X-Git-Url: http://git.annexia.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=guestfish-actions.pod;h=7d46206b3d8de5add39b3ee6d8a32f4348196293;hb=791a34b6d9408f2b412d84a75d8617748d2262b4;hp=f1b624b2dee36a1fc5fed9041cb7fdb10a9c6317;hpb=f47dafd23186938a22d41739d9bc695c7760b912;p=libguestfs.git diff --git a/guestfish-actions.pod b/guestfish-actions.pod index f1b624b..7d46206 100644 --- a/guestfish-actions.pod +++ b/guestfish-actions.pod @@ -372,6 +372,13 @@ 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). +The return value is anything printed to I by +the command. + +If the command returns a non-zero exit status, then +this function returns an error message. The error message +string is the content of I from the command. + The C<$PATH> environment variable will contain at least C and C. If you require a program from another location, you should provide the full path in the @@ -383,6 +390,10 @@ correct places. It is the caller's responsibility to ensure all filesystems that are needed are mounted at the right locations. +Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit +of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use +FTP. + =head2 command-lines command-lines 'arguments ...' @@ -390,6 +401,10 @@ locations. This is the same as C, but splits the result into a list of 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. + =head2 config config qemuparam qemuvalue @@ -591,6 +606,17 @@ This returns the verbose messages flag. This command installs GRUB (the Grand Unified Bootloader) on C, with the root directory being C. +=head2 hexdump + + hexdump path + +This runs C on the given C. The result is +the human-readable, canonical hex dump of the file. + +Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit +of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use +FTP. + =head2 is-busy is-busy @@ -779,7 +805,7 @@ as necessary. This is like the C shell command. mkfs fstype device This creates a filesystem on C (usually a partition -of LVM logical volume). The filesystem type is C, for +or LVM logical volume). The filesystem type is C, for example C. =head2 mount @@ -1043,6 +1069,35 @@ C should be a file or directory in the mounted file system This is the same as the C system call. +=head2 strings + + strings path + +This runs the L command on a file and returns +the list of printable strings found. + +Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit +of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use +FTP. + +=head2 strings-e + + strings-e encoding path + +This is like the C command, but allows you to +specify the encoding. + +See the L manpage for the full list of encodings. + +Commonly useful encodings are C (lower case L) which will +show strings inside Windows/x86 files. + +The returned strings are transcoded to UTF-8. + +Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit +of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use +FTP. + =head2 sync sync @@ -1193,6 +1248,11 @@ As a special case, if C is C<0> then the length is calculated using C (so in this case the content cannot contain embedded ASCII NULs). +I Owing to a bug, writing content containing ASCII NUL +characters does I work, even if the length is specified. +We hope to resolve this bug in a future version. In the meantime +use C. + Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use FTP.