virt-dmesg - print kernel messages for virtual machines
+virt-ps - list processes for virtual machines
+
virt-mem - tool with additional information output
=head1 SUMMARY
virt-dmesg [-options] [domains...]
+virt-ps [-options] [domains...]
+
virt-mem uname [...]
virt-mem dmesg [...]
+virt-mem ps [...]
+
virt-mem [-options]
=head1 DESCRIPTION
Display usage summary.
+=item B<--list-kernels>
+
+List which guest kernel versions are known/supported, then exit.
+
=item B<-t memoryimage>
Post-mortem analysis mode.
=item B<-E auto|littleendian|bigendian>
-=item B<-T auto|i386|x86-64|I<address>>
+=item B<-T auto|i386|x86-64|I<address>|I<address,min,max>>
=item B<-W auto|32|64>
x86-64 and (usually) IA64. I<-E bigendian> is the endianness used on
many RISC chips such as SPARC and PowerPC.
-Text address (I<-T>) sets the base address of the kernel image. I<-T
-i386> means to try some common addresses for i386-based kernels. I<-T
-x86-64> means to try some common addresses for x86-64-based kernels.
-I<-T I<address>> sets the address specifically (I<0x> prefix is used
-to specify hex addresses).
+Text address (I<-T>) sets the base address and optionally min and max
+addresses of the kernel image. I<-T i386> means to try some common
+addresses for i386-based kernels. I<-T x86-64> means to try some
+common addresses for x86-64-based kernels.
+
+I<-T address> sets the kernel base address specifically (I<0x> prefix
+is used to specify hex addresses). I<-T address,min,max> sets the
+kernel base address, minimum address and maximum address.
Word size (I<-W>) sets the word size, 32 or 64 bits.