just want to read the image or write access if you want to modify the
image).
-This is equivalent to the qemu parameter C<-drive file=filename,cache=off>.
+This is equivalent to the qemu parameter
+C<-drive file=filename,cache=off,if=virtio>.
Note that this call checks for the existence of C<filename>. This
stops you from specifying other types of drive which are supported
changes to be committed, although qemu can support this.
This is equivalent to the qemu parameter
-C<-drive file=filename,snapshot=on>.
+C<-drive file=filename,snapshot=on,if=virtio>.
Note that this call checks for the existence of C<filename>. This
stops you from specifying other types of drive which are supported
to look at the file C<daemon/debug.c> in the libguestfs source
to find out what you can do.
+=head2 df
+
+ df
+
+This command runs the C<df> command to report disk space used.
+
+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.
+
+=head2 df-h
+
+ df-h
+
+This command runs the C<df -h> command to report disk space used
+in human-readable 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.
+
=head2 dmesg
dmesg
This automatically calls L<sync(2)> before the operation,
so that the maximum guest memory is freed.
+=head2 du
+
+ du path
+
+This command runs the C<du -s> command to estimate file space
+usage for C<path>.
+
+C<path> can be a file or a directory. If C<path> is a directory
+then the estimate includes the contents of the directory and all
+subdirectories (recursively).
+
+The result is the estimated size in I<kilobytes>
+(ie. units of 1024 bytes).
+
=head2 e2fsck-f
e2fsck-f device
This returns the ext2/3/4 filesystem UUID of the filesystem on
C<device>.
+=head2 get-memsize
+
+ get-memsize
+
+This gets the memory size in megabytes allocated to the
+qemu subprocess.
+
+If C<set-memsize> was not called
+on this handle, and if C<LIBGUESTFS_MEMSIZE> was not set,
+then this returns the compiled-in default value for memsize.
+
+For more information on the architecture of libguestfs,
+see L<guestfs(3)>.
+
=head2 get-path
get-path
of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use
FTP.
+=head2 initrd-list
+
+ initrd-list path
+
+This command lists out files contained in an initrd.
+
+The files are listed without any initial C</> character. The
+files are listed in the order they appear (not necessarily
+alphabetical). Directory names are listed as separate items.
+
+Old Linux kernels (2.4 and earlier) used a compressed ext2
+filesystem as initrd. We I<only> support the newer initramfs
+format (compressed cpio files).
+
=head2 is-busy
is-busy
See also: L<mkdtemp(3)>
+=head2 mkfifo
+
+ mkfifo mode path
+
+This call creates a FIFO (named pipe) called C<path> with
+mode C<mode>. It is just a convenient wrapper around
+C<mknod>.
+
=head2 mkfs
mkfs fstype device
or LVM logical volume). The filesystem type is C<fstype>, for
example C<ext3>.
+=head2 mknod
+
+ mknod mode devmajor devminor path
+
+This call creates block or character special devices, or
+named pipes (FIFOs).
+
+The C<mode> parameter should be the mode, using the standard
+constants. C<devmajor> and C<devminor> are the
+device major and minor numbers, only used when creating block
+and character special devices.
+
+=head2 mknod-b
+
+ mknod-b mode devmajor devminor path
+
+This call creates a block device node called C<path> with
+mode C<mode> and device major/minor C<devmajor> and C<devminor>.
+It is just a convenient wrapper around C<mknod>.
+
+=head2 mknod-c
+
+ mknod-c mode devmajor devminor path
+
+This call creates a char device node called C<path> with
+mode C<mode> and device major/minor C<devmajor> and C<devminor>.
+It is just a convenient wrapper around C<mknod>.
+
+=head2 mkswap
+
+ mkswap device
+
+Create a swap partition on C<device>.
+
+=head2 mkswap-L
+
+ mkswap-L label device
+
+Create a swap partition on C<device> with label C<label>.
+
+=head2 mkswap-U
+
+ mkswap-U uuid device
+
+Create a swap partition on C<device> with UUID C<uuid>.
+
=head2 mount
mount device mountpoint
The filesystem options C<sync> and C<noatime> are set with this
call, in order to improve reliability.
+=head2 mount-loop
+
+ mount-loop file mountpoint
+
+This command lets you mount C<file> (a filesystem image
+in a file) on a mount point. It is entirely equivalent to
+the command C<mount -o loop file mountpoint>.
+
=head2 mount-options
mount-options options device mountpoint
as end of line). For those you need to use the C<read-file>
function which has a more complex interface.
+=head2 readdir
+
+ readdir dir
+
+This returns the list of directory entries in directory C<dir>.
+
+All entries in the directory are returned, including C<.> and
+C<..>. The entries are I<not> sorted, but returned in the same
+order as the underlying filesystem.
+
+This function is primarily intended for use by programs. To
+get a simple list of names, use C<ls>. To get a printable
+directory for human consumption, use C<ll>.
+
=head2 resize2fs
resize2fs device
You can use either C<tune2fs-l> or C<get-e2uuid>
to return the existing UUID of a filesystem.
+=head2 set-memsize | memsize
+
+ set-memsize memsize
+
+This sets the memory size in megabytes allocated to the
+qemu subprocess. This only has any effect if called before
+C<launch>.
+
+You can also change this by setting the environment
+variable C<LIBGUESTFS_MEMSIZE> before the handle is
+created.
+
+For more information on the architecture of libguestfs,
+see L<guestfs(3)>.
+
=head2 set-path | path
set-path path
clearly defined, and depends on both the version of C<tune2fs>
that libguestfs was built against, and the filesystem itself.
+=head2 umask
+
+ umask mask
+
+This function sets the mask used for creating new files and
+device nodes to C<mask & 0777>.
+
+Typical umask values would be C<022> which creates new files
+with permissions like "-rw-r--r--" or "-rwxr-xr-x", and
+C<002> which creates new files with permissions like
+"-rw-rw-r--" or "-rwxrwxr-x".
+
+The default umask is C<022>. This is important because it
+means that directories and device nodes will be created with
+C<0644> or C<0755> mode even if you specify C<0777>.
+
+See also L<umask(2)>, C<mknod>, C<mkdir>.
+
+This call returns the previous umask.
+
=head2 umount | unmount
umount pathordevice