mirror of
https://gitlab.com/libvirt/libvirt.git
synced 2024-11-05 04:41:20 +00:00
208 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
208 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
|
==================
|
||
|
Support guarantees
|
||
|
==================
|
||
|
|
||
|
.. contents::
|
||
|
|
||
|
This document will outline the support status / guarantees around the very
|
||
|
interfaces that libvirt exposes to applications and/or system administrators.
|
||
|
The intent is to help users understand what features they can rely upon in
|
||
|
particular scenarios, and whether they are likely to suffer disruption during
|
||
|
upgrades.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Primary public API
|
||
|
------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
The main public API provided by ``libvirt.so`` and described in
|
||
|
``libvirt/libvirt.h`` exposes the primary hypervisor agnostic management
|
||
|
interface of libvirt. This API has the strongest guarantee of any part of
|
||
|
libvirt with a promise to keep backwards compatibility forever. Specific details
|
||
|
are as follows:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Functions
|
||
|
Functions will never be removed from the public API, and will never have
|
||
|
parameters added, removed or changed in their signature. IOW they will be ABI
|
||
|
compatible forever. The semantics implied by a specific set of parameters
|
||
|
passed to the function will remain unchanged. Where a parameter accepts a
|
||
|
bitset of feature flags, or an enumerated value, further flags / enum values
|
||
|
may be supported in the future. Where a parameter accepts one of a set of
|
||
|
related constants, further constants may be supported in the future.
|
||
|
Struct types
|
||
|
Once defined in a release, struct definitions will never have any fields add,
|
||
|
removed or changed in any way. Their size and layout is fixed forever. If a
|
||
|
struct name starts with an underscore, it is considered acceptable to rename
|
||
|
it. Applications should thus always use the corresponding typedef in
|
||
|
preference to the struct name.
|
||
|
Union types
|
||
|
Once defined in a release, union definitions will never have any existing
|
||
|
fields removed or changed. New union choices may be added, provided that they
|
||
|
don't change the size of the existing union definition. If a struct name
|
||
|
starts with an underscore, it is considered acceptable to rename it.
|
||
|
Applications should thus always use the corresponding typedef in preference
|
||
|
to the struct name.
|
||
|
Type definitions
|
||
|
Most custom data types used in the APIs have corresponding typedefs provided
|
||
|
for their stable names. The typedefs should always be used in preference to
|
||
|
the underlying data type name, as the latter are not guaranteed to be stable.
|
||
|
Enumerations
|
||
|
Once defined in a release, existing enumeration values will never be removed
|
||
|
or renamed. New enumeration values may be introduced at any time. Every
|
||
|
enumeration will have a '_LAST' value which indicates the current highest
|
||
|
enumeration value, which may increase with new releases. If an enumeration
|
||
|
name starts with an underscore, it is considered acceptable to rename it.
|
||
|
Applications should thus always use the corresponding typedef in preference
|
||
|
to the enum name.
|
||
|
Constants
|
||
|
Once defined in a release, existing constants will never be removed or have
|
||
|
their value changed. Most constants are grouped into related sets, and within
|
||
|
each set, new constants may be introduced. APIs which use the constants may
|
||
|
thus accept or return new constant values over time.
|
||
|
Symbol versions
|
||
|
Where the platform library format permits, APIs defined in libvirt.so library
|
||
|
will have version information associated. Each API will be tagged with the
|
||
|
version in which it was introduced, and this won't be changed thereafter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hypervisor specific APIs
|
||
|
------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
A number of hypervisor drivers provide additional libraries with hypervisor
|
||
|
specific APIs, extending the core libvirt API. These add-on libraries follow the
|
||
|
same general principles described above, however, they are **not** guaranteed to
|
||
|
be preserved forever. The project reserves the right to remove hypervisor
|
||
|
specific APIs in any new release, or to change their semantics. That said the
|
||
|
project will endeavour to maintain API compatibility for as long as is
|
||
|
practical.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Use of some hypervisor specific APIs may result in the running guest being
|
||
|
marked as "tainted" if the API is at risk of having unexpected interactions with
|
||
|
normal libvirt operations. An application which chooses to make use of
|
||
|
hypervisor specific APIs should validate their operation with each new release
|
||
|
of libvirt and each new release of the underlying hypervisor. The semantics may
|
||
|
change in unexpected ways, or have unforeseen interactions with libvirt's
|
||
|
operation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Error reporting
|
||
|
---------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Most API calls are subject to failure and so will report error codes and
|
||
|
messages. Libvirt defines error codes for a wide variety of scenarios, some
|
||
|
represent very specific problems, while others are general purpose for broad
|
||
|
classes of problem. Over time the error codes reported are liable to change,
|
||
|
usually changing from a generic error to a more specific error. Thus
|
||
|
applications should be careful about checking for & taking action upon specific
|
||
|
error codes, as their behaviour may change across releases.
|
||
|
|
||
|
XML schemas
|
||
|
-----------
|
||
|
|
||
|
The main objects exposed via the primary libvirt public API are usually
|
||
|
configured via XML documents following specific schemas. The XML schemas are
|
||
|
considered to be stable formats, whose compatibility will be maintained forever.
|
||
|
Specific details are as follows:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Attributes
|
||
|
Attributes defined on an XML element will never be removed or renamed. New
|
||
|
attributes may be defined. If the set of valid values for an attribute are
|
||
|
determined by an enumeration, the permitted values will never be removed or
|
||
|
renamed, only new values defined. None the less, specific hypervisors may
|
||
|
reject usage of certain values according to their feature set.
|
||
|
Elements
|
||
|
Elements defined will never be removed or renamed. New child elements may be
|
||
|
defined at any time. In places where only a single instance of a named XML
|
||
|
element is used, future versions may be extended to permit multiple instances
|
||
|
of the named XML element to be used. An element which currently has no
|
||
|
content may later gain child elements.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some hypervisor drivers may choose to allow use of hypervisor specific
|
||
|
extensions to the XML documents. These extensions will always be contained
|
||
|
within a hypervisor specific XML namespace. There is generally no guarantee of
|
||
|
long term support for the hypervisor specific extensions across releases, though
|
||
|
the project will endeavour to preserve them as long as is possible. Applications
|
||
|
choosing to use hypervisor specific extensions should validate their operation
|
||
|
against new libvirt or hypervisor releases.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Configuration files
|
||
|
-------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
A number of programs / daemons provided libvirt rely on host filesystem
|
||
|
configuration files. These configuration files are accompanied by augeas lens
|
||
|
for easy manipulation by applications. There is in general no guarantee that
|
||
|
parameters available in the configuration file will be preserved across
|
||
|
releases, though the project will endeavour to preserve them as long as is
|
||
|
possible. If a configuration option is dropped from the file, the augeas lens
|
||
|
will retain the ability to read that configuration parameter, so that it is able
|
||
|
to read & update historically modified files. The default configuration files
|
||
|
ship with all parameters commented out such that a deployment relies on the
|
||
|
built-in defaults of the application in question. There is no guarantee that the
|
||
|
defaults will remain the same across releases. A deployment that expects a
|
||
|
particular value for a configuration parameter should consider defining it
|
||
|
explicitly, instead of relying on the defaults.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hypervisor drivers
|
||
|
------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
The libvirt project provides support for a wide variety of hypervisor drivers.
|
||
|
These drivers target certain versions of the hypervisor's underlying management
|
||
|
APIs. In general libvirt aims to work with any hypervisor version that is still
|
||
|
broadly supported by its vendor. When a vendor discontinues support for a
|
||
|
particular hypervisor version it will be dropped by libvirt. Libvirt may choose
|
||
|
to drop support for a particular hypervisor version prior to the vendor ending
|
||
|
support, if it deems that the likely usage is too small to justify the ongoing
|
||
|
maintenance cost.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Each hypervisor release will implement a distinct subset of features that can be
|
||
|
expressed in the libvirt APIs and XML formats. While the XML schema syntax will
|
||
|
be stable across releases, libvirt is unable to promise that it will always be
|
||
|
able to support usage of the same features across hypervisor releases. Where a
|
||
|
hypervisor changes the way a feature is implemented, the project will endeavour
|
||
|
to adapt to the new implementation to provide the same semantics. In cases where
|
||
|
the feature is discontinued by the hypervisor, libvirt will return an error
|
||
|
indicating it is not supported. Likewise libvirt will make reasonable efforts to
|
||
|
keep API calls working across hypervisor releases even if the underlying
|
||
|
implementation changes. In cases where this is impossible, a suitable error will
|
||
|
be reported. The list of APIs which have implementations `is detailed
|
||
|
separately <hvsupport.html>`__.
|
||
|
|
||
|
RPC protocol
|
||
|
------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
For some hypervisor drivers, the libvirt.so library communicates with separate
|
||
|
libvirt daemons to perform work. This communication takes place over a binary
|
||
|
RPC protocol defined by libvirt. The protocol uses the XDR format for data
|
||
|
encoding, and the message packet format is defined in libvirt source code.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Applications are encouraged to use the primary libvirt.so library which
|
||
|
transparently talks to the daemons, so that they are not exposed to the
|
||
|
hypervisor driver specific details. None the less, the RPC protocol associated
|
||
|
with the libvirtd is considered to be a long term stable ABI. It will only ever
|
||
|
have new messages added to it, existing messages will not be removed, nor have
|
||
|
their contents changed. Thus if an application does wish to provide its own
|
||
|
client side implementation of the RPC protocol this is supported, with the
|
||
|
caveat that the application will loose the ability to work with certain
|
||
|
hypervisors libvirt supports. The project reserves the right to define new
|
||
|
authentication and encryption options for the protocol, and the defaults used in
|
||
|
this area may change over time. This is particularly true of the TLS ciphers
|
||
|
permitted. Thus applications choosing to implement the RPC protocol must be
|
||
|
prepared to track support for new security options. If defaults are changed,
|
||
|
however, it will generally be possible to reconfigure the daemon to use the old
|
||
|
defaults, albeit with possible implications for system security.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Other daemons besides, libvirtd, also use the same RPC protocol, but with
|
||
|
different message types defined. These RPC protocols are all considered to be
|
||
|
private implementations that are liable to change at any time. Applications must
|
||
|
not attempt to talk to these other daemons directly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
virsh client
|
||
|
------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
The virsh program provides a simple client to interact with an arbitrary libvirt
|
||
|
hypervisor connection. Since it uses the primary public API of libvirt, it
|
||
|
should generally inherit the guarantees associated with that API, and with the
|
||
|
hypervisor driver. The commands that virsh exposes, and the arguments they
|
||
|
accept are all considered to be long term stable. Existing commands and
|
||
|
arguments will not be removed or renamed. New commands and arguments may be
|
||
|
added in new releases. The text output format produced by virsh commands is not
|
||
|
generally guaranteed to be stable if it contains compound data (eg formatted
|
||
|
tables or lists). Commands which output single data items (ie an object name, or
|
||
|
an XML document), can be treated as having stable format.
|