+=head2 guestfs_ll
+
+ char *guestfs_ll (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *directory);
+
+List the files in C<directory> (relative to the root directory,
+there is no cwd) in the format of 'ls -la'.
+
+This command is mostly useful for interactive sessions. It
+is I<not> intended that you try to parse the output string.
+
+This function returns a string, or NULL on error.
+I<The caller must free the returned string after use>.
+
+=head2 guestfs_ls
+
+ char **guestfs_ls (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *directory);
+
+List the files in C<directory> (relative to the root directory,
+there is no cwd). The '.' and '..' entries are not returned, but
+hidden files are shown.
+
+This command is mostly useful for interactive sessions. Programs
+should probably use C<guestfs_readdir> instead.
+
+This function returns a NULL-terminated array of strings
+(like L<environ(3)>), or NULL if there was an error.
+I<The caller must free the strings and the array after use>.
+
+=head2 guestfs_lstat
+
+ struct guestfs_stat *guestfs_lstat (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *path);
+
+Returns file information for the given C<path>.
+
+This is the same as C<guestfs_stat> except that if C<path>
+is a symbolic link, then the link is stat-ed, not the file it
+refers to.
+
+This is the same as the C<lstat(2)> system call.
+
+This function returns a C<struct guestfs_stat *>
+(see L<stat(2)> and E<lt>guestfs-structs.hE<gt>),
+or NULL if there was an error.
+I<The caller must call C<free> after use>.
+
+=head2 guestfs_lvcreate
+
+ int guestfs_lvcreate (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *logvol,
+ const char *volgroup,
+ int mbytes);
+
+This creates an LVM volume group called C<logvol>
+on the volume group C<volgroup>, with C<size> megabytes.
+
+This function returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
+
+=head2 guestfs_lvm_remove_all
+
+ int guestfs_lvm_remove_all (guestfs_h *handle);
+
+This command removes all LVM logical volumes, volume groups
+and physical volumes.
+
+This function returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
+
+B<This command is dangerous. Without careful use you
+can easily destroy all your data>.
+
+=head2 guestfs_lvremove
+
+ int guestfs_lvremove (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *device);
+
+Remove an LVM logical volume C<device>, where C<device> is
+the path to the LV, such as C</dev/VG/LV>.
+
+You can also remove all LVs in a volume group by specifying
+the VG name, C</dev/VG>.
+
+This function returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
+
+=head2 guestfs_lvs
+
+ char **guestfs_lvs (guestfs_h *handle);
+
+List all the logical volumes detected. This is the equivalent
+of the L<lvs(8)> command.
+
+This returns a list of the logical volume device names
+(eg. C</dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00>).
+
+See also C<guestfs_lvs_full>.
+
+This function returns a NULL-terminated array of strings
+(like L<environ(3)>), or NULL if there was an error.
+I<The caller must free the strings and the array after use>.
+
+=head2 guestfs_lvs_full
+
+ struct guestfs_lvm_lv_list *guestfs_lvs_full (guestfs_h *handle);
+
+List all the logical volumes detected. This is the equivalent
+of the L<lvs(8)> command. The "full" version includes all fields.
+
+This function returns a C<struct guestfs_lvm_lv_list *>
+(see E<lt>guestfs-structs.hE<gt>),
+or NULL if there was an error.
+I<The caller must call C<guestfs_free_lvm_lv_list> after use>.
+
+=head2 guestfs_mkdir
+
+ int guestfs_mkdir (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *path);
+
+Create a directory named C<path>.
+
+This function returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
+
+=head2 guestfs_mkdir_p
+
+ int guestfs_mkdir_p (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *path);
+
+Create a directory named C<path>, creating any parent directories
+as necessary. This is like the C<mkdir -p> shell command.
+
+This function returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
+
+=head2 guestfs_mkfs
+
+ int guestfs_mkfs (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *fstype,
+ const char *device);
+
+This creates a filesystem on C<device> (usually a partition
+or LVM logical volume). The filesystem type is C<fstype>, for
+example C<ext3>.
+
+This function returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
+
+=head2 guestfs_mount
+
+ int guestfs_mount (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *device,
+ const char *mountpoint);
+
+Mount a guest disk at a position in the filesystem. Block devices
+are named C</dev/sda>, C</dev/sdb> and so on, as they were added to
+the guest. If those block devices contain partitions, they will have
+the usual names (eg. C</dev/sda1>). Also LVM C</dev/VG/LV>-style
+names can be used.
+
+The rules are the same as for L<mount(2)>: A filesystem must
+first be mounted on C</> before others can be mounted. Other
+filesystems can only be mounted on directories which already
+exist.
+
+The mounted filesystem is writable, if we have sufficient permissions
+on the underlying device.
+
+The filesystem options C<sync> and C<noatime> are set with this
+call, in order to improve reliability.
+
+This function returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
+
+=head2 guestfs_mount_options
+
+ int guestfs_mount_options (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *options,
+ const char *device,
+ const char *mountpoint);
+
+This is the same as the C<guestfs_mount> command, but it
+allows you to set the mount options as for the
+L<mount(8)> I<-o> flag.
+
+This function returns 0 on success or -1 on error.
+
+=head2 guestfs_mount_ro
+
+ int guestfs_mount_ro (guestfs_h *handle,
+ const char *device,
+ const char *mountpoint);
+
+This is the same as the C<guestfs_mount> command, but it
+mounts the filesystem with the read-only (I<-o ro>) flag.