make sense to do this unless the logical volumes you specify
are all in different volume groups.
+=item B<--machine-readable>
+
+This option is used to make the output more machine friendly
+when being parsed by other programs. See
+L</MACHINE READABLE OUTPUT> below.
+
=item B<-n>
=item B<--dryrun>
=back
+=head1 MACHINE READABLE OUTPUT
+
+The I<--machine-readable> option can be used to make the output more
+machine friendly, which is useful when calling virt-resize from other
+programs, GUIs etc.
+
+Use the option on its own to query the capabilities of the virt-resize
+binary. Typical output looks like this:
+
+ $ virt-resize --machine-readable
+ virt-resize
+ ntfsresize-force
+ 32bitok
+ ntfs
+ btrfs
+
+A list of features is printed, one per line, and the program exits
+with status 0.
+
=head1 NOTES
=head2 "Partition 1 does not end on cylinder boundary."
quote or escape these characters on the command line. See the shell
manual page L<sh(1)> for details.
+=head1 EXIT STATUS
+
+This program returns 0 if successful, or non-zero if there was an
+error.
+
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<virt-filesystems(1)>,