETEXI
a3adb7ad 1993ARCHHEADING(, QEMU_ARCH_I386)
5824d651 1994
de6b4f90 1995ARCHHEADING(i386 target only:, QEMU_ARCH_I386)
5824d651
BS
1996STEXI
1997@table @option
1998ETEXI
1999
5824d651 2000DEF("win2k-hack", 0, QEMU_OPTION_win2k_hack,
ad96090a
BS
2001 "-win2k-hack use it when installing Windows 2000 to avoid a disk full bug\n",
2002 QEMU_ARCH_I386)
5824d651
BS
2003STEXI
2004@item -win2k-hack
6616b2ad 2005@findex -win2k-hack
5824d651
BS
2006Use it when installing Windows 2000 to avoid a disk full bug. After
2007Windows 2000 is installed, you no longer need this option (this option
2008slows down the IDE transfers).
2009ETEXI
2010
5824d651 2011DEF("no-fd-bootchk", 0, QEMU_OPTION_no_fd_bootchk,
ad96090a
BS
2012 "-no-fd-bootchk disable boot signature checking for floppy disks\n",
2013 QEMU_ARCH_I386)
5824d651
BS
2014STEXI
2015@item -no-fd-bootchk
6616b2ad 2016@findex -no-fd-bootchk
4eda32f5 2017Disable boot signature checking for floppy disks in BIOS. May
5824d651
BS
2018be needed to boot from old floppy disks.
2019ETEXI
2020
5824d651 2021DEF("no-acpi", 0, QEMU_OPTION_no_acpi,
f5d8c8cd 2022 "-no-acpi disable ACPI\n", QEMU_ARCH_I386 | QEMU_ARCH_ARM)
5824d651
BS
2023STEXI
2024@item -no-acpi
6616b2ad 2025@findex -no-acpi
5824d651
BS
2026Disable ACPI (Advanced Configuration and Power Interface) support. Use
2027it if your guest OS complains about ACPI problems (PC target machine
2028only).
2029ETEXI
2030
5824d651 2031DEF("no-hpet", 0, QEMU_OPTION_no_hpet,
ad96090a 2032 "-no-hpet disable HPET\n", QEMU_ARCH_I386)
5824d651
BS
2033STEXI
2034@item -no-hpet
6616b2ad 2035@findex -no-hpet
5824d651
BS
2036Disable HPET support.
2037ETEXI
2038
5824d651 2039DEF("acpitable", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_acpitable,
104bf02e 2040 "-acpitable [sig=str][,rev=n][,oem_id=str][,oem_table_id=str][,oem_rev=n][,asl_compiler_id=str][,asl_compiler_rev=n][,{data|file}=file1[:file2]...]\n"
ad96090a 2041 " ACPI table description\n", QEMU_ARCH_I386)
5824d651
BS
2042STEXI
2043@item -acpitable [sig=@var{str}][,rev=@var{n}][,oem_id=@var{str}][,oem_table_id=@var{str}][,oem_rev=@var{n}] [,asl_compiler_id=@var{str}][,asl_compiler_rev=@var{n}][,data=@var{file1}[:@var{file2}]...]
6616b2ad 2044@findex -acpitable
5824d651 2045Add ACPI table with specified header fields and context from specified files.
104bf02e
MT
2046For file=, take whole ACPI table from the specified files, including all
2047ACPI headers (possible overridden by other options).
2048For data=, only data
2049portion of the table is used, all header information is specified in the
2050command line.
ae123749
LE
2051If a SLIC table is supplied to QEMU, then the SLIC's oem_id and oem_table_id
2052fields will override the same in the RSDT and the FADT (a.k.a. FACP), in order
2053to ensure the field matches required by the Microsoft SLIC spec and the ACPI
2054spec.
5824d651
BS
2055ETEXI
2056
b6f6e3d3
AL
2057DEF("smbios", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_smbios,
2058 "-smbios file=binary\n"
ca1a8a06 2059 " load SMBIOS entry from binary file\n"
b155eb1d
GS
2060 "-smbios type=0[,vendor=str][,version=str][,date=str][,release=%d.%d]\n"
2061 " [,uefi=on|off]\n"
ca1a8a06 2062 " specify SMBIOS type 0 fields\n"
b6f6e3d3
AL
2063 "-smbios type=1[,manufacturer=str][,product=str][,version=str][,serial=str]\n"
2064 " [,uuid=uuid][,sku=str][,family=str]\n"
b155eb1d
GS
2065 " specify SMBIOS type 1 fields\n"
2066 "-smbios type=2[,manufacturer=str][,product=str][,version=str][,serial=str]\n"
2067 " [,asset=str][,location=str]\n"
2068 " specify SMBIOS type 2 fields\n"
2069 "-smbios type=3[,manufacturer=str][,version=str][,serial=str][,asset=str]\n"
2070 " [,sku=str]\n"
2071 " specify SMBIOS type 3 fields\n"
2072 "-smbios type=4[,sock_pfx=str][,manufacturer=str][,version=str][,serial=str]\n"
2073 " [,asset=str][,part=str]\n"
2074 " specify SMBIOS type 4 fields\n"
2075 "-smbios type=17[,loc_pfx=str][,bank=str][,manufacturer=str][,serial=str]\n"
3ebd6cc8 2076 " [,asset=str][,part=str][,speed=%d]\n"
b155eb1d 2077 " specify SMBIOS type 17 fields\n",
c30e1565 2078 QEMU_ARCH_I386 | QEMU_ARCH_ARM)
b6f6e3d3
AL
2079STEXI
2080@item -smbios file=@var{binary}
6616b2ad 2081@findex -smbios
b6f6e3d3
AL
2082Load SMBIOS entry from binary file.
2083
84351843 2084@item -smbios type=0[,vendor=@var{str}][,version=@var{str}][,date=@var{str}][,release=@var{%d.%d}][,uefi=on|off]
b6f6e3d3
AL
2085Specify SMBIOS type 0 fields
2086
b155eb1d 2087@item -smbios type=1[,manufacturer=@var{str}][,product=@var{str}][,version=@var{str}][,serial=@var{str}][,uuid=@var{uuid}][,sku=@var{str}][,family=@var{str}]
b6f6e3d3 2088Specify SMBIOS type 1 fields
b155eb1d 2089
3fdbd1d7 2090@item -smbios type=2[,manufacturer=@var{str}][,product=@var{str}][,version=@var{str}][,serial=@var{str}][,asset=@var{str}][,location=@var{str}]
b155eb1d
GS
2091Specify SMBIOS type 2 fields
2092
2093@item -smbios type=3[,manufacturer=@var{str}][,version=@var{str}][,serial=@var{str}][,asset=@var{str}][,sku=@var{str}]
2094Specify SMBIOS type 3 fields
2095
2096@item -smbios type=4[,sock_pfx=@var{str}][,manufacturer=@var{str}][,version=@var{str}][,serial=@var{str}][,asset=@var{str}][,part=@var{str}]
2097Specify SMBIOS type 4 fields
2098
3ebd6cc8 2099@item -smbios type=17[,loc_pfx=@var{str}][,bank=@var{str}][,manufacturer=@var{str}][,serial=@var{str}][,asset=@var{str}][,part=@var{str}][,speed=@var{%d}]
b155eb1d 2100Specify SMBIOS type 17 fields
b6f6e3d3
AL
2101ETEXI
2102
5824d651
BS
2103STEXI
2104@end table
2105ETEXI
c70a01e4 2106DEFHEADING()
5824d651 2107
de6b4f90 2108DEFHEADING(Network options:)
5824d651
BS
2109STEXI
2110@table @option
2111ETEXI
2112
6a8b4a5b 2113DEF("netdev", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_netdev,
5824d651 2114#ifdef CONFIG_SLIRP
0b11c036
ST
2115 "-netdev user,id=str[,ipv4[=on|off]][,net=addr[/mask]][,host=addr]\n"
2116 " [,ipv6[=on|off]][,ipv6-net=addr[/int]][,ipv6-host=addr]\n"
2117 " [,restrict=on|off][,hostname=host][,dhcpstart=addr]\n"
f18d1375 2118 " [,dns=addr][,ipv6-dns=addr][,dnssearch=domain][,domainname=domain]\n"
0fca92b9 2119 " [,tftp=dir][,tftp-server-name=name][,bootfile=f][,hostfwd=rule][,guestfwd=rule]"
ad196a9d 2120#ifndef _WIN32
c92ef6a2 2121 "[,smb=dir[,smbserver=addr]]\n"
ad196a9d 2122#endif
6a8b4a5b
TH
2123 " configure a user mode network backend with ID 'str',\n"
2124 " its DHCP server and optional services\n"
5824d651
BS
2125#endif
2126#ifdef _WIN32
6a8b4a5b
TH
2127 "-netdev tap,id=str,ifname=name\n"
2128 " configure a host TAP network backend with ID 'str'\n"
5824d651 2129#else
6a8b4a5b 2130 "-netdev tap,id=str[,fd=h][,fds=x:y:...:z][,ifname=name][,script=file][,downscript=dfile]\n"
584613ea 2131 " [,br=bridge][,helper=helper][,sndbuf=nbytes][,vnet_hdr=on|off][,vhost=on|off]\n"
6a8b4a5b 2132 " [,vhostfd=h][,vhostfds=x:y:...:z][,vhostforce=on|off][,queues=n]\n"
69e87b32 2133 " [,poll-us=n]\n"
6a8b4a5b 2134 " configure a host TAP network backend with ID 'str'\n"
584613ea 2135 " connected to a bridge (default=" DEFAULT_BRIDGE_INTERFACE ")\n"
a7c36ee4
CB
2136 " use network scripts 'file' (default=" DEFAULT_NETWORK_SCRIPT ")\n"
2137 " to configure it and 'dfile' (default=" DEFAULT_NETWORK_DOWN_SCRIPT ")\n"
2138 " to deconfigure it\n"
ca1a8a06 2139 " use '[down]script=no' to disable script execution\n"
a7c36ee4
CB
2140 " use network helper 'helper' (default=" DEFAULT_BRIDGE_HELPER ") to\n"
2141 " configure it\n"
5824d651 2142 " use 'fd=h' to connect to an already opened TAP interface\n"
2ca81baa 2143 " use 'fds=x:y:...:z' to connect to already opened multiqueue capable TAP interfaces\n"
ca1a8a06 2144 " use 'sndbuf=nbytes' to limit the size of the send buffer (the\n"
f157ed20 2145 " default is disabled 'sndbuf=0' to enable flow control set 'sndbuf=1048576')\n"
ca1a8a06
BR
2146 " use vnet_hdr=off to avoid enabling the IFF_VNET_HDR tap flag\n"
2147 " use vnet_hdr=on to make the lack of IFF_VNET_HDR support an error condition\n"
82b0d80e 2148 " use vhost=on to enable experimental in kernel accelerator\n"
5430a28f
MT
2149 " (only has effect for virtio guests which use MSIX)\n"
2150 " use vhostforce=on to force vhost on for non-MSIX virtio guests\n"
82b0d80e 2151 " use 'vhostfd=h' to connect to an already opened vhost net device\n"
2ca81baa 2152 " use 'vhostfds=x:y:...:z to connect to multiple already opened vhost net devices\n"
ec396014 2153 " use 'queues=n' to specify the number of queues to be created for multiqueue TAP\n"
69e87b32
JW
2154 " use 'poll-us=n' to speciy the maximum number of microseconds that could be\n"
2155 " spent on busy polling for vhost net\n"
6a8b4a5b
TH
2156 "-netdev bridge,id=str[,br=bridge][,helper=helper]\n"
2157 " configure a host TAP network backend with ID 'str' that is\n"
2158 " connected to a bridge (default=" DEFAULT_BRIDGE_INTERFACE ")\n"
2159 " using the program 'helper (default=" DEFAULT_BRIDGE_HELPER ")\n"
3fb69aa1
AI
2160#endif
2161#ifdef __linux__
6a8b4a5b
TH
2162 "-netdev l2tpv3,id=str,src=srcaddr,dst=dstaddr[,srcport=srcport][,dstport=dstport]\n"
2163 " [,rxsession=rxsession],txsession=txsession[,ipv6=on/off][,udp=on/off]\n"
2164 " [,cookie64=on/off][,counter][,pincounter][,txcookie=txcookie]\n"
2165 " [,rxcookie=rxcookie][,offset=offset]\n"
2166 " configure a network backend with ID 'str' connected to\n"
2167 " an Ethernet over L2TPv3 pseudowire.\n"
3fb69aa1 2168 " Linux kernel 3.3+ as well as most routers can talk\n"
2f47b403 2169 " L2TPv3. This transport allows connecting a VM to a VM,\n"
3fb69aa1
AI
2170 " VM to a router and even VM to Host. It is a nearly-universal\n"
2171 " standard (RFC3391). Note - this implementation uses static\n"
2172 " pre-configured tunnels (same as the Linux kernel).\n"
2173 " use 'src=' to specify source address\n"
2174 " use 'dst=' to specify destination address\n"
2175 " use 'udp=on' to specify udp encapsulation\n"
3952651a 2176 " use 'srcport=' to specify source udp port\n"
3fb69aa1
AI
2177 " use 'dstport=' to specify destination udp port\n"
2178 " use 'ipv6=on' to force v6\n"
2179 " L2TPv3 uses cookies to prevent misconfiguration as\n"
2180 " well as a weak security measure\n"
2181 " use 'rxcookie=0x012345678' to specify a rxcookie\n"
2182 " use 'txcookie=0x012345678' to specify a txcookie\n"
2183 " use 'cookie64=on' to set cookie size to 64 bit, otherwise 32\n"
2184 " use 'counter=off' to force a 'cut-down' L2TPv3 with no counter\n"
2185 " use 'pincounter=on' to work around broken counter handling in peer\n"
2186 " use 'offset=X' to add an extra offset between header and data\n"
5824d651 2187#endif
6a8b4a5b
TH
2188 "-netdev socket,id=str[,fd=h][,listen=[host]:port][,connect=host:port]\n"
2189 " configure a network backend to connect to another network\n"
2190 " using a socket connection\n"
2191 "-netdev socket,id=str[,fd=h][,mcast=maddr:port[,localaddr=addr]]\n"
2192 " configure a network backend to connect to a multicast maddr and port\n"
3a75e74c 2193 " use 'localaddr=addr' to specify the host address to send packets from\n"
6a8b4a5b
TH
2194 "-netdev socket,id=str[,fd=h][,udp=host:port][,localaddr=host:port]\n"
2195 " configure a network backend to connect to another network\n"
2196 " using an UDP tunnel\n"
5824d651 2197#ifdef CONFIG_VDE
6a8b4a5b
TH
2198 "-netdev vde,id=str[,sock=socketpath][,port=n][,group=groupname][,mode=octalmode]\n"
2199 " configure a network backend to connect to port 'n' of a vde switch\n"
2200 " running on host and listening for incoming connections on 'socketpath'.\n"
5824d651
BS
2201 " Use group 'groupname' and mode 'octalmode' to change default\n"
2202 " ownership and permissions for communication port.\n"
58952137
VM
2203#endif
2204#ifdef CONFIG_NETMAP
6a8b4a5b 2205 "-netdev netmap,id=str,ifname=name[,devname=nmname]\n"
58952137
VM
2206 " attach to the existing netmap-enabled network interface 'name', or to a\n"
2207 " VALE port (created on the fly) called 'name' ('nmname' is name of the \n"
2208 " netmap device, defaults to '/dev/netmap')\n"
5824d651 2209#endif
253dc14c 2210#ifdef CONFIG_POSIX
6a8b4a5b
TH
2211 "-netdev vhost-user,id=str,chardev=dev[,vhostforce=on|off]\n"
2212 " configure a vhost-user network, backed by a chardev 'dev'\n"
253dc14c 2213#endif
18d65d22 2214 "-netdev hubport,id=str,hubid=n[,netdev=nd]\n"
af1a5c3e 2215 " configure a hub port on the hub with ID 'n'\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
78cd6f7b 2216DEF("nic", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_nic,
dfaa7d50 2217 "-nic [tap|bridge|"
78cd6f7b
TH
2218#ifdef CONFIG_SLIRP
2219 "user|"
2220#endif
2221#ifdef __linux__
2222 "l2tpv3|"
2223#endif
2224#ifdef CONFIG_VDE
2225 "vde|"
2226#endif
2227#ifdef CONFIG_NETMAP
2228 "netmap|"
2229#endif
2230#ifdef CONFIG_POSIX
2231 "vhost-user|"
2232#endif
2233 "socket][,option][,...][mac=macaddr]\n"
2234 " initialize an on-board / default host NIC (using MAC address\n"
2235 " macaddr) and connect it to the given host network backend\n"
dfaa7d50 2236 "-nic none use it alone to have zero network devices (the default is to\n"
78cd6f7b
TH
2237 " provided a 'user' network connection)\n",
2238 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
6a8b4a5b 2239DEF("net", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_net,
af1a5c3e 2240 "-net nic[,macaddr=mac][,model=type][,name=str][,addr=str][,vectors=v]\n"
0e60a82d 2241 " configure or create an on-board (or machine default) NIC and\n"
af1a5c3e 2242 " connect it to hub 0 (please use -nic unless you need a hub)\n"
6a8b4a5b 2243 "-net ["
a1ea458f
MM
2244#ifdef CONFIG_SLIRP
2245 "user|"
2246#endif
2247 "tap|"
a7c36ee4 2248 "bridge|"
a1ea458f
MM
2249#ifdef CONFIG_VDE
2250 "vde|"
58952137
VM
2251#endif
2252#ifdef CONFIG_NETMAP
2253 "netmap|"
a1ea458f 2254#endif
af1a5c3e 2255 "socket][,option][,option][,...]\n"
6a8b4a5b
TH
2256 " old way to initialize a host network interface\n"
2257 " (use the -netdev option if possible instead)\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 2258STEXI
abbbb035
TH
2259@item -nic [tap|bridge|user|l2tpv3|vde|netmap|vhost-user|socket][,...][,mac=macaddr][,model=mn]
2260@findex -nic
2261This option is a shortcut for configuring both the on-board (default) guest
2262NIC hardware and the host network backend in one go. The host backend options
2263are the same as with the corresponding @option{-netdev} options below.
2264The guest NIC model can be set with @option{model=@var{modelname}}.
2265Use @option{model=help} to list the available device types.
2266The hardware MAC address can be set with @option{mac=@var{macaddr}}.
2267
2268The following two example do exactly the same, to show how @option{-nic} can
2269be used to shorten the command line length (note that the e1000 is the default
2270on i386, so the @option{model=e1000} parameter could even be omitted here, too):
2271@example
2272qemu-system-i386 -netdev user,id=n1,ipv6=off -device e1000,netdev=n1,mac=52:54:98:76:54:32
2273qemu-system-i386 -nic user,ipv6=off,model=e1000,mac=52:54:98:76:54:32
2274@end example
2275
2276@item -nic none
2277Indicate that no network devices should be configured. It is used to override
2278the default configuration (default NIC with ``user'' host network backend)
2279which is activated if no other networking options are provided.
5824d651 2280
08d12022 2281@item -netdev user,id=@var{id}[,@var{option}][,@var{option}][,...]
b8f490eb 2282@findex -netdev
abbbb035 2283Configure user mode host network backend which requires no administrator
ad196a9d
JK
2284privilege to run. Valid options are:
2285
b3f046c2 2286@table @option
08d12022 2287@item id=@var{id}
ad196a9d
JK
2288Assign symbolic name for use in monitor commands.
2289
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2290@item ipv4=on|off and ipv6=on|off
2291Specify that either IPv4 or IPv6 must be enabled. If neither is specified
2292both protocols are enabled.
0b11c036 2293
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2294@item net=@var{addr}[/@var{mask}]
2295Set IP network address the guest will see. Optionally specify the netmask,
2296either in the form a.b.c.d or as number of valid top-most bits. Default is
b0b36e5d 229710.0.2.0/24.
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JK
2298
2299@item host=@var{addr}
2300Specify the guest-visible address of the host. Default is the 2nd IP in the
2301guest network, i.e. x.x.x.2.
ad196a9d 2302
d8eb3864
ST
2303@item ipv6-net=@var{addr}[/@var{int}]
2304Set IPv6 network address the guest will see (default is fec0::/64). The
2305network prefix is given in the usual hexadecimal IPv6 address
2306notation. The prefix size is optional, and is given as the number of
2307valid top-most bits (default is 64).
7aac531e 2308
d8eb3864 2309@item ipv6-host=@var{addr}
7aac531e
YB
2310Specify the guest-visible IPv6 address of the host. Default is the 2nd IPv6 in
2311the guest network, i.e. xxxx::2.
2312
c54ed5bc 2313@item restrict=on|off
caef55ed 2314If this option is enabled, the guest will be isolated, i.e. it will not be
ad196a9d 2315able to contact the host and no guest IP packets will be routed over the host
caef55ed 2316to the outside. This option does not affect any explicitly set forwarding rules.
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JK
2317
2318@item hostname=@var{name}
63d2960b 2319Specifies the client hostname reported by the built-in DHCP server.
ad196a9d 2320
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2321@item dhcpstart=@var{addr}
2322Specify the first of the 16 IPs the built-in DHCP server can assign. Default
b0b36e5d 2323is the 15th to 31st IP in the guest network, i.e. x.x.x.15 to x.x.x.31.
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2324
2325@item dns=@var{addr}
2326Specify the guest-visible address of the virtual nameserver. The address must
2327be different from the host address. Default is the 3rd IP in the guest network,
2328i.e. x.x.x.3.
7aac531e 2329
d8eb3864 2330@item ipv6-dns=@var{addr}
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YB
2331Specify the guest-visible address of the IPv6 virtual nameserver. The address
2332must be different from the host address. Default is the 3rd IP in the guest
2333network, i.e. xxxx::3.
c92ef6a2 2334
63d2960b
KS
2335@item dnssearch=@var{domain}
2336Provides an entry for the domain-search list sent by the built-in
2337DHCP server. More than one domain suffix can be transmitted by specifying
2338this option multiple times. If supported, this will cause the guest to
2339automatically try to append the given domain suffix(es) in case a domain name
2340can not be resolved.
2341
2342Example:
2343@example
abbbb035 2344qemu-system-i386 -nic user,dnssearch=mgmt.example.org,dnssearch=example.org
63d2960b
KS
2345@end example
2346
f18d1375
BD
2347@item domainname=@var{domain}
2348Specifies the client domain name reported by the built-in DHCP server.
2349
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JK
2350@item tftp=@var{dir}
2351When using the user mode network stack, activate a built-in TFTP
2352server. The files in @var{dir} will be exposed as the root of a TFTP server.
2353The TFTP client on the guest must be configured in binary mode (use the command
c92ef6a2 2354@code{bin} of the Unix TFTP client).
ad196a9d 2355
0fca92b9
FZ
2356@item tftp-server-name=@var{name}
2357In BOOTP reply, broadcast @var{name} as the "TFTP server name" (RFC2132 option
235866). This can be used to advise the guest to load boot files or configurations
2359from a different server than the host address.
2360
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JK
2361@item bootfile=@var{file}
2362When using the user mode network stack, broadcast @var{file} as the BOOTP
2363filename. In conjunction with @option{tftp}, this can be used to network boot
2364a guest from a local directory.
2365
2366Example (using pxelinux):
2367@example
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TH
2368qemu-system-i386 -hda linux.img -boot n -device e1000,netdev=n1 \
2369 -netdev user,id=n1,tftp=/path/to/tftp/files,bootfile=/pxelinux.0
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2370@end example
2371
c92ef6a2 2372@item smb=@var{dir}[,smbserver=@var{addr}]
ad196a9d
JK
2373When using the user mode network stack, activate a built-in SMB
2374server so that Windows OSes can access to the host files in @file{@var{dir}}
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2375transparently. The IP address of the SMB server can be set to @var{addr}. By
2376default the 4th IP in the guest network is used, i.e. x.x.x.4.
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2377
2378In the guest Windows OS, the line:
2379@example
238010.0.2.4 smbserver
2381@end example
2382must be added in the file @file{C:\WINDOWS\LMHOSTS} (for windows 9x/Me)
2383or @file{C:\WINNT\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS\ETC\LMHOSTS} (Windows NT/2000).
2384
2385Then @file{@var{dir}} can be accessed in @file{\\smbserver\qemu}.
2386
e2d8830e 2387Note that a SAMBA server must be installed on the host OS.
ad196a9d 2388
3c6a0580 2389@item hostfwd=[tcp|udp]:[@var{hostaddr}]:@var{hostport}-[@var{guestaddr}]:@var{guestport}
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2390Redirect incoming TCP or UDP connections to the host port @var{hostport} to
2391the guest IP address @var{guestaddr} on guest port @var{guestport}. If
2392@var{guestaddr} is not specified, its value is x.x.x.15 (default first address
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JK
2393given by the built-in DHCP server). By specifying @var{hostaddr}, the rule can
2394be bound to a specific host interface. If no connection type is set, TCP is
c92ef6a2 2395used. This option can be given multiple times.
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JK
2396
2397For example, to redirect host X11 connection from screen 1 to guest
2398screen 0, use the following:
2399
2400@example
2401# on the host
abbbb035 2402qemu-system-i386 -nic user,hostfwd=tcp:127.0.0.1:6001-:6000
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JK
2403# this host xterm should open in the guest X11 server
2404xterm -display :1
2405@end example
2406
2407To redirect telnet connections from host port 5555 to telnet port on
2408the guest, use the following:
2409
2410@example
2411# on the host
abbbb035 2412qemu-system-i386 -nic user,hostfwd=tcp::5555-:23
ad196a9d
JK
2413telnet localhost 5555
2414@end example
2415
2416Then when you use on the host @code{telnet localhost 5555}, you
2417connect to the guest telnet server.
5824d651 2418
c92ef6a2 2419@item guestfwd=[tcp]:@var{server}:@var{port}-@var{dev}
f9cfd655 2420@itemx guestfwd=[tcp]:@var{server}:@var{port}-@var{cmd:command}
3c6a0580 2421Forward guest TCP connections to the IP address @var{server} on port @var{port}
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AG
2422to the character device @var{dev} or to a program executed by @var{cmd:command}
2423which gets spawned for each connection. This option can be given multiple times.
2424
43ffe61f 2425You can either use a chardev directly and have that one used throughout QEMU's
b412eb61
AG
2426lifetime, like in the following example:
2427
2428@example
2429# open 10.10.1.1:4321 on bootup, connect 10.0.2.100:1234 to it whenever
2430# the guest accesses it
abbbb035 2431qemu-system-i386 -nic user,guestfwd=tcp:10.0.2.100:1234-tcp:10.10.1.1:4321
b412eb61
AG
2432@end example
2433
2434Or you can execute a command on every TCP connection established by the guest,
43ffe61f 2435so that QEMU behaves similar to an inetd process for that virtual server:
b412eb61
AG
2436
2437@example
2438# call "netcat 10.10.1.1 4321" on every TCP connection to 10.0.2.100:1234
2439# and connect the TCP stream to its stdin/stdout
abbbb035 2440qemu-system-i386 -nic 'user,id=n1,guestfwd=tcp:10.0.2.100:1234-cmd:netcat 10.10.1.1 4321'
b412eb61 2441@end example
ad196a9d
JK
2442
2443@end table
2444
584613ea 2445@item -netdev tap,id=@var{id}[,fd=@var{h}][,ifname=@var{name}][,script=@var{file}][,downscript=@var{dfile}][,br=@var{bridge}][,helper=@var{helper}]
abbbb035 2446Configure a host TAP network backend with ID @var{id}.
a7c36ee4
CB
2447
2448Use the network script @var{file} to configure it and the network script
5824d651 2449@var{dfile} to deconfigure it. If @var{name} is not provided, the OS
a7c36ee4
CB
2450automatically provides one. The default network configure script is
2451@file{/etc/qemu-ifup} and the default network deconfigure script is
2452@file{/etc/qemu-ifdown}. Use @option{script=no} or @option{downscript=no}
2453to disable script execution.
2454
2455If running QEMU as an unprivileged user, use the network helper
584613ea
AK
2456@var{helper} to configure the TAP interface and attach it to the bridge.
2457The default network helper executable is @file{/path/to/qemu-bridge-helper}
2458and the default bridge device is @file{br0}.
a7c36ee4
CB
2459
2460@option{fd}=@var{h} can be used to specify the handle of an already
2461opened host TAP interface.
2462
2463Examples:
5824d651
BS
2464
2465@example
a7c36ee4 2466#launch a QEMU instance with the default network script
abbbb035 2467qemu-system-i386 linux.img -nic tap
5824d651
BS
2468@end example
2469
5824d651 2470@example
a7c36ee4
CB
2471#launch a QEMU instance with two NICs, each one connected
2472#to a TAP device
3804da9d 2473qemu-system-i386 linux.img \
74f78b99
TH
2474 -netdev tap,id=nd0,ifname=tap0 -device e1000,netdev=nd0 \
2475 -netdev tap,id=nd1,ifname=tap1 -device rtl8139,netdev=nd1
5824d651
BS
2476@end example
2477
a7c36ee4
CB
2478@example
2479#launch a QEMU instance with the default network helper to
2480#connect a TAP device to bridge br0
abbbb035
TH
2481qemu-system-i386 linux.img -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=n1 \
2482 -netdev tap,id=n1,"helper=/path/to/qemu-bridge-helper"
a7c36ee4
CB
2483@end example
2484
08d12022 2485@item -netdev bridge,id=@var{id}[,br=@var{bridge}][,helper=@var{helper}]
a7c36ee4
CB
2486Connect a host TAP network interface to a host bridge device.
2487
2488Use the network helper @var{helper} to configure the TAP interface and
2489attach it to the bridge. The default network helper executable is
420508fb 2490@file{/path/to/qemu-bridge-helper} and the default bridge
a7c36ee4
CB
2491device is @file{br0}.
2492
2493Examples:
2494
2495@example
2496#launch a QEMU instance with the default network helper to
2497#connect a TAP device to bridge br0
abbbb035 2498qemu-system-i386 linux.img -netdev bridge,id=n1 -device virtio-net,netdev=n1
a7c36ee4
CB
2499@end example
2500
2501@example
2502#launch a QEMU instance with the default network helper to
2503#connect a TAP device to bridge qemubr0
abbbb035 2504qemu-system-i386 linux.img -netdev bridge,br=qemubr0,id=n1 -device virtio-net,netdev=n1
a7c36ee4
CB
2505@end example
2506
08d12022 2507@item -netdev socket,id=@var{id}[,fd=@var{h}][,listen=[@var{host}]:@var{port}][,connect=@var{host}:@var{port}]
5824d651 2508
abbbb035
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2509This host network backend can be used to connect the guest's network to
2510another QEMU virtual machine using a TCP socket connection. If @option{listen}
2511is specified, QEMU waits for incoming connections on @var{port}
5824d651
BS
2512(@var{host} is optional). @option{connect} is used to connect to
2513another QEMU instance using the @option{listen} option. @option{fd}=@var{h}
2514specifies an already opened TCP socket.
2515
2516Example:
2517@example
2518# launch a first QEMU instance
3804da9d 2519qemu-system-i386 linux.img \
abbbb035
TH
2520 -device e1000,netdev=n1,mac=52:54:00:12:34:56 \
2521 -netdev socket,id=n1,listen=:1234
2522# connect the network of this instance to the network of the first instance
3804da9d 2523qemu-system-i386 linux.img \
abbbb035
TH
2524 -device e1000,netdev=n2,mac=52:54:00:12:34:57 \
2525 -netdev socket,id=n2,connect=127.0.0.1:1234
5824d651
BS
2526@end example
2527
08d12022 2528@item -netdev socket,id=@var{id}[,fd=@var{h}][,mcast=@var{maddr}:@var{port}[,localaddr=@var{addr}]]
5824d651 2529
abbbb035
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2530Configure a socket host network backend to share the guest's network traffic
2531with another QEMU virtual machines using a UDP multicast socket, effectively
2532making a bus for every QEMU with same multicast address @var{maddr} and @var{port}.
5824d651
BS
2533NOTES:
2534@enumerate
2535@item
2536Several QEMU can be running on different hosts and share same bus (assuming
2537correct multicast setup for these hosts).
2538@item
2539mcast support is compatible with User Mode Linux (argument @option{eth@var{N}=mcast}), see
2540@url{http://user-mode-linux.sf.net}.
2541@item
2542Use @option{fd=h} to specify an already opened UDP multicast socket.
2543@end enumerate
2544
2545Example:
2546@example
2547# launch one QEMU instance
3804da9d 2548qemu-system-i386 linux.img \
abbbb035
TH
2549 -device e1000,netdev=n1,mac=52:54:00:12:34:56 \
2550 -netdev socket,id=n1,mcast=230.0.0.1:1234
5824d651 2551# launch another QEMU instance on same "bus"
3804da9d 2552qemu-system-i386 linux.img \
abbbb035
TH
2553 -device e1000,netdev=n2,mac=52:54:00:12:34:57 \
2554 -netdev socket,id=n2,mcast=230.0.0.1:1234
5824d651 2555# launch yet another QEMU instance on same "bus"
3804da9d 2556qemu-system-i386 linux.img \
37a4442a 2557 -device e1000,netdev=n3,mac=52:54:00:12:34:58 \
abbbb035 2558 -netdev socket,id=n3,mcast=230.0.0.1:1234
5824d651
BS
2559@end example
2560
2561Example (User Mode Linux compat.):
2562@example
abbbb035 2563# launch QEMU instance (note mcast address selected is UML's default)
3804da9d 2564qemu-system-i386 linux.img \
abbbb035
TH
2565 -device e1000,netdev=n1,mac=52:54:00:12:34:56 \
2566 -netdev socket,id=n1,mcast=239.192.168.1:1102
5824d651
BS
2567# launch UML
2568/path/to/linux ubd0=/path/to/root_fs eth0=mcast
2569@end example
2570
3a75e74c
MR
2571Example (send packets from host's 1.2.3.4):
2572@example
3804da9d 2573qemu-system-i386 linux.img \
abbbb035
TH
2574 -device e1000,netdev=n1,mac=52:54:00:12:34:56 \
2575 -netdev socket,id=n1,mcast=239.192.168.1:1102,localaddr=1.2.3.4
3a75e74c
MR
2576@end example
2577
3fb69aa1 2578@item -netdev l2tpv3,id=@var{id},src=@var{srcaddr},dst=@var{dstaddr}[,srcport=@var{srcport}][,dstport=@var{dstport}],txsession=@var{txsession}[,rxsession=@var{rxsession}][,ipv6][,udp][,cookie64][,counter][,pincounter][,txcookie=@var{txcookie}][,rxcookie=@var{rxcookie}][,offset=@var{offset}]
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2579Configure a L2TPv3 pseudowire host network backend. L2TPv3 (RFC3391) is a
2580popular protocol to transport Ethernet (and other Layer 2) data frames between
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AI
2581two systems. It is present in routers, firewalls and the Linux kernel
2582(from version 3.3 onwards).
2583
2584This transport allows a VM to communicate to another VM, router or firewall directly.
2585
1e9a7379 2586@table @option
3fb69aa1
AI
2587@item src=@var{srcaddr}
2588 source address (mandatory)
2589@item dst=@var{dstaddr}
2590 destination address (mandatory)
2591@item udp
2592 select udp encapsulation (default is ip).
2593@item srcport=@var{srcport}
2594 source udp port.
2595@item dstport=@var{dstport}
2596 destination udp port.
2597@item ipv6
2598 force v6, otherwise defaults to v4.
2599@item rxcookie=@var{rxcookie}
f9cfd655 2600@itemx txcookie=@var{txcookie}
3fb69aa1
AI
2601 Cookies are a weak form of security in the l2tpv3 specification.
2602Their function is mostly to prevent misconfiguration. By default they are 32
2603bit.
2604@item cookie64
2605 Set cookie size to 64 bit instead of the default 32
2606@item counter=off
2607 Force a 'cut-down' L2TPv3 with no counter as in
2608draft-mkonstan-l2tpext-keyed-ipv6-tunnel-00
2609@item pincounter=on
2610 Work around broken counter handling in peer. This may also help on
2611networks which have packet reorder.
2612@item offset=@var{offset}
2613 Add an extra offset between header and data
1e9a7379 2614@end table
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2615
2616For example, to attach a VM running on host 4.3.2.1 via L2TPv3 to the bridge br-lan
2617on the remote Linux host 1.2.3.4:
2618@example
2619# Setup tunnel on linux host using raw ip as encapsulation
2620# on 1.2.3.4
2621ip l2tp add tunnel remote 4.3.2.1 local 1.2.3.4 tunnel_id 1 peer_tunnel_id 1 \
2622 encap udp udp_sport 16384 udp_dport 16384
2623ip l2tp add session tunnel_id 1 name vmtunnel0 session_id \
2624 0xFFFFFFFF peer_session_id 0xFFFFFFFF
2625ifconfig vmtunnel0 mtu 1500
2626ifconfig vmtunnel0 up
2627brctl addif br-lan vmtunnel0
2628
2629
2630# on 4.3.2.1
2631# launch QEMU instance - if your network has reorder or is very lossy add ,pincounter
2632
abbbb035
TH
2633qemu-system-i386 linux.img -device e1000,netdev=n1 \
2634 -netdev l2tpv3,id=n1,src=4.2.3.1,dst=1.2.3.4,udp,srcport=16384,dstport=16384,rxsession=0xffffffff,txsession=0xffffffff,counter
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2635
2636@end example
2637
08d12022 2638@item -netdev vde,id=@var{id}[,sock=@var{socketpath}][,port=@var{n}][,group=@var{groupname}][,mode=@var{octalmode}]
abbbb035 2639Configure VDE backend to connect to PORT @var{n} of a vde switch running on host and
5824d651
BS
2640listening for incoming connections on @var{socketpath}. Use GROUP @var{groupname}
2641and MODE @var{octalmode} to change default ownership and permissions for
c1ba4e0b 2642communication port. This option is only available if QEMU has been compiled
5824d651
BS
2643with vde support enabled.
2644
2645Example:
2646@example
2647# launch vde switch
2648vde_switch -F -sock /tmp/myswitch
2649# launch QEMU instance
abbbb035 2650qemu-system-i386 linux.img -nic vde,sock=/tmp/myswitch
5824d651
BS
2651@end example
2652
b931bfbf 2653@item -netdev vhost-user,chardev=@var{id}[,vhostforce=on|off][,queues=n]
03ce5744
NN
2654
2655Establish a vhost-user netdev, backed by a chardev @var{id}. The chardev should
2656be a unix domain socket backed one. The vhost-user uses a specifically defined
2657protocol to pass vhost ioctl replacement messages to an application on the other
2658end of the socket. On non-MSIX guests, the feature can be forced with
b931bfbf
CO
2659@var{vhostforce}. Use 'queues=@var{n}' to specify the number of queues to
2660be created for multiqueue vhost-user.
03ce5744
NN
2661
2662Example:
2663@example
2664qemu -m 512 -object memory-backend-file,id=mem,size=512M,mem-path=/hugetlbfs,share=on \
2665 -numa node,memdev=mem \
79cad2fa 2666 -chardev socket,id=chr0,path=/path/to/socket \
03ce5744
NN
2667 -netdev type=vhost-user,id=net0,chardev=chr0 \
2668 -device virtio-net-pci,netdev=net0
2669@end example
2670
abbbb035 2671@item -netdev hubport,id=@var{id},hubid=@var{hubid}[,netdev=@var{nd}]
78cd6f7b 2672
abbbb035 2673Create a hub port on the emulated hub with ID @var{hubid}.
78cd6f7b 2674
abbbb035 2675The hubport netdev lets you connect a NIC to a QEMU emulated hub instead of a
af1a5c3e
TH
2676single netdev. Alternatively, you can also connect the hubport to another
2677netdev with ID @var{nd} by using the @option{netdev=@var{nd}} option.
abbbb035 2678
af1a5c3e 2679@item -net nic[,netdev=@var{nd}][,macaddr=@var{mac}][,model=@var{type}] [,name=@var{name}][,addr=@var{addr}][,vectors=@var{v}]
abbbb035
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2680@findex -net
2681Legacy option to configure or create an on-board (or machine default) Network
af1a5c3e
TH
2682Interface Card(NIC) and connect it either to the emulated hub with ID 0 (i.e.
2683the default hub), or to the netdev @var{nd}.
abbbb035
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2684The NIC is an e1000 by default on the PC target. Optionally, the MAC address
2685can be changed to @var{mac}, the device address set to @var{addr} (PCI cards
2686only), and a @var{name} can be assigned for use in monitor commands.
2687Optionally, for PCI cards, you can specify the number @var{v} of MSI-X vectors
2688that the card should have; this option currently only affects virtio cards; set
2689@var{v} = 0 to disable MSI-X. If no @option{-net} option is specified, a single
2690NIC is created. QEMU can emulate several different models of network card.
2691Use @code{-net nic,model=help} for a list of available devices for your target.
2692
af1a5c3e 2693@item -net user|tap|bridge|socket|l2tpv3|vde[,...][,name=@var{name}]
abbbb035 2694Configure a host network backend (with the options corresponding to the same
af1a5c3e
TH
2695@option{-netdev} option) and connect it to the emulated hub 0 (the default
2696hub). Use @var{name} to specify the name of the hub port.
c70a01e4 2697ETEXI
5824d651 2698
c70a01e4 2699STEXI
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2700@end table
2701ETEXI
7273a2db
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2702DEFHEADING()
2703
de6b4f90 2704DEFHEADING(Character device options:)
7273a2db
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2705
2706DEF("chardev", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_chardev,
517b3d40 2707 "-chardev help\n"
d0d7708b 2708 "-chardev null,id=id[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
5dd1f02b 2709 "-chardev socket,id=id[,host=host],port=port[,to=to][,ipv4][,ipv6][,nodelay][,reconnect=seconds]\n"
981b06e7 2710 " [,server][,nowait][,telnet][,websocket][,reconnect=seconds][,mux=on|off]\n"
fd4a5fd4 2711 " [,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off][,tls-creds=ID][,tls-authz=ID] (tcp)\n"
981b06e7 2712 "-chardev socket,id=id,path=path[,server][,nowait][,telnet][,websocket][,reconnect=seconds]\n"
d0d7708b 2713 " [,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off] (unix)\n"
7273a2db 2714 "-chardev udp,id=id[,host=host],port=port[,localaddr=localaddr]\n"
97331287 2715 " [,localport=localport][,ipv4][,ipv6][,mux=on|off]\n"
d0d7708b
DB
2716 " [,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2717 "-chardev msmouse,id=id[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
7273a2db 2718 "-chardev vc,id=id[[,width=width][,height=height]][[,cols=cols][,rows=rows]]\n"
d0d7708b
DB
2719 " [,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2720 "-chardev ringbuf,id=id[,size=size][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2721 "-chardev file,id=id,path=path[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2722 "-chardev pipe,id=id,path=path[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
7273a2db 2723#ifdef _WIN32
d0d7708b
DB
2724 "-chardev console,id=id[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2725 "-chardev serial,id=id,path=path[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
7273a2db 2726#else
d0d7708b
DB
2727 "-chardev pty,id=id[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2728 "-chardev stdio,id=id[,mux=on|off][,signal=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
7273a2db
MB
2729#endif
2730#ifdef CONFIG_BRLAPI
d0d7708b 2731 "-chardev braille,id=id[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
7273a2db
MB
2732#endif
2733#if defined(__linux__) || defined(__sun__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) \
2734 || defined(__NetBSD__) || defined(__OpenBSD__) || defined(__DragonFly__)
d0d7708b
DB
2735 "-chardev serial,id=id,path=path[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2736 "-chardev tty,id=id,path=path[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
7273a2db
MB
2737#endif
2738#if defined(__linux__) || defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__DragonFly__)
d0d7708b
DB
2739 "-chardev parallel,id=id,path=path[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2740 "-chardev parport,id=id,path=path[,mux=on|off][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
cbcc6336
AL
2741#endif
2742#if defined(CONFIG_SPICE)
d0d7708b
DB
2743 "-chardev spicevmc,id=id,name=name[,debug=debug][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
2744 "-chardev spiceport,id=id,name=name[,debug=debug][,logfile=PATH][,logappend=on|off]\n"
7273a2db 2745#endif
ad96090a 2746 , QEMU_ARCH_ALL
7273a2db
MB
2747)
2748
2749STEXI
dddba068
MA
2750
2751The general form of a character device option is:
2752@table @option
16fdc56a 2753@item -chardev @var{backend},id=@var{id}[,mux=on|off][,@var{options}]
6616b2ad 2754@findex -chardev
7273a2db
MB
2755Backend is one of:
2756@option{null},
2757@option{socket},
2758@option{udp},
2759@option{msmouse},
2760@option{vc},
4f57378f 2761@option{ringbuf},
7273a2db
MB
2762@option{file},
2763@option{pipe},
2764@option{console},
2765@option{serial},
2766@option{pty},
2767@option{stdio},
2768@option{braille},
2769@option{tty},
88a946d3 2770@option{parallel},
cbcc6336 2771@option{parport},
16fdc56a 2772@option{spicevmc},
5a49d3e9 2773@option{spiceport}.
7273a2db
MB
2774The specific backend will determine the applicable options.
2775
dddba068 2776Use @code{-chardev help} to print all available chardev backend types.
517b3d40 2777
7273a2db
MB
2778All devices must have an id, which can be any string up to 127 characters long.
2779It is used to uniquely identify this device in other command line directives.
2780
97331287 2781A character device may be used in multiplexing mode by multiple front-ends.
a40db1b3
PM
2782Specify @option{mux=on} to enable this mode.
2783A multiplexer is a "1:N" device, and here the "1" end is your specified chardev
2784backend, and the "N" end is the various parts of QEMU that can talk to a chardev.
2785If you create a chardev with @option{id=myid} and @option{mux=on}, QEMU will
2786create a multiplexer with your specified ID, and you can then configure multiple
2787front ends to use that chardev ID for their input/output. Up to four different
2788front ends can be connected to a single multiplexed chardev. (Without
2789multiplexing enabled, a chardev can only be used by a single front end.)
2790For instance you could use this to allow a single stdio chardev to be used by
2791two serial ports and the QEMU monitor:
2792
2793@example
2794-chardev stdio,mux=on,id=char0 \
bdbcb547 2795-mon chardev=char0,mode=readline \
a40db1b3
PM
2796-serial chardev:char0 \
2797-serial chardev:char0
2798@end example
2799
2800You can have more than one multiplexer in a system configuration; for instance
2801you could have a TCP port multiplexed between UART 0 and UART 1, and stdio
2802multiplexed between the QEMU monitor and a parallel port:
2803
2804@example
2805-chardev stdio,mux=on,id=char0 \
bdbcb547 2806-mon chardev=char0,mode=readline \
a40db1b3
PM
2807-parallel chardev:char0 \
2808-chardev tcp,...,mux=on,id=char1 \
2809-serial chardev:char1 \
2810-serial chardev:char1
2811@end example
2812
2813When you're using a multiplexed character device, some escape sequences are
2814interpreted in the input. @xref{mux_keys, Keys in the character backend
2815multiplexer}.
2816
2817Note that some other command line options may implicitly create multiplexed
2818character backends; for instance @option{-serial mon:stdio} creates a
2819multiplexed stdio backend connected to the serial port and the QEMU monitor,
2820and @option{-nographic} also multiplexes the console and the monitor to
2821stdio.
2822
2823There is currently no support for multiplexing in the other direction
2824(where a single QEMU front end takes input and output from multiple chardevs).
97331287 2825
d0d7708b
DB
2826Every backend supports the @option{logfile} option, which supplies the path
2827to a file to record all data transmitted via the backend. The @option{logappend}
2828option controls whether the log file will be truncated or appended to when
2829opened.
2830
dddba068 2831@end table
7273a2db 2832
dddba068
MA
2833The available backends are:
2834
2835@table @option
16fdc56a 2836@item -chardev null,id=@var{id}
7273a2db
MB
2837A void device. This device will not emit any data, and will drop any data it
2838receives. The null backend does not take any options.
2839
fd4a5fd4 2840@item -chardev socket,id=@var{id}[,@var{TCP options} or @var{unix options}][,server][,nowait][,telnet][,websocket][,reconnect=@var{seconds}][,tls-creds=@var{id}][,tls-authz=@var{id}]
7273a2db
MB
2841
2842Create a two-way stream socket, which can be either a TCP or a unix socket. A
2843unix socket will be created if @option{path} is specified. Behaviour is
2844undefined if TCP options are specified for a unix socket.
2845
2846@option{server} specifies that the socket shall be a listening socket.
2847
2848@option{nowait} specifies that QEMU should not block waiting for a client to
2849connect to a listening socket.
2850
2851@option{telnet} specifies that traffic on the socket should interpret telnet
2852escape sequences.
2853
981b06e7
JS
2854@option{websocket} specifies that the socket uses WebSocket protocol for
2855communication.
2856
5dd1f02b
CM
2857@option{reconnect} sets the timeout for reconnecting on non-server sockets when
2858the remote end goes away. qemu will delay this many seconds and then attempt
2859to reconnect. Zero disables reconnecting, and is the default.
2860
a8fb5427
DB
2861@option{tls-creds} requests enablement of the TLS protocol for encryption,
2862and specifies the id of the TLS credentials to use for the handshake. The
2863credentials must be previously created with the @option{-object tls-creds}
2864argument.
2865
fd4a5fd4
DB
2866@option{tls-auth} provides the ID of the QAuthZ authorization object against
2867which the client's x509 distinguished name will be validated. This object is
2868only resolved at time of use, so can be deleted and recreated on the fly
2869while the chardev server is active. If missing, it will default to denying
2870access.
2871
7273a2db
MB
2872TCP and unix socket options are given below:
2873
2874@table @option
2875
16fdc56a 2876@item TCP options: port=@var{port}[,host=@var{host}][,to=@var{to}][,ipv4][,ipv6][,nodelay]
7273a2db
MB
2877
2878@option{host} for a listening socket specifies the local address to be bound.
2879For a connecting socket species the remote host to connect to. @option{host} is
2880optional for listening sockets. If not specified it defaults to @code{0.0.0.0}.
2881
2882@option{port} for a listening socket specifies the local port to be bound. For a
2883connecting socket specifies the port on the remote host to connect to.
2884@option{port} can be given as either a port number or a service name.
2885@option{port} is required.
2886
2887@option{to} is only relevant to listening sockets. If it is specified, and
2888@option{port} cannot be bound, QEMU will attempt to bind to subsequent ports up
2889to and including @option{to} until it succeeds. @option{to} must be specified
2890as a port number.
2891
2892@option{ipv4} and @option{ipv6} specify that either IPv4 or IPv6 must be used.
2893If neither is specified the socket may use either protocol.
2894
2895@option{nodelay} disables the Nagle algorithm.
2896
2897@item unix options: path=@var{path}
2898
2899@option{path} specifies the local path of the unix socket. @option{path} is
2900required.
2901
2902@end table
2903
16fdc56a 2904@item -chardev udp,id=@var{id}[,host=@var{host}],port=@var{port}[,localaddr=@var{localaddr}][,localport=@var{localport}][,ipv4][,ipv6]
7273a2db
MB
2905
2906Sends all traffic from the guest to a remote host over UDP.
2907
2908@option{host} specifies the remote host to connect to. If not specified it
2909defaults to @code{localhost}.
2910
2911@option{port} specifies the port on the remote host to connect to. @option{port}
2912is required.
2913
2914@option{localaddr} specifies the local address to bind to. If not specified it
2915defaults to @code{0.0.0.0}.
2916
2917@option{localport} specifies the local port to bind to. If not specified any
2918available local port will be used.
2919
2920@option{ipv4} and @option{ipv6} specify that either IPv4 or IPv6 must be used.
2921If neither is specified the device may use either protocol.
2922
16fdc56a 2923@item -chardev msmouse,id=@var{id}
7273a2db
MB
2924
2925Forward QEMU's emulated msmouse events to the guest. @option{msmouse} does not
2926take any options.
2927
16fdc56a 2928@item -chardev vc,id=@var{id}[[,width=@var{width}][,height=@var{height}]][[,cols=@var{cols}][,rows=@var{rows}]]
7273a2db
MB
2929
2930Connect to a QEMU text console. @option{vc} may optionally be given a specific
2931size.
2932
2933@option{width} and @option{height} specify the width and height respectively of
2934the console, in pixels.
2935
2936@option{cols} and @option{rows} specify that the console be sized to fit a text
2937console with the given dimensions.
2938
16fdc56a 2939@item -chardev ringbuf,id=@var{id}[,size=@var{size}]
51767e7c 2940
3949e594 2941Create a ring buffer with fixed size @option{size}.
e69f7d25 2942@var{size} must be a power of two and defaults to @code{64K}.
51767e7c 2943
16fdc56a 2944@item -chardev file,id=@var{id},path=@var{path}
7273a2db
MB
2945
2946Log all traffic received from the guest to a file.
2947
2948@option{path} specifies the path of the file to be opened. This file will be
2949created if it does not already exist, and overwritten if it does. @option{path}
2950is required.
2951
16fdc56a 2952@item -chardev pipe,id=@var{id},path=@var{path}
7273a2db
MB
2953
2954Create a two-way connection to the guest. The behaviour differs slightly between
2955Windows hosts and other hosts:
2956
2957On Windows, a single duplex pipe will be created at
2958@file{\\.pipe\@option{path}}.
2959
2960On other hosts, 2 pipes will be created called @file{@option{path}.in} and
2961@file{@option{path}.out}. Data written to @file{@option{path}.in} will be
2962received by the guest. Data written by the guest can be read from
2963@file{@option{path}.out}. QEMU will not create these fifos, and requires them to
2964be present.
2965
2966@option{path} forms part of the pipe path as described above. @option{path} is
2967required.
2968
16fdc56a 2969@item -chardev console,id=@var{id}
7273a2db
MB
2970
2971Send traffic from the guest to QEMU's standard output. @option{console} does not
2972take any options.
2973
2974@option{console} is only available on Windows hosts.
2975
16fdc56a 2976@item -chardev serial,id=@var{id},path=@option{path}
7273a2db
MB
2977
2978Send traffic from the guest to a serial device on the host.
2979
d59044ef
GH
2980On Unix hosts serial will actually accept any tty device,
2981not only serial lines.
7273a2db
MB
2982
2983@option{path} specifies the name of the serial device to open.
2984
16fdc56a 2985@item -chardev pty,id=@var{id}
7273a2db
MB
2986
2987Create a new pseudo-terminal on the host and connect to it. @option{pty} does
2988not take any options.
2989
2990@option{pty} is not available on Windows hosts.
2991
16fdc56a 2992@item -chardev stdio,id=@var{id}[,signal=on|off]
b65ee4fa 2993Connect to standard input and standard output of the QEMU process.
b7fdb3ab
AJ
2994
2995@option{signal} controls if signals are enabled on the terminal, that includes
2996exiting QEMU with the key sequence @key{Control-c}. This option is enabled by
2997default, use @option{signal=off} to disable it.
2998
16fdc56a 2999@item -chardev braille,id=@var{id}
7273a2db
MB
3000
3001Connect to a local BrlAPI server. @option{braille} does not take any options.
3002
16fdc56a 3003@item -chardev tty,id=@var{id},path=@var{path}
7273a2db 3004
7273a2db 3005@option{tty} is only available on Linux, Sun, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD and
d037d6bb 3006DragonFlyBSD hosts. It is an alias for @option{serial}.
7273a2db
MB
3007
3008@option{path} specifies the path to the tty. @option{path} is required.
3009
16fdc56a
TH
3010@item -chardev parallel,id=@var{id},path=@var{path}
3011@itemx -chardev parport,id=@var{id},path=@var{path}
7273a2db 3012
88a946d3 3013@option{parallel} is only available on Linux, FreeBSD and DragonFlyBSD hosts.
7273a2db
MB
3014
3015Connect to a local parallel port.
3016
3017@option{path} specifies the path to the parallel port device. @option{path} is
3018required.
3019
16fdc56a 3020@item -chardev spicevmc,id=@var{id},debug=@var{debug},name=@var{name}
cbcc6336 3021
3a846906
SH
3022@option{spicevmc} is only available when spice support is built in.
3023
cbcc6336
AL
3024@option{debug} debug level for spicevmc
3025
3026@option{name} name of spice channel to connect to
3027
3028Connect to a spice virtual machine channel, such as vdiport.
cbcc6336 3029
16fdc56a 3030@item -chardev spiceport,id=@var{id},debug=@var{debug},name=@var{name}
5a49d3e9
MAL
3031
3032@option{spiceport} is only available when spice support is built in.
3033
3034@option{debug} debug level for spicevmc
3035
3036@option{name} name of spice port to connect to
3037
3038Connect to a spice port, allowing a Spice client to handle the traffic
3039identified by a name (preferably a fqdn).
c70a01e4 3040ETEXI
5a49d3e9 3041
c70a01e4 3042STEXI
7273a2db
MB
3043@end table
3044ETEXI
7273a2db
MB
3045DEFHEADING()
3046
de6b4f90 3047DEFHEADING(Bluetooth(R) options:)
c70a01e4
MA
3048STEXI
3049@table @option
3050ETEXI
7273a2db 3051
5824d651 3052DEF("bt", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_bt, \
5824d651
BS
3053 "-bt hci,null dumb bluetooth HCI - doesn't respond to commands\n" \
3054 "-bt hci,host[:id]\n" \
3055 " use host's HCI with the given name\n" \
3056 "-bt hci[,vlan=n]\n" \
3057 " emulate a standard HCI in virtual scatternet 'n'\n" \
3058 "-bt vhci[,vlan=n]\n" \
3059 " add host computer to virtual scatternet 'n' using VHCI\n" \
3060 "-bt device:dev[,vlan=n]\n" \
ad96090a
BS
3061 " emulate a bluetooth device 'dev' in scatternet 'n'\n",
3062 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3063STEXI
5824d651 3064@item -bt hci[...]
6616b2ad 3065@findex -bt
5824d651
BS
3066Defines the function of the corresponding Bluetooth HCI. -bt options
3067are matched with the HCIs present in the chosen machine type. For
3068example when emulating a machine with only one HCI built into it, only
3069the first @code{-bt hci[...]} option is valid and defines the HCI's
3070logic. The Transport Layer is decided by the machine type. Currently
3071the machines @code{n800} and @code{n810} have one HCI and all other
3072machines have none.
3073
c0188e69
TH
3074Note: This option and the whole bluetooth subsystem is considered as deprecated.
3075If you still use it, please send a mail to @email{qemu-devel@@nongnu.org} where
3076you describe your usecase.
3077
5824d651
BS
3078@anchor{bt-hcis}
3079The following three types are recognized:
3080
b3f046c2 3081@table @option
5824d651
BS
3082@item -bt hci,null
3083(default) The corresponding Bluetooth HCI assumes no internal logic
3084and will not respond to any HCI commands or emit events.
3085
3086@item -bt hci,host[:@var{id}]
3087(@code{bluez} only) The corresponding HCI passes commands / events
3088to / from the physical HCI identified by the name @var{id} (default:
3089@code{hci0}) on the computer running QEMU. Only available on @code{bluez}
3090capable systems like Linux.
3091
3092@item -bt hci[,vlan=@var{n}]
3093Add a virtual, standard HCI that will participate in the Bluetooth
3094scatternet @var{n} (default @code{0}). Similarly to @option{-net}
3095VLANs, devices inside a bluetooth network @var{n} can only communicate
3096with other devices in the same network (scatternet).
3097@end table
3098
3099@item -bt vhci[,vlan=@var{n}]
3100(Linux-host only) Create a HCI in scatternet @var{n} (default 0) attached
3101to the host bluetooth stack instead of to the emulated target. This
3102allows the host and target machines to participate in a common scatternet
3103and communicate. Requires the Linux @code{vhci} driver installed. Can
3104be used as following:
3105
3106@example
3804da9d 3107qemu-system-i386 [...OPTIONS...] -bt hci,vlan=5 -bt vhci,vlan=5
5824d651
BS
3108@end example
3109
3110@item -bt device:@var{dev}[,vlan=@var{n}]
3111Emulate a bluetooth device @var{dev} and place it in network @var{n}
3112(default @code{0}). QEMU can only emulate one type of bluetooth devices
3113currently:
3114
b3f046c2 3115@table @option
5824d651
BS
3116@item keyboard
3117Virtual wireless keyboard implementing the HIDP bluetooth profile.
3118@end table
5824d651
BS
3119ETEXI
3120
c70a01e4
MA
3121STEXI
3122@end table
3123ETEXI
5824d651
BS
3124DEFHEADING()
3125
d1a0cf73 3126#ifdef CONFIG_TPM
de6b4f90 3127DEFHEADING(TPM device options:)
d1a0cf73
SB
3128
3129DEF("tpmdev", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_tpmdev, \
92dcc234
SB
3130 "-tpmdev passthrough,id=id[,path=path][,cancel-path=path]\n"
3131 " use path to provide path to a character device; default is /dev/tpm0\n"
3132 " use cancel-path to provide path to TPM's cancel sysfs entry; if\n"
f4ede81e
AV
3133 " not provided it will be searched for in /sys/class/misc/tpm?/device\n"
3134 "-tpmdev emulator,id=id,chardev=dev\n"
3135 " configure the TPM device using chardev backend\n",
d1a0cf73
SB
3136 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3137STEXI
3138
3139The general form of a TPM device option is:
3140@table @option
3141
16fdc56a 3142@item -tpmdev @var{backend},id=@var{id}[,@var{options}]
d1a0cf73 3143@findex -tpmdev
d1a0cf73
SB
3144
3145The specific backend type will determine the applicable options.
28c4fa32
CB
3146The @code{-tpmdev} option creates the TPM backend and requires a
3147@code{-device} option that specifies the TPM frontend interface model.
d1a0cf73 3148
2252aaf0 3149Use @code{-tpmdev help} to print all available TPM backend types.
d1a0cf73 3150
2252aaf0
MA
3151@end table
3152
3153The available backends are:
3154
3155@table @option
d1a0cf73 3156
16fdc56a 3157@item -tpmdev passthrough,id=@var{id},path=@var{path},cancel-path=@var{cancel-path}
4549a8b7
SB
3158
3159(Linux-host only) Enable access to the host's TPM using the passthrough
3160driver.
3161
3162@option{path} specifies the path to the host's TPM device, i.e., on
3163a Linux host this would be @code{/dev/tpm0}.
3164@option{path} is optional and by default @code{/dev/tpm0} is used.
3165
92dcc234
SB
3166@option{cancel-path} specifies the path to the host TPM device's sysfs
3167entry allowing for cancellation of an ongoing TPM command.
3168@option{cancel-path} is optional and by default QEMU will search for the
3169sysfs entry to use.
3170
4549a8b7
SB
3171Some notes about using the host's TPM with the passthrough driver:
3172
3173The TPM device accessed by the passthrough driver must not be
3174used by any other application on the host.
3175
3176Since the host's firmware (BIOS/UEFI) has already initialized the TPM,
3177the VM's firmware (BIOS/UEFI) will not be able to initialize the
3178TPM again and may therefore not show a TPM-specific menu that would
3179otherwise allow the user to configure the TPM, e.g., allow the user to
3180enable/disable or activate/deactivate the TPM.
3181Further, if TPM ownership is released from within a VM then the host's TPM
3182will get disabled and deactivated. To enable and activate the
3183TPM again afterwards, the host has to be rebooted and the user is
3184required to enter the firmware's menu to enable and activate the TPM.
3185If the TPM is left disabled and/or deactivated most TPM commands will fail.
3186
3187To create a passthrough TPM use the following two options:
3188@example
3189-tpmdev passthrough,id=tpm0 -device tpm-tis,tpmdev=tpm0
3190@end example
3191Note that the @code{-tpmdev} id is @code{tpm0} and is referenced by
3192@code{tpmdev=tpm0} in the device option.
3193
16fdc56a 3194@item -tpmdev emulator,id=@var{id},chardev=@var{dev}
f4ede81e
AV
3195
3196(Linux-host only) Enable access to a TPM emulator using Unix domain socket based
3197chardev backend.
3198
3199@option{chardev} specifies the unique ID of a character device backend that provides connection to the software TPM server.
3200
3201To create a TPM emulator backend device with chardev socket backend:
3202@example
3203
3204-chardev socket,id=chrtpm,path=/tmp/swtpm-sock -tpmdev emulator,id=tpm0,chardev=chrtpm -device tpm-tis,tpmdev=tpm0
3205
3206@end example
3207
d1a0cf73
SB
3208ETEXI
3209
2252aaf0
MA
3210STEXI
3211@end table
3212ETEXI
d1a0cf73
SB
3213DEFHEADING()
3214
3215#endif
3216
de6b4f90 3217DEFHEADING(Linux/Multiboot boot specific:)
5824d651 3218STEXI
7677f05d
AG
3219
3220When using these options, you can use a given Linux or Multiboot
3221kernel without installing it in the disk image. It can be useful
5824d651
BS
3222for easier testing of various kernels.
3223
3224@table @option
3225ETEXI
3226
3227DEF("kernel", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_kernel, \
ad96090a 3228 "-kernel bzImage use 'bzImage' as kernel image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3229STEXI
3230@item -kernel @var{bzImage}
6616b2ad 3231@findex -kernel
7677f05d
AG
3232Use @var{bzImage} as kernel image. The kernel can be either a Linux kernel
3233or in multiboot format.
5824d651
BS
3234ETEXI
3235
3236DEF("append", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_append, \
ad96090a 3237 "-append cmdline use 'cmdline' as kernel command line\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3238STEXI
3239@item -append @var{cmdline}
6616b2ad 3240@findex -append
5824d651
BS
3241Use @var{cmdline} as kernel command line
3242ETEXI
3243
3244DEF("initrd", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_initrd, \
ad96090a 3245 "-initrd file use 'file' as initial ram disk\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3246STEXI
3247@item -initrd @var{file}
6616b2ad 3248@findex -initrd
5824d651 3249Use @var{file} as initial ram disk.
7677f05d
AG
3250
3251@item -initrd "@var{file1} arg=foo,@var{file2}"
3252
3253This syntax is only available with multiboot.
3254
3255Use @var{file1} and @var{file2} as modules and pass arg=foo as parameter to the
3256first module.
5824d651
BS
3257ETEXI
3258
412beee6 3259DEF("dtb", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_dtb, \
379b5c7c 3260 "-dtb file use 'file' as device tree image\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
412beee6
GL
3261STEXI
3262@item -dtb @var{file}
3263@findex -dtb
3264Use @var{file} as a device tree binary (dtb) image and pass it to the kernel
3265on boot.
3266ETEXI
3267
5824d651
BS
3268STEXI
3269@end table
3270ETEXI
5824d651
BS
3271DEFHEADING()
3272
de6b4f90 3273DEFHEADING(Debug/Expert options:)
5824d651
BS
3274STEXI
3275@table @option
3276ETEXI
3277
81b2b810
GS
3278DEF("fw_cfg", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_fwcfg,
3279 "-fw_cfg [name=]<name>,file=<file>\n"
63d3145a 3280 " add named fw_cfg entry with contents from file\n"
6407d76e 3281 "-fw_cfg [name=]<name>,string=<str>\n"
63d3145a 3282 " add named fw_cfg entry with contents from string\n",
81b2b810
GS
3283 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3284STEXI
63d3145a 3285
81b2b810
GS
3286@item -fw_cfg [name=]@var{name},file=@var{file}
3287@findex -fw_cfg
63d3145a 3288Add named fw_cfg entry with contents from file @var{file}.
6407d76e
GS
3289
3290@item -fw_cfg [name=]@var{name},string=@var{str}
63d3145a
MA
3291Add named fw_cfg entry with contents from string @var{str}.
3292
3293The terminating NUL character of the contents of @var{str} will not be
3294included as part of the fw_cfg item data. To insert contents with
3295embedded NUL characters, you have to use the @var{file} parameter.
3296
3297The fw_cfg entries are passed by QEMU through to the guest.
3298
3299Example:
3300@example
3301 -fw_cfg name=opt/com.mycompany/blob,file=./my_blob.bin
3302@end example
3303creates an fw_cfg entry named opt/com.mycompany/blob with contents
3304from ./my_blob.bin.
3305
81b2b810
GS
3306ETEXI
3307
5824d651 3308DEF("serial", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_serial, \
ad96090a
BS
3309 "-serial dev redirect the serial port to char device 'dev'\n",
3310 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3311STEXI
3312@item -serial @var{dev}
6616b2ad 3313@findex -serial
5824d651
BS
3314Redirect the virtual serial port to host character device
3315@var{dev}. The default device is @code{vc} in graphical mode and
3316@code{stdio} in non graphical mode.
3317
3318This option can be used several times to simulate up to 4 serial
3319ports.
3320
3321Use @code{-serial none} to disable all serial ports.
3322
3323Available character devices are:
b3f046c2 3324@table @option
4e257e5e 3325@item vc[:@var{W}x@var{H}]
5824d651
BS
3326Virtual console. Optionally, a width and height can be given in pixel with
3327@example
3328vc:800x600
3329@end example
3330It is also possible to specify width or height in characters:
3331@example
3332vc:80Cx24C
3333@end example
3334@item pty
3335[Linux only] Pseudo TTY (a new PTY is automatically allocated)
3336@item none
3337No device is allocated.
3338@item null
3339void device
88e020e5
IL
3340@item chardev:@var{id}
3341Use a named character device defined with the @code{-chardev} option.
5824d651
BS
3342@item /dev/XXX
3343[Linux only] Use host tty, e.g. @file{/dev/ttyS0}. The host serial port
3344parameters are set according to the emulated ones.
3345@item /dev/parport@var{N}
3346[Linux only, parallel port only] Use host parallel port
3347@var{N}. Currently SPP and EPP parallel port features can be used.
3348@item file:@var{filename}
3349Write output to @var{filename}. No character can be read.
3350@item stdio
3351[Unix only] standard input/output
3352@item pipe:@var{filename}
3353name pipe @var{filename}
3354@item COM@var{n}
3355[Windows only] Use host serial port @var{n}
3356@item udp:[@var{remote_host}]:@var{remote_port}[@@[@var{src_ip}]:@var{src_port}]
3357This implements UDP Net Console.
3358When @var{remote_host} or @var{src_ip} are not specified
3359they default to @code{0.0.0.0}.
3360When not using a specified @var{src_port} a random port is automatically chosen.
5824d651
BS
3361
3362If you just want a simple readonly console you can use @code{netcat} or
b65ee4fa
SW
3363@code{nc}, by starting QEMU with: @code{-serial udp::4555} and nc as:
3364@code{nc -u -l -p 4555}. Any time QEMU writes something to that port it
5824d651
BS
3365will appear in the netconsole session.
3366
3367If you plan to send characters back via netconsole or you want to stop
b65ee4fa 3368and start QEMU a lot of times, you should have QEMU use the same
5824d651 3369source port each time by using something like @code{-serial
b65ee4fa 3370udp::4555@@:4556} to QEMU. Another approach is to use a patched
5824d651
BS
3371version of netcat which can listen to a TCP port and send and receive
3372characters via udp. If you have a patched version of netcat which
3373activates telnet remote echo and single char transfer, then you can
bd1caa3f 3374use the following options to set up a netcat redirector to allow
b65ee4fa 3375telnet on port 5555 to access the QEMU port.
5824d651 3376@table @code
071c9394 3377@item QEMU Options:
5824d651
BS
3378-serial udp::4555@@:4556
3379@item netcat options:
3380-u -P 4555 -L 0.0.0.0:4556 -t -p 5555 -I -T
3381@item telnet options:
3382localhost 5555
3383@end table
3384
5dd1f02b 3385@item tcp:[@var{host}]:@var{port}[,@var{server}][,nowait][,nodelay][,reconnect=@var{seconds}]
5824d651
BS
3386The TCP Net Console has two modes of operation. It can send the serial
3387I/O to a location or wait for a connection from a location. By default
3388the TCP Net Console is sent to @var{host} at the @var{port}. If you use
3389the @var{server} option QEMU will wait for a client socket application
3390to connect to the port before continuing, unless the @code{nowait}
3391option was specified. The @code{nodelay} option disables the Nagle buffering
5dd1f02b
CM
3392algorithm. The @code{reconnect} option only applies if @var{noserver} is
3393set, if the connection goes down it will attempt to reconnect at the
3394given interval. If @var{host} is omitted, 0.0.0.0 is assumed. Only
5824d651
BS
3395one TCP connection at a time is accepted. You can use @code{telnet} to
3396connect to the corresponding character device.
3397@table @code
3398@item Example to send tcp console to 192.168.0.2 port 4444
3399-serial tcp:192.168.0.2:4444
3400@item Example to listen and wait on port 4444 for connection
3401-serial tcp::4444,server
3402@item Example to not wait and listen on ip 192.168.0.100 port 4444
3403-serial tcp:192.168.0.100:4444,server,nowait
3404@end table
3405
3406@item telnet:@var{host}:@var{port}[,server][,nowait][,nodelay]
3407The telnet protocol is used instead of raw tcp sockets. The options
3408work the same as if you had specified @code{-serial tcp}. The
3409difference is that the port acts like a telnet server or client using
3410telnet option negotiation. This will also allow you to send the
3411MAGIC_SYSRQ sequence if you use a telnet that supports sending the break
3412sequence. Typically in unix telnet you do it with Control-] and then
3413type "send break" followed by pressing the enter key.
3414
981b06e7
JS
3415@item websocket:@var{host}:@var{port},server[,nowait][,nodelay]
3416The WebSocket protocol is used instead of raw tcp socket. The port acts as
3417a WebSocket server. Client mode is not supported.
3418
5dd1f02b 3419@item unix:@var{path}[,server][,nowait][,reconnect=@var{seconds}]
5824d651
BS
3420A unix domain socket is used instead of a tcp socket. The option works the
3421same as if you had specified @code{-serial tcp} except the unix domain socket
3422@var{path} is used for connections.
3423
3424@item mon:@var{dev_string}
3425This is a special option to allow the monitor to be multiplexed onto
3426another serial port. The monitor is accessed with key sequence of
02c4bdf1 3427@key{Control-a} and then pressing @key{c}.
5824d651
BS
3428@var{dev_string} should be any one of the serial devices specified
3429above. An example to multiplex the monitor onto a telnet server
3430listening on port 4444 would be:
3431@table @code
3432@item -serial mon:telnet::4444,server,nowait
3433@end table
be022d61
MT
3434When the monitor is multiplexed to stdio in this way, Ctrl+C will not terminate
3435QEMU any more but will be passed to the guest instead.
5824d651
BS
3436
3437@item braille
3438Braille device. This will use BrlAPI to display the braille output on a real
3439or fake device.
3440
be8b28a9
KW
3441@item msmouse
3442Three button serial mouse. Configure the guest to use Microsoft protocol.
5824d651
BS
3443@end table
3444ETEXI
3445
3446DEF("parallel", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_parallel, \
ad96090a
BS
3447 "-parallel dev redirect the parallel port to char device 'dev'\n",
3448 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3449STEXI
3450@item -parallel @var{dev}
6616b2ad 3451@findex -parallel
5824d651
BS
3452Redirect the virtual parallel port to host device @var{dev} (same
3453devices as the serial port). On Linux hosts, @file{/dev/parportN} can
3454be used to use hardware devices connected on the corresponding host
3455parallel port.
3456
3457This option can be used several times to simulate up to 3 parallel
3458ports.
3459
3460Use @code{-parallel none} to disable all parallel ports.
3461ETEXI
3462
3463DEF("monitor", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_monitor, \
ad96090a
BS
3464 "-monitor dev redirect the monitor to char device 'dev'\n",
3465 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3466STEXI
4e307fc8 3467@item -monitor @var{dev}
6616b2ad 3468@findex -monitor
5824d651
BS
3469Redirect the monitor to host device @var{dev} (same devices as the
3470serial port).
3471The default device is @code{vc} in graphical mode and @code{stdio} in
3472non graphical mode.
70e098af 3473Use @code{-monitor none} to disable the default monitor.
5824d651 3474ETEXI
6ca5582d 3475DEF("qmp", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_qmp, \
ad96090a
BS
3476 "-qmp dev like -monitor but opens in 'control' mode\n",
3477 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
95d5f08b
SW
3478STEXI
3479@item -qmp @var{dev}
6616b2ad 3480@findex -qmp
95d5f08b
SW
3481Like -monitor but opens in 'control' mode.
3482ETEXI
4821cd4c
HR
3483DEF("qmp-pretty", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_qmp_pretty, \
3484 "-qmp-pretty dev like -qmp but uses pretty JSON formatting\n",
3485 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3486STEXI
3487@item -qmp-pretty @var{dev}
3488@findex -qmp-pretty
3489Like -qmp but uses pretty JSON formatting.
3490ETEXI
5824d651 3491
22a0e04b 3492DEF("mon", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_mon, \
ef670726 3493 "-mon [chardev=]name[,mode=readline|control][,pretty[=on|off]]\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
22a0e04b 3494STEXI
ef670726 3495@item -mon [chardev=]name[,mode=readline|control][,pretty[=on|off]]
6616b2ad 3496@findex -mon
ef670726
VJA
3497Setup monitor on chardev @var{name}. @code{pretty} turns on JSON pretty printing
3498easing human reading and debugging.
22a0e04b
GH
3499ETEXI
3500
c9f398e5 3501DEF("debugcon", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_debugcon, \
ad96090a
BS
3502 "-debugcon dev redirect the debug console to char device 'dev'\n",
3503 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
c9f398e5
PA
3504STEXI
3505@item -debugcon @var{dev}
6616b2ad 3506@findex -debugcon
c9f398e5
PA
3507Redirect the debug console to host device @var{dev} (same devices as the
3508serial port). The debug console is an I/O port which is typically port
35090xe9; writing to that I/O port sends output to this device.
3510The default device is @code{vc} in graphical mode and @code{stdio} in
3511non graphical mode.
3512ETEXI
3513
5824d651 3514DEF("pidfile", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_pidfile, \
ad96090a 3515 "-pidfile file write PID to 'file'\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3516STEXI
3517@item -pidfile @var{file}
6616b2ad 3518@findex -pidfile
5824d651
BS
3519Store the QEMU process PID in @var{file}. It is useful if you launch QEMU
3520from a script.
3521ETEXI
3522
1b530a6d 3523DEF("singlestep", 0, QEMU_OPTION_singlestep, \
ad96090a 3524 "-singlestep always run in singlestep mode\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1b530a6d
AJ
3525STEXI
3526@item -singlestep
6616b2ad 3527@findex -singlestep
1b530a6d
AJ
3528Run the emulation in single step mode.
3529ETEXI
3530
047f7038 3531DEF("preconfig", 0, QEMU_OPTION_preconfig, \
361ac948 3532 "--preconfig pause QEMU before machine is initialized (experimental)\n",
047f7038
IM
3533 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3534STEXI
3535@item --preconfig
3536@findex --preconfig
3537Pause QEMU for interactive configuration before the machine is created,
3538which allows querying and configuring properties that will affect
361ac948
MA
3539machine initialization. Use QMP command 'x-exit-preconfig' to exit
3540the preconfig state and move to the next state (i.e. run guest if -S
3541isn't used or pause the second time if -S is used). This option is
3542experimental.
047f7038
IM
3543ETEXI
3544
5824d651 3545DEF("S", 0, QEMU_OPTION_S, \
ad96090a
BS
3546 "-S freeze CPU at startup (use 'c' to start execution)\n",
3547 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3548STEXI
3549@item -S
6616b2ad 3550@findex -S
5824d651
BS
3551Do not start CPU at startup (you must type 'c' in the monitor).
3552ETEXI
3553
888a6bc6
SM
3554DEF("realtime", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_realtime,
3555 "-realtime [mlock=on|off]\n"
3556 " run qemu with realtime features\n"
3557 " mlock=on|off controls mlock support (default: on)\n",
3558 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3559STEXI
3560@item -realtime mlock=on|off
3561@findex -realtime
3562Run qemu with realtime features.
3563mlocking qemu and guest memory can be enabled via @option{mlock=on}
3564(enabled by default).
3565ETEXI
3566
6f131f13 3567DEF("overcommit", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_overcommit,
dfaa7d50 3568 "-overcommit [mem-lock=on|off][cpu-pm=on|off]\n"
6f131f13
MT
3569 " run qemu with overcommit hints\n"
3570 " mem-lock=on|off controls memory lock support (default: off)\n"
3571 " cpu-pm=on|off controls cpu power management (default: off)\n",
3572 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3573STEXI
3574@item -overcommit mem-lock=on|off
3575@item -overcommit cpu-pm=on|off
3576@findex -overcommit
3577Run qemu with hints about host resource overcommit. The default is
3578to assume that host overcommits all resources.
3579
3580Locking qemu and guest memory can be enabled via @option{mem-lock=on} (disabled
3581by default). This works when host memory is not overcommitted and reduces the
3582worst-case latency for guest. This is equivalent to @option{realtime}.
3583
3584Guest ability to manage power state of host cpus (increasing latency for other
3585processes on the same host cpu, but decreasing latency for guest) can be
3586enabled via @option{cpu-pm=on} (disabled by default). This works best when
3587host CPU is not overcommitted. When used, host estimates of CPU cycle and power
3588utilization will be incorrect, not taking into account guest idle time.
3589ETEXI
3590
59030a8c 3591DEF("gdb", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_gdb, \
ad96090a 3592 "-gdb dev wait for gdb connection on 'dev'\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
59030a8c
AL
3593STEXI
3594@item -gdb @var{dev}
6616b2ad 3595@findex -gdb
59030a8c
AL
3596Wait for gdb connection on device @var{dev} (@pxref{gdb_usage}). Typical
3597connections will likely be TCP-based, but also UDP, pseudo TTY, or even
b65ee4fa 3598stdio are reasonable use case. The latter is allowing to start QEMU from
59030a8c
AL
3599within gdb and establish the connection via a pipe:
3600@example
3804da9d 3601(gdb) target remote | exec qemu-system-i386 -gdb stdio ...
59030a8c 3602@end example
5824d651
BS
3603ETEXI
3604
59030a8c 3605DEF("s", 0, QEMU_OPTION_s, \
ad96090a
BS
3606 "-s shorthand for -gdb tcp::" DEFAULT_GDBSTUB_PORT "\n",
3607 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3608STEXI
59030a8c 3609@item -s
6616b2ad 3610@findex -s
59030a8c
AL
3611Shorthand for -gdb tcp::1234, i.e. open a gdbserver on TCP port 1234
3612(@pxref{gdb_usage}).
5824d651
BS
3613ETEXI
3614
3615DEF("d", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_d, \
989b697d 3616 "-d item1,... enable logging of specified items (use '-d help' for a list of log items)\n",
ad96090a 3617 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3618STEXI
989b697d 3619@item -d @var{item1}[,...]
6616b2ad 3620@findex -d
989b697d 3621Enable logging of specified items. Use '-d help' for a list of log items.
5824d651
BS
3622ETEXI
3623
c235d738 3624DEF("D", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_D, \
989b697d 3625 "-D logfile output log to logfile (default stderr)\n",
c235d738
MF
3626 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3627STEXI
8bd383b4 3628@item -D @var{logfile}
c235d738 3629@findex -D
989b697d 3630Output log in @var{logfile} instead of to stderr
c235d738
MF
3631ETEXI
3632
3514552e
AB
3633DEF("dfilter", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_DFILTER, \
3634 "-dfilter range,.. filter debug output to range of addresses (useful for -d cpu,exec,etc..)\n",
3635 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3636STEXI
3637@item -dfilter @var{range1}[,...]
3638@findex -dfilter
3639Filter debug output to that relevant to a range of target addresses. The filter
3640spec can be either @var{start}+@var{size}, @var{start}-@var{size} or
3641@var{start}..@var{end} where @var{start} @var{end} and @var{size} are the
3642addresses and sizes required. For example:
3643@example
3644 -dfilter 0x8000..0x8fff,0xffffffc000080000+0x200,0xffffffc000060000-0x1000
3645@end example
3646Will dump output for any code in the 0x1000 sized block starting at 0x8000 and
3647the 0x200 sized block starting at 0xffffffc000080000 and another 0x1000 sized
3648block starting at 0xffffffc00005f000.
3649ETEXI
3650
9c09a251
RH
3651DEF("seed", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_seed, \
3652 "-seed number seed the pseudo-random number generator\n",
3653 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3654STEXI
3655@item -seed @var{number}
3656@findex -seed
3657Force the guest to use a deterministic pseudo-random number generator, seeded
3658with @var{number}. This does not affect crypto routines within the host.
3659ETEXI
3660
5824d651 3661DEF("L", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_L, \
ad96090a
BS
3662 "-L path set the directory for the BIOS, VGA BIOS and keymaps\n",
3663 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3664STEXI
3665@item -L @var{path}
6616b2ad 3666@findex -L
5824d651 3667Set the directory for the BIOS, VGA BIOS and keymaps.
37146e7e
RJ
3668
3669To list all the data directories, use @code{-L help}.
5824d651
BS
3670ETEXI
3671
3672DEF("bios", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_bios, \
ad96090a 3673 "-bios file set the filename for the BIOS\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3674STEXI
3675@item -bios @var{file}
6616b2ad 3676@findex -bios
5824d651
BS
3677Set the filename for the BIOS.
3678ETEXI
3679
5824d651 3680DEF("enable-kvm", 0, QEMU_OPTION_enable_kvm, \
ad96090a 3681 "-enable-kvm enable KVM full virtualization support\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3682STEXI
3683@item -enable-kvm
6616b2ad 3684@findex -enable-kvm
5824d651
BS
3685Enable KVM full virtualization support. This option is only available
3686if KVM support is enabled when compiling.
3687ETEXI
3688
e37630ca 3689DEF("xen-domid", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_xen_domid,
ad96090a 3690 "-xen-domid id specify xen guest domain id\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
e37630ca
AL
3691DEF("xen-attach", 0, QEMU_OPTION_xen_attach,
3692 "-xen-attach attach to existing xen domain\n"
1077bcac 3693 " libxl will use this when starting QEMU\n",
ad96090a 3694 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
1c599472
PD
3695DEF("xen-domid-restrict", 0, QEMU_OPTION_xen_domid_restrict,
3696 "-xen-domid-restrict restrict set of available xen operations\n"
3697 " to specified domain id. (Does not affect\n"
3698 " xenpv machine type).\n",
3699 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
95d5f08b
SW
3700STEXI
3701@item -xen-domid @var{id}
6616b2ad 3702@findex -xen-domid
95d5f08b 3703Specify xen guest domain @var{id} (XEN only).
95d5f08b 3704@item -xen-attach
6616b2ad 3705@findex -xen-attach
95d5f08b 3706Attach to existing xen domain.
1077bcac 3707libxl will use this when starting QEMU (XEN only).
1c599472
PD
3708@findex -xen-domid-restrict
3709Restrict set of available xen operations to specified domain id (XEN only).
95d5f08b 3710ETEXI
e37630ca 3711
5824d651 3712DEF("no-reboot", 0, QEMU_OPTION_no_reboot, \
ad96090a 3713 "-no-reboot exit instead of rebooting\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3714STEXI
3715@item -no-reboot
6616b2ad 3716@findex -no-reboot
5824d651
BS
3717Exit instead of rebooting.
3718ETEXI
3719
3720DEF("no-shutdown", 0, QEMU_OPTION_no_shutdown, \
ad96090a 3721 "-no-shutdown stop before shutdown\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3722STEXI
3723@item -no-shutdown
6616b2ad 3724@findex -no-shutdown
5824d651
BS
3725Don't exit QEMU on guest shutdown, but instead only stop the emulation.
3726This allows for instance switching to monitor to commit changes to the
3727disk image.
3728ETEXI
3729
3730DEF("loadvm", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_loadvm, \
3731 "-loadvm [tag|id]\n" \
ad96090a
BS
3732 " start right away with a saved state (loadvm in monitor)\n",
3733 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3734STEXI
3735@item -loadvm @var{file}
6616b2ad 3736@findex -loadvm
5824d651
BS
3737Start right away with a saved state (@code{loadvm} in monitor)
3738ETEXI
3739
3740#ifndef _WIN32
3741DEF("daemonize", 0, QEMU_OPTION_daemonize, \
ad96090a 3742 "-daemonize daemonize QEMU after initializing\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3743#endif
3744STEXI
3745@item -daemonize
6616b2ad 3746@findex -daemonize
5824d651
BS
3747Daemonize the QEMU process after initialization. QEMU will not detach from
3748standard IO until it is ready to receive connections on any of its devices.
3749This option is a useful way for external programs to launch QEMU without having
3750to cope with initialization race conditions.
3751ETEXI
3752
3753DEF("option-rom", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_option_rom, \
ad96090a
BS
3754 "-option-rom rom load a file, rom, into the option ROM space\n",
3755 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3756STEXI
3757@item -option-rom @var{file}
6616b2ad 3758@findex -option-rom
5824d651
BS
3759Load the contents of @var{file} as an option ROM.
3760This option is useful to load things like EtherBoot.
3761ETEXI
3762
1ed2fc1f 3763DEF("rtc", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_rtc, \
238d1240 3764 "-rtc [base=utc|localtime|<datetime>][,clock=host|rt|vm][,driftfix=none|slew]\n" \
ad96090a
BS
3765 " set the RTC base and clock, enable drift fix for clock ticks (x86 only)\n",
3766 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3767
5824d651
BS
3768STEXI
3769
238d1240 3770@item -rtc [base=utc|localtime|@var{datetime}][,clock=host|rt|vm][,driftfix=none|slew]
6616b2ad 3771@findex -rtc
1ed2fc1f
JK
3772Specify @option{base} as @code{utc} or @code{localtime} to let the RTC start at the current
3773UTC or local time, respectively. @code{localtime} is required for correct date in
238d1240 3774MS-DOS or Windows. To start at a specific point in time, provide @var{datetime} in the
1ed2fc1f
JK
3775format @code{2006-06-17T16:01:21} or @code{2006-06-17}. The default base is UTC.
3776
9d85d557 3777By default the RTC is driven by the host system time. This allows using of the
6875204c
JK
3778RTC as accurate reference clock inside the guest, specifically if the host
3779time is smoothly following an accurate external reference clock, e.g. via NTP.
78808141 3780If you want to isolate the guest time from the host, you can set @option{clock}
238d1240
AP
3781to @code{rt} instead, which provides a host monotonic clock if host support it.
3782To even prevent the RTC from progressing during suspension, you can set @option{clock}
3783to @code{vm} (virtual clock). @samp{clock=vm} is recommended especially in
3784icount mode in order to preserve determinism; however, note that in icount mode
3785the speed of the virtual clock is variable and can in general differ from the
3786host clock.
6875204c 3787
1ed2fc1f
JK
3788Enable @option{driftfix} (i386 targets only) if you experience time drift problems,
3789specifically with Windows' ACPI HAL. This option will try to figure out how
3790many timer interrupts were not processed by the Windows guest and will
3791re-inject them.
5824d651
BS
3792ETEXI
3793
3794DEF("icount", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_icount, \
9c2037d0 3795 "-icount [shift=N|auto][,align=on|off][,sleep=on|off,rr=record|replay,rrfile=<filename>,rrsnapshot=<snapshot>]\n" \
bc14ca24 3796 " enable virtual instruction counter with 2^N clock ticks per\n" \
f1f4b57e
VC
3797 " instruction, enable aligning the host and virtual clocks\n" \
3798 " or disable real time cpu sleeping\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3799STEXI
9c2037d0 3800@item -icount [shift=@var{N}|auto][,rr=record|replay,rrfile=@var{filename},rrsnapshot=@var{snapshot}]
6616b2ad 3801@findex -icount
5824d651 3802Enable virtual instruction counter. The virtual cpu will execute one
4e257e5e 3803instruction every 2^@var{N} ns of virtual time. If @code{auto} is specified
5824d651
BS
3804then the virtual cpu speed will be automatically adjusted to keep virtual
3805time within a few seconds of real time.
3806
f1f4b57e 3807When the virtual cpu is sleeping, the virtual time will advance at default
778d9f9b
PK
3808speed unless @option{sleep=on|off} is specified.
3809With @option{sleep=on|off}, the virtual time will jump to the next timer deadline
f1f4b57e
VC
3810instantly whenever the virtual cpu goes to sleep mode and will not advance
3811if no timer is enabled. This behavior give deterministic execution times from
3812the guest point of view.
3813
5824d651
BS
3814Note that while this option can give deterministic behavior, it does not
3815provide cycle accurate emulation. Modern CPUs contain superscalar out of
3816order cores with complex cache hierarchies. The number of instructions
3817executed often has little or no correlation with actual performance.
a8bfac37 3818
b6af0975 3819@option{align=on} will activate the delay algorithm which will try
a8bfac37
ST
3820to synchronise the host clock and the virtual clock. The goal is to
3821have a guest running at the real frequency imposed by the shift option.
3822Whenever the guest clock is behind the host clock and if
82597615 3823@option{align=on} is specified then we print a message to the user
a8bfac37
ST
3824to inform about the delay.
3825Currently this option does not work when @option{shift} is @code{auto}.
3826Note: The sync algorithm will work for those shift values for which
3827the guest clock runs ahead of the host clock. Typically this happens
3828when the shift value is high (how high depends on the host machine).
4c27b859
PD
3829
3830When @option{rr} option is specified deterministic record/replay is enabled.
3831Replay log is written into @var{filename} file in record mode and
3832read from this file in replay mode.
9c2037d0
PD
3833
3834Option rrsnapshot is used to create new vm snapshot named @var{snapshot}
3835at the start of execution recording. In replay mode this option is used
3836to load the initial VM state.
5824d651
BS
3837ETEXI
3838
9dd986cc 3839DEF("watchdog", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_watchdog, \
d7933ef3 3840 "-watchdog model\n" \
ad96090a
BS
3841 " enable virtual hardware watchdog [default=none]\n",
3842 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
9dd986cc
RJ
3843STEXI
3844@item -watchdog @var{model}
6616b2ad 3845@findex -watchdog
9dd986cc
RJ
3846Create a virtual hardware watchdog device. Once enabled (by a guest
3847action), the watchdog must be periodically polled by an agent inside
d7933ef3
XW
3848the guest or else the guest will be restarted. Choose a model for
3849which your guest has drivers.
9dd986cc 3850
d7933ef3
XW
3851The @var{model} is the model of hardware watchdog to emulate. Use
3852@code{-watchdog help} to list available hardware models. Only one
9dd986cc 3853watchdog can be enabled for a guest.
d7933ef3
XW
3854
3855The following models may be available:
3856@table @option
3857@item ib700
3858iBASE 700 is a very simple ISA watchdog with a single timer.
3859@item i6300esb
3860Intel 6300ESB I/O controller hub is a much more featureful PCI-based
3861dual-timer watchdog.
188f24c2
XW
3862@item diag288
3863A virtual watchdog for s390x backed by the diagnose 288 hypercall
3864(currently KVM only).
d7933ef3 3865@end table
9dd986cc
RJ
3866ETEXI
3867
3868DEF("watchdog-action", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_watchdog_action, \
7ad9270e 3869 "-watchdog-action reset|shutdown|poweroff|inject-nmi|pause|debug|none\n" \
ad96090a
BS
3870 " action when watchdog fires [default=reset]\n",
3871 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
9dd986cc
RJ
3872STEXI
3873@item -watchdog-action @var{action}
b8f490eb 3874@findex -watchdog-action
9dd986cc
RJ
3875
3876The @var{action} controls what QEMU will do when the watchdog timer
3877expires.
3878The default is
3879@code{reset} (forcefully reset the guest).
3880Other possible actions are:
3881@code{shutdown} (attempt to gracefully shutdown the guest),
3882@code{poweroff} (forcefully poweroff the guest),
7ad9270e 3883@code{inject-nmi} (inject a NMI into the guest),
9dd986cc
RJ
3884@code{pause} (pause the guest),
3885@code{debug} (print a debug message and continue), or
3886@code{none} (do nothing).
3887
3888Note that the @code{shutdown} action requires that the guest responds
3889to ACPI signals, which it may not be able to do in the sort of
3890situations where the watchdog would have expired, and thus
3891@code{-watchdog-action shutdown} is not recommended for production use.
3892
3893Examples:
3894
3895@table @code
3896@item -watchdog i6300esb -watchdog-action pause
f9cfd655 3897@itemx -watchdog ib700
9dd986cc
RJ
3898@end table
3899ETEXI
3900
5824d651 3901DEF("echr", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_echr, \
ad96090a
BS
3902 "-echr chr set terminal escape character instead of ctrl-a\n",
3903 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3904STEXI
3905
4e257e5e 3906@item -echr @var{numeric_ascii_value}
6616b2ad 3907@findex -echr
5824d651
BS
3908Change the escape character used for switching to the monitor when using
3909monitor and serial sharing. The default is @code{0x01} when using the
3910@code{-nographic} option. @code{0x01} is equal to pressing
3911@code{Control-a}. You can select a different character from the ascii
3912control keys where 1 through 26 map to Control-a through Control-z. For
3913instance you could use the either of the following to change the escape
3914character to Control-t.
3915@table @code
3916@item -echr 0x14
f9cfd655 3917@itemx -echr 20
5824d651
BS
3918@end table
3919ETEXI
3920
5824d651 3921DEF("show-cursor", 0, QEMU_OPTION_show_cursor, \
ad96090a 3922 "-show-cursor show cursor\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3923STEXI
95d5f08b 3924@item -show-cursor
6616b2ad 3925@findex -show-cursor
95d5f08b 3926Show cursor.
5824d651
BS
3927ETEXI
3928
3929DEF("tb-size", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_tb_size, \
ad96090a 3930 "-tb-size n set TB size\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3931STEXI
95d5f08b 3932@item -tb-size @var{n}
6616b2ad 3933@findex -tb-size
95d5f08b 3934Set TB size.
5824d651
BS
3935ETEXI
3936
3937DEF("incoming", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_incoming, \
7c601803
MT
3938 "-incoming tcp:[host]:port[,to=maxport][,ipv4][,ipv6]\n" \
3939 "-incoming rdma:host:port[,ipv4][,ipv6]\n" \
3940 "-incoming unix:socketpath\n" \
3941 " prepare for incoming migration, listen on\n" \
3942 " specified protocol and socket address\n" \
3943 "-incoming fd:fd\n" \
3944 "-incoming exec:cmdline\n" \
3945 " accept incoming migration on given file descriptor\n" \
1597051b
DDAG
3946 " or from given external command\n" \
3947 "-incoming defer\n" \
3948 " wait for the URI to be specified via migrate_incoming\n",
ad96090a 3949 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651 3950STEXI
7c601803 3951@item -incoming tcp:[@var{host}]:@var{port}[,to=@var{maxport}][,ipv4][,ipv6]
f9cfd655 3952@itemx -incoming rdma:@var{host}:@var{port}[,ipv4][,ipv6]
6616b2ad 3953@findex -incoming
7c601803
MT
3954Prepare for incoming migration, listen on a given tcp port.
3955
3956@item -incoming unix:@var{socketpath}
3957Prepare for incoming migration, listen on a given unix socket.
3958
3959@item -incoming fd:@var{fd}
3960Accept incoming migration from a given filedescriptor.
3961
3962@item -incoming exec:@var{cmdline}
3963Accept incoming migration as an output from specified external command.
1597051b
DDAG
3964
3965@item -incoming defer
3966Wait for the URI to be specified via migrate_incoming. The monitor can
3967be used to change settings (such as migration parameters) prior to issuing
3968the migrate_incoming to allow the migration to begin.
5824d651
BS
3969ETEXI
3970
d15c05fc
AA
3971DEF("only-migratable", 0, QEMU_OPTION_only_migratable, \
3972 "-only-migratable allow only migratable devices\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3973STEXI
3974@item -only-migratable
3975@findex -only-migratable
3976Only allow migratable devices. Devices will not be allowed to enter an
3977unmigratable state.
3978ETEXI
3979
d8c208dd 3980DEF("nodefaults", 0, QEMU_OPTION_nodefaults, \
ad96090a 3981 "-nodefaults don't create default devices\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
d8c208dd 3982STEXI
3dbf2c7f 3983@item -nodefaults
6616b2ad 3984@findex -nodefaults
66c19bf1
MN
3985Don't create default devices. Normally, QEMU sets the default devices like serial
3986port, parallel port, virtual console, monitor device, VGA adapter, floppy and
3987CD-ROM drive and others. The @code{-nodefaults} option will disable all those
3988default devices.
d8c208dd
GH
3989ETEXI
3990
5824d651
BS
3991#ifndef _WIN32
3992DEF("chroot", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_chroot, \
ad96090a
BS
3993 "-chroot dir chroot to dir just before starting the VM\n",
3994 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
3995#endif
3996STEXI
4e257e5e 3997@item -chroot @var{dir}
6616b2ad 3998@findex -chroot
5824d651
BS
3999Immediately before starting guest execution, chroot to the specified
4000directory. Especially useful in combination with -runas.
4001ETEXI
4002
4003#ifndef _WIN32
4004DEF("runas", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_runas, \
2c42f1e8
IJ
4005 "-runas user change to user id user just before starting the VM\n" \
4006 " user can be numeric uid:gid instead\n",
ad96090a 4007 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
5824d651
BS
4008#endif
4009STEXI
4e257e5e 4010@item -runas @var{user}
6616b2ad 4011@findex -runas
5824d651
BS
4012Immediately before starting guest execution, drop root privileges, switching
4013to the specified user.
4014ETEXI
4015
5824d651
BS
4016DEF("prom-env", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_prom_env,
4017 "-prom-env variable=value\n"
ad96090a
BS
4018 " set OpenBIOS nvram variables\n",
4019 QEMU_ARCH_PPC | QEMU_ARCH_SPARC)
95d5f08b
SW
4020STEXI
4021@item -prom-env @var{variable}=@var{value}
6616b2ad 4022@findex -prom-env
95d5f08b
SW
4023Set OpenBIOS nvram @var{variable} to given @var{value} (PPC, SPARC only).
4024ETEXI
5824d651 4025DEF("semihosting", 0, QEMU_OPTION_semihosting,
f7bbcfb5 4026 "-semihosting semihosting mode\n",
3b3c1694 4027 QEMU_ARCH_ARM | QEMU_ARCH_M68K | QEMU_ARCH_XTENSA | QEMU_ARCH_LM32 |
413a99a9 4028 QEMU_ARCH_MIPS | QEMU_ARCH_NIOS2)
95d5f08b
SW
4029STEXI
4030@item -semihosting
6616b2ad 4031@findex -semihosting
413a99a9 4032Enable semihosting mode (ARM, M68K, Xtensa, MIPS, Nios II only).
a38bb079
LI
4033ETEXI
4034DEF("semihosting-config", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_semihosting_config,
4e7f9032 4035 "-semihosting-config [enable=on|off][,target=native|gdb|auto][,chardev=id][,arg=str[,...]]\n" \
a59d31a1 4036 " semihosting configuration\n",
3b3c1694 4037QEMU_ARCH_ARM | QEMU_ARCH_M68K | QEMU_ARCH_XTENSA | QEMU_ARCH_LM32 |
413a99a9 4038QEMU_ARCH_MIPS | QEMU_ARCH_NIOS2)
a38bb079 4039STEXI
4e7f9032 4040@item -semihosting-config [enable=on|off][,target=native|gdb|auto][,chardev=id][,arg=str[,...]]
a38bb079 4041@findex -semihosting-config
413a99a9 4042Enable and configure semihosting (ARM, M68K, Xtensa, MIPS, Nios II only).
a59d31a1
LA
4043@table @option
4044@item target=@code{native|gdb|auto}
4045Defines where the semihosting calls will be addressed, to QEMU (@code{native})
4046or to GDB (@code{gdb}). The default is @code{auto}, which means @code{gdb}
4047during debug sessions and @code{native} otherwise.
4e7f9032
AB
4048@item chardev=@var{str1}
4049Send the output to a chardev backend output for native or auto output when not in gdb
a59d31a1
LA
4050@item arg=@var{str1},arg=@var{str2},...
4051Allows the user to pass input arguments, and can be used multiple times to build
4052up a list. The old-style @code{-kernel}/@code{-append} method of passing a
4053command line is still supported for backward compatibility. If both the
4054@code{--semihosting-config arg} and the @code{-kernel}/@code{-append} are
4055specified, the former is passed to semihosting as it always takes precedence.
4056@end table
95d5f08b 4057ETEXI
5824d651 4058DEF("old-param", 0, QEMU_OPTION_old_param,
ad96090a 4059 "-old-param old param mode\n", QEMU_ARCH_ARM)
95d5f08b
SW
4060STEXI
4061@item -old-param
6616b2ad 4062@findex -old-param (ARM)
95d5f08b
SW
4063Old param mode (ARM only).
4064ETEXI
4065
7d76ad4f 4066DEF("sandbox", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_sandbox, \
73a1e647 4067 "-sandbox on[,obsolete=allow|deny][,elevateprivileges=allow|deny|children]\n" \
24f8cdc5 4068 " [,spawn=allow|deny][,resourcecontrol=allow|deny]\n" \
2b716fa6
EO
4069 " Enable seccomp mode 2 system call filter (default 'off').\n" \
4070 " use 'obsolete' to allow obsolete system calls that are provided\n" \
4071 " by the kernel, but typically no longer used by modern\n" \
73a1e647
EO
4072 " C library implementations.\n" \
4073 " use 'elevateprivileges' to allow or deny QEMU process to elevate\n" \
4074 " its privileges by blacklisting all set*uid|gid system calls.\n" \
4075 " The value 'children' will deny set*uid|gid system calls for\n" \
995a226f
EO
4076 " main QEMU process but will allow forks and execves to run unprivileged\n" \
4077 " use 'spawn' to avoid QEMU to spawn new threads or processes by\n" \
24f8cdc5
EO
4078 " blacklisting *fork and execve\n" \
4079 " use 'resourcecontrol' to disable process affinity and schedular priority\n",
7d76ad4f
EO
4080 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4081STEXI
24f8cdc5 4082@item -sandbox @var{arg}[,obsolete=@var{string}][,elevateprivileges=@var{string}][,spawn=@var{string}][,resourcecontrol=@var{string}]
7d76ad4f
EO
4083@findex -sandbox
4084Enable Seccomp mode 2 system call filter. 'on' will enable syscall filtering and 'off' will
4085disable it. The default is 'off'.
2b716fa6
EO
4086@table @option
4087@item obsolete=@var{string}
4088Enable Obsolete system calls
73a1e647
EO
4089@item elevateprivileges=@var{string}
4090Disable set*uid|gid system calls
995a226f
EO
4091@item spawn=@var{string}
4092Disable *fork and execve
24f8cdc5
EO
4093@item resourcecontrol=@var{string}
4094Disable process affinity and schedular priority
2b716fa6 4095@end table
7d76ad4f
EO
4096ETEXI
4097
715a664a 4098DEF("readconfig", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_readconfig,
ad96090a 4099 "-readconfig <file>\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3dbf2c7f
SW
4100STEXI
4101@item -readconfig @var{file}
6616b2ad 4102@findex -readconfig
ed24cfac
MN
4103Read device configuration from @var{file}. This approach is useful when you want to spawn
4104QEMU process with many command line options but you don't want to exceed the command line
4105character limit.
3dbf2c7f 4106ETEXI
715a664a
GH
4107DEF("writeconfig", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_writeconfig,
4108 "-writeconfig <file>\n"
ad96090a 4109 " read/write config file\n", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
3dbf2c7f
SW
4110STEXI
4111@item -writeconfig @var{file}
6616b2ad 4112@findex -writeconfig
ed24cfac
MN
4113Write device configuration to @var{file}. The @var{file} can be either filename to save
4114command line and device configuration into file or dash @code{-}) character to print the
4115output to stdout. This can be later used as input file for @code{-readconfig} option.
3dbf2c7f 4116ETEXI
2feac451 4117
f29a5614
EH
4118DEF("no-user-config", 0, QEMU_OPTION_nouserconfig,
4119 "-no-user-config\n"
3478eae9 4120 " do not load default user-provided config files at startup\n",
f29a5614
EH
4121 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4122STEXI
4123@item -no-user-config
4124@findex -no-user-config
4125The @code{-no-user-config} option makes QEMU not load any of the user-provided
3478eae9 4126config files on @var{sysconfdir}.
292444cb 4127ETEXI
2feac451 4128
ab6540d5 4129DEF("trace", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_trace,
10578a25 4130 "-trace [[enable=]<pattern>][,events=<file>][,file=<file>]\n"
23d15e86 4131 " specify tracing options\n",
ab6540d5
PS
4132 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4133STEXI
23d15e86
LV
4134HXCOMM This line is not accurate, as some sub-options are backend-specific but
4135HXCOMM HX does not support conditional compilation of text.
e370ad99 4136@item -trace [[enable=]@var{pattern}][,events=@var{file}][,file=@var{file}]
ab6540d5 4137@findex -trace
eeb2b8f7 4138@include qemu-option-trace.texi
ab6540d5 4139ETEXI
3dbf2c7f 4140
31e70d6c
MA
4141HXCOMM Internal use
4142DEF("qtest", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_qtest, "", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4143DEF("qtest-log", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_qtest_log, "", QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
c7f0f3b1 4144
0f66998f
PM
4145#ifdef __linux__
4146DEF("enable-fips", 0, QEMU_OPTION_enablefips,
4147 "-enable-fips enable FIPS 140-2 compliance\n",
4148 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4149#endif
4150STEXI
4151@item -enable-fips
4152@findex -enable-fips
4153Enable FIPS 140-2 compliance mode.
4154ETEXI
4155
a0dac021 4156HXCOMM Deprecated by -machine accel=tcg property
c6e88b3b 4157DEF("no-kvm", 0, QEMU_OPTION_no_kvm, "", QEMU_ARCH_I386)
a0dac021 4158
5e2ac519
SA
4159DEF("msg", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_msg,
4160 "-msg timestamp[=on|off]\n"
4161 " change the format of messages\n"
4162 " on|off controls leading timestamps (default:on)\n",
4163 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4164STEXI
4165@item -msg timestamp[=on|off]
4166@findex -msg
4167prepend a timestamp to each log message.(default:on)
4168ETEXI
4169
abfd9ce3
AS
4170DEF("dump-vmstate", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_dump_vmstate,
4171 "-dump-vmstate <file>\n"
4172 " Output vmstate information in JSON format to file.\n"
4173 " Use the scripts/vmstate-static-checker.py file to\n"
4174 " check for possible regressions in migration code\n"
2382053f 4175 " by comparing two such vmstate dumps.\n",
abfd9ce3
AS
4176 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4177STEXI
4178@item -dump-vmstate @var{file}
4179@findex -dump-vmstate
4180Dump json-encoded vmstate information for current machine type to file
4181in @var{file}
4182ETEXI
4183
12df189d
EC
4184DEF("enable-sync-profile", 0, QEMU_OPTION_enable_sync_profile,
4185 "-enable-sync-profile\n"
4186 " enable synchronization profiling\n",
4187 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4188STEXI
4189@item -enable-sync-profile
4190@findex -enable-sync-profile
4191Enable synchronization profiling.
4192ETEXI
4193
43f187a5
PB
4194STEXI
4195@end table
4196ETEXI
4197DEFHEADING()
de6b4f90
MA
4198
4199DEFHEADING(Generic object creation:)
43f187a5
PB
4200STEXI
4201@table @option
4202ETEXI
b9174d4f
DB
4203
4204DEF("object", HAS_ARG, QEMU_OPTION_object,
4205 "-object TYPENAME[,PROP1=VALUE1,...]\n"
4206 " create a new object of type TYPENAME setting properties\n"
4207 " in the order they are specified. Note that the 'id'\n"
4208 " property must be set. These objects are placed in the\n"
4209 " '/objects' path.\n",
4210 QEMU_ARCH_ALL)
4211STEXI
4212@item -object @var{typename}[,@var{prop1}=@var{value1},...]
4213@findex -object
4214Create a new object of type @var{typename} setting properties
4215in the order they are specified. Note that the 'id'
4216property must be set. These objects are placed in the
4217'/objects' path.
4218
4219@table @option
4220
98376843 4221@item -object memory-backend-file,id=@var{id},size=@var{size},mem-path=@var{dir},share=@var{on|off},discard-data=@var{on|off},merge=@var{on|off},dump=@var{on|off},prealloc=@var{on|off},host-nodes=@var{host-nodes},policy=@var{default|preferred|bind|interleave},align=@var{align}
b9174d4f
DB
4222
4223Creates a memory file backend object, which can be used to back
c7cddce1
SH
4224the guest RAM with huge pages.
4225
4226The @option{id} parameter is a unique ID that will be used to reference this
4227memory region when configuring the @option{-numa} argument.
4228
4229The @option{size} option provides the size of the memory region, and accepts
4230common suffixes, eg @option{500M}.
4231
4232The @option{mem-path} provides the path to either a shared memory or huge page
4233filesystem mount.
4234
b9174d4f
DB
4235The @option{share} boolean option determines whether the memory
4236region is marked as private to QEMU, or shared. The latter allows
4237a co-operating external process to access the QEMU memory region.
c7cddce1 4238
06329cce
MA
4239The @option{share} is also required for pvrdma devices due to
4240limitations in the RDMA API provided by Linux.
4241
4242Setting share=on might affect the ability to configure NUMA
4243bindings for the memory backend under some circumstances, see
4244Documentation/vm/numa_memory_policy.txt on the Linux kernel
4245source tree for additional details.
4246
11ae6ed8
EH
4247Setting the @option{discard-data} boolean option to @var{on}
4248indicates that file contents can be destroyed when QEMU exits,
4249to avoid unnecessarily flushing data to the backing file. Note
4250that @option{discard-data} is only an optimization, and QEMU
4251might not discard file contents if it aborts unexpectedly or is
4252terminated using SIGKILL.
b9174d4f 4253
c7cddce1
SH
4254The @option{merge} boolean option enables memory merge, also known as
4255MADV_MERGEABLE, so that Kernel Samepage Merging will consider the pages for
4256memory deduplication.
4257
4258Setting the @option{dump} boolean option to @var{off} excludes the memory from
4259core dumps. This feature is also known as MADV_DONTDUMP.
4260
4261The @option{prealloc} boolean option enables memory preallocation.
4262
4263The @option{host-nodes} option binds the memory range to a list of NUMA host
4264nodes.
4265
4266The @option{policy} option sets the NUMA policy to one of the following values:
4267
4268@table @option
4269@item @var{default}
4270default host policy
4271
4272@item @var{preferred}
4273prefer the given host node list for allocation
4274
4275@item @var{bind}
4276restrict memory allocation to the given host node list
4277
4278@item @var{interleave}
4279interleave memory allocations across the given host node list
4280@end table
4281
98376843
HZ
4282The @option{align} option specifies the base address alignment when
4283QEMU mmap(2) @option{mem-path}, and accepts common suffixes, eg
4284@option{2M}. Some backend store specified by @option{mem-path}
4285requires an alignment different than the default one used by QEMU, eg
4286the device DAX /dev/dax0.0 requires 2M alignment rather than 4K. In
4287such cases, users can specify the required alignment via this option.
4288
a4de8552
JH
4289The @option{pmem} option specifies whether the backing file specified
4290by @option{mem-path} is in host persistent memory that can be accessed
4291using the SNIA NVM programming model (e.g. Intel NVDIMM).
4292If @option{pmem} is set to 'on', QEMU will take necessary operations to
4293guarantee the persistence of its own writes to @option{mem-path}
4294(e.g. in vNVDIMM label emulation and live migration).
119906af
ZY
4295Also, we will map the backend-file with MAP_SYNC flag, which ensures the
4296file metadata is in sync for @option{mem-path} in case of host crash
4297or a power failure. MAP_SYNC requires support from both the host kernel
4298(since Linux kernel 4.15) and the filesystem of @option{mem-path} mounted
4299with DAX option.
a4de8552 4300
06329cce 4301@item -object memory-backend-ram,id=@var{id},merge=@var{on|off},dump=@var{on|off},share=@var{on|off},prealloc=@var{on|off},size=@var{size},host-nodes=@var{host-nodes},policy=@var{default|preferred|bind|interleave}
cd19491a
SH
4302
4303Creates a memory backend object, which can be used to back the guest RAM.
4304Memory backend objects offer more control than the @option{-m} option that is
4305traditionally used to define guest RAM. Please refer to
4306@option{memory-backend-file} for a description of the options.
4307
36ea3979 4308@item -object memory-backend-memfd,id=@var{id},merge=@var{on|off},dump=@var{on|off},share=@var{on|off},prealloc=@var{on|off},size=@var{size},host-nodes=@var{host-nodes},policy=@var{default|preferred|bind|interleave},seal=@var{on|off},hugetlb=@var{on|off},hugetlbsize=@var{size}
dbb9e0f4
MAL
4309
4310Creates an anonymous memory file backend object, which allows QEMU to
4311share the memory with an external process (e.g. when using
4312vhost-user). The memory is allocated with memfd and optional
4313sealing. (Linux only)
4314
4315The @option{seal} option creates a sealed-file, that will block
4316further resizing the memory ('on' by default).
4317
4318The @option{hugetlb} option specify the file to be created resides in
4319the hugetlbfs filesystem (since Linux 4.14). Used in conjunction with
4320the @option{hugetlb} option, the @option{hugetlbsize} option specify
4321the hugetlb page size on systems that support multiple hugetlb page
4322sizes (it must be a power of 2 value supported by the system).
4323
4324In some versions of Linux, the @option{hugetlb} option is incompatible
4325with the @option{seal} option (requires at least Linux 4.16).
4326
4327Please refer to @option{memory-backend-file} for a description of the
4328other options.
4329
36ea3979
MAL
4330The @option{share} boolean option is @var{on} by default with memfd.
4331
b9174d4f
DB
4332@item -object rng-random,id=@var{id},filename=@var{/dev/random}
4333
4334Creates a random number generator backend which obtains entropy from
4335a device on the host. The @option{id} parameter is a unique ID that
4336will be used to reference this entropy backend from the @option{virtio-rng}
4337device. The @option{filename} parameter specifies which file to obtain
a2230bd7 4338entropy from and if omitted defaults to @option{/dev/urandom}.
b9174d4f
DB
4339
4340@item -object rng-egd,id=@var{id},chardev=@var{chardevid}
4341
4342Creates a random number generator backend which obtains entropy from
4343an external daemon running on the host. The @option{id} parameter is
4344a unique ID that will be used to reference this entropy backend from
4345the @option{virtio-rng} device. The @option{chardev} parameter is
4346the unique ID of a character device backend that provides the connection
4347to the RNG daemon.
4348
e00adf6c
DB
4349@item -object tls-creds-anon,id=@var{id},endpoint=@var{endpoint},dir=@var{/path/to/cred/dir},verify-peer=@var{on|off}
4350
4351Creates a TLS anonymous credentials object, which can be used to provide
4352TLS support on network backends. The @option{id} parameter is a unique
4353ID which network backends will use to access the credentials. The
4354@option{endpoint} is either @option{server} or @option{client} depending
4355on whether the QEMU network backend that uses the credentials will be
4356acting as a client or as a server. If @option{verify-peer} is enabled
4357(the default) then once the handshake is completed, the peer credentials
4358will be verified, though this is a no-op for anonymous credentials.
4359
4360The @var{dir} parameter tells QEMU where to find the credential
4361files. For server endpoints, this directory may contain a file
4362@var{dh-params.pem} providing diffie-hellman parameters to use
4363for the TLS server. If the file is missing, QEMU will generate
4364a set of DH parameters at startup. This is a computationally
4365expensive operation that consumes random pool entropy, so it is
4366recommended that a persistent set of parameters be generated
4367upfront and saved.
4368
e1a6dc91
RJ
4369@item -object tls-creds-psk,id=@var{id},endpoint=@var{endpoint},dir=@var{/path/to/keys/dir}[,username=@var{username}]
4370
4371Creates a TLS Pre-Shared Keys (PSK) credentials object, which can be used to provide
4372TLS support on network backends. The @option{id} parameter is a unique
4373ID which network backends will use to access the credentials. The
4374@option{endpoint} is either @option{server} or @option{client} depending
4375on whether the QEMU network backend that uses the credentials will be
4376acting as a client or as a server. For clients only, @option{username}
4377is the username which will be sent to the server. If omitted
4378it defaults to ``qemu''.
4379
4380The @var{dir} parameter tells QEMU where to find the keys file.
4381It is called ``@var{dir}/keys.psk'' and contains ``username:key''
4382pairs. This file can most easily be created using the GnuTLS
4383@code{psktool} program.
4384
4385For server endpoints, @var{dir} may also contain a file
4386@var{dh-params.pem} providing diffie-hellman parameters to use
4387for the TLS server. If the file is missing, QEMU will generate
4388a set of DH parameters at startup. This is a computationally
4389expensive operation that consumes random pool entropy, so it is
4390recommended that a persistent set of parameters be generated
4391up front and saved.
4392
00e5e9df 4393@item -object tls-creds-x509,id=@var{id},endpoint=@var{endpoint},dir=@var{/path/to/cred/dir},priority=@var{priority},verify-peer=@var{on|off},passwordid=@var{id}
85bcbc78
DB
4394
4395Creates a TLS anonymous credentials object, which can be used to provide
4396TLS support on network backends. The @option{id} parameter is a unique
4397ID which network backends will use to access the credentials. The
4398@option{endpoint} is either @option{server} or @option{client} depending
4399on whether the QEMU network backend that uses the credentials will be
4400acting as a client or as a server. If @option{verify-peer} is enabled
4401(the default) then once the handshake is completed, the peer credentials
4402will be verified. With x509 certificates, this implies that the clients
4403must be provided with valid client certificates too.
4404
4405The @var{dir} parameter tells QEMU where to find the credential
4406files. For server endpoints, this directory may contain a file
4407@var{dh-params.pem} providing diffie-hellman parameters to use
4408for the TLS server. If the file is missing, QEMU will generate
4409a set of DH parameters at startup. This is a computationally
4410expensive operation that consumes random pool entropy, so it is
4411recommended that a persistent set of parameters be generated
4412upfront and saved.
4413
4414For x509 certificate credentials the directory will contain further files
4415providing the x509 certificates. The certificates must be stored
4416in PEM format, in filenames @var{ca-cert.pem}, @var{ca-crl.pem} (optional),
4417@var{server-cert.pem} (only servers), @var{server-key.pem} (only servers),
4418@var{client-cert.pem} (only clients), and @var{client-key.pem} (only clients).
4419
1d7b5b4a
DB
4420For the @var{server-key.pem} and @var{client-key.pem} files which
4421contain sensitive private keys, it is possible to use an encrypted
4422version by providing the @var{passwordid} parameter. This provides
4423the ID of a previously created @code{secret} object containing the
4424password for decryption.
4425
00e5e9df
CF
4426The @var{priority} parameter allows to override the global default
4427priority used by gnutls. This can be useful if the system administrator
4428needs to use a weaker set of crypto priorities for QEMU without
4429potentially forcing the weakness onto all applications. Or conversely
4430if one wants wants a stronger default for QEMU than for all other
4431applications, they can do this through this parameter. Its format is
4432a gnutls priority string as described at
4433@url{https://gnutls.org/manual/html_node/Priority-Strings.html}.
4434
338d3f41 4435@item -object filter-buffer,id=@var{id},netdev=@var{netdevid},interval=@var{t}[,queue=@var{all|rx|tx}][,status=@var{on|off}]
7dbb11c8
YH
4436
4437Interval @var{t} can't be 0, this filter batches the packet delivery: all
4438packets arriving in a given interval on netdev @var{netdevid} are delayed
4439until the end of the interval. Interval is in microseconds.
338d3f41
HZ
4440@option{status} is optional that indicate whether the netfilter is
4441on (enabled) or off (disabled), the default status for netfilter will be 'on'.
7dbb11c8
YH
4442
4443queue @var{all|rx|tx} is an option that can be applied to any netfilter.
4444
4445@option{all}: the filter is attached both to the receive and the transmit
4446 queue of the netdev (default).
4447
4448@option{rx}: the filter is attached to the receive queue of the netdev,
4449 where it will receive packets sent to the netdev.
4450
4451@option{tx}: the filter is attached to the transmit queue of the netdev,
4452 where it will receive packets sent by the netdev.
4453
e2521f0e 4454@item -object filter-mirror,id=@var{id},netdev=@var{netdevid},outdev=@var{chardevid},queue=@var{all|rx|tx}[,vnet_hdr_support]
f6d3afb5 4455
e2521f0e 4456filter-mirror on netdev @var{netdevid},mirror net packet to chardev@var{chardevid}, if it has the vnet_hdr_support flag, filter-mirror will mirror packet with vnet_hdr_len.
f6d3afb5 4457
00d5c240 4458@item -object filter-redirector,id=@var{id},netdev=@var{netdevid},indev=@var{chardevid},outdev=@var{chardevid},queue=@var{all|rx|tx}[,vnet_hdr_support]
d46f75b2
ZC
4459
4460filter-redirector on netdev @var{netdevid},redirect filter's net packet to chardev
00d5c240
ZC
4461@var{chardevid},and redirect indev's packet to filter.if it has the vnet_hdr_support flag,
4462filter-redirector will redirect packet with vnet_hdr_len.
d46f75b2
ZC
4463Create a filter-redirector we need to differ outdev id from indev id, id can not
4464be the same. we can just use indev or outdev, but at least one of indev or outdev
4465need to be specified.
4466
4b39bdce 4467@item -object filter-rewriter,id=@var{id},netdev=@var{netdevid},queue=@var{all|rx|tx},[vnet_hdr_support]
e6eee8ab
ZC
4468
4469Filter-rewriter is a part of COLO project.It will rewrite tcp packet to
4470secondary from primary to keep secondary tcp connection,and rewrite
4471tcp packet to primary from secondary make tcp packet can be handled by
4b39bdce 4472client.if it has the vnet_hdr_support flag, we can parse packet with vnet header.
e6eee8ab
ZC
4473
4474usage:
4475colo secondary:
4476-object filter-redirector,id=f1,netdev=hn0,queue=tx,indev=red0
4477-object filter-redirector,id=f2,netdev=hn0,queue=rx,outdev=red1
4478-object filter-rewriter,id=rew0,netdev=hn0,queue=all
4479
c551cd52 4480@item -object filter-dump,id=@var{id},netdev=@var{dev}[,file=@var{filename}][,maxlen=@var{len}]
d3e0c032
TH
4481
4482Dump the network traffic on netdev @var{dev} to the file specified by
4483@var{filename}. At most @var{len} bytes (64k by default) per packet are stored.
4484The file format is libpcap, so it can be analyzed with tools such as tcpdump
4485or Wireshark.
4486
cf6af766 4487@item -object colo-compare,id=@var{id},primary_in=@var{chardevid},secondary_in=@var{chardevid},outdev=@var{chardevid},iothread=@var{id}[,vnet_hdr_support][,notify_dev=@var{id}]
7dce4e6f
ZC
4488
4489Colo-compare gets packet from primary_in@var{chardevid} and secondary_in@var{chardevid}, than compare primary packet with
4490secondary packet. If the packets are same, we will output primary
4491packet to outdev@var{chardevid}, else we will notify colo-frame
4492do checkpoint and send primary packet to outdev@var{chardevid}.
5aede7f4
ZC
4493In order to improve efficiency, we need to put the task of comparison
4494in another thread. If it has the vnet_hdr_support flag, colo compare
4495will send/recv packet with vnet_hdr_len.
cf6af766
ZC
4496If you want to use Xen COLO, will need the notify_dev to notify Xen
4497colo-frame to do checkpoint.
7dce4e6f
ZC
4498
4499we must use it with the help of filter-mirror and filter-redirector.
4500
4501@example
4502
cf6af766
ZC
4503KVM COLO
4504
7dce4e6f
ZC
4505primary:
4506-netdev tap,id=hn0,vhost=off,script=/etc/qemu-ifup,downscript=/etc/qemu-ifdown
4507-device e1000,id=e0,netdev=hn0,mac=52:a4:00:12:78:66
4508-chardev socket,id=mirror0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9003,server,nowait
4509-chardev socket,id=compare1,host=3.3.3.3,port=9004,server,nowait
4510-chardev socket,id=compare0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9001,server,nowait
4511-chardev socket,id=compare0-0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9001
4512-chardev socket,id=compare_out,host=3.3.3.3,port=9005,server,nowait
4513-chardev socket,id=compare_out0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9005
5aede7f4 4514-object iothread,id=iothread1
7dce4e6f
ZC
4515-object filter-mirror,id=m0,netdev=hn0,queue=tx,outdev=mirror0
4516-object filter-redirector,netdev=hn0,id=redire0,queue=rx,indev=compare_out
4517-object filter-redirector,netdev=hn0,id=redire1,queue=rx,outdev=compare0
5aede7f4 4518-object colo-compare,id=comp0,primary_in=compare0-0,secondary_in=compare1,outdev=compare_out0,iothread=iothread1
7dce4e6f
ZC
4519
4520secondary:
4521-netdev tap,id=hn0,vhost=off,script=/etc/qemu-ifup,down script=/etc/qemu-ifdown
4522-device e1000,netdev=hn0,mac=52:a4:00:12:78:66
4523-chardev socket,id=red0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9003
4524-chardev socket,id=red1,host=3.3.3.3,port=9004
4525-object filter-redirector,id=f1,netdev=hn0,queue=tx,indev=red0
4526-object filter-redirector,id=f2,netdev=hn0,queue=rx,outdev=red1
4527
cf6af766
ZC
4528
4529Xen COLO
4530
4531primary:
4532-netdev tap,id=hn0,vhost=off,script=/etc/qemu-ifup,downscript=/etc/qemu-ifdown
4533-device e1000,id=e0,netdev=hn0,mac=52:a4:00:12:78:66
4534-chardev socket,id=mirror0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9003,server,nowait
4535-chardev socket,id=compare1,host=3.3.3.3,port=9004,server,nowait
4536-chardev socket,id=compare0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9001,server,nowait
4537-chardev socket,id=compare0-0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9001
4538-chardev socket,id=compare_out,host=3.3.3.3,port=9005,server,nowait
4539-chardev socket,id=compare_out0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9005
4540-chardev socket,id=notify_way,host=3.3.3.3,port=9009,server,nowait
4541-object filter-mirror,id=m0,netdev=hn0,queue=tx,outdev=mirror0
4542-object filter-redirector,netdev=hn0,id=redire0,queue=rx,indev=compare_out
4543-object filter-redirector,netdev=hn0,id=redire1,queue=rx,outdev=compare0
4544-object iothread,id=iothread1
4545-object colo-compare,id=comp0,primary_in=compare0-0,secondary_in=compare1,outdev=compare_out0,notify_dev=nofity_way,iothread=iothread1
4546
4547secondary:
4548-netdev tap,id=hn0,vhost=off,script=/etc/qemu-ifup,down script=/etc/qemu-ifdown
4549-device e1000,netdev=hn0,mac=52:a4:00:12:78:66
4550-chardev socket,id=red0,host=3.3.3.3,port=9003
4551-chardev socket,id=red1,host=3.3.3.3,port=9004
4552-object filter-redirector,id=f1,netdev=hn0,queue=tx,indev=red0
4553-object filter-redirector,id=f2,netdev=hn0,queue=rx,outdev=red1
4554
7dce4e6f
ZC
4555@end example
4556
4557If you want to know the detail of above command line, you can read
4558the colo-compare git log.
4559
1653a5f3
GA
4560@item -object cryptodev-backend-builtin,id=@var{id}[,queues=@var{queues}]
4561
4562Creates a cryptodev backend which executes crypto opreation from
4563the QEMU cipher APIS. The @var{id} parameter is
4564a unique ID that will be used to reference this cryptodev backend from
4565the @option{virtio-crypto} device. The @var{queues} parameter is optional,
4566which specify the queue number of cryptodev backend, the default of
4567@var{queues} is 1.
4568
4569@example
4570
4571 # qemu-system-x86_64 \
4572 [...] \
4573 -object cryptodev-backend-builtin,id=cryptodev0 \
4574 -device virtio-crypto-pci,id=crypto0,cryptodev=cryptodev0 \
4575 [...]
4576@end example
4577
042cea27
GA
4578@item -object cryptodev-vhost-user,id=@var{id},chardev=@var{chardevid}[,queues=@var{queues}]
4579
4580Creates a vhost-user cryptodev backend, backed by a chardev @var{chardevid}.
4581The @var{id} parameter is a unique ID that will be used to reference this
4582cryptodev backend from the @option{virtio-crypto} device.
4583The chardev should be a unix domain socket backed one. The vhost-user uses
4584a specifically defined protocol to pass vhost ioctl replacement messages
4585to an application on the other end of the socket.
4586The @var{queues} parameter is optional, which specify the queue number
4587of cryptodev backend for multiqueue vhost-user, the default of @var{queues} is 1.
4588
4589@example
4590
4591 # qemu-system-x86_64 \
4592 [...] \
4593 -chardev socket,id=chardev0,path=/path/to/socket \
4594 -object cryptodev-vhost-user,id=cryptodev0,chardev=chardev0 \
4595 -device virtio-crypto-pci,id=crypto0,cryptodev=cryptodev0 \
4596 [...]
4597@end example
4598
ac1d8878
DB
4599@item -object secret,id=@var{id},data=@var{string},format=@var{raw|base64}[,keyid=@var{secretid},iv=@var{string}]
4600@item -object secret,id=@var{id},file=@var{filename},format=@var{raw|base64}[,keyid=@var{secretid},iv=@var{string}]
4601
4602Defines a secret to store a password, encryption key, or some other sensitive
4603data. The sensitive data can either be passed directly via the @var{data}
4604parameter, or indirectly via the @var{file} parameter. Using the @var{data}
4605parameter is insecure unless the sensitive data is encrypted.
4606
4607The sensitive data can be provided in raw format (the default), or base64.
4608When encoded as JSON, the raw format only supports valid UTF-8 characters,
4609so base64 is recommended for sending binary data. QEMU will convert from
4610which ever format is provided to the format it needs internally. eg, an
4611RBD password can be provided in raw format, even though it will be base64
4612encoded when passed onto the RBD sever.
4613
4614For added protection, it is possible to encrypt the data associated with
4615a secret using the AES-256-CBC cipher. Use of encryption is indicated
4616by providing the @var{keyid} and @var{iv} parameters. The @var{keyid}
4617parameter provides the ID of a previously defined secret that contains
4618the AES-256 decryption key. This key should be 32-bytes long and be
4619base64 encoded. The @var{iv} parameter provides the random initialization
4620vector used for encryption of this particular secret and should be a
69c0b278 4621base64 encrypted string of the 16-byte IV.
ac1d8878
DB
4622
4623The simplest (insecure) usage is to provide the secret inline
4624
4625@example
4626
4627 # $QEMU -object secret,id=sec0,data=letmein,format=raw
4628
4629@end example
4630
4631The simplest secure usage is to provide the secret via a file
4632
b43671f8 4633 # printf "letmein" > mypasswd.txt
ac1d8878
DB
4634 # $QEMU -object secret,id=sec0,file=mypasswd.txt,format=raw
4635
4636For greater security, AES-256-CBC should be used. To illustrate usage,
4637consider the openssl command line tool which can encrypt the data. Note
4638that when encrypting, the plaintext must be padded to the cipher block
4639size (32 bytes) using the standard PKCS#5/6 compatible padding algorithm.
4640
4641First a master key needs to be created in base64 encoding:
4642
4643@example
4644 # openssl rand -base64 32 > key.b64
4645 # KEY=$(base64 -d key.b64 | hexdump -v -e '/1 "%02X"')
4646@end example
4647
4648Each secret to be encrypted needs to have a random initialization vector
4649generated. These do not need to be kept secret
4650
4651@example
4652 # openssl rand -base64 16 > iv.b64
4653 # IV=$(base64 -d iv.b64 | hexdump -v -e '/1 "%02X"')
4654@end example
4655
4656The secret to be defined can now be encrypted, in this case we're
4657telling openssl to base64 encode the result, but it could be left
4658as raw bytes if desired.
4659
4660@example
b43671f8 4661 # SECRET=$(printf "letmein" |
ac1d8878
DB
4662 openssl enc -aes-256-cbc -a -K $KEY -iv $IV)
4663@end example
4664
4665When launching QEMU, create a master secret pointing to @code{key.b64}
4666and specify that to be used to decrypt the user password. Pass the
4667contents of @code{iv.b64} to the second secret
4668
4669@example
4670 # $QEMU \
4671 -object secret,id=secmaster0,format=base64,file=key.b64 \
4672 -object secret,id=sec0,keyid=secmaster0,format=base64,\
4673 data=$SECRET,iv=$(<iv.b64)
4674@end example
4675
a9b4942f
BS
4676@item -object sev-guest,id=@var{id},cbitpos=@var{cbitpos},reduced-phys-bits=@var{val},[sev-device=@var{string},policy=@var{policy},handle=@var{handle},dh-cert-file=@var{file},session-file=@var{file}]
4677
4678Create a Secure Encrypted Virtualization (SEV) guest object, which can be used
4679to provide the guest memory encryption support on AMD processors.
4680
4681When memory encryption is enabled, one of the physical address bit (aka the
4682C-bit) is utilized to mark if a memory page is protected. The @option{cbitpos}
4683is used to provide the C-bit position. The C-bit position is Host family dependent
4684hence user must provide this value. On EPYC, the value should be 47.
4685
4686When memory encryption is enabled, we loose certain bits in physical address space.
4687The @option{reduced-phys-bits} is used to provide the number of bits we loose in
4688physical address space. Similar to C-bit, the value is Host family dependent.
4689On EPYC, the value should be 5.
4690
4691The @option{sev-device} provides the device file to use for communicating with
4692the SEV firmware running inside AMD Secure Processor. The default device is
4693'/dev/sev'. If hardware supports memory encryption then /dev/sev devices are
4694created by CCP driver.
4695
4696The @option{policy} provides the guest policy to be enforced by the SEV firmware
4697and restrict what configuration and operational commands can be performed on this
4698guest by the hypervisor. The policy should be provided by the guest owner and is
4699bound to the guest and cannot be changed throughout the lifetime of the guest.
4700The default is 0.
4701
4702If guest @option{policy} allows sharing the key with another SEV guest then
4703@option{handle} can be use to provide handle of the guest from which to share
4704the key.
4705
4706The @option{dh-cert-file} and @option{session-file} provides the guest owner's
4707Public Diffie-Hillman key defined in SEV spec. The PDH and session parameters
4708are used for establishing a cryptographic session with the guest owner to
4709negotiate keys used for attestation. The file must be encoded in base64.
4710
4711e.g to launch a SEV guest
4712@example
4713 # $QEMU \
4714 ......
4715 -object sev-guest,id=sev0,cbitpos=47,reduced-phys-bits=5 \
4716 -machine ...,memory-encryption=sev0
4717 .....
4718
4719@end example
fb5c4ebc
DB
4720
4721
4722@item -object authz-simple,id=@var{id},identity=@var{string}
4723
4724Create an authorization object that will control access to network services.
4725
4726The @option{identity} parameter is identifies the user and its format
4727depends on the network service that authorization object is associated
4728with. For authorizing based on TLS x509 certificates, the identity must
4729be the x509 distinguished name. Note that care must be taken to escape
4730any commas in the distinguished name.
4731
4732An example authorization object to validate a x509 distinguished name
4733would look like:
4734@example
4735 # $QEMU \
4736 ...
4737 -object 'authz-simple,id=auth0,identity=CN=laptop.example.com,,O=Example Org,,L=London,,ST=London,,C=GB' \
4738 ...
4739@end example
4740
4741Note the use of quotes due to the x509 distinguished name containing
4742whitespace, and escaping of ','.
4743
55d86984
DB
4744@item -object authz-listfile,id=@var{id},filename=@var{path},refresh=@var{yes|no}
4745
4746Create an authorization object that will control access to network services.
4747
4748The @option{filename} parameter is the fully qualified path to a file
4749containing the access control list rules in JSON format.
4750
4751An example set of rules that match against SASL usernames might look
4752like:
4753
4754@example
4755 @{
4756 "rules": [
4757 @{ "match": "fred", "policy": "allow", "format": "exact" @},
4758 @{ "match": "bob", "policy": "allow", "format": "exact" @},
4759 @{ "match": "danb", "policy": "deny", "format": "glob" @},
4760 @{ "match": "dan*", "policy": "allow", "format": "exact" @},
4761 ],
4762 "policy": "deny"
4763 @}
4764@end example
4765
4766When checking access the object will iterate over all the rules and
4767the first rule to match will have its @option{policy} value returned
4768as the result. If no rules match, then the default @option{policy}
4769value is returned.
4770
4771The rules can either be an exact string match, or they can use the
4772simple UNIX glob pattern matching to allow wildcards to be used.
4773
4774If @option{refresh} is set to true the file will be monitored
4775and automatically reloaded whenever its content changes.
4776
4777As with the @code{authz-simple} object, the format of the identity
4778strings being matched depends on the network service, but is usually
4779a TLS x509 distinguished name, or a SASL username.
4780
4781An example authorization object to validate a SASL username
4782would look like:
4783@example
4784 # $QEMU \
4785 ...
4786 -object authz-simple,id=auth0,filename=/etc/qemu/vnc-sasl.acl,refresh=yes
4787 ...
4788@end example
4789
8953caf3
DB
4790@item -object authz-pam,id=@var{id},service=@var{string}
4791
4792Create an authorization object that will control access to network services.
4793
4794The @option{service} parameter provides the name of a PAM service to use
4795for authorization. It requires that a file @code{/etc/pam.d/@var{service}}
4796exist to provide the configuration for the @code{account} subsystem.
4797
4798An example authorization object to validate a TLS x509 distinguished
4799name would look like:
4800
4801@example
4802 # $QEMU \
4803 ...
4804 -object authz-pam,id=auth0,service=qemu-vnc
4805 ...
4806@end example
4807
4808There would then be a corresponding config file for PAM at
4809@code{/etc/pam.d/qemu-vnc} that contains:
4810
4811@example
4812account requisite pam_listfile.so item=user sense=allow \
4813 file=/etc/qemu/vnc.allow
4814@end example
4815
4816Finally the @code{/etc/qemu/vnc.allow} file would contain
4817the list of x509 distingished names that are permitted
4818access
4819
4820@example
4821CN=laptop.example.com,O=Example Home,L=London,ST=London,C=GB
4822@end example
4823
4824
b9174d4f
DB
4825@end table
4826
4827ETEXI
4828
4829
3dbf2c7f
SW
4830HXCOMM This is the last statement. Insert new options before this line!
4831STEXI
4832@end table
4833ETEXI