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Merge remote-tracking branch 'remotes/jsnow-gitlab/tags/python-pull-request' into staging

Python Pull request

# gpg: Signature made Mon 27 Sep 2021 20:24:39 BST
# gpg:                using RSA key F9B7ABDBBCACDF95BE76CBD07DEF8106AAFC390E
# gpg: Good signature from "John Snow (John Huston) <jsnow@redhat.com>" [full]
# Primary key fingerprint: FAEB 9711 A12C F475 812F  18F2 88A9 064D 1835 61EB
#      Subkey fingerprint: F9B7 ABDB BCAC DF95 BE76  CBD0 7DEF 8106 AAFC 390E

* remotes/jsnow-gitlab/tags/python-pull-request: (32 commits)
  python/aqmp-tui: Add syntax highlighting
  python: add optional pygments dependency
  python: Add entry point for aqmp-tui
  python/aqmp-tui: Add AQMP TUI
  python: Add dependencies for AQMP TUI
  python/aqmp: Add Coverage.py support
  python/aqmp: add LineProtocol tests
  python/aqmp: add AsyncProtocol unit tests
  python: bump avocado to v90.0
  python/aqmp: add scary message
  python/aqmp: add asyncio_run compatibility wrapper
  python/aqmp: add _raw() execution interface
  python/aqmp: add execute() interfaces
  python/aqmp: Add message routing to QMP protocol
  python/pylint: disable no-member check
  python/aqmp: add QMP protocol support
  python/pylint: disable too-many-function-args
  python/aqmp: add QMP event support
  python/aqmp: add well-known QMP object models
  python/aqmp: add QMP Message format
  ...

Signed-off-by: Peter Maydell <peter.maydell@linaro.org>
Peter Maydell 3 năm trước cách đây
mục cha
commit
6b54a31bf7

+ 5 - 0
python/.gitignore

@@ -15,3 +15,8 @@ qemu.egg-info/
 .venv/
 .tox/
 .dev-venv/
+
+# Coverage.py reports
+.coverage
+.coverage.*
+htmlcov/

+ 9 - 0
python/Makefile

@@ -92,6 +92,13 @@ check:
 check-tox:
 	@tox $(QEMU_TOX_EXTRA_ARGS)
 
+.PHONY: check-coverage
+check-coverage:
+	@coverage run -m avocado --config avocado.cfg run tests/*.py
+	@coverage combine
+	@coverage html
+	@coverage report
+
 .PHONY: clean
 clean:
 	python3 setup.py clean --all
@@ -100,3 +107,5 @@ clean:
 .PHONY: distclean
 distclean: clean
 	rm -rf qemu.egg-info/ .venv/ .tox/ $(QEMU_VENV_DIR) dist/
+	rm -f .coverage .coverage.*
+	rm -rf htmlcov/

+ 24 - 4
python/Pipfile.lock

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
 {
     "_meta": {
         "hash": {
-            "sha256": "eff562a688ebc6f3ffe67494dbb804b883e2159ad81c4d55d96da9f7aec13e91"
+            "sha256": "784b327272db32403d5a488507853b5afba850ba26a5948e5b6a90c1baef2d9c"
         },
         "pipfile-spec": 6,
         "requires": {
@@ -39,11 +39,11 @@
         },
         "avocado-framework": {
             "hashes": [
-                "sha256:3fca7226d7d164f124af8a741e7fa658ff4345a0738ddc32907631fd688b38ed",
-                "sha256:48ac254c0ae2ef0c0ceeb38e3d3df0388718eda8f48b3ab55b30b252839f42b1"
+                "sha256:244cb569f8eb4e50a22ac82e1a2b2bba2458999f4281efbe2651bd415d59c65b",
+                "sha256:6f15998b67ecd0e7dde790c4de4dd249d6df52dfe6d5cc4e2dd6596df51c3583"
             ],
             "index": "pypi",
-            "version": "==87.0"
+            "version": "==90.0"
         },
         "distlib": {
             "hashes": [
@@ -200,6 +200,14 @@
             ],
             "version": "==2.0.0"
         },
+        "pygments": {
+            "hashes": [
+                "sha256:a18f47b506a429f6f4b9df81bb02beab9ca21d0a5fee38ed15aef65f0545519f",
+                "sha256:d66e804411278594d764fc69ec36ec13d9ae9147193a1740cd34d272ca383b8e"
+            ],
+            "markers": "python_version >= '3.5'",
+            "version": "==2.9.0"
+        },
         "pylint": {
             "hashes": [
                 "sha256:082a6d461b54f90eea49ca90fff4ee8b6e45e8029e5dbd72f6107ef84f3779c0",
@@ -289,6 +297,18 @@
             "markers": "python_version < '3.8'",
             "version": "==3.10.0.0"
         },
+        "urwid": {
+            "hashes": [
+                "sha256:588bee9c1cb208d0906a9f73c613d2bd32c3ed3702012f51efe318a3f2127eae"
+            ],
+            "version": "==2.1.2"
+        },
+        "urwid-readline": {
+            "hashes": [
+                "sha256:018020cbc864bb5ed87be17dc26b069eae2755cb29f3a9c569aac3bded1efaf4"
+            ],
+            "version": "==0.13"
+        },
         "virtualenv": {
             "hashes": [
                 "sha256:14fdf849f80dbb29a4eb6caa9875d476ee2a5cf76a5f5415fa2f1606010ab467",

+ 3 - 0
python/avocado.cfg

@@ -1,3 +1,6 @@
+[run]
+test_runner = runner
+
 [simpletests]
 # Don't show stdout/stderr in the test *summary*
 status.failure_fields = ['status']

+ 59 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/__init__.py

@@ -0,0 +1,59 @@
+"""
+QEMU Monitor Protocol (QMP) development library & tooling.
+
+This package provides a fairly low-level class for communicating
+asynchronously with QMP protocol servers, as implemented by QEMU, the
+QEMU Guest Agent, and the QEMU Storage Daemon.
+
+`QMPClient` provides the main functionality of this package. All errors
+raised by this library dervive from `AQMPError`, see `aqmp.error` for
+additional detail. See `aqmp.events` for an in-depth tutorial on
+managing QMP events.
+"""
+
+# Copyright (C) 2020, 2021 John Snow for Red Hat, Inc.
+#
+# Authors:
+#  John Snow <jsnow@redhat.com>
+#
+# Based on earlier work by Luiz Capitulino <lcapitulino@redhat.com>.
+#
+# This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2.  See
+# the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
+
+import warnings
+
+from .error import AQMPError
+from .events import EventListener
+from .message import Message
+from .protocol import ConnectError, Runstate, StateError
+from .qmp_client import ExecInterruptedError, ExecuteError, QMPClient
+
+
+_WMSG = """
+
+The Asynchronous QMP library is currently in development and its API
+should be considered highly fluid and subject to change. It should
+not be used by any other scripts checked into the QEMU tree.
+
+Proceed with caution!
+"""
+
+warnings.warn(_WMSG, FutureWarning)
+
+
+# The order of these fields impact the Sphinx documentation order.
+__all__ = (
+    # Classes, most to least important
+    'QMPClient',
+    'Message',
+    'EventListener',
+    'Runstate',
+
+    # Exceptions, most generic to most explicit
+    'AQMPError',
+    'StateError',
+    'ConnectError',
+    'ExecuteError',
+    'ExecInterruptedError',
+)

+ 652 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/aqmp_tui.py

@@ -0,0 +1,652 @@
+# Copyright (c) 2021
+#
+# Authors:
+#  Niteesh Babu G S <niteesh.gs@gmail.com>
+#
+# This work is licensed under the terms of the GNU GPL, version 2 or
+# later.  See the COPYING file in the top-level directory.
+"""
+AQMP TUI
+
+AQMP TUI is an asynchronous interface built on top the of the AQMP library.
+It is the successor of QMP-shell and is bought-in as a replacement for it.
+
+Example Usage: aqmp-tui <SOCKET | TCP IP:PORT>
+Full Usage: aqmp-tui --help
+"""
+
+import argparse
+import asyncio
+import json
+import logging
+from logging import Handler, LogRecord
+import signal
+from typing import (
+    List,
+    Optional,
+    Tuple,
+    Type,
+    Union,
+    cast,
+)
+
+from pygments import lexers
+from pygments import token as Token
+import urwid
+import urwid_readline
+
+from ..qmp import QEMUMonitorProtocol, QMPBadPortError
+from .error import ProtocolError
+from .message import DeserializationError, Message, UnexpectedTypeError
+from .protocol import ConnectError, Runstate
+from .qmp_client import ExecInterruptedError, QMPClient
+from .util import create_task, pretty_traceback
+
+
+# The name of the signal that is used to update the history list
+UPDATE_MSG: str = 'UPDATE_MSG'
+
+
+palette = [
+    (Token.Punctuation, '', '', '', 'h15,bold', 'g7'),
+    (Token.Text, '', '', '', '', 'g7'),
+    (Token.Name.Tag, '', '', '', 'bold,#f88', 'g7'),
+    (Token.Literal.Number.Integer, '', '', '', '#fa0', 'g7'),
+    (Token.Literal.String.Double, '', '', '', '#6f6', 'g7'),
+    (Token.Keyword.Constant, '', '', '', '#6af', 'g7'),
+    ('DEBUG', '', '', '', '#ddf', 'g7'),
+    ('INFO', '', '', '', 'g100', 'g7'),
+    ('WARNING', '', '', '', '#ff6', 'g7'),
+    ('ERROR', '', '', '', '#a00', 'g7'),
+    ('CRITICAL', '', '', '', '#a00', 'g7'),
+    ('background', '', 'black', '', '', 'g7'),
+]
+
+
+def format_json(msg: str) -> str:
+    """
+    Formats valid/invalid multi-line JSON message into a single-line message.
+
+    Formatting is first tried using the standard json module. If that fails
+    due to an decoding error then a simple string manipulation is done to
+    achieve a single line JSON string.
+
+    Converting into single line is more asthetically pleasing when looking
+    along with error messages.
+
+    Eg:
+    Input:
+          [ 1,
+            true,
+            3 ]
+    The above input is not a valid QMP message and produces the following error
+    "QMP message is not a JSON object."
+    When displaying this in TUI in multiline mode we get
+
+        [ 1,
+          true,
+          3 ]: QMP message is not a JSON object.
+
+    whereas in singleline mode we get the following
+
+        [1, true, 3]: QMP message is not a JSON object.
+
+    The single line mode is more asthetically pleasing.
+
+    :param msg:
+        The message to formatted into single line.
+
+    :return: Formatted singleline message.
+    """
+    try:
+        msg = json.loads(msg)
+        return str(json.dumps(msg))
+    except json.decoder.JSONDecodeError:
+        msg = msg.replace('\n', '')
+        words = msg.split(' ')
+        words = list(filter(None, words))
+        return ' '.join(words)
+
+
+def has_handler_type(logger: logging.Logger,
+                     handler_type: Type[Handler]) -> bool:
+    """
+    The Logger class has no interface to check if a certain type of handler is
+    installed or not. So we provide an interface to do so.
+
+    :param logger:
+        Logger object
+    :param handler_type:
+        The type of the handler to be checked.
+
+    :return: returns True if handler of type `handler_type`.
+    """
+    for handler in logger.handlers:
+        if isinstance(handler, handler_type):
+            return True
+    return False
+
+
+class App(QMPClient):
+    """
+    Implements the AQMP TUI.
+
+    Initializes the widgets and starts the urwid event loop.
+
+    :param address:
+        Address of the server to connect to.
+    :param num_retries:
+        The number of times to retry before stopping to reconnect.
+    :param retry_delay:
+        The delay(sec) before each retry
+    """
+    def __init__(self, address: Union[str, Tuple[str, int]], num_retries: int,
+                 retry_delay: Optional[int]) -> None:
+        urwid.register_signal(type(self), UPDATE_MSG)
+        self.window = Window(self)
+        self.address = address
+        self.aloop: Optional[asyncio.AbstractEventLoop] = None
+        self.num_retries = num_retries
+        self.retry_delay = retry_delay if retry_delay else 2
+        self.retry: bool = False
+        self.exiting: bool = False
+        super().__init__()
+
+    def add_to_history(self, msg: str, level: Optional[str] = None) -> None:
+        """
+        Appends the msg to the history list.
+
+        :param msg:
+            The raw message to be appended in string type.
+        """
+        urwid.emit_signal(self, UPDATE_MSG, msg, level)
+
+    def _cb_outbound(self, msg: Message) -> Message:
+        """
+        Callback: outbound message hook.
+
+        Appends the outgoing messages to the history box.
+
+        :param msg: raw outbound message.
+        :return: final outbound message.
+        """
+        str_msg = str(msg)
+
+        if not has_handler_type(logging.getLogger(), TUILogHandler):
+            logging.debug('Request: %s', str_msg)
+        self.add_to_history('<-- ' + str_msg)
+        return msg
+
+    def _cb_inbound(self, msg: Message) -> Message:
+        """
+        Callback: outbound message hook.
+
+        Appends the incoming messages to the history box.
+
+        :param msg: raw inbound message.
+        :return: final inbound message.
+        """
+        str_msg = str(msg)
+
+        if not has_handler_type(logging.getLogger(), TUILogHandler):
+            logging.debug('Request: %s', str_msg)
+        self.add_to_history('--> ' + str_msg)
+        return msg
+
+    async def _send_to_server(self, msg: Message) -> None:
+        """
+        This coroutine sends the message to the server.
+        The message has to be pre-validated.
+
+        :param msg:
+            Pre-validated message to be to sent to the server.
+
+        :raise Exception: When an unhandled exception is caught.
+        """
+        try:
+            await self._raw(msg, assign_id='id' not in msg)
+        except ExecInterruptedError as err:
+            logging.info('Error server disconnected before reply %s', str(err))
+            self.add_to_history('Server disconnected before reply', 'ERROR')
+        except Exception as err:
+            logging.error('Exception from _send_to_server: %s', str(err))
+            raise err
+
+    def cb_send_to_server(self, raw_msg: str) -> None:
+        """
+        Validates and sends the message to the server.
+        The raw string message is first converted into a Message object
+        and is then sent to the server.
+
+        :param raw_msg:
+            The raw string message to be sent to the server.
+
+        :raise Exception: When an unhandled exception is caught.
+        """
+        try:
+            msg = Message(bytes(raw_msg, encoding='utf-8'))
+            create_task(self._send_to_server(msg))
+        except (DeserializationError, UnexpectedTypeError) as err:
+            raw_msg = format_json(raw_msg)
+            logging.info('Invalid message: %s', err.error_message)
+            self.add_to_history(f'{raw_msg}: {err.error_message}', 'ERROR')
+
+    def unhandled_input(self, key: str) -> None:
+        """
+        Handle's keys which haven't been handled by the child widgets.
+
+        :param key:
+            Unhandled key
+        """
+        if key == 'esc':
+            self.kill_app()
+
+    def kill_app(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Initiates killing of app. A bridge between asynchronous and synchronous
+        code.
+        """
+        create_task(self._kill_app())
+
+    async def _kill_app(self) -> None:
+        """
+        This coroutine initiates the actual disconnect process and calls
+        urwid.ExitMainLoop() to kill the TUI.
+
+        :raise Exception: When an unhandled exception is caught.
+        """
+        self.exiting = True
+        await self.disconnect()
+        logging.debug('Disconnect finished. Exiting app')
+        raise urwid.ExitMainLoop()
+
+    async def disconnect(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Overrides the disconnect method to handle the errors locally.
+        """
+        try:
+            await super().disconnect()
+        except (OSError, EOFError) as err:
+            logging.info('disconnect: %s', str(err))
+            self.retry = True
+        except ProtocolError as err:
+            logging.info('disconnect: %s', str(err))
+        except Exception as err:
+            logging.error('disconnect: Unhandled exception %s', str(err))
+            raise err
+
+    def _set_status(self, msg: str) -> None:
+        """
+        Sets the message as the status.
+
+        :param msg:
+            The message to be displayed in the status bar.
+        """
+        self.window.footer.set_text(msg)
+
+    def _get_formatted_address(self) -> str:
+        """
+        Returns a formatted version of the server's address.
+
+        :return: formatted address
+        """
+        if isinstance(self.address, tuple):
+            host, port = self.address
+            addr = f'{host}:{port}'
+        else:
+            addr = f'{self.address}'
+        return addr
+
+    async def _initiate_connection(self) -> Optional[ConnectError]:
+        """
+        Tries connecting to a server a number of times with a delay between
+        each try. If all retries failed then return the error faced during
+        the last retry.
+
+        :return: Error faced during last retry.
+        """
+        current_retries = 0
+        err = None
+
+        # initial try
+        await self.connect_server()
+        while self.retry and current_retries < self.num_retries:
+            logging.info('Connection Failed, retrying in %d', self.retry_delay)
+            status = f'[Retry #{current_retries} ({self.retry_delay}s)]'
+            self._set_status(status)
+
+            await asyncio.sleep(self.retry_delay)
+
+            err = await self.connect_server()
+            current_retries += 1
+        # If all retries failed report the last error
+        if err:
+            logging.info('All retries failed: %s', err)
+            return err
+        return None
+
+    async def manage_connection(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Manage the connection based on the current run state.
+
+        A reconnect is issued when the current state is IDLE and the number
+        of retries is not exhausted.
+        A disconnect is issued when the current state is DISCONNECTING.
+        """
+        while not self.exiting:
+            if self.runstate == Runstate.IDLE:
+                err = await self._initiate_connection()
+                # If retry is still true then, we have exhausted all our tries.
+                if err:
+                    self._set_status(f'[Error: {err.error_message}]')
+                else:
+                    addr = self._get_formatted_address()
+                    self._set_status(f'[Connected {addr}]')
+            elif self.runstate == Runstate.DISCONNECTING:
+                self._set_status('[Disconnected]')
+                await self.disconnect()
+                # check if a retry is needed
+                if self.runstate == Runstate.IDLE:
+                    continue
+            await self.runstate_changed()
+
+    async def connect_server(self) -> Optional[ConnectError]:
+        """
+        Initiates a connection to the server at address `self.address`
+        and in case of a failure, sets the status to the respective error.
+        """
+        try:
+            await self.connect(self.address)
+            self.retry = False
+        except ConnectError as err:
+            logging.info('connect_server: ConnectError %s', str(err))
+            self.retry = True
+            return err
+        return None
+
+    def run(self, debug: bool = False) -> None:
+        """
+        Starts the long running co-routines and the urwid event loop.
+
+        :param debug:
+            Enables/Disables asyncio event loop debugging
+        """
+        screen = urwid.raw_display.Screen()
+        screen.set_terminal_properties(256)
+
+        self.aloop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
+        self.aloop.set_debug(debug)
+
+        # Gracefully handle SIGTERM and SIGINT signals
+        cancel_signals = [signal.SIGTERM, signal.SIGINT]
+        for sig in cancel_signals:
+            self.aloop.add_signal_handler(sig, self.kill_app)
+
+        event_loop = urwid.AsyncioEventLoop(loop=self.aloop)
+        main_loop = urwid.MainLoop(urwid.AttrMap(self.window, 'background'),
+                                   unhandled_input=self.unhandled_input,
+                                   screen=screen,
+                                   palette=palette,
+                                   handle_mouse=True,
+                                   event_loop=event_loop)
+
+        create_task(self.manage_connection(), self.aloop)
+        try:
+            main_loop.run()
+        except Exception as err:
+            logging.error('%s\n%s\n', str(err), pretty_traceback())
+            raise err
+
+
+class StatusBar(urwid.Text):
+    """
+    A simple statusbar modelled using the Text widget. The status can be
+    set using the set_text function. All text set is aligned to right.
+
+    :param text: Initial text to be displayed. Default is empty str.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, text: str = ''):
+        super().__init__(text, align='right')
+
+
+class Editor(urwid_readline.ReadlineEdit):
+    """
+    A simple editor modelled using the urwid_readline.ReadlineEdit widget.
+    Mimcs GNU readline shortcuts and provides history support.
+
+    The readline shortcuts can be found below:
+    https://github.com/rr-/urwid_readline#features
+
+    Along with the readline features, this editor also has support for
+    history. Pressing the 'up'/'down' switches between the prev/next messages
+    available in the history.
+
+    Currently there is no support to save the history to a file. The history of
+    previous commands is lost on exit.
+
+    :param parent: Reference to the TUI object.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, parent: App) -> None:
+        super().__init__(caption='> ', multiline=True)
+        self.parent = parent
+        self.history: List[str] = []
+        self.last_index: int = -1
+        self.show_history: bool = False
+
+    def keypress(self, size: Tuple[int, int], key: str) -> Optional[str]:
+        """
+        Handles the keypress on this widget.
+
+        :param size:
+            The current size of the widget.
+        :param key:
+            The key to be handled.
+
+        :return: Unhandled key if any.
+        """
+        msg = self.get_edit_text()
+        if key == 'up' and not msg:
+            # Show the history when 'up arrow' is pressed with no input text.
+            # NOTE: The show_history logic is necessary because in 'multiline'
+            # mode (which we use) 'up arrow' is used to move between lines.
+            if not self.history:
+                return None
+            self.show_history = True
+            last_msg = self.history[self.last_index]
+            self.set_edit_text(last_msg)
+            self.edit_pos = len(last_msg)
+        elif key == 'up' and self.show_history:
+            self.last_index = max(self.last_index - 1, -len(self.history))
+            self.set_edit_text(self.history[self.last_index])
+            self.edit_pos = len(self.history[self.last_index])
+        elif key == 'down' and self.show_history:
+            if self.last_index == -1:
+                self.set_edit_text('')
+                self.show_history = False
+            else:
+                self.last_index += 1
+                self.set_edit_text(self.history[self.last_index])
+                self.edit_pos = len(self.history[self.last_index])
+        elif key == 'meta enter':
+            # When using multiline, enter inserts a new line into the editor
+            # send the input to the server on alt + enter
+            self.parent.cb_send_to_server(msg)
+            self.history.append(msg)
+            self.set_edit_text('')
+            self.last_index = -1
+            self.show_history = False
+        else:
+            self.show_history = False
+            self.last_index = -1
+            return cast(Optional[str], super().keypress(size, key))
+        return None
+
+
+class EditorWidget(urwid.Filler):
+    """
+    Wrapper around the editor widget.
+
+    The Editor is a flow widget and has to wrapped inside a box widget.
+    This class wraps the Editor inside filler widget.
+
+    :param parent: Reference to the TUI object.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, parent: App) -> None:
+        super().__init__(Editor(parent), valign='top')
+
+
+class HistoryBox(urwid.ListBox):
+    """
+    This widget is modelled using the ListBox widget, contains the list of
+    all messages both QMP messages and log messsages to be shown in the TUI.
+
+    The messages are urwid.Text widgets. On every append of a message, the
+    focus is shifted to the last appended message.
+
+    :param parent: Reference to the TUI object.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, parent: App) -> None:
+        self.parent = parent
+        self.history = urwid.SimpleFocusListWalker([])
+        super().__init__(self.history)
+
+    def add_to_history(self,
+                       history: Union[str, List[Tuple[str, str]]]) -> None:
+        """
+        Appends a message to the list and set the focus to the last appended
+        message.
+
+        :param history:
+            The history item(message/event) to be appended to the list.
+        """
+        self.history.append(urwid.Text(history))
+        self.history.set_focus(len(self.history) - 1)
+
+    def mouse_event(self, size: Tuple[int, int], _event: str, button: float,
+                    _x: int, _y: int, focus: bool) -> None:
+        # Unfortunately there are no urwid constants that represent the mouse
+        # events.
+        if button == 4:  # Scroll up event
+            super().keypress(size, 'up')
+        elif button == 5:  # Scroll down event
+            super().keypress(size, 'down')
+
+
+class HistoryWindow(urwid.Frame):
+    """
+    This window composes the HistoryBox and EditorWidget in a horizontal split.
+    By default the first focus is given to the history box.
+
+    :param parent: Reference to the TUI object.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, parent: App) -> None:
+        self.parent = parent
+        self.editor_widget = EditorWidget(parent)
+        self.editor = urwid.LineBox(self.editor_widget)
+        self.history = HistoryBox(parent)
+        self.body = urwid.Pile([('weight', 80, self.history),
+                                ('weight', 20, self.editor)])
+        super().__init__(self.body)
+        urwid.connect_signal(self.parent, UPDATE_MSG, self.cb_add_to_history)
+
+    def cb_add_to_history(self, msg: str, level: Optional[str] = None) -> None:
+        """
+        Appends a message to the history box
+
+        :param msg:
+            The message to be appended to the history box.
+        :param level:
+            The log level of the message, if it is a log message.
+        """
+        formatted = []
+        if level:
+            msg = f'[{level}]: {msg}'
+            formatted.append((level, msg))
+        else:
+            lexer = lexers.JsonLexer()  # pylint: disable=no-member
+            for token in lexer.get_tokens(msg):
+                formatted.append(token)
+        self.history.add_to_history(formatted)
+
+
+class Window(urwid.Frame):
+    """
+    This window is the top most widget of the TUI and will contain other
+    windows. Each child of this widget is responsible for displaying a specific
+    functionality.
+
+    :param parent: Reference to the TUI object.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, parent: App) -> None:
+        self.parent = parent
+        footer = StatusBar()
+        body = HistoryWindow(parent)
+        super().__init__(body, footer=footer)
+
+
+class TUILogHandler(Handler):
+    """
+    This handler routes all the log messages to the TUI screen.
+    It is installed to the root logger to so that the log message from all
+    libraries begin used is routed to the screen.
+
+    :param tui: Reference to the TUI object.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, tui: App) -> None:
+        super().__init__()
+        self.tui = tui
+
+    def emit(self, record: LogRecord) -> None:
+        """
+        Emits a record to the TUI screen.
+
+        Appends the log message to the TUI screen
+        """
+        level = record.levelname
+        msg = record.getMessage()
+        self.tui.add_to_history(msg, level)
+
+
+def main() -> None:
+    """
+    Driver of the whole script, parses arguments, initialize the TUI and
+    the logger.
+    """
+    parser = argparse.ArgumentParser(description='AQMP TUI')
+    parser.add_argument('qmp_server', help='Address of the QMP server. '
+                        'Format <UNIX socket path | TCP addr:port>')
+    parser.add_argument('--num-retries', type=int, default=10,
+                        help='Number of times to reconnect before giving up.')
+    parser.add_argument('--retry-delay', type=int,
+                        help='Time(s) to wait before next retry. '
+                        'Default action is to wait 2s between each retry.')
+    parser.add_argument('--log-file', help='The Log file name')
+    parser.add_argument('--log-level', default='WARNING',
+                        help='Log level <CRITICAL|ERROR|WARNING|INFO|DEBUG|>')
+    parser.add_argument('--asyncio-debug', action='store_true',
+                        help='Enable debug mode for asyncio loop. '
+                        'Generates lot of output, makes TUI unusable when '
+                        'logs are logged in the TUI. '
+                        'Use only when logging to a file.')
+    args = parser.parse_args()
+
+    try:
+        address = QEMUMonitorProtocol.parse_address(args.qmp_server)
+    except QMPBadPortError as err:
+        parser.error(str(err))
+
+    app = App(address, args.num_retries, args.retry_delay)
+
+    root_logger = logging.getLogger()
+    root_logger.setLevel(logging.getLevelName(args.log_level))
+
+    if args.log_file:
+        root_logger.addHandler(logging.FileHandler(args.log_file))
+    else:
+        root_logger.addHandler(TUILogHandler(app))
+
+    app.run(args.asyncio_debug)
+
+
+if __name__ == '__main__':
+    main()

+ 50 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/error.py

@@ -0,0 +1,50 @@
+"""
+AQMP Error Classes
+
+This package seeks to provide semantic error classes that are intended
+to be used directly by clients when they would like to handle particular
+semantic failures (e.g. "failed to connect") without needing to know the
+enumeration of possible reasons for that failure.
+
+AQMPError serves as the ancestor for all exceptions raised by this
+package, and is suitable for use in handling semantic errors from this
+library. In most cases, individual public methods will attempt to catch
+and re-encapsulate various exceptions to provide a semantic
+error-handling interface.
+
+.. admonition:: AQMP Exception Hierarchy Reference
+
+ |   `Exception`
+ |    +-- `AQMPError`
+ |         +-- `ConnectError`
+ |         +-- `StateError`
+ |         +-- `ExecInterruptedError`
+ |         +-- `ExecuteError`
+ |         +-- `ListenerError`
+ |         +-- `ProtocolError`
+ |              +-- `DeserializationError`
+ |              +-- `UnexpectedTypeError`
+ |              +-- `ServerParseError`
+ |              +-- `BadReplyError`
+ |              +-- `GreetingError`
+ |              +-- `NegotiationError`
+"""
+
+
+class AQMPError(Exception):
+    """Abstract error class for all errors originating from this package."""
+
+
+class ProtocolError(AQMPError):
+    """
+    Abstract error class for protocol failures.
+
+    Semantically, these errors are generally the fault of either the
+    protocol server or as a result of a bug in this library.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_message: str):
+        super().__init__(error_message)
+        #: Human-readable error message, without any prefix.
+        self.error_message: str = error_message

+ 706 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/events.py

@@ -0,0 +1,706 @@
+"""
+AQMP Events and EventListeners
+
+Asynchronous QMP uses `EventListener` objects to listen for events. An
+`EventListener` is a FIFO event queue that can be pre-filtered to listen
+for only specific events. Each `EventListener` instance receives its own
+copy of events that it hears, so events may be consumed without fear or
+worry for depriving other listeners of events they need to hear.
+
+
+EventListener Tutorial
+----------------------
+
+In all of the following examples, we assume that we have a `QMPClient`
+instantiated named ``qmp`` that is already connected.
+
+
+`listener()` context blocks with one name
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The most basic usage is by using the `listener()` context manager to
+construct them:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   with qmp.listener('STOP') as listener:
+       await qmp.execute('stop')
+       await listener.get()
+
+The listener is active only for the duration of the ‘with’ block. This
+instance listens only for ‘STOP’ events.
+
+
+`listener()` context blocks with two or more names
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Multiple events can be selected for by providing any ``Iterable[str]``:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   with qmp.listener(('STOP', 'RESUME')) as listener:
+       await qmp.execute('stop')
+       event = await listener.get()
+       assert event['event'] == 'STOP'
+
+       await qmp.execute('cont')
+       event = await listener.get()
+       assert event['event'] == 'RESUME'
+
+
+`listener()` context blocks with no names
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+By omitting names entirely, you can listen to ALL events.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   with qmp.listener() as listener:
+       await qmp.execute('stop')
+       event = await listener.get()
+       assert event['event'] == 'STOP'
+
+This isn’t a very good use case for this feature: In a non-trivial
+running system, we may not know what event will arrive next. Grabbing
+the top of a FIFO queue returning multiple kinds of events may be prone
+to error.
+
+
+Using async iterators to retrieve events
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+If you’d like to simply watch what events happen to arrive, you can use
+the listener as an async iterator:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   with qmp.listener() as listener:
+       async for event in listener:
+           print(f"Event arrived: {event['event']}")
+
+This is analogous to the following code:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   with qmp.listener() as listener:
+       while True:
+           event = listener.get()
+           print(f"Event arrived: {event['event']}")
+
+This event stream will never end, so these blocks will never terminate.
+
+
+Using asyncio.Task to concurrently retrieve events
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Since a listener’s event stream will never terminate, it is not likely
+useful to use that form in a script. For longer-running clients, we can
+create event handlers by using `asyncio.Task` to create concurrent
+coroutines:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   async def print_events(listener):
+       try:
+           async for event in listener:
+               print(f"Event arrived: {event['event']}")
+       except asyncio.CancelledError:
+           return
+
+   with qmp.listener() as listener:
+       task = asyncio.Task(print_events(listener))
+       await qmp.execute('stop')
+       await qmp.execute('cont')
+       task.cancel()
+       await task
+
+However, there is no guarantee that these events will be received by the
+time we leave this context block. Once the context block is exited, the
+listener will cease to hear any new events, and becomes inert.
+
+Be mindful of the timing: the above example will *probably*– but does
+not *guarantee*– that both STOP/RESUMED events will be printed. The
+example below outlines how to use listeners outside of a context block.
+
+
+Using `register_listener()` and `remove_listener()`
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+To create a listener with a longer lifetime, beyond the scope of a
+single block, create a listener and then call `register_listener()`:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   class MyClient:
+       def __init__(self, qmp):
+           self.qmp = qmp
+           self.listener = EventListener()
+
+       async def print_events(self):
+           try:
+               async for event in self.listener:
+                   print(f"Event arrived: {event['event']}")
+           except asyncio.CancelledError:
+               return
+
+       async def run(self):
+           self.task = asyncio.Task(self.print_events)
+           self.qmp.register_listener(self.listener)
+           await qmp.execute('stop')
+           await qmp.execute('cont')
+
+       async def stop(self):
+           self.task.cancel()
+           await self.task
+           self.qmp.remove_listener(self.listener)
+
+The listener can be deactivated by using `remove_listener()`. When it is
+removed, any possible pending events are cleared and it can be
+re-registered at a later time.
+
+
+Using the built-in all events listener
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The `QMPClient` object creates its own default listener named
+:py:obj:`~Events.events` that can be used for the same purpose without
+having to create your own:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   async def print_events(listener):
+       try:
+           async for event in listener:
+               print(f"Event arrived: {event['event']}")
+       except asyncio.CancelledError:
+           return
+
+   task = asyncio.Task(print_events(qmp.events))
+
+   await qmp.execute('stop')
+   await qmp.execute('cont')
+
+   task.cancel()
+   await task
+
+
+Using both .get() and async iterators
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+The async iterator and `get()` methods pull events from the same FIFO
+queue. If you mix the usage of both, be aware: Events are emitted
+precisely once per listener.
+
+If multiple contexts try to pull events from the same listener instance,
+events are still emitted only precisely once.
+
+This restriction can be lifted by creating additional listeners.
+
+
+Creating multiple listeners
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Additional `EventListener` objects can be created at-will. Each one
+receives its own copy of events, with separate FIFO event queues.
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   my_listener = EventListener()
+   qmp.register_listener(my_listener)
+
+   await qmp.execute('stop')
+   copy1 = await my_listener.get()
+   copy2 = await qmp.events.get()
+
+   assert copy1 == copy2
+
+In this example, we await an event from both a user-created
+`EventListener` and the built-in events listener. Both receive the same
+event.
+
+
+Clearing listeners
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+`EventListener` objects can be cleared, clearing all events seen thus far:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   await qmp.execute('stop')
+   qmp.events.clear()
+   await qmp.execute('cont')
+   event = await qmp.events.get()
+   assert event['event'] == 'RESUME'
+
+`EventListener` objects are FIFO queues. If events are not consumed,
+they will remain in the queue until they are witnessed or discarded via
+`clear()`. FIFO queues will be drained automatically upon leaving a
+context block, or when calling `remove_listener()`.
+
+
+Accessing listener history
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+`EventListener` objects record their history. Even after being cleared,
+you can obtain a record of all events seen so far:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   await qmp.execute('stop')
+   await qmp.execute('cont')
+   qmp.events.clear()
+
+   assert len(qmp.events.history) == 2
+   assert qmp.events.history[0]['event'] == 'STOP'
+   assert qmp.events.history[1]['event'] == 'RESUME'
+
+The history is updated immediately and does not require the event to be
+witnessed first.
+
+
+Using event filters
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+`EventListener` objects can be given complex filtering criteria if names
+are not sufficient:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   def job1_filter(event) -> bool:
+       event_data = event.get('data', {})
+       event_job_id = event_data.get('id')
+       return event_job_id == "job1"
+
+   with qmp.listener('JOB_STATUS_CHANGE', job1_filter) as listener:
+       await qmp.execute('blockdev-backup', arguments={'job-id': 'job1', ...})
+       async for event in listener:
+           if event['data']['status'] == 'concluded':
+               break
+
+These filters might be most useful when parameterized. `EventListener`
+objects expect a function that takes only a single argument (the raw
+event, as a `Message`) and returns a bool; True if the event should be
+accepted into the stream. You can create a function that adapts this
+signature to accept configuration parameters:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   def job_filter(job_id: str) -> EventFilter:
+       def filter(event: Message) -> bool:
+           return event['data']['id'] == job_id
+       return filter
+
+   with qmp.listener('JOB_STATUS_CHANGE', job_filter('job2')) as listener:
+       await qmp.execute('blockdev-backup', arguments={'job-id': 'job2', ...})
+       async for event in listener:
+           if event['data']['status'] == 'concluded':
+               break
+
+
+Activating an existing listener with `listen()`
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Listeners with complex, long configurations can also be created manually
+and activated temporarily by using `listen()` instead of `listener()`:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   listener = EventListener(('BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED', 'BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED',
+                             'BLOCK_JOB_ERROR', 'BLOCK_JOB_READY',
+                             'BLOCK_JOB_PENDING', 'JOB_STATUS_CHANGE'))
+
+   with qmp.listen(listener):
+       await qmp.execute('blockdev-backup', arguments={'job-id': 'job3', ...})
+       async for event in listener:
+           print(event)
+           if event['event'] == 'BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED':
+               break
+
+Any events that are not witnessed by the time the block is left will be
+cleared from the queue; entering the block is an implicit
+`register_listener()` and leaving the block is an implicit
+`remove_listener()`.
+
+
+Activating multiple existing listeners with `listen()`
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+While `listener()` is only capable of creating a single listener,
+`listen()` is capable of activating multiple listeners simultaneously:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   def job_filter(job_id: str) -> EventFilter:
+       def filter(event: Message) -> bool:
+           return event['data']['id'] == job_id
+       return filter
+
+   jobA = EventListener('JOB_STATUS_CHANGE', job_filter('jobA'))
+   jobB = EventListener('JOB_STATUS_CHANGE', job_filter('jobB'))
+
+   with qmp.listen(jobA, jobB):
+       qmp.execute('blockdev-create', arguments={'job-id': 'jobA', ...})
+       qmp.execute('blockdev-create', arguments={'job-id': 'jobB', ...})
+
+       async for event in jobA.get():
+           if event['data']['status'] == 'concluded':
+               break
+       async for event in jobB.get():
+           if event['data']['status'] == 'concluded':
+               break
+
+
+Extending the `EventListener` class
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+In the case that a more specialized `EventListener` is desired to
+provide either more functionality or more compact syntax for specialized
+cases, it can be extended.
+
+One of the key methods to extend or override is
+:py:meth:`~EventListener.accept()`. The default implementation checks an
+incoming message for:
+
+1. A qualifying name, if any :py:obj:`~EventListener.names` were
+   specified at initialization time
+2. That :py:obj:`~EventListener.event_filter()` returns True.
+
+This can be modified however you see fit to change the criteria for
+inclusion in the stream.
+
+For convenience, a ``JobListener`` class could be created that simply
+bakes in configuration so it does not need to be repeated:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   class JobListener(EventListener):
+       def __init__(self, job_id: str):
+           super().__init__(('BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED', 'BLOCK_JOB_CANCELLED',
+                             'BLOCK_JOB_ERROR', 'BLOCK_JOB_READY',
+                             'BLOCK_JOB_PENDING', 'JOB_STATUS_CHANGE'))
+           self.job_id = job_id
+
+       def accept(self, event) -> bool:
+           if not super().accept(event):
+               return False
+           if event['event'] in ('BLOCK_JOB_PENDING', 'JOB_STATUS_CHANGE'):
+               return event['data']['id'] == job_id
+           return event['data']['device'] == job_id
+
+From here on out, you can conjure up a custom-purpose listener that
+listens only for job-related events for a specific job-id easily:
+
+.. code:: python
+
+   listener = JobListener('job4')
+   with qmp.listener(listener):
+       await qmp.execute('blockdev-backup', arguments={'job-id': 'job4', ...})
+       async for event in listener:
+           print(event)
+           if event['event'] == 'BLOCK_JOB_COMPLETED':
+               break
+
+
+Experimental Interfaces & Design Issues
+---------------------------------------
+
+These interfaces are not ones I am sure I will keep or otherwise modify
+heavily.
+
+qmp.listener()’s type signature
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+`listener()` does not return anything, because it was assumed the caller
+already had a handle to the listener. However, for
+``qmp.listener(EventListener())`` forms, the caller will not have saved
+a handle to the listener.
+
+Because this function can accept *many* listeners, I found it hard to
+accurately type in a way where it could be used in both “one” or “many”
+forms conveniently and in a statically type-safe manner.
+
+Ultimately, I removed the return altogether, but perhaps with more time
+I can work out a way to re-add it.
+
+
+API Reference
+-------------
+
+"""
+
+import asyncio
+from contextlib import contextmanager
+import logging
+from typing import (
+    AsyncIterator,
+    Callable,
+    Iterable,
+    Iterator,
+    List,
+    Optional,
+    Set,
+    Tuple,
+    Union,
+)
+
+from .error import AQMPError
+from .message import Message
+
+
+EventNames = Union[str, Iterable[str], None]
+EventFilter = Callable[[Message], bool]
+
+
+class ListenerError(AQMPError):
+    """
+    Generic error class for `EventListener`-related problems.
+    """
+
+
+class EventListener:
+    """
+    Selectively listens for events with runtime configurable filtering.
+
+    This class is designed to be directly usable for the most common cases,
+    but it can be extended to provide more rigorous control.
+
+    :param names:
+        One or more names of events to listen for.
+        When not provided, listen for ALL events.
+    :param event_filter:
+        An optional event filtering function.
+        When names are also provided, this acts as a secondary filter.
+
+    When ``names`` and ``event_filter`` are both provided, the names
+    will be filtered first, and then the filter function will be called
+    second. The event filter function can assume that the format of the
+    event is a known format.
+    """
+    def __init__(
+        self,
+        names: EventNames = None,
+        event_filter: Optional[EventFilter] = None,
+    ):
+        # Queue of 'heard' events yet to be witnessed by a caller.
+        self._queue: 'asyncio.Queue[Message]' = asyncio.Queue()
+
+        # Intended as a historical record, NOT a processing queue or backlog.
+        self._history: List[Message] = []
+
+        #: Primary event filter, based on one or more event names.
+        self.names: Set[str] = set()
+        if isinstance(names, str):
+            self.names.add(names)
+        elif names is not None:
+            self.names.update(names)
+
+        #: Optional, secondary event filter.
+        self.event_filter: Optional[EventFilter] = event_filter
+
+    @property
+    def history(self) -> Tuple[Message, ...]:
+        """
+        A read-only history of all events seen so far.
+
+        This represents *every* event, including those not yet witnessed
+        via `get()` or ``async for``. It persists between `clear()`
+        calls and is immutable.
+        """
+        return tuple(self._history)
+
+    def accept(self, event: Message) -> bool:
+        """
+        Determine if this listener accepts this event.
+
+        This method determines which events will appear in the stream.
+        The default implementation simply checks the event against the
+        list of names and the event_filter to decide if this
+        `EventListener` accepts a given event. It can be
+        overridden/extended to provide custom listener behavior.
+
+        User code is not expected to need to invoke this method.
+
+        :param event: The event under consideration.
+        :return: `True`, if this listener accepts this event.
+        """
+        name_ok = (not self.names) or (event['event'] in self.names)
+        return name_ok and (
+            (not self.event_filter) or self.event_filter(event)
+        )
+
+    async def put(self, event: Message) -> None:
+        """
+        Conditionally put a new event into the FIFO queue.
+
+        This method is not designed to be invoked from user code, and it
+        should not need to be overridden. It is a public interface so
+        that `QMPClient` has an interface by which it can inform
+        registered listeners of new events.
+
+        The event will be put into the queue if
+        :py:meth:`~EventListener.accept()` returns `True`.
+
+        :param event: The new event to put into the FIFO queue.
+        """
+        if not self.accept(event):
+            return
+
+        self._history.append(event)
+        await self._queue.put(event)
+
+    async def get(self) -> Message:
+        """
+        Wait for the very next event in this stream.
+
+        If one is already available, return that one.
+        """
+        return await self._queue.get()
+
+    def clear(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Clear this listener of all pending events.
+
+        Called when an `EventListener` is being unregistered, this clears the
+        pending FIFO queue synchronously. It can be also be used to
+        manually clear any pending events, if desired.
+
+        .. warning::
+            Take care when discarding events. Cleared events will be
+            silently tossed on the floor. All events that were ever
+            accepted by this listener are visible in `history()`.
+        """
+        while True:
+            try:
+                self._queue.get_nowait()
+            except asyncio.QueueEmpty:
+                break
+
+    def __aiter__(self) -> AsyncIterator[Message]:
+        return self
+
+    async def __anext__(self) -> Message:
+        """
+        Enables the `EventListener` to function as an async iterator.
+
+        It may be used like this:
+
+        .. code:: python
+
+            async for event in listener:
+                print(event)
+
+        These iterators will never terminate of their own accord; you
+        must provide break conditions or otherwise prepare to run them
+        in an `asyncio.Task` that can be cancelled.
+        """
+        return await self.get()
+
+
+class Events:
+    """
+    Events is a mix-in class that adds event functionality to the QMP class.
+
+    It's designed specifically as a mix-in for `QMPClient`, and it
+    relies upon the class it is being mixed into having a 'logger'
+    property.
+    """
+    def __init__(self) -> None:
+        self._listeners: List[EventListener] = []
+
+        #: Default, all-events `EventListener`.
+        self.events: EventListener = EventListener()
+        self.register_listener(self.events)
+
+        # Parent class needs to have a logger
+        self.logger: logging.Logger
+
+    async def _event_dispatch(self, msg: Message) -> None:
+        """
+        Given a new event, propagate it to all of the active listeners.
+
+        :param msg: The event to propagate.
+        """
+        for listener in self._listeners:
+            await listener.put(msg)
+
+    def register_listener(self, listener: EventListener) -> None:
+        """
+        Register and activate an `EventListener`.
+
+        :param listener: The listener to activate.
+        :raise ListenerError: If the given listener is already registered.
+        """
+        if listener in self._listeners:
+            raise ListenerError("Attempted to re-register existing listener")
+        self.logger.debug("Registering %s.", str(listener))
+        self._listeners.append(listener)
+
+    def remove_listener(self, listener: EventListener) -> None:
+        """
+        Unregister and deactivate an `EventListener`.
+
+        The removed listener will have its pending events cleared via
+        `clear()`. The listener can be re-registered later when
+        desired.
+
+        :param listener: The listener to deactivate.
+        :raise ListenerError: If the given listener is not registered.
+        """
+        if listener == self.events:
+            raise ListenerError("Cannot remove the default listener.")
+        self.logger.debug("Removing %s.", str(listener))
+        listener.clear()
+        self._listeners.remove(listener)
+
+    @contextmanager
+    def listen(self, *listeners: EventListener) -> Iterator[None]:
+        r"""
+        Context manager: Temporarily listen with an `EventListener`.
+
+        Accepts one or more `EventListener` objects and registers them,
+        activating them for the duration of the context block.
+
+        `EventListener` objects will have any pending events in their
+        FIFO queue cleared upon exiting the context block, when they are
+        deactivated.
+
+        :param \*listeners: One or more EventListeners to activate.
+        :raise ListenerError: If the given listener(s) are already active.
+        """
+        _added = []
+
+        try:
+            for listener in listeners:
+                self.register_listener(listener)
+                _added.append(listener)
+
+            yield
+
+        finally:
+            for listener in _added:
+                self.remove_listener(listener)
+
+    @contextmanager
+    def listener(
+        self,
+        names: EventNames = (),
+        event_filter: Optional[EventFilter] = None
+    ) -> Iterator[EventListener]:
+        """
+        Context manager: Temporarily listen with a new `EventListener`.
+
+        Creates an `EventListener` object and registers it, activating
+        it for the duration of the context block.
+
+        :param names:
+            One or more names of events to listen for.
+            When not provided, listen for ALL events.
+        :param event_filter:
+            An optional event filtering function.
+            When names are also provided, this acts as a secondary filter.
+
+        :return: The newly created and active `EventListener`.
+        """
+        listener = EventListener(names, event_filter)
+        with self.listen(listener):
+            yield listener

+ 209 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/message.py

@@ -0,0 +1,209 @@
+"""
+QMP Message Format
+
+This module provides the `Message` class, which represents a single QMP
+message sent to or from the server.
+"""
+
+import json
+from json import JSONDecodeError
+from typing import (
+    Dict,
+    Iterator,
+    Mapping,
+    MutableMapping,
+    Optional,
+    Union,
+)
+
+from .error import ProtocolError
+
+
+class Message(MutableMapping[str, object]):
+    """
+    Represents a single QMP protocol message.
+
+    QMP uses JSON objects as its basic communicative unit; so this
+    Python object is a :py:obj:`~collections.abc.MutableMapping`. It may
+    be instantiated from either another mapping (like a `dict`), or from
+    raw `bytes` that still need to be deserialized.
+
+    Once instantiated, it may be treated like any other MutableMapping::
+
+        >>> msg = Message(b'{"hello": "world"}')
+        >>> assert msg['hello'] == 'world'
+        >>> msg['id'] = 'foobar'
+        >>> print(msg)
+        {
+          "hello": "world",
+          "id": "foobar"
+        }
+
+    It can be converted to `bytes`::
+
+        >>> msg = Message({"hello": "world"})
+        >>> print(bytes(msg))
+        b'{"hello":"world","id":"foobar"}'
+
+    Or back into a garden-variety `dict`::
+
+       >>> dict(msg)
+       {'hello': 'world'}
+
+
+    :param value: Initial value, if any.
+    :param eager:
+        When `True`, attempt to serialize or deserialize the initial value
+        immediately, so that conversion exceptions are raised during
+        the call to ``__init__()``.
+    """
+    # pylint: disable=too-many-ancestors
+
+    def __init__(self,
+                 value: Union[bytes, Mapping[str, object]] = b'{}', *,
+                 eager: bool = True):
+        self._data: Optional[bytes] = None
+        self._obj: Optional[Dict[str, object]] = None
+
+        if isinstance(value, bytes):
+            self._data = value
+            if eager:
+                self._obj = self._deserialize(self._data)
+        else:
+            self._obj = dict(value)
+            if eager:
+                self._data = self._serialize(self._obj)
+
+    # Methods necessary to implement the MutableMapping interface, see:
+    # https://docs.python.org/3/library/collections.abc.html#collections.abc.MutableMapping
+
+    # We get pop, popitem, clear, update, setdefault, __contains__,
+    # keys, items, values, get, __eq__ and __ne__ for free.
+
+    def __getitem__(self, key: str) -> object:
+        return self._object[key]
+
+    def __setitem__(self, key: str, value: object) -> None:
+        self._object[key] = value
+        self._data = None
+
+    def __delitem__(self, key: str) -> None:
+        del self._object[key]
+        self._data = None
+
+    def __iter__(self) -> Iterator[str]:
+        return iter(self._object)
+
+    def __len__(self) -> int:
+        return len(self._object)
+
+    # Dunder methods not related to MutableMapping:
+
+    def __repr__(self) -> str:
+        if self._obj is not None:
+            return f"Message({self._object!r})"
+        return f"Message({bytes(self)!r})"
+
+    def __str__(self) -> str:
+        """Pretty-printed representation of this QMP message."""
+        return json.dumps(self._object, indent=2)
+
+    def __bytes__(self) -> bytes:
+        """bytes representing this QMP message."""
+        if self._data is None:
+            self._data = self._serialize(self._obj or {})
+        return self._data
+
+    # Conversion Methods
+
+    @property
+    def _object(self) -> Dict[str, object]:
+        """
+        A `dict` representing this QMP message.
+
+        Generated on-demand, if required. This property is private
+        because it returns an object that could be used to invalidate
+        the internal state of the `Message` object.
+        """
+        if self._obj is None:
+            self._obj = self._deserialize(self._data or b'{}')
+        return self._obj
+
+    @classmethod
+    def _serialize(cls, value: object) -> bytes:
+        """
+        Serialize a JSON object as `bytes`.
+
+        :raise ValueError: When the object cannot be serialized.
+        :raise TypeError: When the object cannot be serialized.
+
+        :return: `bytes` ready to be sent over the wire.
+        """
+        return json.dumps(value, separators=(',', ':')).encode('utf-8')
+
+    @classmethod
+    def _deserialize(cls, data: bytes) -> Dict[str, object]:
+        """
+        Deserialize JSON `bytes` into a native Python `dict`.
+
+        :raise DeserializationError:
+            If JSON deserialization fails for any reason.
+        :raise UnexpectedTypeError:
+            If the data does not represent a JSON object.
+
+        :return: A `dict` representing this QMP message.
+        """
+        try:
+            obj = json.loads(data)
+        except JSONDecodeError as err:
+            emsg = "Failed to deserialize QMP message."
+            raise DeserializationError(emsg, data) from err
+        if not isinstance(obj, dict):
+            raise UnexpectedTypeError(
+                "QMP message is not a JSON object.",
+                obj
+            )
+        return obj
+
+
+class DeserializationError(ProtocolError):
+    """
+    A QMP message was not understood as JSON.
+
+    When this Exception is raised, ``__cause__`` will be set to the
+    `json.JSONDecodeError` Exception, which can be interrogated for
+    further details.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param raw: The raw `bytes` that prompted the failure.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_message: str, raw: bytes):
+        super().__init__(error_message)
+        #: The raw `bytes` that were not understood as JSON.
+        self.raw: bytes = raw
+
+    def __str__(self) -> str:
+        return "\n".join([
+            super().__str__(),
+            f"  raw bytes were: {str(self.raw)}",
+        ])
+
+
+class UnexpectedTypeError(ProtocolError):
+    """
+    A QMP message was JSON, but not a JSON object.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param value: The deserialized JSON value that wasn't an object.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_message: str, value: object):
+        super().__init__(error_message)
+        #: The JSON value that was expected to be an object.
+        self.value: object = value
+
+    def __str__(self) -> str:
+        strval = json.dumps(self.value, indent=2)
+        return "\n".join([
+            super().__str__(),
+            f"  json value was: {strval}",
+        ])

+ 133 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/models.py

@@ -0,0 +1,133 @@
+"""
+QMP Data Models
+
+This module provides simplistic data classes that represent the few
+structures that the QMP spec mandates; they are used to verify incoming
+data to make sure it conforms to spec.
+"""
+# pylint: disable=too-few-public-methods
+
+from collections import abc
+from typing import (
+    Any,
+    Mapping,
+    Optional,
+    Sequence,
+)
+
+
+class Model:
+    """
+    Abstract data model, representing some QMP object of some kind.
+
+    :param raw: The raw object to be validated.
+    :raise KeyError: If any required fields are absent.
+    :raise TypeError: If any required fields have the wrong type.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, raw: Mapping[str, Any]):
+        self._raw = raw
+
+    def _check_key(self, key: str) -> None:
+        if key not in self._raw:
+            raise KeyError(f"'{self._name}' object requires '{key}' member")
+
+    def _check_value(self, key: str, type_: type, typestr: str) -> None:
+        assert key in self._raw
+        if not isinstance(self._raw[key], type_):
+            raise TypeError(
+                f"'{self._name}' member '{key}' must be a {typestr}"
+            )
+
+    def _check_member(self, key: str, type_: type, typestr: str) -> None:
+        self._check_key(key)
+        self._check_value(key, type_, typestr)
+
+    @property
+    def _name(self) -> str:
+        return type(self).__name__
+
+    def __repr__(self) -> str:
+        return f"{self._name}({self._raw!r})"
+
+
+class Greeting(Model):
+    """
+    Defined in qmp-spec.txt, section 2.2, "Server Greeting".
+
+    :param raw: The raw Greeting object.
+    :raise KeyError: If any required fields are absent.
+    :raise TypeError: If any required fields have the wrong type.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, raw: Mapping[str, Any]):
+        super().__init__(raw)
+        #: 'QMP' member
+        self.QMP: QMPGreeting  # pylint: disable=invalid-name
+
+        self._check_member('QMP', abc.Mapping, "JSON object")
+        self.QMP = QMPGreeting(self._raw['QMP'])
+
+
+class QMPGreeting(Model):
+    """
+    Defined in qmp-spec.txt, section 2.2, "Server Greeting".
+
+    :param raw: The raw QMPGreeting object.
+    :raise KeyError: If any required fields are absent.
+    :raise TypeError: If any required fields have the wrong type.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, raw: Mapping[str, Any]):
+        super().__init__(raw)
+        #: 'version' member
+        self.version: Mapping[str, object]
+        #: 'capabilities' member
+        self.capabilities: Sequence[object]
+
+        self._check_member('version', abc.Mapping, "JSON object")
+        self.version = self._raw['version']
+
+        self._check_member('capabilities', abc.Sequence, "JSON array")
+        self.capabilities = self._raw['capabilities']
+
+
+class ErrorResponse(Model):
+    """
+    Defined in qmp-spec.txt, section 2.4.2, "error".
+
+    :param raw: The raw ErrorResponse object.
+    :raise KeyError: If any required fields are absent.
+    :raise TypeError: If any required fields have the wrong type.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, raw: Mapping[str, Any]):
+        super().__init__(raw)
+        #: 'error' member
+        self.error: ErrorInfo
+        #: 'id' member
+        self.id: Optional[object] = None  # pylint: disable=invalid-name
+
+        self._check_member('error', abc.Mapping, "JSON object")
+        self.error = ErrorInfo(self._raw['error'])
+
+        if 'id' in raw:
+            self.id = raw['id']
+
+
+class ErrorInfo(Model):
+    """
+    Defined in qmp-spec.txt, section 2.4.2, "error".
+
+    :param raw: The raw ErrorInfo object.
+    :raise KeyError: If any required fields are absent.
+    :raise TypeError: If any required fields have the wrong type.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, raw: Mapping[str, Any]):
+        super().__init__(raw)
+        #: 'class' member, with an underscore to avoid conflicts in Python.
+        self.class_: str
+        #: 'desc' member
+        self.desc: str
+
+        self._check_member('class', str, "string")
+        self.class_ = self._raw['class']
+
+        self._check_member('desc', str, "string")
+        self.desc = self._raw['desc']

+ 902 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/protocol.py

@@ -0,0 +1,902 @@
+"""
+Generic Asynchronous Message-based Protocol Support
+
+This module provides a generic framework for sending and receiving
+messages over an asyncio stream. `AsyncProtocol` is an abstract class
+that implements the core mechanisms of a simple send/receive protocol,
+and is designed to be extended.
+
+In this package, it is used as the implementation for the `QMPClient`
+class.
+"""
+
+import asyncio
+from asyncio import StreamReader, StreamWriter
+from enum import Enum
+from functools import wraps
+import logging
+from ssl import SSLContext
+from typing import (
+    Any,
+    Awaitable,
+    Callable,
+    Generic,
+    List,
+    Optional,
+    Tuple,
+    TypeVar,
+    Union,
+    cast,
+)
+
+from .error import AQMPError
+from .util import (
+    bottom_half,
+    create_task,
+    exception_summary,
+    flush,
+    is_closing,
+    pretty_traceback,
+    upper_half,
+    wait_closed,
+)
+
+
+T = TypeVar('T')
+_TaskFN = Callable[[], Awaitable[None]]  # aka ``async def func() -> None``
+_FutureT = TypeVar('_FutureT', bound=Optional['asyncio.Future[Any]'])
+
+
+class Runstate(Enum):
+    """Protocol session runstate."""
+
+    #: Fully quiesced and disconnected.
+    IDLE = 0
+    #: In the process of connecting or establishing a session.
+    CONNECTING = 1
+    #: Fully connected and active session.
+    RUNNING = 2
+    #: In the process of disconnecting.
+    #: Runstate may be returned to `IDLE` by calling `disconnect()`.
+    DISCONNECTING = 3
+
+
+class ConnectError(AQMPError):
+    """
+    Raised when the initial connection process has failed.
+
+    This Exception always wraps a "root cause" exception that can be
+    interrogated for additional information.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param exc: The root-cause exception.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_message: str, exc: Exception):
+        super().__init__(error_message)
+        #: Human-readable error string
+        self.error_message: str = error_message
+        #: Wrapped root cause exception
+        self.exc: Exception = exc
+
+    def __str__(self) -> str:
+        return f"{self.error_message}: {self.exc!s}"
+
+
+class StateError(AQMPError):
+    """
+    An API command (connect, execute, etc) was issued at an inappropriate time.
+
+    This error is raised when a command like
+    :py:meth:`~AsyncProtocol.connect()` is issued at an inappropriate
+    time.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the state violation.
+    :param state: The actual `Runstate` seen at the time of the violation.
+    :param required: The `Runstate` required to process this command.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_message: str,
+                 state: Runstate, required: Runstate):
+        super().__init__(error_message)
+        self.error_message = error_message
+        self.state = state
+        self.required = required
+
+
+F = TypeVar('F', bound=Callable[..., Any])  # pylint: disable=invalid-name
+
+
+# Don't Panic.
+def require(required_state: Runstate) -> Callable[[F], F]:
+    """
+    Decorator: protect a method so it can only be run in a certain `Runstate`.
+
+    :param required_state: The `Runstate` required to invoke this method.
+    :raise StateError: When the required `Runstate` is not met.
+    """
+    def _decorator(func: F) -> F:
+        # _decorator is the decorator that is built by calling the
+        # require() decorator factory; e.g.:
+        #
+        # @require(Runstate.IDLE) def foo(): ...
+        # will replace 'foo' with the result of '_decorator(foo)'.
+
+        @wraps(func)
+        def _wrapper(proto: 'AsyncProtocol[Any]',
+                     *args: Any, **kwargs: Any) -> Any:
+            # _wrapper is the function that gets executed prior to the
+            # decorated method.
+
+            name = type(proto).__name__
+
+            if proto.runstate != required_state:
+                if proto.runstate == Runstate.CONNECTING:
+                    emsg = f"{name} is currently connecting."
+                elif proto.runstate == Runstate.DISCONNECTING:
+                    emsg = (f"{name} is disconnecting."
+                            " Call disconnect() to return to IDLE state.")
+                elif proto.runstate == Runstate.RUNNING:
+                    emsg = f"{name} is already connected and running."
+                elif proto.runstate == Runstate.IDLE:
+                    emsg = f"{name} is disconnected and idle."
+                else:
+                    assert False
+                raise StateError(emsg, proto.runstate, required_state)
+            # No StateError, so call the wrapped method.
+            return func(proto, *args, **kwargs)
+
+        # Return the decorated method;
+        # Transforming Func to Decorated[Func].
+        return cast(F, _wrapper)
+
+    # Return the decorator instance from the decorator factory. Phew!
+    return _decorator
+
+
+class AsyncProtocol(Generic[T]):
+    """
+    AsyncProtocol implements a generic async message-based protocol.
+
+    This protocol assumes the basic unit of information transfer between
+    client and server is a "message", the details of which are left up
+    to the implementation. It assumes the sending and receiving of these
+    messages is full-duplex and not necessarily correlated; i.e. it
+    supports asynchronous inbound messages.
+
+    It is designed to be extended by a specific protocol which provides
+    the implementations for how to read and send messages. These must be
+    defined in `_do_recv()` and `_do_send()`, respectively.
+
+    Other callbacks have a default implementation, but are intended to be
+    either extended or overridden:
+
+     - `_establish_session`:
+         The base implementation starts the reader/writer tasks.
+         A protocol implementation can override this call, inserting
+         actions to be taken prior to starting the reader/writer tasks
+         before the super() call; actions needing to occur afterwards
+         can be written after the super() call.
+     - `_on_message`:
+         Actions to be performed when a message is received.
+     - `_cb_outbound`:
+         Logging/Filtering hook for all outbound messages.
+     - `_cb_inbound`:
+         Logging/Filtering hook for all inbound messages.
+         This hook runs *before* `_on_message()`.
+
+    :param name:
+        Name used for logging messages, if any. By default, messages
+        will log to 'qemu.aqmp.protocol', but each individual connection
+        can be given its own logger by giving it a name; messages will
+        then log to 'qemu.aqmp.protocol.${name}'.
+    """
+    # pylint: disable=too-many-instance-attributes
+
+    #: Logger object for debugging messages from this connection.
+    logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
+
+    # Maximum allowable size of read buffer
+    _limit = (64 * 1024)
+
+    # -------------------------
+    # Section: Public interface
+    # -------------------------
+
+    def __init__(self, name: Optional[str] = None) -> None:
+        #: The nickname for this connection, if any.
+        self.name: Optional[str] = name
+        if self.name is not None:
+            self.logger = self.logger.getChild(self.name)
+
+        # stream I/O
+        self._reader: Optional[StreamReader] = None
+        self._writer: Optional[StreamWriter] = None
+
+        # Outbound Message queue
+        self._outgoing: asyncio.Queue[T]
+
+        # Special, long-running tasks:
+        self._reader_task: Optional[asyncio.Future[None]] = None
+        self._writer_task: Optional[asyncio.Future[None]] = None
+
+        # Aggregate of the above two tasks, used for Exception management.
+        self._bh_tasks: Optional[asyncio.Future[Tuple[None, None]]] = None
+
+        #: Disconnect task. The disconnect implementation runs in a task
+        #: so that asynchronous disconnects (initiated by the
+        #: reader/writer) are allowed to wait for the reader/writers to
+        #: exit.
+        self._dc_task: Optional[asyncio.Future[None]] = None
+
+        self._runstate = Runstate.IDLE
+        self._runstate_changed: Optional[asyncio.Event] = None
+
+    def __repr__(self) -> str:
+        cls_name = type(self).__name__
+        tokens = []
+        if self.name is not None:
+            tokens.append(f"name={self.name!r}")
+        tokens.append(f"runstate={self.runstate.name}")
+        return f"<{cls_name} {' '.join(tokens)}>"
+
+    @property  # @upper_half
+    def runstate(self) -> Runstate:
+        """The current `Runstate` of the connection."""
+        return self._runstate
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def runstate_changed(self) -> Runstate:
+        """
+        Wait for the `runstate` to change, then return that runstate.
+        """
+        await self._runstate_event.wait()
+        return self.runstate
+
+    @upper_half
+    @require(Runstate.IDLE)
+    async def accept(self, address: Union[str, Tuple[str, int]],
+                     ssl: Optional[SSLContext] = None) -> None:
+        """
+        Accept a connection and begin processing message queues.
+
+        If this call fails, `runstate` is guaranteed to be set back to `IDLE`.
+
+        :param address:
+            Address to listen to; UNIX socket path or TCP address/port.
+        :param ssl: SSL context to use, if any.
+
+        :raise StateError: When the `Runstate` is not `IDLE`.
+        :raise ConnectError: If a connection could not be accepted.
+        """
+        await self._new_session(address, ssl, accept=True)
+
+    @upper_half
+    @require(Runstate.IDLE)
+    async def connect(self, address: Union[str, Tuple[str, int]],
+                      ssl: Optional[SSLContext] = None) -> None:
+        """
+        Connect to the server and begin processing message queues.
+
+        If this call fails, `runstate` is guaranteed to be set back to `IDLE`.
+
+        :param address:
+            Address to connect to; UNIX socket path or TCP address/port.
+        :param ssl: SSL context to use, if any.
+
+        :raise StateError: When the `Runstate` is not `IDLE`.
+        :raise ConnectError: If a connection cannot be made to the server.
+        """
+        await self._new_session(address, ssl)
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def disconnect(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Disconnect and wait for all tasks to fully stop.
+
+        If there was an exception that caused the reader/writers to
+        terminate prematurely, it will be raised here.
+
+        :raise Exception: When the reader or writer terminate unexpectedly.
+        """
+        self.logger.debug("disconnect() called.")
+        self._schedule_disconnect()
+        await self._wait_disconnect()
+
+    # --------------------------
+    # Section: Session machinery
+    # --------------------------
+
+    @property
+    def _runstate_event(self) -> asyncio.Event:
+        # asyncio.Event() objects should not be created prior to entrance into
+        # an event loop, so we can ensure we create it in the correct context.
+        # Create it on-demand *only* at the behest of an 'async def' method.
+        if not self._runstate_changed:
+            self._runstate_changed = asyncio.Event()
+        return self._runstate_changed
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    def _set_state(self, state: Runstate) -> None:
+        """
+        Change the `Runstate` of the protocol connection.
+
+        Signals the `runstate_changed` event.
+        """
+        if state == self._runstate:
+            return
+
+        self.logger.debug("Transitioning from '%s' to '%s'.",
+                          str(self._runstate), str(state))
+        self._runstate = state
+        self._runstate_event.set()
+        self._runstate_event.clear()
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _new_session(self,
+                           address: Union[str, Tuple[str, int]],
+                           ssl: Optional[SSLContext] = None,
+                           accept: bool = False) -> None:
+        """
+        Establish a new connection and initialize the session.
+
+        Connect or accept a new connection, then begin the protocol
+        session machinery. If this call fails, `runstate` is guaranteed
+        to be set back to `IDLE`.
+
+        :param address:
+            Address to connect to/listen on;
+            UNIX socket path or TCP address/port.
+        :param ssl: SSL context to use, if any.
+        :param accept: Accept a connection instead of connecting when `True`.
+
+        :raise ConnectError:
+            When a connection or session cannot be established.
+
+            This exception will wrap a more concrete one. In most cases,
+            the wrapped exception will be `OSError` or `EOFError`. If a
+            protocol-level failure occurs while establishing a new
+            session, the wrapped error may also be an `AQMPError`.
+        """
+        assert self.runstate == Runstate.IDLE
+
+        try:
+            phase = "connection"
+            await self._establish_connection(address, ssl, accept)
+
+            phase = "session"
+            await self._establish_session()
+
+        except BaseException as err:
+            emsg = f"Failed to establish {phase}"
+            self.logger.error("%s: %s", emsg, exception_summary(err))
+            self.logger.debug("%s:\n%s\n", emsg, pretty_traceback())
+            try:
+                # Reset from CONNECTING back to IDLE.
+                await self.disconnect()
+            except:
+                emsg = "Unexpected bottom half exception"
+                self.logger.critical("%s:\n%s\n", emsg, pretty_traceback())
+                raise
+
+            # NB: CancelledError is not a BaseException before Python 3.8
+            if isinstance(err, asyncio.CancelledError):
+                raise
+
+            if isinstance(err, Exception):
+                raise ConnectError(emsg, err) from err
+
+            # Raise BaseExceptions un-wrapped, they're more important.
+            raise
+
+        assert self.runstate == Runstate.RUNNING
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _establish_connection(
+            self,
+            address: Union[str, Tuple[str, int]],
+            ssl: Optional[SSLContext] = None,
+            accept: bool = False
+    ) -> None:
+        """
+        Establish a new connection.
+
+        :param address:
+            Address to connect to/listen on;
+            UNIX socket path or TCP address/port.
+        :param ssl: SSL context to use, if any.
+        :param accept: Accept a connection instead of connecting when `True`.
+        """
+        assert self.runstate == Runstate.IDLE
+        self._set_state(Runstate.CONNECTING)
+
+        # Allow runstate watchers to witness 'CONNECTING' state; some
+        # failures in the streaming layer are synchronous and will not
+        # otherwise yield.
+        await asyncio.sleep(0)
+
+        if accept:
+            await self._do_accept(address, ssl)
+        else:
+            await self._do_connect(address, ssl)
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _do_accept(self, address: Union[str, Tuple[str, int]],
+                         ssl: Optional[SSLContext] = None) -> None:
+        """
+        Acting as the transport server, accept a single connection.
+
+        :param address:
+            Address to listen on; UNIX socket path or TCP address/port.
+        :param ssl: SSL context to use, if any.
+
+        :raise OSError: For stream-related errors.
+        """
+        self.logger.debug("Awaiting connection on %s ...", address)
+        connected = asyncio.Event()
+        server: Optional[asyncio.AbstractServer] = None
+
+        async def _client_connected_cb(reader: asyncio.StreamReader,
+                                       writer: asyncio.StreamWriter) -> None:
+            """Used to accept a single incoming connection, see below."""
+            nonlocal server
+            nonlocal connected
+
+            # A connection has been accepted; stop listening for new ones.
+            assert server is not None
+            server.close()
+            await server.wait_closed()
+            server = None
+
+            # Register this client as being connected
+            self._reader, self._writer = (reader, writer)
+
+            # Signal back: We've accepted a client!
+            connected.set()
+
+        if isinstance(address, tuple):
+            coro = asyncio.start_server(
+                _client_connected_cb,
+                host=address[0],
+                port=address[1],
+                ssl=ssl,
+                backlog=1,
+                limit=self._limit,
+            )
+        else:
+            coro = asyncio.start_unix_server(
+                _client_connected_cb,
+                path=address,
+                ssl=ssl,
+                backlog=1,
+                limit=self._limit,
+            )
+
+        server = await coro     # Starts listening
+        await connected.wait()  # Waits for the callback to fire (and finish)
+        assert server is None
+
+        self.logger.debug("Connection accepted.")
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _do_connect(self, address: Union[str, Tuple[str, int]],
+                          ssl: Optional[SSLContext] = None) -> None:
+        """
+        Acting as the transport client, initiate a connection to a server.
+
+        :param address:
+            Address to connect to; UNIX socket path or TCP address/port.
+        :param ssl: SSL context to use, if any.
+
+        :raise OSError: For stream-related errors.
+        """
+        self.logger.debug("Connecting to %s ...", address)
+
+        if isinstance(address, tuple):
+            connect = asyncio.open_connection(
+                address[0],
+                address[1],
+                ssl=ssl,
+                limit=self._limit,
+            )
+        else:
+            connect = asyncio.open_unix_connection(
+                path=address,
+                ssl=ssl,
+                limit=self._limit,
+            )
+        self._reader, self._writer = await connect
+
+        self.logger.debug("Connected.")
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _establish_session(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Establish a new session.
+
+        Starts the readers/writer tasks; subclasses may perform their
+        own negotiations here. The Runstate will be RUNNING upon
+        successful conclusion.
+        """
+        assert self.runstate == Runstate.CONNECTING
+
+        self._outgoing = asyncio.Queue()
+
+        reader_coro = self._bh_loop_forever(self._bh_recv_message, 'Reader')
+        writer_coro = self._bh_loop_forever(self._bh_send_message, 'Writer')
+
+        self._reader_task = create_task(reader_coro)
+        self._writer_task = create_task(writer_coro)
+
+        self._bh_tasks = asyncio.gather(
+            self._reader_task,
+            self._writer_task,
+        )
+
+        self._set_state(Runstate.RUNNING)
+        await asyncio.sleep(0)  # Allow runstate_event to process
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    def _schedule_disconnect(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Initiate a disconnect; idempotent.
+
+        This method is used both in the upper-half as a direct
+        consequence of `disconnect()`, and in the bottom-half in the
+        case of unhandled exceptions in the reader/writer tasks.
+
+        It can be invoked no matter what the `runstate` is.
+        """
+        if not self._dc_task:
+            self._set_state(Runstate.DISCONNECTING)
+            self.logger.debug("Scheduling disconnect.")
+            self._dc_task = create_task(self._bh_disconnect())
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _wait_disconnect(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Waits for a previously scheduled disconnect to finish.
+
+        This method will gather any bottom half exceptions and re-raise
+        the one that occurred first; presuming it to be the root cause
+        of any subsequent Exceptions. It is intended to be used in the
+        upper half of the call chain.
+
+        :raise Exception:
+            Arbitrary exception re-raised on behalf of the reader/writer.
+        """
+        assert self.runstate == Runstate.DISCONNECTING
+        assert self._dc_task
+
+        aws: List[Awaitable[object]] = [self._dc_task]
+        if self._bh_tasks:
+            aws.insert(0, self._bh_tasks)
+        all_defined_tasks = asyncio.gather(*aws)
+
+        # Ensure disconnect is done; Exception (if any) is not raised here:
+        await asyncio.wait((self._dc_task,))
+
+        try:
+            await all_defined_tasks  # Raise Exceptions from the bottom half.
+        finally:
+            self._cleanup()
+            self._set_state(Runstate.IDLE)
+
+    @upper_half
+    def _cleanup(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Fully reset this object to a clean state and return to `IDLE`.
+        """
+        def _paranoid_task_erase(task: _FutureT) -> Optional[_FutureT]:
+            # Help to erase a task, ENSURING it is fully quiesced first.
+            assert (task is None) or task.done()
+            return None if (task and task.done()) else task
+
+        assert self.runstate == Runstate.DISCONNECTING
+        self._dc_task = _paranoid_task_erase(self._dc_task)
+        self._reader_task = _paranoid_task_erase(self._reader_task)
+        self._writer_task = _paranoid_task_erase(self._writer_task)
+        self._bh_tasks = _paranoid_task_erase(self._bh_tasks)
+
+        self._reader = None
+        self._writer = None
+
+        # NB: _runstate_changed cannot be cleared because we still need it to
+        # send the final runstate changed event ...!
+
+    # ----------------------------
+    # Section: Bottom Half methods
+    # ----------------------------
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _bh_disconnect(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Disconnect and cancel all outstanding tasks.
+
+        It is designed to be called from its task context,
+        :py:obj:`~AsyncProtocol._dc_task`. By running in its own task,
+        it is free to wait on any pending actions that may still need to
+        occur in either the reader or writer tasks.
+        """
+        assert self.runstate == Runstate.DISCONNECTING
+
+        def _done(task: Optional['asyncio.Future[Any]']) -> bool:
+            return task is not None and task.done()
+
+        # NB: We can't rely on _bh_tasks being done() here, it may not
+        #     yet have had a chance to run and gather itself.
+        tasks = tuple(filter(None, (self._writer_task, self._reader_task)))
+        error_pathway = _done(self._reader_task) or _done(self._writer_task)
+
+        try:
+            # Try to flush the writer, if possible:
+            if not error_pathway:
+                await self._bh_flush_writer()
+        except BaseException as err:
+            error_pathway = True
+            emsg = "Failed to flush the writer"
+            self.logger.error("%s: %s", emsg, exception_summary(err))
+            self.logger.debug("%s:\n%s\n", emsg, pretty_traceback())
+            raise
+        finally:
+            # Cancel any still-running tasks:
+            if self._writer_task is not None and not self._writer_task.done():
+                self.logger.debug("Cancelling writer task.")
+                self._writer_task.cancel()
+            if self._reader_task is not None and not self._reader_task.done():
+                self.logger.debug("Cancelling reader task.")
+                self._reader_task.cancel()
+
+            # Close out the tasks entirely (Won't raise):
+            if tasks:
+                self.logger.debug("Waiting for tasks to complete ...")
+                await asyncio.wait(tasks)
+
+            # Lastly, close the stream itself. (May raise):
+            await self._bh_close_stream(error_pathway)
+            self.logger.debug("Disconnected.")
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _bh_flush_writer(self) -> None:
+        if not self._writer_task:
+            return
+
+        self.logger.debug("Draining the outbound queue ...")
+        await self._outgoing.join()
+        if self._writer is not None:
+            self.logger.debug("Flushing the StreamWriter ...")
+            await flush(self._writer)
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _bh_close_stream(self, error_pathway: bool = False) -> None:
+        # NB: Closing the writer also implcitly closes the reader.
+        if not self._writer:
+            return
+
+        if not is_closing(self._writer):
+            self.logger.debug("Closing StreamWriter.")
+            self._writer.close()
+
+        self.logger.debug("Waiting for StreamWriter to close ...")
+        try:
+            await wait_closed(self._writer)
+        except Exception:  # pylint: disable=broad-except
+            # It's hard to tell if the Stream is already closed or
+            # not. Even if one of the tasks has failed, it may have
+            # failed for a higher-layered protocol reason. The
+            # stream could still be open and perfectly fine.
+            # I don't know how to discern its health here.
+
+            if error_pathway:
+                # We already know that *something* went wrong. Let's
+                # just trust that the Exception we already have is the
+                # better one to present to the user, even if we don't
+                # genuinely *know* the relationship between the two.
+                self.logger.debug(
+                    "Discarding Exception from wait_closed:\n%s\n",
+                    pretty_traceback(),
+                )
+            else:
+                # Oops, this is a brand-new error!
+                raise
+        finally:
+            self.logger.debug("StreamWriter closed.")
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _bh_loop_forever(self, async_fn: _TaskFN, name: str) -> None:
+        """
+        Run one of the bottom-half methods in a loop forever.
+
+        If the bottom half ever raises any exception, schedule a
+        disconnect that will terminate the entire loop.
+
+        :param async_fn: The bottom-half method to run in a loop.
+        :param name: The name of this task, used for logging.
+        """
+        try:
+            while True:
+                await async_fn()
+        except asyncio.CancelledError:
+            # We have been cancelled by _bh_disconnect, exit gracefully.
+            self.logger.debug("Task.%s: cancelled.", name)
+            return
+        except BaseException as err:
+            self.logger.error("Task.%s: %s",
+                              name, exception_summary(err))
+            self.logger.debug("Task.%s: failure:\n%s\n",
+                              name, pretty_traceback())
+            self._schedule_disconnect()
+            raise
+        finally:
+            self.logger.debug("Task.%s: exiting.", name)
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _bh_send_message(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Wait for an outgoing message, then send it.
+
+        Designed to be run in `_bh_loop_forever()`.
+        """
+        msg = await self._outgoing.get()
+        try:
+            await self._send(msg)
+        finally:
+            self._outgoing.task_done()
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _bh_recv_message(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Wait for an incoming message and call `_on_message` to route it.
+
+        Designed to be run in `_bh_loop_forever()`.
+        """
+        msg = await self._recv()
+        await self._on_message(msg)
+
+    # --------------------
+    # Section: Message I/O
+    # --------------------
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    def _cb_outbound(self, msg: T) -> T:
+        """
+        Callback: outbound message hook.
+
+        This is intended for subclasses to be able to add arbitrary
+        hooks to filter or manipulate outgoing messages. The base
+        implementation does nothing but log the message without any
+        manipulation of the message.
+
+        :param msg: raw outbound message
+        :return: final outbound message
+        """
+        self.logger.debug("--> %s", str(msg))
+        return msg
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    def _cb_inbound(self, msg: T) -> T:
+        """
+        Callback: inbound message hook.
+
+        This is intended for subclasses to be able to add arbitrary
+        hooks to filter or manipulate incoming messages. The base
+        implementation does nothing but log the message without any
+        manipulation of the message.
+
+        This method does not "handle" incoming messages; it is a filter.
+        The actual "endpoint" for incoming messages is `_on_message()`.
+
+        :param msg: raw inbound message
+        :return: processed inbound message
+        """
+        self.logger.debug("<-- %s", str(msg))
+        return msg
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _readline(self) -> bytes:
+        """
+        Wait for a newline from the incoming reader.
+
+        This method is provided as a convenience for upper-layer
+        protocols, as many are line-based.
+
+        This method *may* return a sequence of bytes without a trailing
+        newline if EOF occurs, but *some* bytes were received. In this
+        case, the next call will raise `EOFError`. It is assumed that
+        the layer 5 protocol will decide if there is anything meaningful
+        to be done with a partial message.
+
+        :raise OSError: For stream-related errors.
+        :raise EOFError:
+            If the reader stream is at EOF and there are no bytes to return.
+        :return: bytes, including the newline.
+        """
+        assert self._reader is not None
+        msg_bytes = await self._reader.readline()
+
+        if not msg_bytes:
+            if self._reader.at_eof():
+                raise EOFError
+
+        return msg_bytes
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _do_recv(self) -> T:
+        """
+        Abstract: Read from the stream and return a message.
+
+        Very low-level; intended to only be called by `_recv()`.
+        """
+        raise NotImplementedError
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _recv(self) -> T:
+        """
+        Read an arbitrary protocol message.
+
+        .. warning::
+            This method is intended primarily for `_bh_recv_message()`
+            to use in an asynchronous task loop. Using it outside of
+            this loop will "steal" messages from the normal routing
+            mechanism. It is safe to use prior to `_establish_session()`,
+            but should not be used otherwise.
+
+        This method uses `_do_recv()` to retrieve the raw message, and
+        then transforms it using `_cb_inbound()`.
+
+        :return: A single (filtered, processed) protocol message.
+        """
+        message = await self._do_recv()
+        return self._cb_inbound(message)
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    def _do_send(self, msg: T) -> None:
+        """
+        Abstract: Write a message to the stream.
+
+        Very low-level; intended to only be called by `_send()`.
+        """
+        raise NotImplementedError
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _send(self, msg: T) -> None:
+        """
+        Send an arbitrary protocol message.
+
+        This method will transform any outgoing messages according to
+        `_cb_outbound()`.
+
+        .. warning::
+            Like `_recv()`, this method is intended to be called by
+            the writer task loop that processes outgoing
+            messages. Calling it directly may circumvent logic
+            implemented by the caller meant to correlate outgoing and
+            incoming messages.
+
+        :raise OSError: For problems with the underlying stream.
+        """
+        msg = self._cb_outbound(msg)
+        self._do_send(msg)
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _on_message(self, msg: T) -> None:
+        """
+        Called to handle the receipt of a new message.
+
+        .. caution::
+            This is executed from within the reader loop, so be advised
+            that waiting on either the reader or writer task will lead
+            to deadlock. Additionally, any unhandled exceptions will
+            directly cause the loop to halt, so logic may be best-kept
+            to a minimum if at all possible.
+
+        :param msg: The incoming message, already logged/filtered.
+        """
+        # Nothing to do in the abstract case.

+ 0 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/py.typed


+ 621 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/qmp_client.py

@@ -0,0 +1,621 @@
+"""
+QMP Protocol Implementation
+
+This module provides the `QMPClient` class, which can be used to connect
+and send commands to a QMP server such as QEMU. The QMP class can be
+used to either connect to a listening server, or used to listen and
+accept an incoming connection from that server.
+"""
+
+import asyncio
+import logging
+from typing import (
+    Dict,
+    List,
+    Mapping,
+    Optional,
+    Union,
+    cast,
+)
+
+from .error import AQMPError, ProtocolError
+from .events import Events
+from .message import Message
+from .models import ErrorResponse, Greeting
+from .protocol import AsyncProtocol, Runstate, require
+from .util import (
+    bottom_half,
+    exception_summary,
+    pretty_traceback,
+    upper_half,
+)
+
+
+class _WrappedProtocolError(ProtocolError):
+    """
+    Abstract exception class for Protocol errors that wrap an Exception.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param exc: The root-cause exception.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_message: str, exc: Exception):
+        super().__init__(error_message)
+        self.exc = exc
+
+    def __str__(self) -> str:
+        return f"{self.error_message}: {self.exc!s}"
+
+
+class GreetingError(_WrappedProtocolError):
+    """
+    An exception occurred during the Greeting phase.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param exc: The root-cause exception.
+    """
+
+
+class NegotiationError(_WrappedProtocolError):
+    """
+    An exception occurred during the Negotiation phase.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param exc: The root-cause exception.
+    """
+
+
+class ExecuteError(AQMPError):
+    """
+    Exception raised by `QMPClient.execute()` on RPC failure.
+
+    :param error_response: The RPC error response object.
+    :param sent: The sent RPC message that caused the failure.
+    :param received: The raw RPC error reply received.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_response: ErrorResponse,
+                 sent: Message, received: Message):
+        super().__init__(error_response.error.desc)
+        #: The sent `Message` that caused the failure
+        self.sent: Message = sent
+        #: The received `Message` that indicated failure
+        self.received: Message = received
+        #: The parsed error response
+        self.error: ErrorResponse = error_response
+        #: The QMP error class
+        self.error_class: str = error_response.error.class_
+
+
+class ExecInterruptedError(AQMPError):
+    """
+    Exception raised by `execute()` (et al) when an RPC is interrupted.
+
+    This error is raised when an `execute()` statement could not be
+    completed.  This can occur because the connection itself was
+    terminated before a reply was received.
+
+    The true cause of the interruption will be available via `disconnect()`.
+    """
+
+
+class _MsgProtocolError(ProtocolError):
+    """
+    Abstract error class for protocol errors that have a `Message` object.
+
+    This Exception class is used for protocol errors where the `Message`
+    was mechanically understood, but was found to be inappropriate or
+    malformed.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param msg: The QMP `Message` that caused the error.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_message: str, msg: Message):
+        super().__init__(error_message)
+        #: The received `Message` that caused the error.
+        self.msg: Message = msg
+
+    def __str__(self) -> str:
+        return "\n".join([
+            super().__str__(),
+            f"  Message was: {str(self.msg)}\n",
+        ])
+
+
+class ServerParseError(_MsgProtocolError):
+    """
+    The Server sent a `Message` indicating parsing failure.
+
+    i.e. A reply has arrived from the server, but it is missing the "ID"
+    field, indicating a parsing error.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param msg: The QMP `Message` that caused the error.
+    """
+
+
+class BadReplyError(_MsgProtocolError):
+    """
+    An execution reply was successfully routed, but not understood.
+
+    If a QMP message is received with an 'id' field to allow it to be
+    routed, but is otherwise malformed, this exception will be raised.
+
+    A reply message is malformed if it is missing either the 'return' or
+    'error' keys, or if the 'error' value has missing keys or members of
+    the wrong type.
+
+    :param error_message: Human-readable string describing the error.
+    :param msg: The malformed reply that was received.
+    :param sent: The message that was sent that prompted the error.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, error_message: str, msg: Message, sent: Message):
+        super().__init__(error_message, msg)
+        #: The sent `Message` that caused the failure
+        self.sent = sent
+
+
+class QMPClient(AsyncProtocol[Message], Events):
+    """
+    Implements a QMP client connection.
+
+    QMP can be used to establish a connection as either the transport
+    client or server, though this class always acts as the QMP client.
+
+    :param name: Optional nickname for the connection, used for logging.
+
+    Basic script-style usage looks like this::
+
+      qmp = QMPClient('my_virtual_machine_name')
+      await qmp.connect(('127.0.0.1', 1234))
+      ...
+      res = await qmp.execute('block-query')
+      ...
+      await qmp.disconnect()
+
+    Basic async client-style usage looks like this::
+
+      class Client:
+          def __init__(self, name: str):
+              self.qmp = QMPClient(name)
+
+          async def watch_events(self):
+              try:
+                  async for event in self.qmp.events:
+                      print(f"Event: {event['event']}")
+              except asyncio.CancelledError:
+                  return
+
+          async def run(self, address='/tmp/qemu.socket'):
+              await self.qmp.connect(address)
+              asyncio.create_task(self.watch_events())
+              await self.qmp.runstate_changed.wait()
+              await self.disconnect()
+
+    See `aqmp.events` for more detail on event handling patterns.
+    """
+    #: Logger object used for debugging messages.
+    logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
+
+    # Read buffer limit; large enough to accept query-qmp-schema
+    _limit = (256 * 1024)
+
+    # Type alias for pending execute() result items
+    _PendingT = Union[Message, ExecInterruptedError]
+
+    def __init__(self, name: Optional[str] = None) -> None:
+        super().__init__(name)
+        Events.__init__(self)
+
+        #: Whether or not to await a greeting after establishing a connection.
+        self.await_greeting: bool = True
+
+        #: Whether or not to perform capabilities negotiation upon connection.
+        #: Implies `await_greeting`.
+        self.negotiate: bool = True
+
+        # Cached Greeting, if one was awaited.
+        self._greeting: Optional[Greeting] = None
+
+        # Command ID counter
+        self._execute_id = 0
+
+        # Incoming RPC reply messages.
+        self._pending: Dict[
+            Union[str, None],
+            'asyncio.Queue[QMPClient._PendingT]'
+        ] = {}
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _establish_session(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Initiate the QMP session.
+
+        Wait for the QMP greeting and perform capabilities negotiation.
+
+        :raise GreetingError: When the greeting is not understood.
+        :raise NegotiationError: If the negotiation fails.
+        :raise EOFError: When the server unexpectedly hangs up.
+        :raise OSError: For underlying stream errors.
+        """
+        self._greeting = None
+        self._pending = {}
+
+        if self.await_greeting or self.negotiate:
+            self._greeting = await self._get_greeting()
+
+        if self.negotiate:
+            await self._negotiate()
+
+        # This will start the reader/writers:
+        await super()._establish_session()
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _get_greeting(self) -> Greeting:
+        """
+        :raise GreetingError: When the greeting is not understood.
+        :raise EOFError: When the server unexpectedly hangs up.
+        :raise OSError: For underlying stream errors.
+
+        :return: the Greeting object given by the server.
+        """
+        self.logger.debug("Awaiting greeting ...")
+
+        try:
+            msg = await self._recv()
+            return Greeting(msg)
+        except (ProtocolError, KeyError, TypeError) as err:
+            emsg = "Did not understand Greeting"
+            self.logger.error("%s: %s", emsg, exception_summary(err))
+            self.logger.debug("%s:\n%s\n", emsg, pretty_traceback())
+            raise GreetingError(emsg, err) from err
+        except BaseException as err:
+            # EOFError, OSError, or something unexpected.
+            emsg = "Failed to receive Greeting"
+            self.logger.error("%s: %s", emsg, exception_summary(err))
+            self.logger.debug("%s:\n%s\n", emsg, pretty_traceback())
+            raise
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _negotiate(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Perform QMP capabilities negotiation.
+
+        :raise NegotiationError: When negotiation fails.
+        :raise EOFError: When the server unexpectedly hangs up.
+        :raise OSError: For underlying stream errors.
+        """
+        self.logger.debug("Negotiating capabilities ...")
+
+        arguments: Dict[str, List[str]] = {'enable': []}
+        if self._greeting and 'oob' in self._greeting.QMP.capabilities:
+            arguments['enable'].append('oob')
+        msg = self.make_execute_msg('qmp_capabilities', arguments=arguments)
+
+        # It's not safe to use execute() here, because the reader/writers
+        # aren't running. AsyncProtocol *requires* that a new session
+        # does not fail after the reader/writers are running!
+        try:
+            await self._send(msg)
+            reply = await self._recv()
+            assert 'return' in reply
+            assert 'error' not in reply
+        except (ProtocolError, AssertionError) as err:
+            emsg = "Negotiation failed"
+            self.logger.error("%s: %s", emsg, exception_summary(err))
+            self.logger.debug("%s:\n%s\n", emsg, pretty_traceback())
+            raise NegotiationError(emsg, err) from err
+        except BaseException as err:
+            # EOFError, OSError, or something unexpected.
+            emsg = "Negotiation failed"
+            self.logger.error("%s: %s", emsg, exception_summary(err))
+            self.logger.debug("%s:\n%s\n", emsg, pretty_traceback())
+            raise
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _bh_disconnect(self) -> None:
+        try:
+            await super()._bh_disconnect()
+        finally:
+            if self._pending:
+                self.logger.debug("Cancelling pending executions")
+            keys = self._pending.keys()
+            for key in keys:
+                self.logger.debug("Cancelling execution '%s'", key)
+                self._pending[key].put_nowait(
+                    ExecInterruptedError("Disconnected")
+                )
+
+            self.logger.debug("QMP Disconnected.")
+
+    @upper_half
+    def _cleanup(self) -> None:
+        super()._cleanup()
+        assert not self._pending
+
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _on_message(self, msg: Message) -> None:
+        """
+        Add an incoming message to the appropriate queue/handler.
+
+        :raise ServerParseError: When Message indicates server parse failure.
+        """
+        # Incoming messages are not fully parsed/validated here;
+        # do only light peeking to know how to route the messages.
+
+        if 'event' in msg:
+            await self._event_dispatch(msg)
+            return
+
+        # Below, we assume everything left is an execute/exec-oob response.
+
+        exec_id = cast(Optional[str], msg.get('id'))
+
+        if exec_id in self._pending:
+            await self._pending[exec_id].put(msg)
+            return
+
+        # We have a message we can't route back to a caller.
+
+        is_error = 'error' in msg
+        has_id = 'id' in msg
+
+        if is_error and not has_id:
+            # This is very likely a server parsing error.
+            # It doesn't inherently belong to any pending execution.
+            # Instead of performing clever recovery, just terminate.
+            # See "NOTE" in qmp-spec.txt, section 2.4.2
+            raise ServerParseError(
+                ("Server sent an error response without an ID, "
+                 "but there are no ID-less executions pending. "
+                 "Assuming this is a server parser failure."),
+                msg
+            )
+
+        # qmp-spec.txt, section 2.4:
+        # 'Clients should drop all the responses
+        # that have an unknown "id" field.'
+        self.logger.log(
+            logging.ERROR if is_error else logging.WARNING,
+            "Unknown ID '%s', message dropped.",
+            exec_id,
+        )
+        self.logger.debug("Unroutable message: %s", str(msg))
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    async def _do_recv(self) -> Message:
+        """
+        :raise OSError: When a stream error is encountered.
+        :raise EOFError: When the stream is at EOF.
+        :raise ProtocolError:
+            When the Message is not understood.
+            See also `Message._deserialize`.
+
+        :return: A single QMP `Message`.
+        """
+        msg_bytes = await self._readline()
+        msg = Message(msg_bytes, eager=True)
+        return msg
+
+    @upper_half
+    @bottom_half
+    def _do_send(self, msg: Message) -> None:
+        """
+        :raise ValueError: JSON serialization failure
+        :raise TypeError: JSON serialization failure
+        :raise OSError: When a stream error is encountered.
+        """
+        assert self._writer is not None
+        self._writer.write(bytes(msg))
+
+    @upper_half
+    def _get_exec_id(self) -> str:
+        exec_id = f"__aqmp#{self._execute_id:05d}"
+        self._execute_id += 1
+        return exec_id
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _issue(self, msg: Message) -> Union[None, str]:
+        """
+        Issue a QMP `Message` and do not wait for a reply.
+
+        :param msg: The QMP `Message` to send to the server.
+
+        :return: The ID of the `Message` sent.
+        """
+        msg_id: Optional[str] = None
+        if 'id' in msg:
+            assert isinstance(msg['id'], str)
+            msg_id = msg['id']
+
+        self._pending[msg_id] = asyncio.Queue(maxsize=1)
+        await self._outgoing.put(msg)
+
+        return msg_id
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _reply(self, msg_id: Union[str, None]) -> Message:
+        """
+        Await a reply to a previously issued QMP message.
+
+        :param msg_id: The ID of the previously issued message.
+
+        :return: The reply from the server.
+        :raise ExecInterruptedError:
+            When the reply could not be retrieved because the connection
+            was lost, or some other problem.
+        """
+        queue = self._pending[msg_id]
+        result = await queue.get()
+
+        try:
+            if isinstance(result, ExecInterruptedError):
+                raise result
+            return result
+        finally:
+            del self._pending[msg_id]
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def _execute(self, msg: Message, assign_id: bool = True) -> Message:
+        """
+        Send a QMP `Message` to the server and await a reply.
+
+        This method *assumes* you are sending some kind of an execute
+        statement that *will* receive a reply.
+
+        An execution ID will be assigned if assign_id is `True`. It can be
+        disabled, but this requires that an ID is manually assigned
+        instead. For manually assigned IDs, you must not use the string
+        '__aqmp#' anywhere in the ID.
+
+        :param msg: The QMP `Message` to execute.
+        :param assign_id: If True, assign a new execution ID.
+
+        :return: Execution reply from the server.
+        :raise ExecInterruptedError:
+            When the reply could not be retrieved because the connection
+            was lost, or some other problem.
+        """
+        if assign_id:
+            msg['id'] = self._get_exec_id()
+        elif 'id' in msg:
+            assert isinstance(msg['id'], str)
+            assert '__aqmp#' not in msg['id']
+
+        exec_id = await self._issue(msg)
+        return await self._reply(exec_id)
+
+    @upper_half
+    @require(Runstate.RUNNING)
+    async def _raw(
+            self,
+            msg: Union[Message, Mapping[str, object], bytes],
+            assign_id: bool = True,
+    ) -> Message:
+        """
+        Issue a raw `Message` to the QMP server and await a reply.
+
+        :param msg:
+            A Message to send to the server. It may be a `Message`, any
+            Mapping (including Dict), or raw bytes.
+        :param assign_id:
+            Assign an arbitrary execution ID to this message. If
+            `False`, the existing id must either be absent (and no other
+            such pending execution may omit an ID) or a string. If it is
+            a string, it must not start with '__aqmp#' and no other such
+            pending execution may currently be using that ID.
+
+        :return: Execution reply from the server.
+
+        :raise ExecInterruptedError:
+            When the reply could not be retrieved because the connection
+            was lost, or some other problem.
+        :raise TypeError:
+            When assign_id is `False`, an ID is given, and it is not a string.
+        :raise ValueError:
+            When assign_id is `False`, but the ID is not usable;
+            Either because it starts with '__aqmp#' or it is already in-use.
+        """
+        # 1. convert generic Mapping or bytes to a QMP Message
+        # 2. copy Message objects so that we assign an ID only to the copy.
+        msg = Message(msg)
+
+        exec_id = msg.get('id')
+        if not assign_id and 'id' in msg:
+            if not isinstance(exec_id, str):
+                raise TypeError(f"ID ('{exec_id}') must be a string.")
+            if exec_id.startswith('__aqmp#'):
+                raise ValueError(
+                    f"ID ('{exec_id}') must not start with '__aqmp#'."
+                )
+
+        if not assign_id and exec_id in self._pending:
+            raise ValueError(
+                f"ID '{exec_id}' is in-use and cannot be used."
+            )
+
+        return await self._execute(msg, assign_id=assign_id)
+
+    @upper_half
+    @require(Runstate.RUNNING)
+    async def execute_msg(self, msg: Message) -> object:
+        """
+        Execute a QMP command and return its value.
+
+        :param msg: The QMP `Message` to execute.
+
+        :return:
+            The command execution return value from the server. The type of
+            object returned depends on the command that was issued,
+            though most in QEMU return a `dict`.
+        :raise ValueError:
+            If the QMP `Message` does not have either the 'execute' or
+            'exec-oob' fields set.
+        :raise ExecuteError: When the server returns an error response.
+        :raise ExecInterruptedError: if the connection was terminated early.
+        """
+        if not ('execute' in msg or 'exec-oob' in msg):
+            raise ValueError("Requires 'execute' or 'exec-oob' message")
+
+        # Copy the Message so that the ID assigned by _execute() is
+        # local to this method; allowing the ID to be seen in raised
+        # Exceptions but without modifying the caller's held copy.
+        msg = Message(msg)
+        reply = await self._execute(msg)
+
+        if 'error' in reply:
+            try:
+                error_response = ErrorResponse(reply)
+            except (KeyError, TypeError) as err:
+                # Error response was malformed.
+                raise BadReplyError(
+                    "QMP error reply is malformed", reply, msg,
+                ) from err
+
+            raise ExecuteError(error_response, msg, reply)
+
+        if 'return' not in reply:
+            raise BadReplyError(
+                "QMP reply is missing a 'error' or 'return' member",
+                reply, msg,
+            )
+
+        return reply['return']
+
+    @classmethod
+    def make_execute_msg(cls, cmd: str,
+                         arguments: Optional[Mapping[str, object]] = None,
+                         oob: bool = False) -> Message:
+        """
+        Create an executable message to be sent by `execute_msg` later.
+
+        :param cmd: QMP command name.
+        :param arguments: Arguments (if any). Must be JSON-serializable.
+        :param oob: If `True`, execute "out of band".
+
+        :return: An executable QMP `Message`.
+        """
+        msg = Message({'exec-oob' if oob else 'execute': cmd})
+        if arguments is not None:
+            msg['arguments'] = arguments
+        return msg
+
+    @upper_half
+    async def execute(self, cmd: str,
+                      arguments: Optional[Mapping[str, object]] = None,
+                      oob: bool = False) -> object:
+        """
+        Execute a QMP command and return its value.
+
+        :param cmd: QMP command name.
+        :param arguments: Arguments (if any). Must be JSON-serializable.
+        :param oob: If `True`, execute "out of band".
+
+        :return:
+            The command execution return value from the server. The type of
+            object returned depends on the command that was issued,
+            though most in QEMU return a `dict`.
+        :raise ExecuteError: When the server returns an error response.
+        :raise ExecInterruptedError: if the connection was terminated early.
+        """
+        msg = self.make_execute_msg(cmd, arguments, oob=oob)
+        return await self.execute_msg(msg)

+ 217 - 0
python/qemu/aqmp/util.py

@@ -0,0 +1,217 @@
+"""
+Miscellaneous Utilities
+
+This module provides asyncio utilities and compatibility wrappers for
+Python 3.6 to provide some features that otherwise become available in
+Python 3.7+.
+
+Various logging and debugging utilities are also provided, such as
+`exception_summary()` and `pretty_traceback()`, used primarily for
+adding information into the logging stream.
+"""
+
+import asyncio
+import sys
+import traceback
+from typing import (
+    Any,
+    Coroutine,
+    Optional,
+    TypeVar,
+    cast,
+)
+
+
+T = TypeVar('T')
+
+
+# --------------------------
+# Section: Utility Functions
+# --------------------------
+
+
+async def flush(writer: asyncio.StreamWriter) -> None:
+    """
+    Utility function to ensure a StreamWriter is *fully* drained.
+
+    `asyncio.StreamWriter.drain` only promises we will return to below
+    the "high-water mark". This function ensures we flush the entire
+    buffer -- by setting the high water mark to 0 and then calling
+    drain. The flow control limits are restored after the call is
+    completed.
+    """
+    transport = cast(asyncio.WriteTransport, writer.transport)
+
+    # https://github.com/python/typeshed/issues/5779
+    low, high = transport.get_write_buffer_limits()  # type: ignore
+    transport.set_write_buffer_limits(0, 0)
+    try:
+        await writer.drain()
+    finally:
+        transport.set_write_buffer_limits(high, low)
+
+
+def upper_half(func: T) -> T:
+    """
+    Do-nothing decorator that annotates a method as an "upper-half" method.
+
+    These methods must not call bottom-half functions directly, but can
+    schedule them to run.
+    """
+    return func
+
+
+def bottom_half(func: T) -> T:
+    """
+    Do-nothing decorator that annotates a method as a "bottom-half" method.
+
+    These methods must take great care to handle their own exceptions whenever
+    possible. If they go unhandled, they will cause termination of the loop.
+
+    These methods do not, in general, have the ability to directly
+    report information to a caller’s context and will usually be
+    collected as a Task result instead.
+
+    They must not call upper-half functions directly.
+    """
+    return func
+
+
+# -------------------------------
+# Section: Compatibility Wrappers
+# -------------------------------
+
+
+def create_task(coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, T],
+                loop: Optional[asyncio.AbstractEventLoop] = None
+                ) -> 'asyncio.Future[T]':
+    """
+    Python 3.6-compatible `asyncio.create_task` wrapper.
+
+    :param coro: The coroutine to execute in a task.
+    :param loop: Optionally, the loop to create the task in.
+
+    :return: An `asyncio.Future` object.
+    """
+    if sys.version_info >= (3, 7):
+        if loop is not None:
+            return loop.create_task(coro)
+        return asyncio.create_task(coro)  # pylint: disable=no-member
+
+    # Python 3.6:
+    return asyncio.ensure_future(coro, loop=loop)
+
+
+def is_closing(writer: asyncio.StreamWriter) -> bool:
+    """
+    Python 3.6-compatible `asyncio.StreamWriter.is_closing` wrapper.
+
+    :param writer: The `asyncio.StreamWriter` object.
+    :return: `True` if the writer is closing, or closed.
+    """
+    if sys.version_info >= (3, 7):
+        return writer.is_closing()
+
+    # Python 3.6:
+    transport = writer.transport
+    assert isinstance(transport, asyncio.WriteTransport)
+    return transport.is_closing()
+
+
+async def wait_closed(writer: asyncio.StreamWriter) -> None:
+    """
+    Python 3.6-compatible `asyncio.StreamWriter.wait_closed` wrapper.
+
+    :param writer: The `asyncio.StreamWriter` to wait on.
+    """
+    if sys.version_info >= (3, 7):
+        await writer.wait_closed()
+        return
+
+    # Python 3.6
+    transport = writer.transport
+    assert isinstance(transport, asyncio.WriteTransport)
+
+    while not transport.is_closing():
+        await asyncio.sleep(0)
+
+    # This is an ugly workaround, but it's the best I can come up with.
+    sock = transport.get_extra_info('socket')
+
+    if sock is None:
+        # Our transport doesn't have a socket? ...
+        # Nothing we can reasonably do.
+        return
+
+    while sock.fileno() != -1:
+        await asyncio.sleep(0)
+
+
+def asyncio_run(coro: Coroutine[Any, Any, T], *, debug: bool = False) -> T:
+    """
+    Python 3.6-compatible `asyncio.run` wrapper.
+
+    :param coro: A coroutine to execute now.
+    :return: The return value from the coroutine.
+    """
+    if sys.version_info >= (3, 7):
+        return asyncio.run(coro, debug=debug)
+
+    # Python 3.6
+    loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
+    loop.set_debug(debug)
+    ret = loop.run_until_complete(coro)
+    loop.close()
+
+    return ret
+
+
+# ----------------------------
+# Section: Logging & Debugging
+# ----------------------------
+
+
+def exception_summary(exc: BaseException) -> str:
+    """
+    Return a summary string of an arbitrary exception.
+
+    It will be of the form "ExceptionType: Error Message", if the error
+    string is non-empty, and just "ExceptionType" otherwise.
+    """
+    name = type(exc).__qualname__
+    smod = type(exc).__module__
+    if smod not in ("__main__", "builtins"):
+        name = smod + '.' + name
+
+    error = str(exc)
+    if error:
+        return f"{name}: {error}"
+    return name
+
+
+def pretty_traceback(prefix: str = "  | ") -> str:
+    """
+    Formats the current traceback, indented to provide visual distinction.
+
+    This is useful for printing a traceback within a traceback for
+    debugging purposes when encapsulating errors to deliver them up the
+    stack; when those errors are printed, this helps provide a nice
+    visual grouping to quickly identify the parts of the error that
+    belong to the inner exception.
+
+    :param prefix: The prefix to append to each line of the traceback.
+    :return: A string, formatted something like the following::
+
+      | Traceback (most recent call last):
+      |   File "foobar.py", line 42, in arbitrary_example
+      |     foo.baz()
+      | ArbitraryError: [Errno 42] Something bad happened!
+    """
+    output = "".join(traceback.format_exception(*sys.exc_info()))
+
+    exc_lines = []
+    for line in output.split('\n'):
+        exc_lines.append(prefix + line)
+
+    # The last line is always empty, omit it
+    return "\n".join(exc_lines[:-1])

+ 41 - 2
python/setup.cfg

@@ -27,6 +27,7 @@ packages =
     qemu.qmp
     qemu.machine
     qemu.utils
+    qemu.aqmp
 
 [options.package_data]
 * = py.typed
@@ -36,18 +37,27 @@ packages =
 # version, use e.g. "pipenv install --dev pylint==3.0.0".
 # Subsequently, edit 'Pipfile' to remove e.g. 'pylint = "==3.0.0'.
 devel =
-    avocado-framework >= 87.0
+    avocado-framework >= 90.0
     flake8 >= 3.6.0
     fusepy >= 2.0.4
     isort >= 5.1.2
     mypy >= 0.770
     pylint >= 2.8.0
     tox >= 3.18.0
+    urwid >= 2.1.2
+    urwid-readline >= 0.13
+    Pygments >= 2.9.0
 
 # Provides qom-fuse functionality
 fuse =
     fusepy >= 2.0.4
 
+# AQMP TUI dependencies
+tui =
+    urwid >= 2.1.2
+    urwid-readline >= 0.13
+    Pygments >= 2.9.0
+
 [options.entry_points]
 console_scripts =
     qom = qemu.qmp.qom:main
@@ -58,6 +68,7 @@ console_scripts =
     qom-fuse = qemu.qmp.qom_fuse:QOMFuse.entry_point [fuse]
     qemu-ga-client = qemu.qmp.qemu_ga_client:main
     qmp-shell = qemu.qmp.qmp_shell:main
+    aqmp-tui = qemu.aqmp.aqmp_tui:main [tui]
 
 [flake8]
 extend-ignore = E722  # Prefer pylint's bare-except checks to flake8's
@@ -73,8 +84,22 @@ namespace_packages = True
 # fusepy has no type stubs:
 allow_subclassing_any = True
 
+[mypy-qemu.aqmp.aqmp_tui]
+# urwid and urwid_readline have no type stubs:
+allow_subclassing_any = True
+
+# The following missing import directives are because these libraries do not
+# provide type stubs. Allow them on an as-needed basis for mypy.
 [mypy-fuse]
-# fusepy has no type stubs:
+ignore_missing_imports = True
+
+[mypy-urwid]
+ignore_missing_imports = True
+
+[mypy-urwid_readline]
+ignore_missing_imports = True
+
+[mypy-pygments]
 ignore_missing_imports = True
 
 [pylint.messages control]
@@ -88,6 +113,8 @@ ignore_missing_imports = True
 # no Warning level messages displayed, use "--disable=all --enable=classes
 # --disable=W".
 disable=consider-using-f-string,
+        too-many-function-args,  # mypy handles this with less false positives.
+        no-member,  # mypy also handles this better.
 
 [pylint.basic]
 # Good variable names which should always be accepted, separated by a comma.
@@ -100,6 +127,7 @@ good-names=i,
            fh,  # fh = open(...)
            fd,  # fd = os.open(...)
            c,   # for c in string: ...
+           T,   # for TypeVars. See pylint#3401
 
 [pylint.similarities]
 # Ignore imports when computing similarities.
@@ -134,5 +162,16 @@ allowlist_externals = make
 deps =
     .[devel]
     .[fuse]  # Workaround to trigger tox venv rebuild
+    .[tui]   # Workaround to trigger tox venv rebuild
 commands =
     make check
+
+# Coverage.py [https://coverage.readthedocs.io/en/latest/] is a tool for
+# measuring code coverage of Python programs. It monitors your program,
+# noting which parts of the code have been executed, then analyzes the
+# source to identify code that could have been executed but was not.
+
+[coverage:run]
+concurrency = multiprocessing
+source = qemu/
+parallel = true

+ 583 - 0
python/tests/protocol.py

@@ -0,0 +1,583 @@
+import asyncio
+from contextlib import contextmanager
+import os
+import socket
+from tempfile import TemporaryDirectory
+
+import avocado
+
+from qemu.aqmp import ConnectError, Runstate
+from qemu.aqmp.protocol import AsyncProtocol, StateError
+from qemu.aqmp.util import asyncio_run, create_task
+
+
+class NullProtocol(AsyncProtocol[None]):
+    """
+    NullProtocol is a test mockup of an AsyncProtocol implementation.
+
+    It adds a fake_session instance variable that enables a code path
+    that bypasses the actual connection logic, but still allows the
+    reader/writers to start.
+
+    Because the message type is defined as None, an asyncio.Event named
+    'trigger_input' is created that prohibits the reader from
+    incessantly being able to yield None; this event can be poked to
+    simulate an incoming message.
+
+    For testing symmetry with do_recv, an interface is added to "send" a
+    Null message.
+
+    For testing purposes, a "simulate_disconnection" method is also
+    added which allows us to trigger a bottom half disconnect without
+    injecting any real errors into the reader/writer loops; in essence
+    it performs exactly half of what disconnect() normally does.
+    """
+    def __init__(self, name=None):
+        self.fake_session = False
+        self.trigger_input: asyncio.Event
+        super().__init__(name)
+
+    async def _establish_session(self):
+        self.trigger_input = asyncio.Event()
+        await super()._establish_session()
+
+    async def _do_accept(self, address, ssl=None):
+        if not self.fake_session:
+            await super()._do_accept(address, ssl)
+
+    async def _do_connect(self, address, ssl=None):
+        if not self.fake_session:
+            await super()._do_connect(address, ssl)
+
+    async def _do_recv(self) -> None:
+        await self.trigger_input.wait()
+        self.trigger_input.clear()
+
+    def _do_send(self, msg: None) -> None:
+        pass
+
+    async def send_msg(self) -> None:
+        await self._outgoing.put(None)
+
+    async def simulate_disconnect(self) -> None:
+        """
+        Simulates a bottom-half disconnect.
+
+        This method schedules a disconnection but does not wait for it
+        to complete. This is used to put the loop into the DISCONNECTING
+        state without fully quiescing it back to IDLE. This is normally
+        something you cannot coax AsyncProtocol to do on purpose, but it
+        will be similar to what happens with an unhandled Exception in
+        the reader/writer.
+
+        Under normal circumstances, the library design requires you to
+        await on disconnect(), which awaits the disconnect task and
+        returns bottom half errors as a pre-condition to allowing the
+        loop to return back to IDLE.
+        """
+        self._schedule_disconnect()
+
+
+class LineProtocol(AsyncProtocol[str]):
+    def __init__(self, name=None):
+        super().__init__(name)
+        self.rx_history = []
+
+    async def _do_recv(self) -> str:
+        raw = await self._readline()
+        msg = raw.decode()
+        self.rx_history.append(msg)
+        return msg
+
+    def _do_send(self, msg: str) -> None:
+        assert self._writer is not None
+        self._writer.write(msg.encode() + b'\n')
+
+    async def send_msg(self, msg: str) -> None:
+        await self._outgoing.put(msg)
+
+
+def run_as_task(coro, allow_cancellation=False):
+    """
+    Run a given coroutine as a task.
+
+    Optionally, wrap it in a try..except block that allows this
+    coroutine to be canceled gracefully.
+    """
+    async def _runner():
+        try:
+            await coro
+        except asyncio.CancelledError:
+            if allow_cancellation:
+                return
+            raise
+    return create_task(_runner())
+
+
+@contextmanager
+def jammed_socket():
+    """
+    Opens up a random unused TCP port on localhost, then jams it.
+    """
+    socks = []
+
+    try:
+        sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
+        sock.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
+        sock.bind(('127.0.0.1', 0))
+        sock.listen(1)
+        address = sock.getsockname()
+
+        socks.append(sock)
+
+        # I don't *fully* understand why, but it takes *two* un-accepted
+        # connections to start jamming the socket.
+        for _ in range(2):
+            sock = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
+            sock.connect(address)
+            socks.append(sock)
+
+        yield address
+
+    finally:
+        for sock in socks:
+            sock.close()
+
+
+class Smoke(avocado.Test):
+
+    def setUp(self):
+        self.proto = NullProtocol()
+
+    def test__repr__(self):
+        self.assertEqual(
+            repr(self.proto),
+            "<NullProtocol runstate=IDLE>"
+        )
+
+    def testRunstate(self):
+        self.assertEqual(
+            self.proto.runstate,
+            Runstate.IDLE
+        )
+
+    def testDefaultName(self):
+        self.assertEqual(
+            self.proto.name,
+            None
+        )
+
+    def testLogger(self):
+        self.assertEqual(
+            self.proto.logger.name,
+            'qemu.aqmp.protocol'
+        )
+
+    def testName(self):
+        self.proto = NullProtocol('Steve')
+
+        self.assertEqual(
+            self.proto.name,
+            'Steve'
+        )
+
+        self.assertEqual(
+            self.proto.logger.name,
+            'qemu.aqmp.protocol.Steve'
+        )
+
+        self.assertEqual(
+            repr(self.proto),
+            "<NullProtocol name='Steve' runstate=IDLE>"
+        )
+
+
+class TestBase(avocado.Test):
+
+    def setUp(self):
+        self.proto = NullProtocol(type(self).__name__)
+        self.assertEqual(self.proto.runstate, Runstate.IDLE)
+        self.runstate_watcher = None
+
+    def tearDown(self):
+        self.assertEqual(self.proto.runstate, Runstate.IDLE)
+
+    async def _asyncSetUp(self):
+        pass
+
+    async def _asyncTearDown(self):
+        if self.runstate_watcher:
+            await self.runstate_watcher
+
+    @staticmethod
+    def async_test(async_test_method):
+        """
+        Decorator; adds SetUp and TearDown to async tests.
+        """
+        async def _wrapper(self, *args, **kwargs):
+            loop = asyncio.get_event_loop()
+            loop.set_debug(True)
+
+            await self._asyncSetUp()
+            await async_test_method(self, *args, **kwargs)
+            await self._asyncTearDown()
+
+        return _wrapper
+
+    # Definitions
+
+    # The states we expect a "bad" connect/accept attempt to transition through
+    BAD_CONNECTION_STATES = (
+        Runstate.CONNECTING,
+        Runstate.DISCONNECTING,
+        Runstate.IDLE,
+    )
+
+    # The states we expect a "good" session to transition through
+    GOOD_CONNECTION_STATES = (
+        Runstate.CONNECTING,
+        Runstate.RUNNING,
+        Runstate.DISCONNECTING,
+        Runstate.IDLE,
+    )
+
+    # Helpers
+
+    async def _watch_runstates(self, *states):
+        """
+        This launches a task alongside (most) tests below to confirm that
+        the sequence of runstate changes that occur is exactly as
+        anticipated.
+        """
+        async def _watcher():
+            for state in states:
+                new_state = await self.proto.runstate_changed()
+                self.assertEqual(
+                    new_state,
+                    state,
+                    msg=f"Expected state '{state.name}'",
+                )
+
+        self.runstate_watcher = create_task(_watcher())
+        # Kick the loop and force the task to block on the event.
+        await asyncio.sleep(0)
+
+
+class State(TestBase):
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testSuperfluousDisconnect(self):
+        """
+        Test calling disconnect() while already disconnected.
+        """
+        await self._watch_runstates(
+            Runstate.DISCONNECTING,
+            Runstate.IDLE,
+        )
+        await self.proto.disconnect()
+
+
+class Connect(TestBase):
+    """
+    Tests primarily related to calling Connect().
+    """
+    async def _bad_connection(self, family: str):
+        assert family in ('INET', 'UNIX')
+
+        if family == 'INET':
+            await self.proto.connect(('127.0.0.1', 0))
+        elif family == 'UNIX':
+            await self.proto.connect('/dev/null')
+
+    async def _hanging_connection(self):
+        with jammed_socket() as addr:
+            await self.proto.connect(addr)
+
+    async def _bad_connection_test(self, family: str):
+        await self._watch_runstates(*self.BAD_CONNECTION_STATES)
+
+        with self.assertRaises(ConnectError) as context:
+            await self._bad_connection(family)
+
+        self.assertIsInstance(context.exception.exc, OSError)
+        self.assertEqual(
+            context.exception.error_message,
+            "Failed to establish connection"
+        )
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testBadINET(self):
+        """
+        Test an immediately rejected call to an IP target.
+        """
+        await self._bad_connection_test('INET')
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testBadUNIX(self):
+        """
+        Test an immediately rejected call to a UNIX socket target.
+        """
+        await self._bad_connection_test('UNIX')
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testCancellation(self):
+        """
+        Test what happens when a connection attempt is aborted.
+        """
+        # Note that accept() cannot be cancelled outright, as it isn't a task.
+        # However, we can wrap it in a task and cancel *that*.
+        await self._watch_runstates(*self.BAD_CONNECTION_STATES)
+        task = run_as_task(self._hanging_connection(), allow_cancellation=True)
+
+        state = await self.proto.runstate_changed()
+        self.assertEqual(state, Runstate.CONNECTING)
+
+        # This is insider baseball, but the connection attempt has
+        # yielded *just* before the actual connection attempt, so kick
+        # the loop to make sure it's truly wedged.
+        await asyncio.sleep(0)
+
+        task.cancel()
+        await task
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testTimeout(self):
+        """
+        Test what happens when a connection attempt times out.
+        """
+        await self._watch_runstates(*self.BAD_CONNECTION_STATES)
+        task = run_as_task(self._hanging_connection())
+
+        # More insider baseball: to improve the speed of this test while
+        # guaranteeing that the connection even gets a chance to start,
+        # verify that the connection hangs *first*, then await the
+        # result of the task with a nearly-zero timeout.
+
+        state = await self.proto.runstate_changed()
+        self.assertEqual(state, Runstate.CONNECTING)
+        await asyncio.sleep(0)
+
+        with self.assertRaises(asyncio.TimeoutError):
+            await asyncio.wait_for(task, timeout=0)
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testRequire(self):
+        """
+        Test what happens when a connection attempt is made while CONNECTING.
+        """
+        await self._watch_runstates(*self.BAD_CONNECTION_STATES)
+        task = run_as_task(self._hanging_connection(), allow_cancellation=True)
+
+        state = await self.proto.runstate_changed()
+        self.assertEqual(state, Runstate.CONNECTING)
+
+        with self.assertRaises(StateError) as context:
+            await self._bad_connection('UNIX')
+
+        self.assertEqual(
+            context.exception.error_message,
+            "NullProtocol is currently connecting."
+        )
+        self.assertEqual(context.exception.state, Runstate.CONNECTING)
+        self.assertEqual(context.exception.required, Runstate.IDLE)
+
+        task.cancel()
+        await task
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testImplicitRunstateInit(self):
+        """
+        Test what happens if we do not wait on the runstate event until
+        AFTER a connection is made, i.e., connect()/accept() themselves
+        initialize the runstate event. All of the above tests force the
+        initialization by waiting on the runstate *first*.
+        """
+        task = run_as_task(self._hanging_connection(), allow_cancellation=True)
+
+        # Kick the loop to coerce the state change
+        await asyncio.sleep(0)
+        assert self.proto.runstate == Runstate.CONNECTING
+
+        # We already missed the transition to CONNECTING
+        await self._watch_runstates(Runstate.DISCONNECTING, Runstate.IDLE)
+
+        task.cancel()
+        await task
+
+
+class Accept(Connect):
+    """
+    All of the same tests as Connect, but using the accept() interface.
+    """
+    async def _bad_connection(self, family: str):
+        assert family in ('INET', 'UNIX')
+
+        if family == 'INET':
+            await self.proto.accept(('example.com', 1))
+        elif family == 'UNIX':
+            await self.proto.accept('/dev/null')
+
+    async def _hanging_connection(self):
+        with TemporaryDirectory(suffix='.aqmp') as tmpdir:
+            sock = os.path.join(tmpdir, type(self.proto).__name__ + ".sock")
+            await self.proto.accept(sock)
+
+
+class FakeSession(TestBase):
+
+    def setUp(self):
+        super().setUp()
+        self.proto.fake_session = True
+
+    async def _asyncSetUp(self):
+        await super()._asyncSetUp()
+        await self._watch_runstates(*self.GOOD_CONNECTION_STATES)
+
+    async def _asyncTearDown(self):
+        await self.proto.disconnect()
+        await super()._asyncTearDown()
+
+    ####
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testFakeConnect(self):
+
+        """Test the full state lifecycle (via connect) with a no-op session."""
+        await self.proto.connect('/not/a/real/path')
+        self.assertEqual(self.proto.runstate, Runstate.RUNNING)
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testFakeAccept(self):
+        """Test the full state lifecycle (via accept) with a no-op session."""
+        await self.proto.accept('/not/a/real/path')
+        self.assertEqual(self.proto.runstate, Runstate.RUNNING)
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testFakeRecv(self):
+        """Test receiving a fake/null message."""
+        await self.proto.accept('/not/a/real/path')
+
+        logname = self.proto.logger.name
+        with self.assertLogs(logname, level='DEBUG') as context:
+            self.proto.trigger_input.set()
+            self.proto.trigger_input.clear()
+            await asyncio.sleep(0)  # Kick reader.
+
+        self.assertEqual(
+            context.output,
+            [f"DEBUG:{logname}:<-- None"],
+        )
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testFakeSend(self):
+        """Test sending a fake/null message."""
+        await self.proto.accept('/not/a/real/path')
+
+        logname = self.proto.logger.name
+        with self.assertLogs(logname, level='DEBUG') as context:
+            # Cheat: Send a Null message to nobody.
+            await self.proto.send_msg()
+            # Kick writer; awaiting on a queue.put isn't sufficient to yield.
+            await asyncio.sleep(0)
+
+        self.assertEqual(
+            context.output,
+            [f"DEBUG:{logname}:--> None"],
+        )
+
+    async def _prod_session_api(
+            self,
+            current_state: Runstate,
+            error_message: str,
+            accept: bool = True
+    ):
+        with self.assertRaises(StateError) as context:
+            if accept:
+                await self.proto.accept('/not/a/real/path')
+            else:
+                await self.proto.connect('/not/a/real/path')
+
+        self.assertEqual(context.exception.error_message, error_message)
+        self.assertEqual(context.exception.state, current_state)
+        self.assertEqual(context.exception.required, Runstate.IDLE)
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testAcceptRequireRunning(self):
+        """Test that accept() cannot be called when Runstate=RUNNING"""
+        await self.proto.accept('/not/a/real/path')
+
+        await self._prod_session_api(
+            Runstate.RUNNING,
+            "NullProtocol is already connected and running.",
+            accept=True,
+        )
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testConnectRequireRunning(self):
+        """Test that connect() cannot be called when Runstate=RUNNING"""
+        await self.proto.accept('/not/a/real/path')
+
+        await self._prod_session_api(
+            Runstate.RUNNING,
+            "NullProtocol is already connected and running.",
+            accept=False,
+        )
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testAcceptRequireDisconnecting(self):
+        """Test that accept() cannot be called when Runstate=DISCONNECTING"""
+        await self.proto.accept('/not/a/real/path')
+
+        # Cheat: force a disconnect.
+        await self.proto.simulate_disconnect()
+
+        await self._prod_session_api(
+            Runstate.DISCONNECTING,
+            ("NullProtocol is disconnecting."
+             " Call disconnect() to return to IDLE state."),
+            accept=True,
+        )
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testConnectRequireDisconnecting(self):
+        """Test that connect() cannot be called when Runstate=DISCONNECTING"""
+        await self.proto.accept('/not/a/real/path')
+
+        # Cheat: force a disconnect.
+        await self.proto.simulate_disconnect()
+
+        await self._prod_session_api(
+            Runstate.DISCONNECTING,
+            ("NullProtocol is disconnecting."
+             " Call disconnect() to return to IDLE state."),
+            accept=False,
+        )
+
+
+class SimpleSession(TestBase):
+
+    def setUp(self):
+        super().setUp()
+        self.server = LineProtocol(type(self).__name__ + '-server')
+
+    async def _asyncSetUp(self):
+        await super()._asyncSetUp()
+        await self._watch_runstates(*self.GOOD_CONNECTION_STATES)
+
+    async def _asyncTearDown(self):
+        await self.proto.disconnect()
+        try:
+            await self.server.disconnect()
+        except EOFError:
+            pass
+        await super()._asyncTearDown()
+
+    @TestBase.async_test
+    async def testSmoke(self):
+        with TemporaryDirectory(suffix='.aqmp') as tmpdir:
+            sock = os.path.join(tmpdir, type(self.proto).__name__ + ".sock")
+            server_task = create_task(self.server.accept(sock))
+
+            # give the server a chance to start listening [...]
+            await asyncio.sleep(0)
+            await self.proto.connect(sock)