qmp: fix integer usage in examples

Per the qapi schema, block_set_io_throttle takes most arguments
as ints, not strings.

* qmp-commands.hx (block_set_io_throttle): Use correct type.  Fix
whitespace and a copy-paste bug in the process.

Signed-off-by: Eric Blake <eblake@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Benoit Canet <benoit@irqsave.net>
Signed-off-by: Michael Tokarev <mjt@tls.msk.ru>
This commit is contained in:
Eric Blake 2013-08-30 14:44:11 -06:00 committed by Michael Tokarev
parent a32b12741b
commit 586b546657
1 changed files with 13 additions and 13 deletions

View File

@ -1402,22 +1402,22 @@ Change I/O throttle limits for a block drive.
Arguments:
- "device": device name (json-string)
- "bps": total throughput limit in bytes per second(json-int)
- "bps_rd": read throughput limit in bytes per second(json-int)
- "bps_wr": read throughput limit in bytes per second(json-int)
- "iops": total I/O operations per second(json-int)
- "iops_rd": read I/O operations per second(json-int)
- "iops_wr": write I/O operations per second(json-int)
- "bps": total throughput limit in bytes per second (json-int)
- "bps_rd": read throughput limit in bytes per second (json-int)
- "bps_wr": write throughput limit in bytes per second (json-int)
- "iops": total I/O operations per second (json-int)
- "iops_rd": read I/O operations per second (json-int)
- "iops_wr": write I/O operations per second (json-int)
Example:
-> { "execute": "block_set_io_throttle", "arguments": { "device": "virtio0",
"bps": "1000000",
"bps_rd": "0",
"bps_wr": "0",
"iops": "0",
"iops_rd": "0",
"iops_wr": "0" } }
"bps": 1000000,
"bps_rd": 0,
"bps_wr": 0,
"iops": 0,
"iops_rd": 0,
"iops_wr": 0 } }
<- { "return": {} }
EQMP
@ -1791,7 +1791,7 @@ Each json-object contain the following:
- "vm-state-size": size of the VM state in bytes (json-int)
- "date-sec": UTC date of the snapshot in seconds (json-int)
- "date-nsec": fractional part in nanoseconds to be used with
date-sec(json-int)
date-sec (json-int)
- "vm-clock-sec": VM clock relative to boot in seconds
(json-int)
- "vm-clock-nsec": fractional part in nanoseconds to be used