libguestfs

libguestfs
Developer(s) Richard Jones
Initial release April 4, 2009 (2009-04-04)[1]
Stable release
1.38.6 / September 22, 2018 (2018-09-22)[2]
Written in C; utilities in OCaml Perl, et al.
Operating system Linux
Type Virtualization
License LGPL, GPL
Website libguestfs.org

libguestfs is a C library and a set of tools for accessing and modifying virtual disk images used in platform virtualization. The tools can be used for viewing and editing virtual machines (VMs) managed by libvirt and files inside VMs, scripting changes to VMs, creating VMs, and much else besides.[3]

libguestfs can access nearly any type of file system including: all known types of Linux filesystem (ext2/3/4, XFS, btrfs, etc.), any Windows filesystem (VFAT and NTFS), any Mac OS X and BSD filesystems, LVM2 volume management, MBR and GPT disk partitions, raw disks, qcow2, VirtualBox VDI, VMWare VMDK, Hyper-V VHD/VHDX, on files, local devices, CD and DVD ISOs, SD cards, or remotely over FTP, HTTP, SSH, iSCSI, NBD, GlusterFS, Ceph, Sheepdog, and much more. libguestfs does not require root permissions.

The functionality is available through a shell called guestfish. There is a rescue shell called virt-rescue for fixing unbootable virtual machines. Multiple tools are available modeled after ordinary Unix commands, such as virt-cat and virt-tar.[4]

libguestfs is also an API that can be linked with C and C++ management programs and has bindings for Perl, Python, Ruby, Java, OCaml, PHP, Haskell, Erlang, Lua, Golang and C#. It can be used from shell scripts or in the command line. Using the FUSE module guest filesystems can be mounted on the host with the guestmount command.[5]

libguestfs is implemented using the Kernel-based Virtual Machine for the Linux kernel.[6]

See also

References

  1. "Historical releases of libguestfs".
  2. "libguestfs 1.38 stable".
  3. "Description from home page".
  4. "Features in Fedora 12".
  5. "Description from home page".
  6. "Internal description of libguestfs".
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.