5 guestfs - Library for accessing and modifying virtual machine images
11 guestfs_h *g = guestfs_create ();
12 guestfs_add_drive (g, "guest.img");
14 guestfs_mount (g, "/dev/sda1", "/");
15 guestfs_touch (g, "/hello");
16 guestfs_umount (g, "/");
20 cc prog.c -o prog -lguestfs
22 cc prog.c -o prog `pkg-config libguestfs --cflags --libs`
26 Libguestfs is a library for accessing and modifying guest disk images.
27 Amongst the things this is good for: making batch configuration
28 changes to guests, getting disk used/free statistics (see also:
29 virt-df), migrating between virtualization systems (see also:
30 virt-p2v), performing partial backups, performing partial guest
31 clones, cloning guests and changing registry/UUID/hostname info, and
34 Libguestfs uses Linux kernel and qemu code, and can access any type of
35 guest filesystem that Linux and qemu can, including but not limited
36 to: ext2/3/4, btrfs, FAT and NTFS, LVM, many different disk partition
37 schemes, qcow, qcow2, vmdk.
39 Libguestfs provides ways to enumerate guest storage (eg. partitions,
40 LVs, what filesystem is in each LV, etc.). It can also run commands
41 in the context of the guest. Also you can access filesystems over
44 Libguestfs is a library that can be linked with C and C++ management
45 programs (or management programs written in OCaml, Perl, Python, Ruby,
46 Java, Haskell or C#). You can also use it from shell scripts or the
49 You don't need to be root to use libguestfs, although obviously you do
50 need enough permissions to access the disk images.
52 Libguestfs is a large API because it can do many things. For a gentle
53 introduction, please read the L</API OVERVIEW> section next.
57 This section provides a gentler overview of the libguestfs API. We
58 also try to group API calls together, where that may not be obvious
59 from reading about the individual calls in the main section of this
64 Before you can use libguestfs calls, you have to create a handle.
65 Then you must add at least one disk image to the handle, followed by
66 launching the handle, then performing whatever operations you want,
67 and finally closing the handle. By convention we use the single
68 letter C<g> for the name of the handle variable, although of course
69 you can use any name you want.
71 The general structure of all libguestfs-using programs looks like
74 guestfs_h *g = guestfs_create ();
76 /* Call guestfs_add_drive additional times if there are
77 * multiple disk images.
79 guestfs_add_drive (g, "guest.img");
81 /* Most manipulation calls won't work until you've launched
82 * the handle 'g'. You have to do this _after_ adding drives
83 * and _before_ other commands.
87 /* Now you can examine what partitions, LVs etc are available.
89 char **partitions = guestfs_list_partitions (g);
90 char **logvols = guestfs_lvs (g);
92 /* To access a filesystem in the image, you must mount it.
94 guestfs_mount (g, "/dev/sda1", "/");
96 /* Now you can perform filesystem actions on the guest
99 guestfs_touch (g, "/hello");
101 /* You only need to call guestfs_sync if you have made
102 * changes to the guest image. (But if you've made changes
103 * then you *must* sync). See also: guestfs_umount and
104 * guestfs_umount_all calls.
108 /* Close the handle 'g'. */
111 The code above doesn't include any error checking. In real code you
112 should check return values carefully for errors. In general all
113 functions that return integers return C<-1> on error, and all
114 functions that return pointers return C<NULL> on error. See section
115 L</ERROR HANDLING> below for how to handle errors, and consult the
116 documentation for each function call below to see precisely how they
117 return error indications.
121 The image filename (C<"guest.img"> in the example above) could be a
122 disk image from a virtual machine, a L<dd(1)> copy of a physical hard
123 disk, an actual block device, or simply an empty file of zeroes that
124 you have created through L<posix_fallocate(3)>. Libguestfs lets you
125 do useful things to all of these.
127 You can add a disk read-only using L</guestfs_add_drive_ro>, in which
128 case libguestfs won't modify the file.
130 Be extremely cautious if the disk image is in use, eg. if it is being
131 used by a virtual machine. Adding it read-write will almost certainly
132 cause disk corruption, but adding it read-only is safe.
134 You must add at least one disk image, and you may add multiple disk
135 images. In the API, the disk images are usually referred to as
136 C</dev/sda> (for the first one you added), C</dev/sdb> (for the second
139 Once L</guestfs_launch> has been called you cannot add any more images.
140 You can call L</guestfs_list_devices> to get a list of the device
141 names, in the order that you added them. See also L</BLOCK DEVICE
146 Before you can read or write files, create directories and so on in a
147 disk image that contains filesystems, you have to mount those
148 filesystems using L</guestfs_mount>. If you already know that a disk
149 image contains (for example) one partition with a filesystem on that
150 partition, then you can mount it directly:
152 guestfs_mount (g, "/dev/sda1", "/");
154 where C</dev/sda1> means literally the first partition (C<1>) of the
155 first disk image that we added (C</dev/sda>). If the disk contains
156 Linux LVM2 logical volumes you could refer to those instead (eg. C</dev/VG/LV>).
158 If you are given a disk image and you don't know what it contains then
159 you have to find out. Libguestfs can do that too: use
160 L</guestfs_list_partitions> and L</guestfs_lvs> to list possible
161 partitions and LVs, and either try mounting each to see what is
162 mountable, or else examine them with L</guestfs_vfs_type> or
163 L</guestfs_file>. Libguestfs also has a set of APIs for inspection of
164 disk images (see L</INSPECTION> below). But you might find it easier
165 to look at higher level programs built on top of libguestfs, in
166 particular L<virt-inspector(1)>.
168 To mount a disk image read-only, use L</guestfs_mount_ro>. There are
169 several other variations of the C<guestfs_mount_*> call.
171 =head2 FILESYSTEM ACCESS AND MODIFICATION
173 The majority of the libguestfs API consists of fairly low-level calls
174 for accessing and modifying the files, directories, symlinks etc on
175 mounted filesystems. There are over a hundred such calls which you
176 can find listed in detail below in this man page, and we don't even
177 pretend to cover them all in this overview.
179 Specify filenames as full paths, starting with C<"/"> and including
182 For example, if you mounted a filesystem at C<"/"> and you want to
183 read the file called C<"etc/passwd"> then you could do:
185 char *data = guestfs_cat (g, "/etc/passwd");
187 This would return C<data> as a newly allocated buffer containing the
188 full content of that file (with some conditions: see also
189 L</DOWNLOADING> below), or C<NULL> if there was an error.
191 As another example, to create a top-level directory on that filesystem
192 called C<"var"> you would do:
194 guestfs_mkdir (g, "/var");
196 To create a symlink you could do:
198 guestfs_ln_s (g, "/etc/init.d/portmap",
199 "/etc/rc3.d/S30portmap");
201 Libguestfs will reject attempts to use relative paths and there is no
202 concept of a current working directory.
204 Libguestfs can return errors in many situations: for example if the
205 filesystem isn't writable, or if a file or directory that you
206 requested doesn't exist. If you are using the C API (documented here)
207 you have to check for those error conditions after each call. (Other
208 language bindings turn these errors into exceptions).
210 File writes are affected by the per-handle umask, set by calling
211 L</guestfs_umask> and defaulting to 022. See L</UMASK>.
215 Libguestfs contains API calls to read, create and modify partition
216 tables on disk images.
218 In the common case where you want to create a single partition
219 covering the whole disk, you should use the L</guestfs_part_disk>
222 const char *parttype = "mbr";
223 if (disk_is_larger_than_2TB)
225 guestfs_part_disk (g, "/dev/sda", parttype);
227 Obviously this effectively wipes anything that was on that disk image
232 Libguestfs provides access to a large part of the LVM2 API, such as
233 L</guestfs_lvcreate> and L</guestfs_vgremove>. It won't make much sense
234 unless you familiarize yourself with the concepts of physical volumes,
235 volume groups and logical volumes.
237 This author strongly recommends reading the LVM HOWTO, online at
238 L<http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/>.
242 Use L</guestfs_cat> to download small, text only files. This call
243 is limited to files which are less than 2 MB and which cannot contain
244 any ASCII NUL (C<\0>) characters. However it has a very simple
247 L</guestfs_read_file> can be used to read files which contain
248 arbitrary 8 bit data, since it returns a (pointer, size) pair.
249 However it is still limited to "small" files, less than 2 MB.
251 L</guestfs_download> can be used to download any file, with no
252 limits on content or size (even files larger than 4 GB).
254 To download multiple files, see L</guestfs_tar_out> and
259 It's often the case that you want to write a file or files to the disk
262 To write a small file with fixed content, use L</guestfs_write>. To
263 create a file of all zeroes, use L</guestfs_truncate_size> (sparse) or
264 L</guestfs_fallocate64> (with all disk blocks allocated). There are a
265 variety of other functions for creating test files, for example
266 L</guestfs_fill> and L</guestfs_fill_pattern>.
268 To upload a single file, use L</guestfs_upload>. This call has no
269 limits on file content or size (even files larger than 4 GB).
271 To upload multiple files, see L</guestfs_tar_in> and L</guestfs_tgz_in>.
273 However the fastest way to upload I<large numbers of arbitrary files>
274 is to turn them into a squashfs or CD ISO (see L<mksquashfs(8)> and
275 L<mkisofs(8)>), then attach this using L</guestfs_add_drive_ro>. If
276 you add the drive in a predictable way (eg. adding it last after all
277 other drives) then you can get the device name from
278 L</guestfs_list_devices> and mount it directly using
279 L</guestfs_mount_ro>. Note that squashfs images are sometimes
280 non-portable between kernel versions, and they don't support labels or
281 UUIDs. If you want to pre-build an image or you need to mount it
282 using a label or UUID, use an ISO image instead.
286 There are various different commands for copying between files and
287 devices and in and out of the guest filesystem. These are summarised
292 =item B<file> to B<file>
294 Use L</guestfs_cp> to copy a single file, or
295 L</guestfs_cp_a> to copy directories recursively.
297 =item B<file or device> to B<file or device>
299 Use L</guestfs_dd> which efficiently uses L<dd(1)>
300 to copy between files and devices in the guest.
302 Example: duplicate the contents of an LV:
304 guestfs_dd (g, "/dev/VG/Original", "/dev/VG/Copy");
306 The destination (C</dev/VG/Copy>) must be at least as large as the
307 source (C</dev/VG/Original>). To copy less than the whole
308 source device, use L</guestfs_copy_size>.
310 =item B<file on the host> to B<file or device>
312 Use L</guestfs_upload>. See L</UPLOADING> above.
314 =item B<file or device> to B<file on the host>
316 Use L</guestfs_download>. See L</DOWNLOADING> above.
322 L</guestfs_ll> is just designed for humans to read (mainly when using
323 the L<guestfish(1)>-equivalent command C<ll>).
325 L</guestfs_ls> is a quick way to get a list of files in a directory
326 from programs, as a flat list of strings.
328 L</guestfs_readdir> is a programmatic way to get a list of files in a
329 directory, plus additional information about each one. It is more
330 equivalent to using the L<readdir(3)> call on a local filesystem.
332 L</guestfs_find> and L</guestfs_find0> can be used to recursively list
335 =head2 RUNNING COMMANDS
337 Although libguestfs is a primarily an API for manipulating files
338 inside guest images, we also provide some limited facilities for
339 running commands inside guests.
341 There are many limitations to this:
347 The kernel version that the command runs under will be different
348 from what it expects.
352 If the command needs to communicate with daemons, then most likely
353 they won't be running.
357 The command will be running in limited memory.
361 The network may not be available unless you enable it
362 (see L</guestfs_set_network>).
366 Only supports Linux guests (not Windows, BSD, etc).
370 Architecture limitations (eg. won't work for a PPC guest on
375 For SELinux guests, you may need to enable SELinux and load policy
376 first. See L</SELINUX> in this manpage.
380 The two main API calls to run commands are L</guestfs_command> and
381 L</guestfs_sh> (there are also variations).
383 The difference is that L</guestfs_sh> runs commands using the shell, so
384 any shell globs, redirections, etc will work.
386 =head2 CONFIGURATION FILES
388 To read and write configuration files in Linux guest filesystems, we
389 strongly recommend using Augeas. For example, Augeas understands how
390 to read and write, say, a Linux shadow password file or X.org
391 configuration file, and so avoids you having to write that code.
393 The main Augeas calls are bound through the C<guestfs_aug_*> APIs. We
394 don't document Augeas itself here because there is excellent
395 documentation on the L<http://augeas.net/> website.
397 If you don't want to use Augeas (you fool!) then try calling
398 L</guestfs_read_lines> to get the file as a list of lines which
399 you can iterate over.
403 We support SELinux guests. To ensure that labeling happens correctly
404 in SELinux guests, you need to enable SELinux and load the guest's
411 Before launching, do:
413 guestfs_set_selinux (g, 1);
417 After mounting the guest's filesystem(s), load the policy. This
418 is best done by running the L<load_policy(8)> command in the
421 guestfs_sh (g, "/usr/sbin/load_policy");
423 (Older versions of C<load_policy> require you to specify the
424 name of the policy file).
428 Optionally, set the security context for the API. The correct
429 security context to use can only be known by inspecting the
430 guest. As an example:
432 guestfs_setcon (g, "unconfined_u:unconfined_r:unconfined_t:s0");
436 This will work for running commands and editing existing files.
438 When new files are created, you may need to label them explicitly,
439 for example by running the external command
440 C<restorecon pathname>.
444 Certain calls are affected by the current file mode creation mask (the
445 "umask"). In particular ones which create files or directories, such
446 as L</guestfs_touch>, L</guestfs_mknod> or L</guestfs_mkdir>. This
447 affects either the default mode that the file is created with or
448 modifies the mode that you supply.
450 The default umask is C<022>, so files are created with modes such as
451 C<0644> and directories with C<0755>.
453 There are two ways to avoid being affected by umask. Either set umask
454 to 0 (call C<guestfs_umask (g, 0)> early after launching). Or call
455 L</guestfs_chmod> after creating each file or directory.
457 For more information about umask, see L<umask(2)>.
459 =head2 ENCRYPTED DISKS
461 Libguestfs allows you to access Linux guests which have been
462 encrypted using whole disk encryption that conforms to the
463 Linux Unified Key Setup (LUKS) standard. This includes
464 nearly all whole disk encryption systems used by modern
467 Use L</guestfs_vfs_type> to identify LUKS-encrypted block
468 devices (it returns the string C<crypto_LUKS>).
470 Then open these devices by calling L</guestfs_luks_open>.
471 Obviously you will require the passphrase!
473 Opening a LUKS device creates a new device mapper device
474 called C</dev/mapper/mapname> (where C<mapname> is the
475 string you supply to L</guestfs_luks_open>).
476 Reads and writes to this mapper device are decrypted from and
477 encrypted to the underlying block device respectively.
479 LVM volume groups on the device can be made visible by calling
480 L</guestfs_vgscan> followed by L</guestfs_vg_activate_all>.
481 The logical volume(s) can now be mounted in the usual way.
483 Use the reverse process to close a LUKS device. Unmount
484 any logical volumes on it, deactivate the volume groups
485 by caling C<guestfs_vg_activate (g, 0, ["/dev/VG"])>.
486 Then close the mapper device by calling
487 L</guestfs_luks_close> on the C</dev/mapper/mapname>
488 device (I<not> the underlying encrypted block device).
492 Libguestfs has APIs for inspecting an unknown disk image to find out
493 if it contains operating systems. (These APIs used to be in a
494 separate Perl-only library called L<Sys::Guestfs::Lib(3)> but since
495 version 1.5.3 the most frequently used part of this library has been
496 rewritten in C and moved into the core code).
498 Add all disks belonging to the unknown virtual machine and call
499 L</guestfs_launch> in the usual way.
501 Then call L</guestfs_inspect_os>. This function uses other libguestfs
502 calls and certain heuristics, and returns a list of operating systems
503 that were found. An empty list means none were found. A single
504 element is the root filesystem of the operating system. For dual- or
505 multi-boot guests, multiple roots can be returned, each one
506 corresponding to a separate operating system. (Multi-boot virtual
507 machines are extremely rare in the world of virtualization, but since
508 this scenario can happen, we have built libguestfs to deal with it.)
510 For each root, you can then call various C<guestfs_inspect_get_*>
511 functions to get additional details about that operating system. For
512 example, call L</guestfs_inspect_get_type> to return the string
513 C<windows> or C<linux> for Windows and Linux-based operating systems
516 Un*x-like and Linux-based operating systems usually consist of several
517 filesystems which are mounted at boot time (for example, a separate
518 boot partition mounted on C</boot>). The inspection rules are able to
519 detect how filesystems correspond to mount points. Call
520 C<guestfs_inspect_get_mountpoints> to get this mapping. It might
521 return a hash table like this example:
524 / => /dev/vg_guest/lv_root
525 /usr => /dev/vg_guest/lv_usr
527 The caller can then make calls to L</guestfs_mount_options> to
528 mount the filesystems as suggested.
530 Be careful to mount filesystems in the right order (eg. C</> before
531 C</usr>). Sorting the keys of the hash by length, shortest first,
534 Inspection currently only works for some common operating systems.
535 Contributors are welcome to send patches for other operating systems
536 that we currently cannot detect.
538 Encrypted disks must be opened before inspection. See
539 L</ENCRYPTED DISKS> for more details. The L</guestfs_inspect_os>
540 function just ignores any encrypted devices.
542 A note on the implementation: The call L</guestfs_inspect_os> performs
543 inspection and caches the results in the guest handle. Subsequent
544 calls to C<guestfs_inspect_get_*> return this cached information, but
545 I<do not> re-read the disks. If you change the content of the guest
546 disks, you can redo inspection by calling L</guestfs_inspect_os>
549 =head2 SPECIAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR WINDOWS GUESTS
551 Libguestfs can mount NTFS partitions. It does this using the
552 L<http://www.ntfs-3g.org/> driver.
554 DOS and Windows still use drive letters, and the filesystems are
555 always treated as case insensitive by Windows itself, and therefore
556 you might find a Windows configuration file referring to a path like
557 C<c:\windows\system32>. When the filesystem is mounted in libguestfs,
558 that directory might be referred to as C</WINDOWS/System32>.
560 Drive letter mappings are outside the scope of libguestfs. You have
561 to use libguestfs to read the appropriate Windows Registry and
562 configuration files, to determine yourself how drives are mapped (see
563 also L<hivex(3)> and L<virt-inspector(1)>).
565 Replacing backslash characters with forward slash characters is also
566 outside the scope of libguestfs, but something that you can easily do.
568 Where we can help is in resolving the case insensitivity of paths.
569 For this, call L</guestfs_case_sensitive_path>.
571 Libguestfs also provides some help for decoding Windows Registry
572 "hive" files, through the library C<hivex> which is part of the
573 libguestfs project although ships as a separate tarball. You have to
574 locate and download the hive file(s) yourself, and then pass them to
575 C<hivex> functions. See also the programs L<hivexml(1)>,
576 L<hivexsh(1)>, L<hivexregedit(1)> and L<virt-win-reg(1)> for more help
579 =head2 USING LIBGUESTFS WITH OTHER PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES
581 Although we don't want to discourage you from using the C API, we will
582 mention here that the same API is also available in other languages.
584 The API is broadly identical in all supported languages. This means
585 that the C call C<guestfs_mount(g,path)> is
586 C<$g-E<gt>mount($path)> in Perl, C<g.mount(path)> in Python,
587 and C<Guestfs.mount g path> in OCaml. In other words, a
588 straightforward, predictable isomorphism between each language.
590 Error messages are automatically transformed
591 into exceptions if the language supports it.
593 We don't try to "object orientify" parts of the API in OO languages,
594 although contributors are welcome to write higher level APIs above
595 what we provide in their favourite languages if they wish.
601 You can use the I<guestfs.h> header file from C++ programs. The C++
602 API is identical to the C API. C++ classes and exceptions are not
607 The C# bindings are highly experimental. Please read the warnings
608 at the top of C<csharp/Libguestfs.cs>.
612 This is the only language binding that is working but incomplete.
613 Only calls which return simple integers have been bound in Haskell,
614 and we are looking for help to complete this binding.
618 Full documentation is contained in the Javadoc which is distributed
623 For documentation see the file C<guestfs.mli>.
627 For documentation see L<Sys::Guestfs(3)>.
631 For documentation do:
639 Use the Guestfs module. There is no Ruby-specific documentation, but
640 you can find examples written in Ruby in the libguestfs source.
642 =item B<shell scripts>
644 For documentation see L<guestfish(1)>.
648 =head2 LIBGUESTFS GOTCHAS
650 L<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gotcha_(programming)>: "A feature of a
651 system [...] that works in the way it is documented but is
652 counterintuitive and almost invites mistakes."
654 Since we developed libguestfs and the associated tools, there are
655 several things we would have designed differently, but are now stuck
656 with for backwards compatibility or other reasons. If there is ever a
657 libguestfs 2.0 release, you can expect these to change. Beware of
662 =item Autosync / forgetting to sync.
664 When modifying a filesystem from C or another language, you B<must>
665 unmount all filesystems and call L</guestfs_sync> explicitly before
666 you close the libguestfs handle. You can also call:
668 guestfs_set_autosync (g, 1);
670 to have the unmount/sync done automatically for you when the handle 'g'
671 is closed. (This feature is called "autosync", L</guestfs_set_autosync>
674 If you forget to do this, then it is entirely possible that your
675 changes won't be written out, or will be partially written, or (very
676 rarely) that you'll get disk corruption.
678 Note that in L<guestfish(3)> autosync is the default. So quick and
679 dirty guestfish scripts that forget to sync will work just fine, which
680 can make this very puzzling if you are trying to debug a problem.
682 =item Mount option C<-o sync> should not be the default.
684 If you use L</guestfs_mount>, then C<-o sync,noatime> are added
685 implicitly. However C<-o sync> does not add any reliability benefit,
686 but does have a very large performance impact.
688 The work around is to use L</guestfs_mount_options> and set the mount
689 options that you actually want to use.
691 =item Read-only should be the default.
693 In L<guestfish(3)>, I<--ro> should be the default, and you should
694 have to specify I<--rw> if you want to make changes to the image.
696 This would reduce the potential to corrupt live VM images.
698 Note that many filesystems change the disk when you just mount and
699 unmount, even if you didn't perform any writes. You need to use
700 L</guestfs_add_drive_ro> to guarantee that the disk is not changed.
702 =item guestfish command line is hard to use.
704 C<guestfish disk.img> doesn't do what people expect (open C<disk.img>
705 for examination). It tries to run a guestfish command C<disk.img>
706 which doesn't exist, so it fails. In earlier versions of guestfish
707 the error message was also unintuitive, but we have corrected this
708 since. Like the Bourne shell, we should have used C<guestfish -c
709 command> to run commands.
711 =item guestfish megabyte modifiers don't work right on all commands
713 In recent guestfish you can use C<1M> to mean 1 megabyte (and
714 similarly for other modifiers). What guestfish actually does is to
715 multiply the number part by the modifier part and pass the result to
716 the C API. However this doesn't work for a few APIs which aren't
717 expecting bytes, but are already expecting some other unit
720 The most common is L</guestfs_lvcreate>. The guestfish command:
724 does not do what you might expect. Instead because
725 L</guestfs_lvcreate> is already expecting megabytes, this tries to
726 create a 100 I<terabyte> (100 megabytes * megabytes) logical volume.
727 The error message you get from this is also a little obscure.
729 This could be fixed in the generator by specially marking parameters
730 and return values which take bytes or other units.
732 =item Library should return errno with error messages.
734 It would be a nice-to-have to be able to get the original value of
735 'errno' from inside the appliance along error paths (where set).
736 Currently L<guestmount(1)> goes through hoops to try to reverse the
737 error message string into an errno, see the function error() in
740 In libguestfs 1.5.4, the protocol was changed so that the
741 Linux errno is sent back from the daemon.
745 =head2 PROTOCOL LIMITS
747 Internally libguestfs uses a message-based protocol to pass API calls
748 and their responses to and from a small "appliance" (see L</INTERNALS>
749 for plenty more detail about this). The maximum message size used by
750 the protocol is slightly less than 4 MB. For some API calls you may
751 need to be aware of this limit. The API calls which may be affected
752 are individually documented, with a link back to this section of the
755 A simple call such as L</guestfs_cat> returns its result (the file
756 data) in a simple string. Because this string is at some point
757 internally encoded as a message, the maximum size that it can return
758 is slightly under 4 MB. If the requested file is larger than this
759 then you will get an error.
761 In order to transfer large files into and out of the guest filesystem,
762 you need to use particular calls that support this. The sections
763 L</UPLOADING> and L</DOWNLOADING> document how to do this.
765 You might also consider mounting the disk image using our FUSE
766 filesystem support (L<guestmount(1)>).
768 =head2 KEYS AND PASSPHRASES
770 Certain libguestfs calls take a parameter that contains sensitive key
771 material, passed in as a C string.
773 In the future we would hope to change the libguestfs implementation so
774 that keys are L<mlock(2)>-ed into physical RAM, and thus can never end
775 up in swap. However this is I<not> done at the moment, because of the
776 complexity of such an implementation.
778 Therefore you should be aware that any key parameter you pass to
779 libguestfs might end up being written out to the swap partition. If
780 this is a concern, scrub the swap partition or don't use libguestfs on
783 =head1 CONNECTION MANAGEMENT
787 C<guestfs_h> is the opaque type representing a connection handle.
788 Create a handle by calling L</guestfs_create>. Call L</guestfs_close>
789 to free the handle and release all resources used.
791 For information on using multiple handles and threads, see the section
792 L</MULTIPLE HANDLES AND MULTIPLE THREADS> below.
794 =head2 guestfs_create
796 guestfs_h *guestfs_create (void);
798 Create a connection handle.
800 You have to call L</guestfs_add_drive> on the handle at least once.
802 This function returns a non-NULL pointer to a handle on success or
805 After configuring the handle, you have to call L</guestfs_launch>.
807 You may also want to configure error handling for the handle. See
808 L</ERROR HANDLING> section below.
812 void guestfs_close (guestfs_h *g);
814 This closes the connection handle and frees up all resources used.
816 =head1 ERROR HANDLING
818 The convention in all functions that return C<int> is that they return
819 C<-1> to indicate an error. You can get additional information on
820 errors by calling L</guestfs_last_error> and/or by setting up an error
821 handler with L</guestfs_set_error_handler>.
823 The default error handler prints the information string to C<stderr>.
825 Out of memory errors are handled differently. The default action is
826 to call L<abort(3)>. If this is undesirable, then you can set a
827 handler using L</guestfs_set_out_of_memory_handler>.
829 =head2 guestfs_last_error
831 const char *guestfs_last_error (guestfs_h *g);
833 This returns the last error message that happened on C<g>. If
834 there has not been an error since the handle was created, then this
837 The lifetime of the returned string is until the next error occurs, or
838 L</guestfs_close> is called.
840 The error string is not localized (ie. is always in English), because
841 this makes searching for error messages in search engines give the
842 largest number of results.
844 =head2 guestfs_set_error_handler
846 typedef void (*guestfs_error_handler_cb) (guestfs_h *g,
849 void guestfs_set_error_handler (guestfs_h *g,
850 guestfs_error_handler_cb cb,
853 The callback C<cb> will be called if there is an error. The
854 parameters passed to the callback are an opaque data pointer and the
855 error message string.
857 Note that the message string C<msg> is freed as soon as the callback
858 function returns, so if you want to stash it somewhere you must make
861 The default handler prints messages on C<stderr>.
863 If you set C<cb> to C<NULL> then I<no> handler is called.
865 =head2 guestfs_get_error_handler
867 guestfs_error_handler_cb guestfs_get_error_handler (guestfs_h *g,
870 Returns the current error handler callback.
872 =head2 guestfs_set_out_of_memory_handler
874 typedef void (*guestfs_abort_cb) (void);
875 int guestfs_set_out_of_memory_handler (guestfs_h *g,
878 The callback C<cb> will be called if there is an out of memory
879 situation. I<Note this callback must not return>.
881 The default is to call L<abort(3)>.
883 You cannot set C<cb> to C<NULL>. You can't ignore out of memory
886 =head2 guestfs_get_out_of_memory_handler
888 guestfs_abort_fn guestfs_get_out_of_memory_handler (guestfs_h *g);
890 This returns the current out of memory handler.
894 Libguestfs needs a kernel and initrd.img, which it finds by looking
895 along an internal path.
897 By default it looks for these in the directory C<$libdir/guestfs>
898 (eg. C</usr/local/lib/guestfs> or C</usr/lib64/guestfs>).
900 Use L</guestfs_set_path> or set the environment variable
901 L</LIBGUESTFS_PATH> to change the directories that libguestfs will
902 search in. The value is a colon-separated list of paths. The current
903 directory is I<not> searched unless the path contains an empty element
904 or C<.>. For example C<LIBGUESTFS_PATH=:/usr/lib/guestfs> would
905 search the current directory and then C</usr/lib/guestfs>.
907 =head1 HIGH-LEVEL API ACTIONS
911 We guarantee the libguestfs ABI (binary interface), for public,
912 high-level actions as outlined in this section. Although we will
913 deprecate some actions, for example if they get replaced by newer
914 calls, we will keep the old actions forever. This allows you the
915 developer to program in confidence against the libguestfs API.
925 =head2 GROUPS OF FUNCTIONALITY IN THE APPLIANCE
927 Using L</guestfs_available> you can test availability of
928 the following groups of functions. This test queries the
929 appliance to see if the appliance you are currently using
930 supports the functionality.
934 =head2 GUESTFISH supported COMMAND
936 In L<guestfish(3)> there is a handy interactive command
937 C<supported> which prints out the available groups and
938 whether they are supported by this build of libguestfs.
939 Note however that you have to do C<run> first.
941 =head2 SINGLE CALLS AT COMPILE TIME
943 If you need to test whether a single libguestfs function is
944 available at compile time, we recommend using build tools
945 such as autoconf or cmake. For example in autotools you could
948 AC_CHECK_LIB([guestfs],[guestfs_create])
949 AC_CHECK_FUNCS([guestfs_dd])
951 which would result in C<HAVE_GUESTFS_DD> being either defined
952 or not defined in your program.
954 =head2 SINGLE CALLS AT RUN TIME
956 Testing at compile time doesn't guarantee that a function really
957 exists in the library. The reason is that you might be dynamically
958 linked against a previous I<libguestfs.so> (dynamic library)
959 which doesn't have the call. This situation unfortunately results
960 in a segmentation fault, which is a shortcoming of the C dynamic
961 linking system itself.
963 You can use L<dlopen(3)> to test if a function is available
964 at run time, as in this example program (note that you still
965 need the compile time check as well):
977 #ifdef HAVE_GUESTFS_DD
981 /* Test if the function guestfs_dd is really available. */
982 dl = dlopen (NULL, RTLD_LAZY);
984 fprintf (stderr, "dlopen: %s\n", dlerror ());
987 has_function = dlsym (dl, "guestfs_dd") != NULL;
991 printf ("this libguestfs.so does NOT have guestfs_dd function\n");
993 printf ("this libguestfs.so has guestfs_dd function\n");
994 /* Now it's safe to call
995 guestfs_dd (g, "foo", "bar");
999 printf ("guestfs_dd function was not found at compile time\n");
1003 You may think the above is an awful lot of hassle, and it is.
1004 There are other ways outside of the C linking system to ensure
1005 that this kind of incompatibility never arises, such as using
1008 Requires: libguestfs >= 1.0.80
1012 <!-- old anchor for the next section -->
1013 <a name="state_machine_and_low_level_event_api"/>
1019 Internally, libguestfs is implemented by running an appliance (a
1020 special type of small virtual machine) using L<qemu(1)>. Qemu runs as
1021 a child process of the main program.
1027 | | child process / appliance
1028 | | __________________________
1030 +-------------------+ RPC | +-----------------+ |
1031 | libguestfs <--------------------> guestfsd | |
1032 | | | +-----------------+ |
1033 \___________________/ | | Linux kernel | |
1034 | +--^--------------+ |
1035 \_________|________________/
1043 The library, linked to the main program, creates the child process and
1044 hence the appliance in the L</guestfs_launch> function.
1046 Inside the appliance is a Linux kernel and a complete stack of
1047 userspace tools (such as LVM and ext2 programs) and a small
1048 controlling daemon called L</guestfsd>. The library talks to
1049 L</guestfsd> using remote procedure calls (RPC). There is a mostly
1050 one-to-one correspondence between libguestfs API calls and RPC calls
1051 to the daemon. Lastly the disk image(s) are attached to the qemu
1052 process which translates device access by the appliance's Linux kernel
1053 into accesses to the image.
1055 A common misunderstanding is that the appliance "is" the virtual
1056 machine. Although the disk image you are attached to might also be
1057 used by some virtual machine, libguestfs doesn't know or care about
1058 this. (But you will care if both libguestfs's qemu process and your
1059 virtual machine are trying to update the disk image at the same time,
1060 since these usually results in massive disk corruption).
1062 =head1 STATE MACHINE
1064 libguestfs uses a state machine to model the child process:
1075 / | \ \ guestfs_launch
1086 \______/ <------ \________/
1088 The normal transitions are (1) CONFIG (when the handle is created, but
1089 there is no child process), (2) LAUNCHING (when the child process is
1090 booting up), (3) alternating between READY and BUSY as commands are
1091 issued to, and carried out by, the child process.
1093 The guest may be killed by L</guestfs_kill_subprocess>, or may die
1094 asynchronously at any time (eg. due to some internal error), and that
1095 causes the state to transition back to CONFIG.
1097 Configuration commands for qemu such as L</guestfs_add_drive> can only
1098 be issued when in the CONFIG state.
1100 The high-level API offers two calls that go from CONFIG through
1101 LAUNCHING to READY. L</guestfs_launch> blocks until the child process
1102 is READY to accept commands (or until some failure or timeout).
1103 L</guestfs_launch> internally moves the state from CONFIG to LAUNCHING
1104 while it is running.
1106 High-level API actions such as L</guestfs_mount> can only be issued
1107 when in the READY state. These high-level API calls block waiting for
1108 the command to be carried out (ie. the state to transition to BUSY and
1109 then back to READY). But using the low-level event API, you get
1110 non-blocking versions. (But you can still only carry out one
1111 operation per handle at a time - that is a limitation of the
1112 communications protocol we use).
1114 Finally, the child process sends asynchronous messages back to the
1115 main program, such as kernel log messages. Mostly these are ignored
1116 by the high-level API, but using the low-level event API you can
1117 register to receive these messages.
1119 =head2 SETTING CALLBACKS TO HANDLE EVENTS
1121 The child process generates events in some situations. Current events
1122 include: receiving a log message, the child process exits.
1124 Use the C<guestfs_set_*_callback> functions to set a callback for
1125 different types of events.
1127 Only I<one callback of each type> can be registered for each handle.
1128 Calling C<guestfs_set_*_callback> again overwrites the previous
1129 callback of that type. Cancel all callbacks of this type by calling
1130 this function with C<cb> set to C<NULL>.
1132 =head2 guestfs_set_log_message_callback
1134 typedef void (*guestfs_log_message_cb) (guestfs_h *g, void *opaque,
1135 char *buf, int len);
1136 void guestfs_set_log_message_callback (guestfs_h *g,
1137 guestfs_log_message_cb cb,
1140 The callback function C<cb> will be called whenever qemu or the guest
1141 writes anything to the console.
1143 Use this function to capture kernel messages and similar.
1145 Normally there is no log message handler, and log messages are just
1148 =head2 guestfs_set_subprocess_quit_callback
1150 typedef void (*guestfs_subprocess_quit_cb) (guestfs_h *g, void *opaque);
1151 void guestfs_set_subprocess_quit_callback (guestfs_h *g,
1152 guestfs_subprocess_quit_cb cb,
1155 The callback function C<cb> will be called when the child process
1156 quits, either asynchronously or if killed by
1157 L</guestfs_kill_subprocess>. (This corresponds to a transition from
1158 any state to the CONFIG state).
1160 =head2 guestfs_set_launch_done_callback
1162 typedef void (*guestfs_launch_done_cb) (guestfs_h *g, void *opaque);
1163 void guestfs_set_launch_done_callback (guestfs_h *g,
1164 guestfs_launch_done_cb cb,
1167 The callback function C<cb> will be called when the child process
1168 becomes ready first time after it has been launched. (This
1169 corresponds to a transition from LAUNCHING to the READY state).
1171 =head2 guestfs_set_close_callback
1173 typedef void (*guestfs_close_cb) (guestfs_h *g, void *opaque);
1174 void guestfs_set_close_callback (guestfs_h *g,
1175 guestfs_close_cb cb,
1178 The callback function C<cb> will be called while the handle
1179 is being closed (synchronously from L</guestfs_close>).
1181 Note that libguestfs installs an L<atexit(3)> handler to try to
1182 clean up handles that are open when the program exits. This
1183 means that this callback might be called indirectly from
1184 L<exit(3)>, which can cause unexpected problems in higher-level
1185 languages (eg. if your HLL interpreter has already been cleaned
1186 up by the time this is called, and if your callback then jumps
1187 into some HLL function).
1189 =head1 BLOCK DEVICE NAMING
1191 In the kernel there is now quite a profusion of schemata for naming
1192 block devices (in this context, by I<block device> I mean a physical
1193 or virtual hard drive). The original Linux IDE driver used names
1194 starting with C</dev/hd*>. SCSI devices have historically used a
1195 different naming scheme, C</dev/sd*>. When the Linux kernel I<libata>
1196 driver became a popular replacement for the old IDE driver
1197 (particularly for SATA devices) those devices also used the
1198 C</dev/sd*> scheme. Additionally we now have virtual machines with
1199 paravirtualized drivers. This has created several different naming
1200 systems, such as C</dev/vd*> for virtio disks and C</dev/xvd*> for Xen
1203 As discussed above, libguestfs uses a qemu appliance running an
1204 embedded Linux kernel to access block devices. We can run a variety
1205 of appliances based on a variety of Linux kernels.
1207 This causes a problem for libguestfs because many API calls use device
1208 or partition names. Working scripts and the recipe (example) scripts
1209 that we make available over the internet could fail if the naming
1212 Therefore libguestfs defines C</dev/sd*> as the I<standard naming
1213 scheme>. Internally C</dev/sd*> names are translated, if necessary,
1214 to other names as required. For example, under RHEL 5 which uses the
1215 C</dev/hd*> scheme, any device parameter C</dev/sda2> is translated to
1216 C</dev/hda2> transparently.
1218 Note that this I<only> applies to parameters. The
1219 L</guestfs_list_devices>, L</guestfs_list_partitions> and similar calls
1220 return the true names of the devices and partitions as known to the
1223 =head2 ALGORITHM FOR BLOCK DEVICE NAME TRANSLATION
1225 Usually this translation is transparent. However in some (very rare)
1226 cases you may need to know the exact algorithm. Such cases include
1227 where you use L</guestfs_config> to add a mixture of virtio and IDE
1228 devices to the qemu-based appliance, so have a mixture of C</dev/sd*>
1229 and C</dev/vd*> devices.
1231 The algorithm is applied only to I<parameters> which are known to be
1232 either device or partition names. Return values from functions such
1233 as L</guestfs_list_devices> are never changed.
1239 Is the string a parameter which is a device or partition name?
1243 Does the string begin with C</dev/sd>?
1247 Does the named device exist? If so, we use that device.
1248 However if I<not> then we continue with this algorithm.
1252 Replace initial C</dev/sd> string with C</dev/hd>.
1254 For example, change C</dev/sda2> to C</dev/hda2>.
1256 If that named device exists, use it. If not, continue.
1260 Replace initial C</dev/sd> string with C</dev/vd>.
1262 If that named device exists, use it. If not, return an error.
1266 =head2 PORTABILITY CONCERNS
1268 Although the standard naming scheme and automatic translation is
1269 useful for simple programs and guestfish scripts, for larger programs
1270 it is best not to rely on this mechanism.
1272 Where possible for maximum future portability programs using
1273 libguestfs should use these future-proof techniques:
1279 Use L</guestfs_list_devices> or L</guestfs_list_partitions> to list
1280 actual device names, and then use those names directly.
1282 Since those device names exist by definition, they will never be
1287 Use higher level ways to identify filesystems, such as LVM names,
1288 UUIDs and filesystem labels.
1294 =head2 COMMUNICATION PROTOCOL
1296 Don't rely on using this protocol directly. This section documents
1297 how it currently works, but it may change at any time.
1299 The protocol used to talk between the library and the daemon running
1300 inside the qemu virtual machine is a simple RPC mechanism built on top
1301 of XDR (RFC 1014, RFC 1832, RFC 4506).
1303 The detailed format of structures is in C<src/guestfs_protocol.x>
1304 (note: this file is automatically generated).
1306 There are two broad cases, ordinary functions that don't have any
1307 C<FileIn> and C<FileOut> parameters, which are handled with very
1308 simple request/reply messages. Then there are functions that have any
1309 C<FileIn> or C<FileOut> parameters, which use the same request and
1310 reply messages, but they may also be followed by files sent using a
1313 =head3 ORDINARY FUNCTIONS (NO FILEIN/FILEOUT PARAMS)
1315 For ordinary functions, the request message is:
1317 total length (header + arguments,
1318 but not including the length word itself)
1319 struct guestfs_message_header (encoded as XDR)
1320 struct guestfs_<foo>_args (encoded as XDR)
1322 The total length field allows the daemon to allocate a fixed size
1323 buffer into which it slurps the rest of the message. As a result, the
1324 total length is limited to C<GUESTFS_MESSAGE_MAX> bytes (currently
1325 4MB), which means the effective size of any request is limited to
1326 somewhere under this size.
1328 Note also that many functions don't take any arguments, in which case
1329 the C<guestfs_I<foo>_args> is completely omitted.
1331 The header contains the procedure number (C<guestfs_proc>) which is
1332 how the receiver knows what type of args structure to expect, or none
1335 The reply message for ordinary functions is:
1337 total length (header + ret,
1338 but not including the length word itself)
1339 struct guestfs_message_header (encoded as XDR)
1340 struct guestfs_<foo>_ret (encoded as XDR)
1342 As above the C<guestfs_I<foo>_ret> structure may be completely omitted
1343 for functions that return no formal return values.
1345 As above the total length of the reply is limited to
1346 C<GUESTFS_MESSAGE_MAX>.
1348 In the case of an error, a flag is set in the header, and the reply
1349 message is slightly changed:
1351 total length (header + error,
1352 but not including the length word itself)
1353 struct guestfs_message_header (encoded as XDR)
1354 struct guestfs_message_error (encoded as XDR)
1356 The C<guestfs_message_error> structure contains the error message as a
1359 =head3 FUNCTIONS THAT HAVE FILEIN PARAMETERS
1361 A C<FileIn> parameter indicates that we transfer a file I<into> the
1362 guest. The normal request message is sent (see above). However this
1363 is followed by a sequence of file chunks.
1365 total length (header + arguments,
1366 but not including the length word itself,
1367 and not including the chunks)
1368 struct guestfs_message_header (encoded as XDR)
1369 struct guestfs_<foo>_args (encoded as XDR)
1370 sequence of chunks for FileIn param #0
1371 sequence of chunks for FileIn param #1 etc.
1373 The "sequence of chunks" is:
1375 length of chunk (not including length word itself)
1376 struct guestfs_chunk (encoded as XDR)
1378 struct guestfs_chunk (encoded as XDR)
1381 struct guestfs_chunk (with data.data_len == 0)
1383 The final chunk has the C<data_len> field set to zero. Additionally a
1384 flag is set in the final chunk to indicate either successful
1385 completion or early cancellation.
1387 At time of writing there are no functions that have more than one
1388 FileIn parameter. However this is (theoretically) supported, by
1389 sending the sequence of chunks for each FileIn parameter one after
1390 another (from left to right).
1392 Both the library (sender) I<and> the daemon (receiver) may cancel the
1393 transfer. The library does this by sending a chunk with a special
1394 flag set to indicate cancellation. When the daemon sees this, it
1395 cancels the whole RPC, does I<not> send any reply, and goes back to
1396 reading the next request.
1398 The daemon may also cancel. It does this by writing a special word
1399 C<GUESTFS_CANCEL_FLAG> to the socket. The library listens for this
1400 during the transfer, and if it gets it, it will cancel the transfer
1401 (it sends a cancel chunk). The special word is chosen so that even if
1402 cancellation happens right at the end of the transfer (after the
1403 library has finished writing and has started listening for the reply),
1404 the "spurious" cancel flag will not be confused with the reply
1407 This protocol allows the transfer of arbitrary sized files (no 32 bit
1408 limit), and also files where the size is not known in advance
1409 (eg. from pipes or sockets). However the chunks are rather small
1410 (C<GUESTFS_MAX_CHUNK_SIZE>), so that neither the library nor the
1411 daemon need to keep much in memory.
1413 =head3 FUNCTIONS THAT HAVE FILEOUT PARAMETERS
1415 The protocol for FileOut parameters is exactly the same as for FileIn
1416 parameters, but with the roles of daemon and library reversed.
1418 total length (header + ret,
1419 but not including the length word itself,
1420 and not including the chunks)
1421 struct guestfs_message_header (encoded as XDR)
1422 struct guestfs_<foo>_ret (encoded as XDR)
1423 sequence of chunks for FileOut param #0
1424 sequence of chunks for FileOut param #1 etc.
1426 =head3 INITIAL MESSAGE
1428 Because the underlying channel (QEmu -net channel) doesn't have any
1429 sort of connection control, when the daemon launches it sends an
1430 initial word (C<GUESTFS_LAUNCH_FLAG>) which indicates that the guest
1431 and daemon is alive. This is what L</guestfs_launch> waits for.
1433 =head1 MULTIPLE HANDLES AND MULTIPLE THREADS
1435 All high-level libguestfs actions are synchronous. If you want
1436 to use libguestfs asynchronously then you must create a thread.
1438 Only use the handle from a single thread. Either use the handle
1439 exclusively from one thread, or provide your own mutex so that two
1440 threads cannot issue calls on the same handle at the same time.
1442 =head1 QEMU WRAPPERS
1444 If you want to compile your own qemu, run qemu from a non-standard
1445 location, or pass extra arguments to qemu, then you can write a
1446 shell-script wrapper around qemu.
1448 There is one important rule to remember: you I<must C<exec qemu>> as
1449 the last command in the shell script (so that qemu replaces the shell
1450 and becomes the direct child of the libguestfs-using program). If you
1451 don't do this, then the qemu process won't be cleaned up correctly.
1453 Here is an example of a wrapper, where I have built my own copy of
1457 qemudir=/home/rjones/d/qemu
1458 exec $qemudir/x86_64-softmmu/qemu-system-x86_64 -L $qemudir/pc-bios "$@"
1460 Save this script as C</tmp/qemu.wrapper> (or wherever), C<chmod +x>,
1461 and then use it by setting the LIBGUESTFS_QEMU environment variable.
1464 LIBGUESTFS_QEMU=/tmp/qemu.wrapper guestfish
1466 Note that libguestfs also calls qemu with the -help and -version
1467 options in order to determine features.
1469 =head1 LIBGUESTFS VERSION NUMBERS
1471 Since April 2010, libguestfs has started to make separate development
1472 and stable releases, along with corresponding branches in our git
1473 repository. These separate releases can be identified by version
1476 even numbers for stable: 1.2.x, 1.4.x, ...
1477 .-------- odd numbers for development: 1.3.x, 1.5.x, ...
1483 | `-------- sub-version
1485 `------ always '1' because we don't change the ABI
1487 Thus "1.3.5" is the 5th update to the development branch "1.3".
1489 As time passes we cherry pick fixes from the development branch and
1490 backport those into the stable branch, the effect being that the
1491 stable branch should get more stable and less buggy over time. So the
1492 stable releases are ideal for people who don't need new features but
1493 would just like the software to work.
1495 Our criteria for backporting changes are:
1501 Documentation changes which don't affect any code are
1502 backported unless the documentation refers to a future feature
1503 which is not in stable.
1507 Bug fixes which are not controversial, fix obvious problems, and
1508 have been well tested are backported.
1512 Simple rearrangements of code which shouldn't affect how it works get
1513 backported. This is so that the code in the two branches doesn't get
1514 too far out of step, allowing us to backport future fixes more easily.
1518 We I<don't> backport new features, new APIs, new tools etc, except in
1519 one exceptional case: the new feature is required in order to
1520 implement an important bug fix.
1524 A new stable branch starts when we think the new features in
1525 development are substantial and compelling enough over the current
1526 stable branch to warrant it. When that happens we create new stable
1527 and development versions 1.N.0 and 1.(N+1).0 [N is even]. The new
1528 dot-oh release won't necessarily be so stable at this point, but by
1529 backporting fixes from development, that branch will stabilize over
1532 =head1 ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES
1536 =item LIBGUESTFS_APPEND
1538 Pass additional options to the guest kernel.
1540 =item LIBGUESTFS_DEBUG
1542 Set C<LIBGUESTFS_DEBUG=1> to enable verbose messages. This
1543 has the same effect as calling C<guestfs_set_verbose (g, 1)>.
1545 =item LIBGUESTFS_MEMSIZE
1547 Set the memory allocated to the qemu process, in megabytes. For
1550 LIBGUESTFS_MEMSIZE=700
1552 =item LIBGUESTFS_PATH
1554 Set the path that libguestfs uses to search for kernel and initrd.img.
1555 See the discussion of paths in section PATH above.
1557 =item LIBGUESTFS_QEMU
1559 Set the default qemu binary that libguestfs uses. If not set, then
1560 the qemu which was found at compile time by the configure script is
1563 See also L</QEMU WRAPPERS> above.
1565 =item LIBGUESTFS_TRACE
1567 Set C<LIBGUESTFS_TRACE=1> to enable command traces. This
1568 has the same effect as calling C<guestfs_set_trace (g, 1)>.
1572 Location of temporary directory, defaults to C</tmp>.
1574 If libguestfs was compiled to use the supermin appliance then each
1575 handle will require rather a large amount of space in this directory
1576 for short periods of time (~ 80 MB). You can use C<$TMPDIR> to
1577 configure another directory to use in case C</tmp> is not large
1589 L<virt-inspector(1)>,
1590 L<virt-list-filesystems(1)>,
1591 L<virt-list-partitions(1)>,
1600 L<http://libguestfs.org/>.
1602 Tools with a similar purpose:
1611 To get a list of bugs against libguestfs use this link:
1613 L<https://bugzilla.redhat.com/buglist.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools>
1615 To report a new bug against libguestfs use this link:
1617 L<https://bugzilla.redhat.com/enter_bug.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools>
1619 When reporting a bug, please check:
1625 That the bug hasn't been reported already.
1629 That you are testing a recent version.
1633 Describe the bug accurately, and give a way to reproduce it.
1637 Run libguestfs-test-tool and paste the B<complete, unedited>
1638 output into the bug report.
1644 Richard W.M. Jones (C<rjones at redhat dot com>)
1648 Copyright (C) 2009-2010 Red Hat Inc.
1649 L<http://libguestfs.org/>
1651 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
1652 modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
1653 License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
1654 version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
1656 This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
1657 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
1658 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
1659 Lesser General Public License for more details.
1661 You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
1662 License along with this library; if not, write to the Free Software
1663 Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA