Deprecated features¶
In general features are intended to be supported indefinitely once introduced into QEMU. In the event that a feature needs to be removed, it will be listed in this section. The feature will remain functional for the release in which it was deprecated and one further release. After these two releases, the feature is liable to be removed. Deprecated features may also generate warnings on the console when QEMU starts up, or if activated via a monitor command, however, this is not a mandatory requirement.
Prior to the 2.10.0 release there was no official policy on how long features would be deprecated prior to their removal, nor any documented list of which features were deprecated. Thus any features deprecated prior to 2.10.0 will be treated as if they were first deprecated in the 2.10.0 release.
What follows is a list of all features currently marked as deprecated.
System emulator command line arguments¶
-usbdevice
(since 2.10.0)¶
The -usbdevice DEV
argument is now a synonym for setting
the -device usb-DEV
argument instead. The deprecated syntax
would automatically enable USB support on the machine type.
If using the new syntax, USB support must be explicitly
enabled via the -machine usb=on
argument.
-drive file=json:{...{'driver':'file'}}
(since 3.0)¶
The ‘file’ driver for drives is no longer appropriate for character or host devices and will only accept regular files (S_IFREG). The correct driver for these file types is ‘host_cdrom’ or ‘host_device’ as appropriate.
-vnc acl
(since 4.0.0)¶
The acl
option to the -vnc
argument has been replaced
by the tls-authz
and sasl-authz
options.
QEMU_AUDIO_
environment variables and -audio-help
(since 4.0)¶
The -audiodev
argument is now the preferred way to specify audio
backend settings instead of environment variables. To ease migration to
the new format, the -audiodev-help
option can be used to convert
the current values of the environment variables to -audiodev
options.
Creating sound card devices and vnc without audiodev=
property (since 4.2)¶
When not using the deprecated legacy audio config, each sound card
should specify an audiodev=
property. Additionally, when using
vnc, you should specify an audiodev=
property if you plan to
transmit audio through the VNC protocol.
Creating sound card devices using -soundhw
(since 5.1)¶
Sound card devices should be created using -device
instead. The
names are the same for most devices. The exceptions are hda
which
needs two devices (-device intel-hda -device hda-duplex
) and
pcspk
which can be activated using -machine
pcspk-audiodev=<name>
.
-mon ...,control=readline,pretty=on|off
(since 4.1)¶
The pretty=on|off
switch has no effect for HMP monitors, but is
silently ignored. Using the switch with HMP monitors will become an
error in the future.
-realtime
(since 4.1)¶
The -realtime mlock=on|off
argument has been replaced by the
-overcommit mem-lock=on|off
argument.
RISC-V -bios
(since 5.1)¶
QEMU 4.1 introduced support for the -bios option in QEMU for RISC-V for the RISC-V virt machine and sifive_u machine. QEMU 4.1 had no changes to the default behaviour to avoid breakages.
QEMU 5.1 changes the default behaviour from -bios none
to -bios default
.
- QEMU 5.1 has three options:
-bios default
- This is the current default behavior if no -bios optionis included. This option will load the default OpenSBI firmware automatically. The firmware is included with the QEMU release and no user interaction is required. All a user needs to do is specify the kernel they want to boot with the -kernel option
-bios none
- QEMU will not automatically load any firmware. It is upto the user to load all the images they need.
-bios <file>
- Tells QEMU to load the specified file as the firmwrae.
-tb-size
option (since 5.0)¶
QEMU 5.0 introduced an alternative syntax to specify the size of the translation
block cache, -accel tcg,tb-size=
. The new syntax deprecates the
previously available -tb-size
option.
-show-cursor
option (since 5.0)¶
- Use
-display sdl,show-cursor=on
or -display gtk,show-cursor=on
instead.
Configuring floppies with ``-global
¶
Use -device floppy,...
instead:
-global isa-fdc.driveA=...
-global sysbus-fdc.driveA=...
-global SUNW,fdtwo.drive=...
become
-device floppy,unit=0,drive=...
and
-global isa-fdc.driveB=...
-global sysbus-fdc.driveB=...
become
-device floppy,unit=1,drive=...
-drive
with bogus interface type¶
Drives with interface types other than if=none
are for onboard
devices. It is possible to use drives the board doesn’t pick up with
-device. This usage is now deprecated. Use if=none
instead.
QEMU Machine Protocol (QMP) commands¶
change
(since 2.5.0)¶
Use blockdev-change-medium
or change-vnc-password
instead.
blockdev-open-tray
, blockdev-close-tray
argument device
(since 2.8.0)¶
Use argument id
instead.
eject
argument device
(since 2.8.0)¶
Use argument id
instead.
blockdev-change-medium
argument device
(since 2.8.0)¶
Use argument id
instead.
block_set_io_throttle
argument device
(since 2.8.0)¶
Use argument id
instead.
migrate_set_downtime
and migrate_set_speed
(since 2.8.0)¶
Use migrate-set-parameters
instead.
query-named-block-nodes
result encryption_key_missing
(since 2.10.0)¶
Always false.
query-block
result inserted.encryption_key_missing
(since 2.10.0)¶
Always false.
blockdev-add
empty string argument backing
(since 2.10.0)¶
Use argument value null
instead.
migrate-set-cache-size
and query-migrate-cache-size
(since 2.11.0)¶
Use migrate-set-parameters
and query-migrate-parameters
instead.
block-commit
arguments base
and top
(since 3.1.0)¶
Use arguments base-node
and top-node
instead.
object-add
option props
(since 5.0)¶
Specify the properties for the object as top-level arguments instead.
query-named-block-nodes
and query-block
result dirty-bitmaps[i].status (since 4.0)¶
The status
field of the BlockDirtyInfo
structure, returned by
these commands is deprecated. Two new boolean fields, recording
and
busy
effectively replace it.
query-block
result field dirty-bitmaps
(Since 4.2)¶
The dirty-bitmaps
field of the BlockInfo
structure, returned by
the query-block command is itself now deprecated. The dirty-bitmaps
field of the BlockDeviceInfo
struct should be used instead, which is the
type of the inserted
field in query-block replies, as well as the
type of array items in query-named-block-nodes.
Since the dirty-bitmaps
field is optionally present in both the old and
new locations, clients must use introspection to learn where to anticipate
the field if/when it does appear in command output.
query-cpus
(since 2.12.0)¶
The query-cpus
command is replaced by the query-cpus-fast
command.
query-cpus-fast
arch
output member (since 3.0.0)¶
The arch
output member of the query-cpus-fast
command is
replaced by the target
output member.
query-events
(since 4.0)¶
The query-events
command has been superseded by the more powerful
and accurate query-qmp-schema
command.
chardev client socket with wait
option (since 4.0)¶
Character devices creating sockets in client mode should not specify the ‘wait’ field, which is only applicable to sockets in server mode
nbd-server-add
and nbd-server-remove
(since 5.2)¶
Use the more generic commands block-export-add
and block-export-del
instead. As part of this deprecation, where nbd-server-add
used a
single bitmap
, the new block-export-add
uses a list of bitmaps
.
Human Monitor Protocol (HMP) commands¶
acl_show
, acl_reset
, acl_policy
, acl_add
, acl_remove
(since 4.0.0)¶
The acl_show
, acl_reset
, acl_policy
, acl_add
, and
acl_remove
commands are deprecated with no replacement. Authorization
for VNC should be performed using the pluggable QAuthZ objects.
System emulator CPUS¶
moxie
CPU (since 5.2.0)¶
The moxie
guest CPU support is deprecated and will be removed in
a future version of QEMU. It’s unclear whether anybody is still using
CPU emulation in QEMU, and there are no test images available to make
sure that the code is still working.
compat
property of server class POWER CPUs (since 5.0)¶
The compat
property used to set backwards compatibility modes for
the processor has been deprecated. The max-cpu-compat
property of
the pseries
machine type should be used instead.
lm32
CPUs (since 5.2.0)¶
The lm32
guest CPU support is deprecated and will be removed in
a future version of QEMU. The only public user of this architecture
was the milkymist project, which has been dead for years; there was
never an upstream Linux port.
unicore32
CPUs (since 5.2.0)¶
The unicore32
guest CPU support is deprecated and will be removed in
a future version of QEMU. Support for this CPU was removed from the
upstream Linux kernel, and there is no available upstream toolchain
to build binaries for it.
Icelake-Client
CPU Model (since 5.2.0)¶
Icelake-Client
CPU Models are deprecated. Use Icelake-Server
CPU
Models instead.
MIPS I7200
CPU Model (since 5.2)¶
The I7200
guest CPU relies on the nanoMIPS ISA, which is deprecated
(the ISA has never been upstreamed to a compiler toolchain). Therefore
this CPU is also deprecated.
System emulator devices¶
ide-drive
(since 4.2)¶
The ‘ide-drive’ device is deprecated. Users should use ‘ide-hd’ or ‘ide-cd’ as appropriate to get an IDE hard disk or CD-ROM as needed.
scsi-disk
(since 4.2)¶
The ‘scsi-disk’ device is deprecated. Users should use ‘scsi-hd’ or ‘scsi-cd’ as appropriate to get a SCSI hard disk or CD-ROM as needed.
System emulator machines¶
mips fulong2e
machine (since 5.1)¶
This machine has been renamed fuloong2e
.
pc-1.0
, pc-1.1
, pc-1.2
and pc-1.3
(since 5.0)¶
These machine types are very old and likely can not be used for live migration from old QEMU versions anymore. A newer machine type should be used instead.
Raspberry Pi raspi2
and raspi3
machines (since 5.2)¶
The Raspberry Pi machines come in various models (A, A+, B, B+). To be able
to distinguish which model QEMU is implementing, the raspi2
and raspi3
machines have been renamed raspi2b
and raspi3b
.
Device options¶
Emulated device options¶
-device virtio-blk,scsi=on|off
(since 5.0.0)¶
The virtio-blk SCSI passthrough feature is a legacy VIRTIO feature. VIRTIO 1.0 and later do not support it because the virtio-scsi device was introduced for full SCSI support. Use virtio-scsi instead when SCSI passthrough is required.
Note this also applies to -device virtio-blk-pci,scsi=on|off
, which is an
alias.
Block device options¶
"backing": ""
(since 2.12.0)¶
In order to prevent QEMU from automatically opening an image’s backing
chain, use "backing": null
instead.
rbd
keyvalue pair encoded filenames: ""
(since 3.1.0)¶
Options for rbd
should be specified according to its runtime options,
like other block drivers. Legacy parsing of keyvalue pair encoded
filenames is useful to open images with the old format for backing files;
These image files should be updated to use the current format.
Example of legacy encoding:
json:{"file.driver":"rbd", "file.filename":"rbd:rbd/name"}
The above, converted to the current supported format:
json:{"file.driver":"rbd", "file.pool":"rbd", "file.image":"name"}
sheepdog
driver (since 5.2.0)¶
The sheepdog
block device driver is deprecated. The corresponding upstream
server project is no longer actively maintained. Users are recommended to switch
to an alternative distributed block device driver such as RBD. The
qemu-img convert
command can be used to liberate existing data by moving
it out of sheepdog volumes into an alternative storage backend.
linux-user mode CPUs¶
tilegx
CPUs (since 5.1.0)¶
The tilegx
guest CPU support (which was only implemented in
linux-user mode) is deprecated and will be removed in a future version
of QEMU. Support for this CPU was removed from the upstream Linux
kernel in 2018, and has also been dropped from glibc.
ppc64abi32
CPUs (since 5.2.0)¶
The ppc64abi32
architecture has a number of issues which regularly
trip up our CI testing and is suspected to be quite broken. For that
reason the maintainers strongly suspect no one actually uses it.
MIPS I7200
CPU (since 5.2)¶
The I7200
guest CPU relies on the nanoMIPS ISA, which is deprecated
(the ISA has never been upstreamed to a compiler toolchain). Therefore
this CPU is also deprecated.
Backwards compatibility¶
Runnability guarantee of CPU models (since 4.1.0)¶
Previous versions of QEMU never changed existing CPU models in ways that introduced additional host software or hardware requirements to the VM. This allowed management software to safely change the machine type of an existing VM without introducing new requirements (“runnability guarantee”). This prevented CPU models from being updated to include CPU vulnerability mitigations, leaving guests vulnerable in the default configuration.
The CPU model runnability guarantee won’t apply anymore to
existing CPU models. Management software that needs runnability
guarantees must resolve the CPU model aliases using the
alias-of
field returned by the query-cpu-definitions
QMP
command.
While those guarantees are kept, the return value of
query-cpu-definitions
will have existing CPU model aliases
point to a version that doesn’t break runnability guarantees
(specifically, version 1 of those CPU models). In future QEMU
versions, aliases will point to newer CPU model versions
depending on the machine type, so management software must
resolve CPU model aliases before starting a virtual machine.
Recently removed features¶
What follows is a record of recently removed, formerly deprecated features that serves as a record for users who have encountered trouble after a recent upgrade.
System emulator command line arguments¶
-net ...,name=
name (removed in 5.1)¶
The name
parameter of the -net
option was a synonym
for the id
parameter, which should now be used instead.
-no-kvm
(removed in 5.2)¶
The -no-kvm
argument was a synonym for setting -machine accel=tcg
.
QEMU Machine Protocol (QMP) commands¶
block-dirty-bitmap-add
“autoload” parameter (since 4.2.0)¶
The “autoload” parameter has been ignored since 2.12.0. All bitmaps are automatically loaded from qcow2 images.
cpu-add
(removed in 5.2)¶
Use device_add
for hotplugging vCPUs instead of cpu-add
. See
documentation of query-hotpluggable-cpus
for additional details.
Human Monitor Protocol (HMP) commands¶
The hub_id
parameter of hostfwd_add
/ hostfwd_remove
(removed in 5.0)¶
The [hub_id name]
parameter tuple of the ‘hostfwd_add’ and
‘hostfwd_remove’ HMP commands has been replaced by netdev_id
.
cpu-add
(removed in 5.2)¶
Use device_add
for hotplugging vCPUs instead of cpu-add
. See
documentation of query-hotpluggable-cpus
for additional details.
Guest Emulator ISAs¶
RISC-V ISA privilege specification version 1.09.1 (removed in 5.1)¶
The RISC-V ISA privilege specification version 1.09.1 has been removed. QEMU supports both the newer version 1.10.0 and the ratified version 1.11.0, these should be used instead of the 1.09.1 version.
System emulator CPUS¶
KVM guest support on 32-bit Arm hosts (removed in 5.2)¶
The Linux kernel has dropped support for allowing 32-bit Arm systems to host KVM guests as of the 5.7 kernel. Accordingly, QEMU is deprecating its support for this configuration and will remove it in a future version. Running 32-bit guests on a 64-bit Arm host remains supported.
RISC-V ISA Specific CPUs (removed in 5.1)¶
The RISC-V cpus with the ISA version in the CPU name have been removed. The
four CPUs are: rv32gcsu-v1.9.1
, rv32gcsu-v1.10.0
, rv64gcsu-v1.9.1
and
rv64gcsu-v1.10.0
. Instead the version can be specified via the CPU priv_spec
option when using the rv32
or rv64
CPUs.
RISC-V no MMU CPUs (removed in 5.1)¶
The RISC-V no MMU cpus have been removed. The two CPUs: rv32imacu-nommu
and
rv64imacu-nommu
can no longer be used. Instead the MMU status can be specified
via the CPU mmu
option when using the rv32
or rv64
CPUs.
System emulator machines¶
spike_v1.9.1
and spike_v1.10
(removed in 5.1)¶
The version specific Spike machines have been removed in favour of the
generic spike
machine. If you need to specify an older version of the RISC-V
spec you can use the -cpu rv64gcsu,priv_spec=v1.10.0
command line argument.
mips r4k
platform (removed in 5.2)¶
This machine type was very old and unmaintained. Users should use the malta
machine type instead.
Related binaries¶
qemu-nbd --partition
(removed in 5.0)¶
The qemu-nbd --partition $digit
code (also spelled -P
)
could only handle MBR partitions, and never correctly handled logical
partitions beyond partition 5. Exporting a partition can still be
done by utilizing the --image-opts
option with a raw blockdev
using the offset
and size
parameters layered on top of
any other existing blockdev. For example, if partition 1 is 100MiB
long starting at 1MiB, the old command:
qemu-nbd -t -P 1 -f qcow2 file.qcow2
can be rewritten as:
qemu-nbd -t --image-opts driver=raw,offset=1M,size=100M,file.driver=qcow2,file.file.driver=file,file.file.filename=file.qcow2
qemu-img convert -n -o
(removed in 5.1)¶
All options specified in -o
are image creation options, so
they are now rejected when used with -n
to skip image creation.
qemu-img create -b bad file $size
(removed in 5.1)¶
When creating an image with a backing file that could not be opened,
qemu-img create
used to issue a warning about the failure but
proceed with the image creation if an explicit size was provided.
However, as the -u
option exists for this purpose, it is safer to
enforce that any failure to open the backing image (including if the
backing file is missing or an incorrect format was specified) is an
error when -u
is not used.
Command line options¶
-smp
(invalid topologies) (removed 5.2)¶
CPU topology properties should describe whole machine topology including possible CPUs.
However, historically it was possible to start QEMU with an incorrect topology where n <= sockets * cores * threads < maxcpus, which could lead to an incorrect topology enumeration by the guest. Support for invalid topologies is removed, the user must ensure topologies described with -smp include all possible cpus, i.e. sockets * cores * threads = maxcpus.
-numa
node (without memory specified) (removed 5.2)¶
Splitting RAM by default between NUMA nodes had the same issues as mem
parameter with the difference that the role of the user plays QEMU using
implicit generic or board specific splitting rule.
Use memdev
with memory-backend-ram backend or mem
(if
it’s supported by used machine type) to define mapping explicitly instead.
Users of existing VMs, wishing to preserve the same RAM distribution, should
configure it explicitly using -numa node,memdev
options. Current RAM
distribution can be retrieved using HMP command info numa
and if separate
memory devices (pc|nv-dimm) are present use info memory-device
and subtract
device memory from output of info numa
.
-numa node,mem=
size (removed in 5.1)¶
The parameter mem
of -numa node
was used to assign a part of
guest RAM to a NUMA node. But when using it, it’s impossible to manage a specified
RAM chunk on the host side (like bind it to a host node, setting bind policy, …),
so the guest ends up with the fake NUMA configuration with suboptiomal performance.
However since 2014 there is an alternative way to assign RAM to a NUMA node
using parameter memdev
, which does the same as mem
and adds
means to actually manage node RAM on the host side. Use parameter memdev
with memory-backend-ram backend as replacement for parameter mem
to achieve the same fake NUMA effect or a properly configured
memory-backend-file backend to actually benefit from NUMA configuration.
New machine versions (since 5.1) will not accept the option but it will still
work with old machine types. User can check the QAPI schema to see if the legacy
option is supported by looking at MachineInfo::numa-mem-supported property.
-mem-path
fallback to RAM (removed in 5.0)¶
If guest RAM allocation from file pointed by mem-path
failed,
QEMU was falling back to allocating from RAM, which might have resulted
in unpredictable behavior since the backing file specified by the user
as ignored. Currently, users are responsible for making sure the backing storage
specified with -mem-path
can actually provide the guest RAM configured with
-m
and QEMU fails to start up if RAM allocation is unsuccessful.
-smp
(invalid topologies) (removed 5.2)¶
CPU topology properties should describe whole machine topology including possible CPUs.
However, historically it was possible to start QEMU with an incorrect topology where n <= sockets * cores * threads < maxcpus, which could lead to an incorrect topology enumeration by the guest. Support for invalid topologies is removed, the user must ensure topologies described with -smp include all possible cpus, i.e. sockets * cores * threads = maxcpus.
-machine enforce-config-section=on|off
(removed 5.2)¶
The enforce-config-section
property was replaced by the
-global migration.send-configuration={on|off}
option.