I don't think I can remove the parameters directly but certainly mark them as deprecated.
Message-Id: <20230420150009.1675181-6-alex.ben...@linaro.org> Reviewed-by: Stefan Hajnoczi <stefa...@redhat.com> Signed-off-by: Alex Bennée <alex.ben...@linaro.org> --- qapi/trace.json | 22 +++++++--------------- 1 file changed, 7 insertions(+), 15 deletions(-) diff --git a/qapi/trace.json b/qapi/trace.json index f425d10764..de6b1681aa 100644 --- a/qapi/trace.json +++ b/qapi/trace.json @@ -33,9 +33,9 @@ # # @name: Event name. # @state: Tracing state. -# @vcpu: Whether this is a per-vCPU event (since 2.7). +# @vcpu: Whether this is a per-vCPU event (deprecated since 8.1). # -# An event is per-vCPU if it has the "vcpu" property in the "trace-events" +# There are no longer any events with the "vcpu" property in the "trace-events" # files. # # Since: 2.2 @@ -49,19 +49,15 @@ # Query the state of events. # # @name: Event name pattern (case-sensitive glob). -# @vcpu: The vCPU to query (any by default; since 2.7). +# @vcpu: The vCPU to query (deprecated since 8.1). # # Returns: a list of @TraceEventInfo for the matching events # # An event is returned if: # # - its name matches the @name pattern, and -# - if @vcpu is given, the event has the "vcpu" property. # -# Therefore, if @vcpu is given, the operation will only match per-vCPU events, -# returning their state on the specified vCPU. Special case: if @name is an -# exact match, @vcpu is given and the event does not have the "vcpu" property, -# an error is returned. +# There are no longer any per-vCPU events # # Since: 2.2 # @@ -84,17 +80,13 @@ # @name: Event name pattern (case-sensitive glob). # @enable: Whether to enable tracing. # @ignore-unavailable: Do not match unavailable events with @name. -# @vcpu: The vCPU to act upon (all by default; since 2.7). +# @vcpu: The vCPU to act upon (deprecated since 8.1). # # An event's state is modified if: # -# - its name matches the @name pattern, and -# - if @vcpu is given, the event has the "vcpu" property. +# - its name matches the @name pattern # -# Therefore, if @vcpu is given, the operation will only match per-vCPU events, -# setting their state on the specified vCPU. Special case: if @name is an exact -# match, @vcpu is given and the event does not have the "vcpu" property, an -# error is returned. +# There are no longer and per-vCPU events so specifying it will never match. # # Since: 2.2 # -- 2.39.2