associated with this operating system should be mounted.
Callers should note that this is at best an educated guess
made by reading configuration files such as C</etc/fstab>.
+I<In particular note> that this may return filesystems
+which are non-existent or not mountable and callers should
+be prepared to handle or ignore failures if they try to
+mount them.
Each element in the returned hashtable has a key which
is the path of the mountpoint (eg. C</boot>) and a value
(see L<http://libvirt.org/uri.html>). If this is not set then
we connect to the default libvirt URI (or one set through an
environment variable, see the libvirt documentation for full
-details). If you are using the C API directly then it is more
-flexible to create the libvirt connection object yourself, get
-the domain object, and call C<guestfs_add_libvirt_dom>.
+details).
The other optional parameters are passed directly through to
C<guestfs_add_drive_opts>.");
This command is mostly useful for interactive sessions. It
is I<not> intended that you try to parse the output string.
-Use C<statvfs> from programs.");
+Use C<guestfs_statvfs> from programs.");
("df_h", (RString "output", [], []), 126, [],
[], (* XXX Tricky to test because it depends on the exact format
This command is mostly useful for interactive sessions. It
is I<not> intended that you try to parse the output string.
-Use C<statvfs> from programs.");
+Use C<guestfs_statvfs> from programs.");
("du", (RInt64 "sizekb", [Pathname "path"], []), 127, [],
[InitISOFS, Always, TestOutputInt (
For VFAT and NTFS the C<blocksize> parameter is treated as
the requested cluster size.
+For UFS block sizes, please see L<mkfs.ufs(8)>.
+
=back");
("getxattr", (RBufferOut "xattr", [Pathname "path"; String "name"], []), 279, [Optional "linuxxattrs"],