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authorEric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>2014-05-07 09:57:41 +0800
committerLuiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com>2014-05-09 09:11:32 -0400
commitcc1626556d264c867a07ebe8672fa06b208e209a (patch)
tree88400103c9fe22fb1f92036f8eaf5631203f1b28 /docs/qapi-code-gen.txt
parentcd0c5389ddb7d0bb7005f993be1b8ac46a8b88b2 (diff)
qapi: Document optional arguments' backwards compatibility
Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Fam Zheng <famz@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Luiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/qapi-code-gen.txt')
-rw-r--r--docs/qapi-code-gen.txt32
1 files changed, 28 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/docs/qapi-code-gen.txt b/docs/qapi-code-gen.txt
index 051d109c34..26312d84e8 100644
--- a/docs/qapi-code-gen.txt
+++ b/docs/qapi-code-gen.txt
@@ -60,10 +60,34 @@ example of a complex type is:
{ 'type': 'MyType',
'data': { 'member1': 'str', 'member2': 'int', '*member3': 'str' } }
-The use of '*' as a prefix to the name means the member is optional. Optional
-members should always be added to the end of the dictionary to preserve
-backwards compatibility.
-
+The use of '*' as a prefix to the name means the member is optional.
+
+The default initialization value of an optional argument should not be changed
+between versions of QEMU unless the new default maintains backward
+compatibility to the user-visible behavior of the old default.
+
+With proper documentation, this policy still allows some flexibility; for
+example, documenting that a default of 0 picks an optimal buffer size allows
+one release to declare the optimal size at 512 while another release declares
+the optimal size at 4096 - the user-visible behavior is not the bytes used by
+the buffer, but the fact that the buffer was optimal size.
+
+On input structures (only mentioned in the 'data' side of a command), changing
+from mandatory to optional is safe (older clients will supply the option, and
+newer clients can benefit from the default); changing from optional to
+mandatory is backwards incompatible (older clients may be omitting the option,
+and must continue to work).
+
+On output structures (only mentioned in the 'returns' side of a command),
+changing from mandatory to optional is in general unsafe (older clients may be
+expecting the field, and could crash if it is missing), although it can be done
+if the only way that the optional argument will be omitted is when it is
+triggered by the presence of a new input flag to the command that older clients
+don't know to send. Changing from optional to mandatory is safe.
+
+A structure that is used in both input and output of various commands
+must consider the backwards compatibility constraints of both directions
+of use.
A complex type definition can specify another complex type as its base.
In this case, the fields of the base type are included as top-level fields