=back
+=head2 UPLOADING AND DOWNLOADING TO PIPES AND FILE DESCRIPTORS
+
+Calls like L</guestfs_upload>, L</guestfs_download>,
+L</guestfs_tar_in>, L</guestfs_tar_out> etc appear to only take
+filenames as arguments, so it appears you can only upload and download
+to files. However many Un*x-like hosts let you use the special device
+files C</dev/stdin>, C</dev/stdout>, C</dev/stderr> and C</dev/fd/N>
+to read and write from stdin, stdout, stderr, and arbitrary file
+descriptor N.
+
+For example, L<virt-cat(1)> writes its output to stdout by
+doing:
+
+ guestfs_download (filename, "/dev/stdout");
+
+and you can write tar output to a pipe C<fd> by doing:
+
+ char devfd[64];
+ snprintf (devfd, sizeof devfd, "/dev/fd/%d", fd);
+ guestfs_tar_out ("/", devfd);
+
=head2 LISTING FILES
L</guestfs_ll> is just designed for humans to read (mainly when using
Libguestfs can mount NTFS partitions. It does this using the
L<http://www.ntfs-3g.org/> driver.
+=head3 DRIVE LETTERS AND PATHS
+
DOS and Windows still use drive letters, and the filesystems are
always treated as case insensitive by Windows itself, and therefore
you might find a Windows configuration file referring to a path like
Where we can help is in resolving the case insensitivity of paths.
For this, call L</guestfs_case_sensitive_path>.
+=head3 ACCESSING THE WINDOWS REGISTRY
+
Libguestfs also provides some help for decoding Windows Registry
"hive" files, through the library C<hivex> which is part of the
libguestfs project although ships as a separate tarball. You have to
L<hivexsh(1)>, L<hivexregedit(1)> and L<virt-win-reg(1)> for more help
on this issue.
+=head3 SYMLINKS ON NTFS-3G FILESYSTEMS
+
+Ntfs-3g tries to rewrite "Junction Points" and NTFS "symbolic links"
+to provide something which looks like a Linux symlink. The way it
+tries to do the rewriting is described here:
+
+L<http://www.tuxera.com/community/ntfs-3g-advanced/junction-points-and-symbolic-links/>
+
+The essential problem is that ntfs-3g simply does not have enough
+information to do a correct job. NTFS links can contain drive letters
+and references to external device GUIDs that ntfs-3g has no way of
+resolving. It is almost certainly the case that libguestfs callers
+should ignore what ntfs-3g does (ie. don't use L</guestfs_readlink> on
+NTFS volumes).
+
+Instead if you encounter a symbolic link on an ntfs-3g filesystem, use
+L</guestfs_lgetxattr> to read the C<system.ntfs_reparse_data> extended
+attribute, and read the raw reparse data from that (you can find the
+format documented in various places around the web).
+
+=head3 EXTENDED ATTRIBUTES ON NTFS-3G FILESYSTEMS
+
+There are other useful extended attributes that can be read from
+ntfs-3g filesystems (using L</guestfs_getxattr>). See:
+
+L<http://www.tuxera.com/community/ntfs-3g-advanced/extended-attributes/>
+
=head2 USING LIBGUESTFS WITH OTHER PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES
Although we don't want to discourage you from using the C API, we will