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 *not* invoked via the
+ shell (see "g.sh").
The return value is anything printed to *stdout* by the
command.
u"""This is the same as "g.command", but splits the result
into a list of lines.
+ See also: "g.sh_lines"
+
This function returns a list of strings.
Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer
"""
return libguestfsmod.ntfs_3g_probe (self._o, rw, device)
+ def sh (self, command):
+ u"""This call runs a command from the guest filesystem via
+ the guest's "/bin/sh".
+
+ This is like "g.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 "g.command" apply to this call.
+ """
+ return libguestfsmod.sh (self._o, command)
+
+ def sh_lines (self, command):
+ u"""This is the same as "g.sh", but splits the result into a
+ list of lines.
+
+ See also: "g.command_lines"
+
+ This function returns a list of strings.
+ """
+ return libguestfsmod.sh_lines (self._o, command)
+
+ def glob_expand (self, pattern):
+ u"""This command searches for all the pathnames matching
+ "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 glob(3) function with
+ flags "GLOB_MARK|GLOB_BRACE". See that manual page for
+ more details.
+
+ This function returns a list of strings.
+ """
+ return libguestfsmod.glob_expand (self._o, pattern)
+