X-Git-Url: http://git.annexia.org/?p=virt-mem.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=README;h=6fbe3c19aab58bcbe36c486f5b07640f2fabeda9;hp=ce48e4e1fbc0ea1175559cc32e5b6e35b0088563;hb=8eb1c2c4f71819108ceea4731f4dad75775ce6ae;hpb=f3a07af5c07c1a278a0352430d642f179d428fd2 diff --git a/README b/README index ce48e4e..6fbe3c1 100644 --- a/README +++ b/README @@ -17,11 +17,6 @@ software inside the virtual machine. At the moment we only support virtual machines running Linux kernel >= 2.6, but we expect to support other operating systems in the future. -Most of the commands also offer a CSV (comma-separated values) output -format ('virt-xx --csv'), allowing usage from scripts to update -spreadsheets, databases or integrate with existing monitoring systems -like Nagios. - The commands use libvirt to access the underlying virtualization system, so we support a variety of different systems such as Xen, QEMU and KVM, and more can be added just by adding support to libvirt. @@ -43,18 +38,15 @@ Run ./configure and look at the output for any missing packages. Then: make - make -C po # if you want to rebuild the locales -The binaries are called things like 'virt-dmesg.opt' and located in -the respective directories, so you could run them by doing: +Then run the virt-mem meta-tool, for example: - dmesg/virt-dmesg.opt + ./mem/virt-mem.opt dmesg -All the binaries understand the --help option to provide a summary of -options. All require virtual machines to run against, but most also -offer a test mode (-t option). +(If this binary is linked with the name 'virt-dmesg' then it behaves +in the same way). -To install the binaries, man pages and locales, do this as root: +To install the binaries, man pages and message catalogs, do this as +root: make install - make -C po install \ No newline at end of file