=item B<--xml>
+=item B<--perl>
+
=item B<--fish>
=item B<--ro-fish>
If you select I<--xml> then you get XML output which can be fed
to other programs.
+If you select I<--perl> then you get Perl structures output which
+can be used directly in another Perl program.
+
If you select I<--fish> then we print a L<guestfish(1)> command
line which will automatically mount up the filesystems on the
correct mount points. Try this for example:
"connect|c=s" => \$uri,
"force" => \$force,
"xml" => sub { $output = "xml" },
+ "perl" => sub { $output = "perl" },
"fish" => sub { $output = "fish" },
"guestfish" => sub { $output = "fish" },
"ro-fish" => sub { $output = "ro-fish" },
check_for_applications ($root_dev);
check_for_kernels ($root_dev);
- umount_all ();
+ # umount_all in libguestfs is buggy - it doesn't unmount
+ # filesystems in the correct order. So let's unmount them
+ # in reverse first before calling umount_all as a last resort.
+ foreach (sort { $b cmp $a } keys %$mounts) {
+ eval "\$g->umount ('$_')";
+ }
+ $g->umount_all ();
}
}
print "\n"
}
+# Perl output.
+elsif ($output eq "perl") {
+ print Dumper(\%oses);
+}
+
+# Plain text output (the default).
+elsif ($output eq "text") {
+ # XXX text output.
+
+
+
+}
+
+# XML output.
+elsif ($output eq "xml") {
+ # XXX XML output.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+}
+
=head1 SEE ALSO
L<guestfs(3)>,