This is equivalent to the qemu parameter C<-cdrom filename>.
+Note that this call checks for the existence of C<filename>. This
+stops you from specifying other types of drive which are supported
+by qemu such as C<nbd:> and C<http:> URLs. To specify those, use
+the general C<$h-E<gt>config> call instead.
+
=item $h->add_drive ($filename);
This function adds a virtual machine disk image C<filename> to the
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>.
+This is equivalent to the qemu parameter C<-drive file=filename,cache=off>.
+
+Note that this call checks for the existence of C<filename>. This
+stops you from specifying other types of drive which are supported
+by qemu such as C<nbd:> and C<http:> URLs. To specify those, use
+the general C<$h-E<gt>config> call instead.
+
+=item $h->add_drive_ro ($filename);
+
+This adds a drive in snapshot mode, making it effectively
+read-only.
+
+Note that writes to the device are allowed, and will be seen for
+the duration of the guestfs handle, but they are written
+to a temporary file which is discarded as soon as the guestfs
+handle is closed. We don't currently have any method to enable
+changes to be committed, although qemu can support this.
+
+This is equivalent to the qemu parameter
+C<-drive file=filename,snapshot=on>.
+
+Note that this call checks for the existence of C<filename>. This
+stops you from specifying other types of drive which are supported
+by qemu such as C<nbd:> and C<http:> URLs. To specify those, use
+the general C<$h-E<gt>config> call instead.
=item $h->aug_close ();
The single parameter is an argv-style list of arguments.
The first element is the name of the program to run.
Subsequent elements are parameters. The list must be
-non-empty (ie. must contain a program name).
+non-empty (ie. must contain a program name). Note that
+the command runs directly, and is I<not> invoked via
+the shell (see C<$h-E<gt>sh>).
The return value is anything printed to I<stdout> by
the command.
This is the same as C<$h-E<gt>command>, but splits the
result into a list of lines.
+See also: C<$h-E<gt>sh_lines>
+
Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit
of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use
FTP.
This automatically calls L<sync(2)> before the operation,
so that the maximum guest memory is freed.
+=item $h->e2fsck_f ($device);
+
+This runs C<e2fsck -p -f device>, ie. runs the ext2/ext3
+filesystem checker on C<device>, noninteractively (C<-p>),
+even if the filesystem appears to be clean (C<-f>).
+
+This command is only needed because of C<$h-E<gt>resize2fs>
+(q.v.). Normally you should use C<$h-E<gt>fsck>.
+
=item $h->end_busy ();
This sets the state to C<READY>, or if in C<CONFIG> then it leaves the
This returns the verbose messages flag.
+=item @paths = $h->glob_expand ($pattern);
+
+This command searches for all the pathnames matching
+C<pattern> according to the wildcard expansion rules
+used by the shell.
+
+If no paths match, then this returns an empty list
+(note: not an error).
+
+It is just a wrapper around the C L<glob(3)> function
+with flags C<GLOB_MARK|GLOB_BRACE>.
+See that manual page for more details.
+
=item $h->grub_install ($root, $device);
This command installs GRUB (the Grand Unified Bootloader) on
This moves a file from C<src> to C<dest> where C<dest> is
either a destination filename or destination directory.
+=item $status = $h->ntfs_3g_probe ($rw, $device);
+
+This command runs the L<ntfs-3g.probe(8)> command which probes
+an NTFS C<device> for mountability. (Not all NTFS volumes can
+be mounted read-write, and some cannot be mounted at all).
+
+C<rw> is a boolean flag. Set it to true if you want to test
+if the volume can be mounted read-write. Set it to false if
+you want to test if the volume can be mounted read-only.
+
+The return value is an integer which C<0> if the operation
+would succeed, or some non-zero value documented in the
+L<ntfs-3g.probe(8)> manual page.
+
=item $h->ping_daemon ();
This is a test probe into the guestfs daemon running inside
This resizes an ext2 or ext3 filesystem to match the size of
the underlying device.
+I<Note:> It is sometimes required that you run C<$h-E<gt>e2fsck_f>
+on the C<device> before calling this command. For unknown reasons
+C<resize2fs> sometimes gives an error about this and sometimes not.
+In any case, it is always safe to call C<$h-E<gt>e2fsck_f> before
+calling this function.
+
=item $h->rm ($path);
Remove the single file C<path>.
Remove the single directory C<path>.
+=item $h->scrub_device ($device);
+
+This command writes patterns over C<device> to make data retrieval
+more difficult.
+
+It is an interface to the L<scrub(1)> program. See that
+manual page for more details.
+
+B<This command is dangerous. Without careful use you
+can easily destroy all your data>.
+
+=item $h->scrub_file ($file);
+
+This command writes patterns over a file to make data retrieval
+more difficult.
+
+The file is I<removed> after scrubbing.
+
+It is an interface to the L<scrub(1)> program. See that
+manual page for more details.
+
+=item $h->scrub_freespace ($dir);
+
+This command creates the directory C<dir> and then fills it
+with files until the filesystem is full, and scrubs the files
+as for C<$h-E<gt>scrub_file>, and deletes them.
+The intention is to scrub any free space on the partition
+containing C<dir>.
+
+It is an interface to the L<scrub(1)> program. See that
+manual page for more details.
+
=item $h->set_append ($append);
This function is used to add additional options to the
human-readable output of the L<sfdisk(8)> command. It is
not intended to be parsed.
+=item $output = $h->sh ($command);
+
+This call runs a command from the guest filesystem via the
+guest's C</bin/sh>.
+
+This is like C<$h-E<gt>command>, but passes the command to:
+
+ /bin/sh -c "command"
+
+Depending on the guest's shell, this usually results in
+wildcards being expanded, shell expressions being interpolated
+and so on.
+
+All the provisos about C<$h-E<gt>command> apply to this call.
+
+=item @lines = $h->sh_lines ($command);
+
+This is the same as C<$h-E<gt>sh>, but splits the result
+into a list of lines.
+
+See also: C<$h-E<gt>command_lines>
+
+=item $h->sleep ($secs);
+
+Sleep for C<secs> seconds.
+
=item %statbuf = $h->stat ($path);
Returns file information for the given C<path>.
to securely wipe the device). It should be sufficient to remove
any partition tables, filesystem superblocks and so on.
+See also: C<$h-E<gt>scrub_device>.
+
=item $h->zerofree ($device);
This runs the I<zerofree> program on C<device>. This program