X-Git-Url: http://git.annexia.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=perl%2Flib%2FSys%2FGuestfs.pm;h=83fbbb106b4b13074822b69710a7380bf5290fe3;hb=da947eadcfa1367c2d634667068db813a87a6dd1;hp=d803ce1124a68a1bce39e25d0868839c1a22cd3b;hpb=e8ecc08f663b44f3d79517affe52f137858dfe00;p=libguestfs.git diff --git a/perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs.pm b/perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs.pm index d803ce1..83fbbb1 100644 --- a/perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs.pm +++ b/perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs.pm @@ -97,6 +97,11 @@ This function adds a virtual CD-ROM disk image to the guest. This is equivalent to the qemu parameter C<-cdrom filename>. +Note that this call checks for the existence of C. This +stops you from specifying other types of drive which are supported +by qemu such as C and C URLs. To specify those, use +the general C<$h-Econfig> call instead. + =item $h->add_drive ($filename); This function adds a virtual machine disk image C to the @@ -110,7 +115,31 @@ for whatever operations you want to perform (ie. read access if you 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. This +stops you from specifying other types of drive which are supported +by qemu such as C and C URLs. To specify those, use +the general C<$h-Econfig> 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. This +stops you from specifying other types of drive which are supported +by qemu such as C and C URLs. To specify those, use +the general C<$h-Econfig> call instead. =item $h->aug_close (); @@ -403,7 +432,9 @@ or compatible processor architecture). The single parameter is an argv-style list of arguments. The first element is the name of the program to run. Subsequent elements are parameters. The list must be -non-empty (ie. must contain a program name). +non-empty (ie. must contain a program name). Note that +the command runs directly, and is I invoked via +the shell (see C<$h-Esh>). The return value is anything printed to I by the command. @@ -432,6 +463,8 @@ FTP. This is the same as C<$h-Ecommand>, but splits the result into a list of lines. +See also: C<$h-Esh_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. @@ -499,6 +532,15 @@ Setting C to 3 should drop everything. This automatically calls L before the operation, so that the maximum guest memory is freed. +=item $h->e2fsck_f ($device); + +This runs C, ie. runs the ext2/ext3 +filesystem checker on C, noninteractively (C<-p>), +even if the filesystem appears to be clean (C<-f>). + +This command is only needed because of C<$h-Eresize2fs> +(q.v.). Normally you should use C<$h-Efsck>. + =item $h->end_busy (); This sets the state to C, or if in C then it leaves the @@ -531,6 +573,33 @@ The exact command which runs is C. Note in particular that the filename is not prepended to the output (the C<-b> option). +=item @names = $h->find ($directory); + +This command lists out all files and directories, recursively, +starting at C. It is essentially equivalent to +running the shell command C but some +post-processing happens on the output, described below. + +This returns a list of strings I. Thus +if the directory structure was: + + /tmp/a + /tmp/b + /tmp/c/d + +then the returned list from C<$h-Efind> C would be +4 elements: + + a + b + c + c/d + +If C is not a directory, then this command returns +an error. + +The returned list is sorted. + =item $status = $h->fsck ($fstype, $device); This runs the filesystem checker (fsck) on C which @@ -607,6 +676,19 @@ For more information on states, see L. This returns the verbose messages flag. +=item @paths = $h->glob_expand ($pattern); + +This command searches for all the pathnames matching +C 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 function +with flags C. +See that manual page for more details. + =item $h->grub_install ($root, $device); This command installs GRUB (the Grand Unified Bootloader) on @@ -740,6 +822,12 @@ the path to the LV, such as C. You can also remove all LVs in a volume group by specifying the VG name, C. +=item $h->lvresize ($device, $mbytes); + +This resizes (expands or shrinks) an existing LVM logical +volume to C. When reducing, data in the reduced part +is lost. + =item @logvols = $h->lvs (); List all the logical volumes detected. This is the equivalent @@ -764,6 +852,27 @@ Create a directory named C. Create a directory named C, creating any parent directories as necessary. This is like the C shell command. +=item $dir = $h->mkdtemp ($template); + +This command creates a temporary directory. The +C