X-Git-Url: http://git.annexia.org/?p=libguestfs.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=perl%2Flib%2FSys%2FGuestfs.pm;h=5aac2e91c9a78c9b2ce6198659278d7a2fc58fe0;hp=bab788791be2136bfae6cc677fdb1809322e92f1;hb=15e0fd573a87488c66cb3a6f0da01f3ab5f2f6ed;hpb=36f9dac1a2530b575dab9226f6ddd85e6e8c8590 diff --git a/perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs.pm b/perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs.pm index bab7887..5aac2e9 100644 --- a/perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs.pm +++ b/perl/lib/Sys/Guestfs.pm @@ -432,6 +432,16 @@ The first character of C string must be a C<-> (dash). C can be NULL. +=item $h->cp ($src, $dest); + +This copies a file from C to C where C is +either a destination filename or destination directory. + +=item $h->cp_a ($src, $dest); + +This copies a file or directory from C to C +recursively using the C command. + =item $result = $h->debug ($subcmd, \@extraargs); The C<$h-Edebug> command exposes some internals of @@ -442,6 +452,17 @@ There is no comprehensive help for this command. You have to look at the file C in the libguestfs source to find out what you can do. +=item $kmsgs = $h->dmesg (); + +This returns the kernel messages (C output) from +the guest kernel. This is sometimes useful for extended +debugging of problems. + +Another way to get the same information is to enable +verbose messages with C<$h-Eset_verbose> or by setting +the environment variable C before +running the program. + =item $h->download ($remotefilename, $filename); Download file C and save it as C @@ -451,6 +472,33 @@ C can also be a named pipe. See also C<$h-Eupload>, C<$h-Ecat>. +=item $h->drop_caches ($whattodrop); + +This instructs the guest kernel to drop its page cache, +and/or dentries and inode caches. The parameter C +tells the kernel what precisely to drop, see +L + +Setting C to 3 should drop everything. + +This automatically calls L before the operation, +so that the maximum guest memory is freed. + +=item $h->end_busy (); + +This sets the state to C, or if in C then it leaves the +state as is. This is only used when implementing +actions using the low-level API. + +For more information on states, see L. + +=item $equality = $h->equal ($file1, $file2); + +This compares the two files C and C and returns +true if their content is exactly equal, or false otherwise. + +The external L program is used for the comparison. + =item $existsflag = $h->exists ($path); This returns C if and only if there is a file, directory @@ -537,6 +585,20 @@ For more information on states, see L. This returns the verbose messages flag. +=item $h->grub_install ($root, $device); + +This command installs GRUB (the Grand Unified Bootloader) on +C, with the root directory being C. + +=item $dump = $h->hexdump ($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. + =item $busy = $h->is_busy (); This returns true iff this handle is busy processing a command @@ -683,7 +745,7 @@ as necessary. This is like the C shell command. =item $h->mkfs ($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. =item $h->mount ($device, $mountpoint); @@ -729,6 +791,18 @@ the list of devices (eg. C, C). Some internal mounts are not shown. +=item $h->mv ($src, $dest); + +This moves a file from C to C where C is +either a destination filename or destination directory. + +=item $h->ping_daemon (); + +This is a test probe into the guestfs daemon running inside +the qemu subprocess. Calling this function checks that the +daemon responds to the ping message, without affecting the daemon +or attached block device(s) in any other way. + =item $h->pvcreate ($device); This creates an LVM physical volume on the named C, @@ -901,6 +975,31 @@ C should be a file or directory in the mounted file system This is the same as the C system call. +=item @stringsout = $h->strings ($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. + +=item @stringsout = $h->strings_e ($encoding, $path); + +This is like the C<$h-Estrings> 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. + =item $h->sync (); This syncs the disk, so that any writes are flushed through to the @@ -1019,6 +1118,11 @@ As a special case, if C is C<0> then the length is calculated using C (so in this case the content cannot contain embedded ASCII NULs). +I Owing to a bug, writing content containing ASCII NUL +characters does I work, even if the length is specified. +We hope to resolve this bug in a future version. In the meantime +use C<$h-Eupload>. + Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use FTP.