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|
=head2 add-cdrom | cdrom
add-cdrom filename
This function adds a virtual CD-ROM disk image to the guest.
This is equivalent to the qemu parameter C<-cdrom filename>.
=head2 add-drive | add
add-drive filename
This function adds a virtual machine disk image C<filename> to the
guest. The first time you call this function, the disk appears as IDE
disk 0 (C</dev/sda>) in the guest, the second time as C</dev/sdb>, and
so on.
You don't necessarily need to be root when using libguestfs. However
you obviously do need sufficient permissions to access the filename
for whatever operations you want to perform (ie. read access if you
just want to read the image or write access if you want to modify the
image).
This is equivalent to the qemu parameter C<-drive file=filename>.
=head2 aug-close
aug-close
Close the current Augeas handle and free up any resources
used by it. After calling this, you have to call
C<aug-init> again before you can use any other
Augeas functions.
=head2 aug-defnode
aug-defnode name expr val
Defines a variable C<name> whose value is the result of
evaluating C<expr>.
If C<expr> evaluates to an empty nodeset, a node is created,
equivalent to calling C<aug-set> C<expr>, C<value>.
C<name> will be the nodeset containing that single node.
On success this returns a pair containing the
number of nodes in the nodeset, and a boolean flag
if a node was created.
=head2 aug-defvar
aug-defvar name expr
Defines an Augeas variable C<name> whose value is the result
of evaluating C<expr>. If C<expr> is NULL, then C<name> is
undefined.
On success this returns the number of nodes in C<expr>, or
C<0> if C<expr> evaluates to something which is not a nodeset.
=head2 aug-get
aug-get path
Look up the value associated with C<path>. If C<path>
matches exactly one node, the C<value> is returned.
=head2 aug-init
aug-init root flags
Create a new Augeas handle for editing configuration files.
If there was any previous Augeas handle associated with this
guestfs session, then it is closed.
You must call this before using any other C<aug-*>
commands.
C<root> is the filesystem root. C<root> must not be NULL,
use C</> instead.
The flags are the same as the flags defined in
E<lt>augeas.hE<gt>, the logical I<or> of the following
integers:
=over 4
=item C<AUG_SAVE_BACKUP> = 1
Keep the original file with a C<.augsave> extension.
=item C<AUG_SAVE_NEWFILE> = 2
Save changes into a file with extension C<.augnew>, and
do not overwrite original. Overrides C<AUG_SAVE_BACKUP>.
=item C<AUG_TYPE_CHECK> = 4
Typecheck lenses (can be expensive).
=item C<AUG_NO_STDINC> = 8
Do not use standard load path for modules.
=item C<AUG_SAVE_NOOP> = 16
Make save a no-op, just record what would have been changed.
=item C<AUG_NO_LOAD> = 32
Do not load the tree in C<aug-init>.
=back
To close the handle, you can call C<aug-close>.
To find out more about Augeas, see L<http://augeas.net/>.
=head2 aug-insert
aug-insert path label true|false
Create a new sibling C<label> for C<path>, inserting it into
the tree before or after C<path> (depending on the boolean
flag C<before>).
C<path> must match exactly one existing node in the tree, and
C<label> must be a label, ie. not contain C</>, C<*> or end
with a bracketed index C<[N]>.
=head2 aug-load
aug-load
Load files into the tree.
See C<aug_load> in the Augeas documentation for the full gory
details.
=head2 aug-ls
aug-ls path
This is just a shortcut for listing C<aug-match>
C<path/*> and sorting the resulting nodes into alphabetical order.
=head2 aug-match
aug-match path
Returns a list of paths which match the path expression C<path>.
The returned paths are sufficiently qualified so that they match
exactly one node in the current tree.
=head2 aug-mv
aug-mv src dest
Move the node C<src> to C<dest>. C<src> must match exactly
one node. C<dest> is overwritten if it exists.
=head2 aug-rm
aug-rm path
Remove C<path> and all of its children.
On success this returns the number of entries which were removed.
=head2 aug-save
aug-save
This writes all pending changes to disk.
The flags which were passed to C<aug-init> affect exactly
how files are saved.
=head2 aug-set
aug-set path val
Set the value associated with C<path> to C<value>.
=head2 blockdev-flushbufs
blockdev-flushbufs device
This tells the kernel to flush internal buffers associated
with C<device>.
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-getbsz
blockdev-getbsz device
This returns the block size of a device.
(Note this is different from both I<size in blocks> and
I<filesystem block size>).
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-getro
blockdev-getro device
Returns a boolean indicating if the block device is read-only
(true if read-only, false if not).
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-getsize64
blockdev-getsize64 device
This returns the size of the device in bytes.
See also C<blockdev-getsz>.
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-getss
blockdev-getss device
This returns the size of sectors on a block device.
Usually 512, but can be larger for modern devices.
(Note, this is not the size in sectors, use C<blockdev-getsz>
for that).
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-getsz
blockdev-getsz device
This returns the size of the device in units of 512-byte sectors
(even if the sectorsize isn't 512 bytes ... weird).
See also C<blockdev-getss> for the real sector size of
the device, and C<blockdev-getsize64> for the more
useful I<size in bytes>.
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-rereadpt
blockdev-rereadpt device
Reread the partition table on C<device>.
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-setbsz
blockdev-setbsz device blocksize
This sets the block size of a device.
(Note this is different from both I<size in blocks> and
I<filesystem block size>).
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-setro
blockdev-setro device
Sets the block device named C<device> to read-only.
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 blockdev-setrw
blockdev-setrw device
Sets the block device named C<device> to read-write.
This uses the L<blockdev(8)> command.
=head2 cat
cat path
Return the contents of the file named C<path>.
Note that this function cannot correctly handle binary files
(specifically, files containing C<\0> character which is treated
as end of string). For those you need to use the C<download>
function which has a more complex interface.
Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit
of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use
FTP.
=head2 checksum
checksum csumtype path
This call computes the MD5, SHAx or CRC checksum of the
file named C<path>.
The type of checksum to compute is given by the C<csumtype>
parameter which must have one of the following values:
=over 4
=item C<crc>
Compute the cyclic redundancy check (CRC) specified by POSIX
for the C<cksum> command.
=item C<md5>
Compute the MD5 hash (using the C<md5sum> program).
=item C<sha1>
Compute the SHA1 hash (using the C<sha1sum> program).
=item C<sha224>
Compute the SHA224 hash (using the C<sha224sum> program).
=item C<sha256>
Compute the SHA256 hash (using the C<sha256sum> program).
=item C<sha384>
Compute the SHA384 hash (using the C<sha384sum> program).
=item C<sha512>
Compute the SHA512 hash (using the C<sha512sum> program).
=back
The checksum is returned as a printable string.
=head2 chmod
chmod mode path
Change the mode (permissions) of C<path> to C<mode>. Only
numeric modes are supported.
=head2 chown
chown owner group path
Change the file owner to C<owner> and group to C<group>.
Only numeric uid and gid are supported. If you want to use
names, you will need to locate and parse the password file
yourself (Augeas support makes this relatively easy).
=head2 command
command 'arguments ...'
This call runs a command from the guest filesystem. The
filesystem must be mounted, and must contain a compatible
operating system (ie. something Linux, with the same
or compatible processor architecture).
The single parameter is an argv-style list of arguments.
The first element is the name of the program to run.
Subsequent elements are parameters. The list must be
non-empty (ie. must contain a program name).
The C<$PATH> environment variable will contain at least
C</usr/bin> and C</bin>. If you require a program from
another location, you should provide the full path in the
first parameter.
Shared libraries and data files required by the program
must be available on filesystems which are mounted in the
correct places. It is the caller's responsibility to ensure
all filesystems that are needed are mounted at the right
locations.
=head2 command-lines
command-lines 'arguments ...'
This is the same as C<command>, but splits the
result into a list of lines.
=head2 config
config qemuparam qemuvalue
This can be used to add arbitrary qemu command line parameters
of the form C<-param value>. Actually it's not quite arbitrary - we
prevent you from setting some parameters which would interfere with
parameters that we use.
The first character of C<param> string must be a C<-> (dash).
C<value> can be NULL.
=head2 cp
cp src dest
This copies a file from C<src> to C<dest> where C<dest> is
either a destination filename or destination directory.
=head2 cp-a
cp-a src dest
This copies a file or directory from C<src> to C<dest>
recursively using the C<cp -a> command.
=head2 debug
debug subcmd 'extraargs ...'
The C<debug> command exposes some internals of
C<guestfsd> (the guestfs daemon) that runs inside the
qemu subprocess.
There is no comprehensive help for this command. You have
to look at the file C<daemon/debug.c> in the libguestfs source
to find out what you can do.
=head2 dmesg
dmesg
This returns the kernel messages (C<dmesg> 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<set-verbose> or by setting
the environment variable C<LIBGUESTFS_DEBUG=1> before
running the program.
=head2 download
download remotefilename (filename|-)
Download file C<remotefilename> and save it as C<filename>
on the local machine.
C<filename> can also be a named pipe.
See also C<upload>, C<cat>.
Use C<-> instead of a filename to read/write from stdin/stdout.
=head2 drop-caches
drop-caches whattodrop
This instructs the guest kernel to drop its page cache,
and/or dentries and inode caches. The parameter C<whattodrop>
tells the kernel what precisely to drop, see
L<http://linux-mm.org/Drop_Caches>
Setting C<whattodrop> to 3 should drop everything.
This automatically calls L<sync(2)> before the operation,
so that the maximum guest memory is freed.
=head2 exists
exists path
This returns C<true> if and only if there is a file, directory
(or anything) with the given C<path> name.
See also C<is-file>, C<is-dir>, C<stat>.
=head2 file
file path
This call uses the standard L<file(1)> command to determine
the type or contents of the file. This also works on devices,
for example to find out whether a partition contains a filesystem.
The exact command which runs is C<file -bsL path>. Note in
particular that the filename is not prepended to the output
(the C<-b> option).
=head2 fsck
fsck fstype device
This runs the filesystem checker (fsck) on C<device> which
should have filesystem type C<fstype>.
The returned integer is the status. See L<fsck(8)> for the
list of status codes from C<fsck>.
Notes:
=over 4
=item *
Multiple status codes can be summed together.
=item *
A non-zero return code can mean "success", for example if
errors have been corrected on the filesystem.
=item *
Checking or repairing NTFS volumes is not supported
(by linux-ntfs).
=back
This command is entirely equivalent to running C<fsck -a -t fstype device>.
=head2 get-autosync
get-autosync
Get the autosync flag.
=head2 get-e2label
get-e2label device
This returns the ext2/3/4 filesystem label of the filesystem on
C<device>.
=head2 get-e2uuid
get-e2uuid device
This returns the ext2/3/4 filesystem UUID of the filesystem on
C<device>.
=head2 get-path
get-path
Return the current search path.
This is always non-NULL. If it wasn't set already, then this will
return the default path.
=head2 get-qemu
get-qemu
Return the current qemu binary.
This is always non-NULL. If it wasn't set already, then this will
return the default qemu binary name.
=head2 get-state
get-state
This returns the current state as an opaque integer. This is
only useful for printing debug and internal error messages.
For more information on states, see L<guestfs(3)>.
=head2 get-verbose
get-verbose
This returns the verbose messages flag.
=head2 grub-install
grub-install root device
This command installs GRUB (the Grand Unified Bootloader) on
C<device>, with the root directory being C<root>.
=head2 is-busy
is-busy
This returns true iff this handle is busy processing a command
(in the C<BUSY> state).
For more information on states, see L<guestfs(3)>.
=head2 is-config
is-config
This returns true iff this handle is being configured
(in the C<CONFIG> state).
For more information on states, see L<guestfs(3)>.
=head2 is-dir
is-dir path
This returns C<true> if and only if there is a directory
with the given C<path> name. Note that it returns false for
other objects like files.
See also C<stat>.
=head2 is-file
is-file path
This returns C<true> if and only if there is a file
with the given C<path> name. Note that it returns false for
other objects like directories.
See also C<stat>.
=head2 is-launching
is-launching
This returns true iff this handle is launching the subprocess
(in the C<LAUNCHING> state).
For more information on states, see L<guestfs(3)>.
=head2 is-ready
is-ready
This returns true iff this handle is ready to accept commands
(in the C<READY> state).
For more information on states, see L<guestfs(3)>.
=head2 kill-subprocess
kill-subprocess
This kills the qemu subprocess. You should never need to call this.
=head2 launch | run
launch
Internally libguestfs is implemented by running a virtual machine
using L<qemu(1)>.
You should call this after configuring the handle
(eg. adding drives) but before performing any actions.
=head2 list-devices
list-devices
List all the block devices.
The full block device names are returned, eg. C</dev/sda>
=head2 list-partitions
list-partitions
List all the partitions detected on all block devices.
The full partition device names are returned, eg. C</dev/sda1>
This does not return logical volumes. For that you will need to
call C<lvs>.
=head2 ll
ll directory
List the files in C<directory> (relative to the root directory,
there is no cwd) in the format of 'ls -la'.
This command is mostly useful for interactive sessions. It
is I<not> intended that you try to parse the output string.
=head2 ls
ls directory
List the files in C<directory> (relative to the root directory,
there is no cwd). The '.' and '..' entries are not returned, but
hidden files are shown.
This command is mostly useful for interactive sessions. Programs
should probably use C<readdir> instead.
=head2 lstat
lstat path
Returns file information for the given C<path>.
This is the same as C<stat> except that if C<path>
is a symbolic link, then the link is stat-ed, not the file it
refers to.
This is the same as the C<lstat(2)> system call.
=head2 lvcreate
lvcreate logvol volgroup mbytes
This creates an LVM volume group called C<logvol>
on the volume group C<volgroup>, with C<size> megabytes.
=head2 lvm-remove-all
lvm-remove-all
This command removes all LVM logical volumes, volume groups
and physical volumes.
B<This command is dangerous. Without careful use you
can easily destroy all your data>.
=head2 lvremove
lvremove device
Remove an LVM logical volume C<device>, where C<device> is
the path to the LV, such as C</dev/VG/LV>.
You can also remove all LVs in a volume group by specifying
the VG name, C</dev/VG>.
=head2 lvs
lvs
List all the logical volumes detected. This is the equivalent
of the L<lvs(8)> command.
This returns a list of the logical volume device names
(eg. C</dev/VolGroup00/LogVol00>).
See also C<lvs-full>.
=head2 lvs-full
lvs-full
List all the logical volumes detected. This is the equivalent
of the L<lvs(8)> command. The "full" version includes all fields.
=head2 mkdir
mkdir path
Create a directory named C<path>.
=head2 mkdir-p
mkdir-p path
Create a directory named C<path>, creating any parent directories
as necessary. This is like the C<mkdir -p> shell command.
=head2 mkfs
mkfs fstype device
This creates a filesystem on C<device> (usually a partition
of LVM logical volume). The filesystem type is C<fstype>, for
example C<ext3>.
=head2 mount
mount device mountpoint
Mount a guest disk at a position in the filesystem. Block devices
are named C</dev/sda>, C</dev/sdb> and so on, as they were added to
the guest. If those block devices contain partitions, they will have
the usual names (eg. C</dev/sda1>). Also LVM C</dev/VG/LV>-style
names can be used.
The rules are the same as for L<mount(2)>: A filesystem must
first be mounted on C</> before others can be mounted. Other
filesystems can only be mounted on directories which already
exist.
The mounted filesystem is writable, if we have sufficient permissions
on the underlying device.
The filesystem options C<sync> and C<noatime> are set with this
call, in order to improve reliability.
=head2 mount-options
mount-options options device mountpoint
This is the same as the C<mount> command, but it
allows you to set the mount options as for the
L<mount(8)> I<-o> flag.
=head2 mount-ro
mount-ro device mountpoint
This is the same as the C<mount> command, but it
mounts the filesystem with the read-only (I<-o ro>) flag.
=head2 mount-vfs
mount-vfs options vfstype device mountpoint
This is the same as the C<mount> command, but it
allows you to set both the mount options and the vfstype
as for the L<mount(8)> I<-o> and I<-t> flags.
=head2 mounts
mounts
This returns the list of currently mounted filesystems. It returns
the list of devices (eg. C</dev/sda1>, C</dev/VG/LV>).
Some internal mounts are not shown.
=head2 mv
mv src dest
This moves a file from C<src> to C<dest> where C<dest> is
either a destination filename or destination directory.
=head2 ping-daemon
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.
=head2 pvcreate
pvcreate device
This creates an LVM physical volume on the named C<device>,
where C<device> should usually be a partition name such
as C</dev/sda1>.
=head2 pvremove
pvremove device
This wipes a physical volume C<device> so that LVM will no longer
recognise it.
The implementation uses the C<pvremove> command which refuses to
wipe physical volumes that contain any volume groups, so you have
to remove those first.
=head2 pvs
pvs
List all the physical volumes detected. This is the equivalent
of the L<pvs(8)> command.
This returns a list of just the device names that contain
PVs (eg. C</dev/sda2>).
See also C<pvs-full>.
=head2 pvs-full
pvs-full
List all the physical volumes detected. This is the equivalent
of the L<pvs(8)> command. The "full" version includes all fields.
=head2 read-lines
read-lines path
Return the contents of the file named C<path>.
The file contents are returned as a list of lines. Trailing
C<LF> and C<CRLF> character sequences are I<not> returned.
Note that this function cannot correctly handle binary files
(specifically, files containing C<\0> character which is treated
as end of line). For those you need to use the C<read-file>
function which has a more complex interface.
=head2 rm
rm path
Remove the single file C<path>.
=head2 rm-rf
rm-rf path
Remove the file or directory C<path>, recursively removing the
contents if its a directory. This is like the C<rm -rf> shell
command.
=head2 rmdir
rmdir path
Remove the single directory C<path>.
=head2 set-autosync | autosync
set-autosync true|false
If C<autosync> is true, this enables autosync. Libguestfs will make a
best effort attempt to run C<umount-all> followed by
C<sync> when the handle is closed
(also if the program exits without closing handles).
This is disabled by default (except in guestfish where it is
enabled by default).
=head2 set-e2label
set-e2label device label
This sets the ext2/3/4 filesystem label of the filesystem on
C<device> to C<label>. Filesystem labels are limited to
16 characters.
You can use either C<tune2fs-l> or C<get-e2label>
to return the existing label on a filesystem.
=head2 set-e2uuid
set-e2uuid device uuid
This sets the ext2/3/4 filesystem UUID of the filesystem on
C<device> to C<uuid>. The format of the UUID and alternatives
such as C<clear>, C<random> and C<time> are described in the
L<tune2fs(8)> manpage.
You can use either C<tune2fs-l> or C<get-e2uuid>
to return the existing UUID of a filesystem.
=head2 set-path | path
set-path path
Set the path that libguestfs searches for kernel and initrd.img.
The default is C<$libdir/guestfs> unless overridden by setting
C<LIBGUESTFS_PATH> environment variable.
The string C<path> is stashed in the libguestfs handle, so the caller
must make sure it remains valid for the lifetime of the handle.
Setting C<path> to C<NULL> restores the default path.
=head2 set-qemu | qemu
set-qemu qemu
Set the qemu binary that we will use.
The default is chosen when the library was compiled by the
configure script.
You can also override this by setting the C<LIBGUESTFS_QEMU>
environment variable.
The string C<qemu> is stashed in the libguestfs handle, so the caller
must make sure it remains valid for the lifetime of the handle.
Setting C<qemu> to C<NULL> restores the default qemu binary.
=head2 set-verbose | verbose
set-verbose true|false
If C<verbose> is true, this turns on verbose messages (to C<stderr>).
Verbose messages are disabled unless the environment variable
C<LIBGUESTFS_DEBUG> is defined and set to C<1>.
=head2 sfdisk
sfdisk device cyls heads sectors 'lines ...'
This is a direct interface to the L<sfdisk(8)> program for creating
partitions on block devices.
C<device> should be a block device, for example C</dev/sda>.
C<cyls>, C<heads> and C<sectors> are the number of cylinders, heads
and sectors on the device, which are passed directly to sfdisk as
the I<-C>, I<-H> and I<-S> parameters. If you pass C<0> for any
of these, then the corresponding parameter is omitted. Usually for
'large' disks, you can just pass C<0> for these, but for small
(floppy-sized) disks, sfdisk (or rather, the kernel) cannot work
out the right geometry and you will need to tell it.
C<lines> is a list of lines that we feed to C<sfdisk>. For more
information refer to the L<sfdisk(8)> manpage.
To create a single partition occupying the whole disk, you would
pass C<lines> as a single element list, when the single element being
the string C<,> (comma).
B<This command is dangerous. Without careful use you
can easily destroy all your data>.
=head2 stat
stat path
Returns file information for the given C<path>.
This is the same as the C<stat(2)> system call.
=head2 statvfs
statvfs path
Returns file system statistics for any mounted file system.
C<path> should be a file or directory in the mounted file system
(typically it is the mount point itself, but it doesn't need to be).
This is the same as the C<statvfs(2)> system call.
=head2 sync
sync
This syncs the disk, so that any writes are flushed through to the
underlying disk image.
You should always call this if you have modified a disk image, before
closing the handle.
=head2 tar-in
tar-in (tarfile|-) directory
This command uploads and unpacks local file C<tarfile> (an
I<uncompressed> tar file) into C<directory>.
To upload a compressed tarball, use C<tgz-in>.
Use C<-> instead of a filename to read/write from stdin/stdout.
=head2 tar-out
tar-out directory (tarfile|-)
This command packs the contents of C<directory> and downloads
it to local file C<tarfile>.
To download a compressed tarball, use C<tgz-out>.
Use C<-> instead of a filename to read/write from stdin/stdout.
=head2 tgz-in
tgz-in (tarball|-) directory
This command uploads and unpacks local file C<tarball> (a
I<gzip compressed> tar file) into C<directory>.
To upload an uncompressed tarball, use C<tar-in>.
Use C<-> instead of a filename to read/write from stdin/stdout.
=head2 tgz-out
tgz-out directory (tarball|-)
This command packs the contents of C<directory> and downloads
it to local file C<tarball>.
To download an uncompressed tarball, use C<tar-out>.
Use C<-> instead of a filename to read/write from stdin/stdout.
=head2 touch
touch path
Touch acts like the L<touch(1)> command. It can be used to
update the timestamps on a file, or, if the file does not exist,
to create a new zero-length file.
=head2 tune2fs-l
tune2fs-l device
This returns the contents of the ext2, ext3 or ext4 filesystem
superblock on C<device>.
It is the same as running C<tune2fs -l device>. See L<tune2fs(8)>
manpage for more details. The list of fields returned isn't
clearly defined, and depends on both the version of C<tune2fs>
that libguestfs was built against, and the filesystem itself.
=head2 umount | unmount
umount pathordevice
This unmounts the given filesystem. The filesystem may be
specified either by its mountpoint (path) or the device which
contains the filesystem.
=head2 umount-all | unmount-all
umount-all
This unmounts all mounted filesystems.
Some internal mounts are not unmounted by this call.
=head2 upload
upload (filename|-) remotefilename
Upload local file C<filename> to C<remotefilename> on the
filesystem.
C<filename> can also be a named pipe.
See also C<download>.
Use C<-> instead of a filename to read/write from stdin/stdout.
=head2 vgcreate
vgcreate volgroup 'physvols ...'
This creates an LVM volume group called C<volgroup>
from the non-empty list of physical volumes C<physvols>.
=head2 vgremove
vgremove vgname
Remove an LVM volume group C<vgname>, (for example C<VG>).
This also forcibly removes all logical volumes in the volume
group (if any).
=head2 vgs
vgs
List all the volumes groups detected. This is the equivalent
of the L<vgs(8)> command.
This returns a list of just the volume group names that were
detected (eg. C<VolGroup00>).
See also C<vgs-full>.
=head2 vgs-full
vgs-full
List all the volumes groups detected. This is the equivalent
of the L<vgs(8)> command. The "full" version includes all fields.
=head2 write-file
write-file path content size
This call creates a file called C<path>. The contents of the
file is the string C<content> (which can contain any 8 bit data),
with length C<size>.
As a special case, if C<size> is C<0>
then the length is calculated using C<strlen> (so in this case
the content cannot contain embedded ASCII NULs).
Because of the message protocol, there is a transfer limit
of somewhere between 2MB and 4MB. To transfer large files you should use
FTP.
=head2 zero
zero device
This command writes zeroes over the first few blocks of C<device>.
How many blocks are zeroed isn't specified (but it's I<not> enough
to securely wipe the device). It should be sufficient to remove
any partition tables, filesystem superblocks and so on.
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