X-Git-Url: http://git.annexia.org/?p=libguestfs.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=fish%2Fguestfish.pod;h=98286d188e8966aec91cdd591ad08bbaa65a6d3c;hp=07b9899940b942516f361b7795a388ce61308c23;hb=4e529e06a4500959cd783f5029354fea47a253a6;hpb=fbc2555903be8c88ad9430d871cf0d27c8fded1e diff --git a/fish/guestfish.pod b/fish/guestfish.pod index 07b9899..98286d1 100644 --- a/fish/guestfish.pod +++ b/fish/guestfish.pod @@ -153,22 +153,34 @@ To list what is available do: Displays general help on options. -=item B<-h> | B<--cmd-help> +=item B<-h> + +=item B<--cmd-help> Lists all available guestfish commands. -=item B<-h cmd> | B<--cmd-help cmd> +=item B<-h cmd> + +=item B<--cmd-help cmd> Displays detailed help on a single command C. -=item B<-a image> | B<--add image> +=item B<-a image> + +=item B<--add image> Add a block device or virtual machine image to the shell. The format of the disk image is auto-detected. To override this and force a particular format use the I<--format=..> option. -=item B<-c URI> | B<--connect URI> +Using this flag is mostly equivalent to using the C command, +with C if the I<--ro> flag was given, and +with C if the I<--format:...> flag was given. + +=item B<-c URI> + +=item B<--connect URI> When used in conjunction with the I<-d> option, this specifies the libvirt URI to use. The default is to use the default libvirt @@ -179,13 +191,21 @@ connection. If using the I<--listen> option and a csh-like shell, use this option. See section L below. -=item B<-d libvirt-domain> | B<--domain libvirt-domain> +=item B<-d libvirt-domain> + +=item B<--domain libvirt-domain> Add disks from the named libvirt domain. If the I<--ro> option is also used, then any libvirt domain can be used. However in write mode, only libvirt domains which are shut down can be named here. -=item B<-D> | B<--no-dest-paths> +Using this flag is mostly equivalent to using the C command, +with C if the I<--ro> flag was given, and +with C if the I<--format:...> flag was given. + +=item B<-D> + +=item B<--no-dest-paths> Don't tab-complete paths on the guest filesystem. It is useful to be able to hit the tab key to complete paths on the guest filesystem, but @@ -199,14 +219,18 @@ echoing off so you cannot see what you are typing. If you are not worried about Tempest attacks and there is no one else in the room you can specify this flag to see what you are typing. -=item B<-f file> | B<--file file> +=item B<-f file> + +=item B<--file file> Read commands from C. To write pure guestfish scripts, use: #!/usr/bin/guestfish -f -=item B<--format=raw|qcow2|..> | B<--format> +=item B<--format=raw|qcow2|..> + +=item B<--format> The default for the I<-a> option is to auto-detect the format of the disk image. Using this forces the disk format for I<-a> options which @@ -229,7 +253,9 @@ this option to specify the disk format. This avoids a possible security problem with malicious guests (CVE-2010-3851). See also L. -=item B<-i> | B<--inspector> +=item B<-i> + +=item B<--inspector> Using L code, inspect the disks looking for an operating system and mount filesystems as they would be @@ -254,6 +280,10 @@ versions of guestfish. You can still use the old syntax: guestfish [--ro] -i libvirt-domain +Using this flag is mostly equivalent to using the C +command and then using other commands to mount the filesystems that +were found. + =item B<--keys-from-stdin> Read key or passphrase parameters from stdin. The default is @@ -264,7 +294,14 @@ to try to read passphrases from the user by opening C. Fork into the background and listen for remote commands. See section L below. -=item B<-m dev[:mountpoint]> | B<--mount dev[:mountpoint]> +=item B<--live> + +Connect to a live virtual machine. +(Experimental, see L). + +=item B<-m dev[:mountpoint[:options]]> + +=item B<--mount dev[:mountpoint[:options]]> Mount the named partition or logical volume on the given mountpoint. @@ -281,12 +318,30 @@ filesystems and LVs available (see L, L and L commands), or you can use the L program. -=item B<-n> | B<--no-sync> +The third (and rarely used) part of the mount parameter is the list of +mount options used to mount the underlying filesystem. If this is not +given, then the mount options are either the empty string or C +(the latter if the I<--ro> flag is used). By specifying the mount +options, you override this default choice. Probably the only time you +would use this is to enable ACLs and/or extended attributes if the +filesystem can support them: + + -m /dev/sda1:/:acl,user_xattr + +Using this flag is equivalent to using the C command. + +=item B<-n> + +=item B<--no-sync> Disable autosync. This is enabled by default. See the discussion of autosync in the L manpage. -=item B<-N type> | B<--new type> | B<-N help> +=item B<-N type> + +=item B<--new type> + +=item B<-N help> Prepare a fresh disk image formatted as "type". This is an alternative to the I<-a> option: whereas I<-a> adds an existing disk, @@ -309,17 +364,20 @@ Disable progress bars. Send remote commands to C<$GUESTFISH_PID> or C. See section L below. -=item B<-r> | B<--ro> +=item B<-r> -This changes the I<-a> and I<-m> options so that disks are added and -mounts are done read-only (see L). +=item B<--ro> + +This changes the I<-a>, I<-d> and I<-m> options so that disks are +added and mounts are done read-only. The option must always be used if the disk image or virtual machine might be running, and is generally recommended in cases where you don't need write access to the disk. Note that prepared disk images created with I<-N> are not affected by -the I<--ro> option. +this option. Also commands like C are not affected - you have to +specify the C option explicitly if you need it. See also L below. @@ -327,16 +385,22 @@ See also L below. Enable SELinux support for the guest. See L. -=item B<-v> | B<--verbose> +=item B<-v> + +=item B<--verbose> Enable very verbose messages. This is particularly useful if you find a bug. -=item B<-V> | B<--version> +=item B<-V> + +=item B<--version> Display the guestfish / libguestfs version number and exit. -=item B<-w> | B<--rw> +=item B<-w> + +=item B<--rw> This option does nothing at the moment. See L below. @@ -413,7 +477,7 @@ disk image read-only you have to do I<-a image --ro>. This matters: If you accidentally open a live VM disk image writable then you will cause irreversible disk corruption. -By libguestfs 1.8 we intend to change the default the other way. Disk +By libguestfs 1.10 we intend to change the default the other way. Disk images will be opened read-only. You will have to either specify I or change a configuration file in order to get write access for disk images specified by those other command line options. @@ -626,6 +690,32 @@ C. (See C). To change the local directory, use the C command. C will have no effect, due to the way that subprocesses work in Unix. +=head2 LOCAL COMMANDS WITH INLINE EXECUTION + +If a line starts with I!> then the shell command is executed (as +for I), but subsequently any output (stdout) of the shell command +is parsed and executed as guestfish commands. + +Thus you can use shell script to construct arbitrary guestfish +commands which are then parsed by guestfish. + +For example it is tedious to create a sequence of files +(eg. C through C) using guestfish commands +alone. However this is simple if we use a shell script to +create the guestfish commands for us: + + : + + > character so it is +just an ordinary I local command), see what guestfish commands it +would run, and when you are happy with those prepend the C> +character to run the guestfish commands for real. + =head1 PIPES Use CspaceE | command> to pipe the output of the @@ -976,12 +1066,13 @@ set, it uses C. =item TMPDIR -Location of temporary directory, defaults to C. +Location of temporary directory, defaults to C except for the +cached supermin appliance which defaults to C. If libguestfs was compiled to use the supermin appliance then the real appliance is cached in this directory, shared between all handles belonging to the same EUID. You can use C<$TMPDIR> to -configure another directory to use in case C is not large +configure another directory to use in case C is not large enough. =back @@ -1041,9 +1132,12 @@ Any existing file with the same name will be overwritten. L, L, L, +L, +L, L, L, L, +L, L, L, L, @@ -1051,6 +1145,8 @@ L, L, L, L, +L, +L, L, L.