Provided by: libguestfs-tools_1.40.2-7ubuntu5_amd64 bug

NAME

       virt-inspector - Display operating system version and other information about a virtual machine

SYNOPSIS

        virt-inspector [--options] -d domname

        virt-inspector [--options] -a disk.img [-a disk.img ...]

       Old-style:

        virt-inspector domname

        virt-inspector disk.img [disk.img ...]

DESCRIPTION

       virt-inspector examines a virtual machine or disk image and tries to determine the version of the
       operating system and other information about the virtual machine.

       Virt-inspector produces XML output for feeding into other programs.

       In the normal usage, use "virt-inspector -d domname" where "domname" is the libvirt domain (see: "virsh
       list --all").

       You can also run virt-inspector directly on disk images from a single virtual machine.  Use
       "virt-inspector -a disk.img".  In rare cases a domain has several block devices, in which case you should
       list several -a options one after another, with the first corresponding to the guest’s /dev/sda, the
       second to the guest’s /dev/sdb and so on.

       You can also run virt-inspector on install disks, live CDs, bootable USB keys and similar.

       Virt-inspector can only inspect and report upon one domain at a time.  To inspect several virtual
       machines, you have to run virt-inspector several times (for example, from a shell script for-loop).

       Because virt-inspector needs direct access to guest images, it won’t normally work over remote libvirt
       connections.

       All of the information available from virt-inspector is also available through the core libguestfs
       inspection API (see "INSPECTION" in guestfs(3)).  The same information can also be fetched using
       guestfish or via libguestfs bindings in many programming languages (see "GETTING INSPECTION DATA FROM THE
       LIBGUESTFS API").

OPTIONS

       --help
           Display brief help.

       -a file
       --add file
           Add  file  which  should be a disk image from a virtual machine.  If the virtual machine has multiple
           block devices, you must supply all of them with separate -a options.

           The format of the disk image is auto-detected.  To override this and force a  particular  format  use
           the --format=.. option.

       -a URI
       --add URI
           Add a remote disk.  See "ADDING REMOTE STORAGE" in guestfish(1).

       -c URI
       --connect URI
           If  using  libvirt,  connect  to  the  given URI.  If omitted, then we connect to the default libvirt
           hypervisor.

           Libvirt is only used if you specify a "domname" on the command line.   If  you  specify  guest  block
           devices directly (-a), then libvirt is not used at all.

       -d guest
       --domain guest
           Add all the disks from the named libvirt guest.  Domain UUIDs can be used instead of names.

       --echo-keys
           When  prompting for keys and passphrases, virt-inspector normally turns 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.

       --format=raw|qcow2|..
       --format
           Specify  the  format of disk images given on the command line.  If this is omitted then the format is
           autodetected from the content of the disk image.

           If disk images are requested from libvirt, then this program asks libvirt for this  information.   In
           this case, the value of the format parameter is ignored.

           If  working  with  untrusted  raw-format  guest  disk  images, you should ensure the format is always
           specified.

       --key SELECTOR
           Specify a key for LUKS, to automatically open a LUKS device when using  the  inspection.   "SELECTOR"
           can be in one of the following formats:

           --key "DEVICE":key:KEY_STRING
               Use the specified "KEY_STRING" as passphrase.

           --key "DEVICE":file:FILENAME
               Read the passphrase from FILENAME.

       --keys-from-stdin
           Read  key  or  passphrase  parameters from stdin.  The default is to try to read passphrases from the
           user by opening /dev/tty.

       --no-applications
           By default the output of virt-inspector includes the list of all the applications  installed  in  the
           guest, if available.

           Specify this option to disable this part of the resulting XML.

       --no-icon
           By default the output of virt-inspector includes the icon of the guest, if available (see "icon").

           Specify this option to disable this part of the resulting XML.

       -v
       --verbose
           Enable verbose messages for debugging.

       -V
       --version
           Display version number and exit.

       -x  Enable tracing of libguestfs API calls.

       --xpath query
           Perform  an  XPath  query  on  the  XML on stdin, and print the result on stdout.  In this mode virt-
           inspector simply runs an XPath query; all  other  inspection  functions  are  disabled.   See  "XPATH
           QUERIES" below for some examples.

OLD-STYLE COMMAND LINE ARGUMENTS

       Previous versions of virt-inspector allowed you to write either:

        virt-inspector disk.img [disk.img ...]

       or

        virt-inspector guestname

       whereas  in  this  version  you should use -a or -d respectively to avoid the confusing case where a disk
       image might have the same name as a guest.

       For compatibility the old style is still supported.

XML FORMAT

       The virt-inspector XML is described precisely in a RELAX  NG  schema  file  virt-inspector.rng  which  is
       supplied with libguestfs.  This section is just an overview.

       The top-level element is <operatingsystems>, and it contains one or more <operatingsystem> elements.  You
       would  only  see  more  than one <operatingsystem> element if the virtual machine is multi-boot, which is
       vanishingly rare in real world VMs.

   <operatingsystem>
       In the <operatingsystem> tag are  various  optional  fields  that  describe  the  operating  system,  its
       architecture, the descriptive "product name" string, the type of OS and so on, as in this example:

        <operatingsystems>
          <operatingsystem>
            <root>/dev/sda2</root>
            <name>windows</name>
            <arch>i386</arch>
            <distro>windows</distro>
            <product_name>Windows 7 Enterprise</product_name>
            <product_variant>Client</product_variant>
            <major_version>6</major_version>
            <minor_version>1</minor_version>
            <windows_systemroot>/Windows</windows_systemroot>

       In  brief, <name> is the class of operating system (something like "linux" or "windows"), <distro> is the
       distribution (eg. "fedora" but many other distros are recognized) and <arch> is the  guest  architecture.
       The  other  fields  are  fairly  self-explanatory,  but  because these fields are taken directly from the
       libguestfs inspection API you can find precise information from "INSPECTION" in guestfs(3).

       The <root> element is the root filesystem device, but from the point of view of libguestfs (block devices
       may have completely different names inside the VM itself).

   <mountpoints>
       Un*x-like guests typically have multiple filesystems which are mounted at various mountpoints, and  these
       are described in the <mountpoints> element which looks like this:

        <operatingsystems>
          <operatingsystem>
            ...
            <mountpoints>
              <mountpoint dev="/dev/vg_f13x64/lv_root">/</mountpoint>
              <mountpoint dev="/dev/sda1">/boot</mountpoint>
            </mountpoints>

       As with <root>, devices are from the point of view of libguestfs, and may have completely different names
       inside the guest.  Only mountable filesystems appear in this list, not things like swap devices.

   <filesystems>
       <filesystems> is like <mountpoints> but covers all filesystems belonging to the guest, including swap and
       empty partitions.  (In the rare case of a multi-boot guest, it covers filesystems belonging to this OS or
       shared with this OS and other OSes).

       You might see something like this:

        <operatingsystems>
          <operatingsystem>
            ...
            <filesystems>
              <filesystem dev="/dev/vg_f13x64/lv_root">
                <type>ext4</type>
                <label>Fedora-13-x86_64</label>
                <uuid>e6a4db1e-15c2-477b-ac2a-699181c396aa</uuid>
              </filesystem>

       The optional elements within <filesystem> are the filesystem type, the label, and the UUID.

   <applications>
       The  related  elements  <package_format>,  <package_management>  and <applications> describe applications
       installed in the virtual machine.

       <package_format>, if present, describes the packaging system used.  Typical values  would  be  "rpm"  and
       "deb".

       <package_management>, if present, describes the package manager.  Typical values include "yum", "up2date"
       and "apt"

       <applications> lists the packages or applications installed.

        <operatingsystems>
          <operatingsystem>
            ...
            <applications>
              <application>
                <name>coreutils</name>
                <version>8.5</version>
                <release>1</release>
              </application>

       The  version  and  release fields may not be available for some types guests.  Other fields are possible,
       see "guestfs_inspect_list_applications" in guestfs(3).

   <drive_mappings>
       For operating systems like Windows which use drive letters, virt-inspector is able to find out how  drive
       letters map to filesystems.

        <operatingsystems>
          <operatingsystem>
            ...
            <drive_mappings>
              <drive_mapping name="C">/dev/sda2</drive_mapping>
              <drive_mapping name="E">/dev/sdb1</drive_mapping>
            </drive_mappings>

       In the example above, drive C maps to the filesystem on the second partition on the first disk, and drive
       E maps to the filesystem on the first partition on the second disk.

       Note  that  this  only  covers  permanent  local  filesystem  mappings,  not  things like network shares.
       Furthermore NTFS volume mount points may not be listed here.

   <icon>
       Virt-inspector is sometimes able to extract an icon or logo for the  guest.   The  icon  is  returned  as
       base64-encoded PNG data.  Note that the icon can be very large and high quality.

        <operatingsystems>
          <operatingsystem>
            ...
            <icon>
              iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAAGAAAABg[.......]
              [... many lines of base64 data ...]
            </icon>

       To  display  the  icon, you have to extract it and convert the base64 data back to a binary file.  Use an
       XPath query or simply an editor to extract the data, then use the coreutils base64(1) program to  do  the
       conversion back to a PNG file:

        base64 -i -d < icon.data > icon.png

XPATH QUERIES

       Virt-inspector  includes  built  in  support  for  running XPath queries.  The reason for including XPath
       support directly in virt-inspector is simply that there are no good and  widely  available  command  line
       programs  that can do XPath queries.  The only good one is xmlstarlet(1) and that is not available on Red
       Hat Enterprise Linux.

       To perform an XPath query, use the --xpath option.  Note that in this mode, virt-inspector  simply  reads
       XML  from  stdin  and  outputs the query result on stdout.  All other inspection features are disabled in
       this mode.

       For example:

        $ virt-inspector -d Guest | virt-inspector --xpath '//filesystems'
        <filesystems>
             <filesystem dev="/dev/vg_f13x64/lv_root">
               <type>ext4</type>
        [...]

        $ virt-inspector -d Guest | \
            virt-inspector --xpath "string(//filesystem[@dev='/dev/sda1']/type)"
        ext4

        $ virt-inspector -d Guest | \
            virt-inspector --xpath 'string(//icon)' | base64 -i -d | display -
        [displays the guest icon, if there is one]

GETTING INSPECTION DATA FROM THE LIBGUESTFS API

       In early versions of libguestfs, virt-inspector was a large Perl script that  contained  many  heuristics
       for  inspecting  guests.   This  had  several  problems: in order to do inspection from other tools (like
       guestfish) we had to call out to this Perl script; and it  privileged  Perl  over  other  languages  that
       libguestfs supports.

       By  libguestfs  1.8 we had rewritten the Perl code in C, and incorporated it all into the core libguestfs
       API (guestfs(3)).  Now virt-inspector is simply a thin C program  over  the  core  C  API.   All  of  the
       inspection  information  is  available  from all programming languages that libguestfs supports, and from
       guestfish.

       For a description of the C inspection API, read "INSPECTION" in guestfs(3).

       For example code using the C inspection API, look for inspect-vm.c which ships with libguestfs.

       inspect-vm.c has also been translated into other languages.   For  example,  inspect_vm.pl  is  the  Perl
       translation,  and  there are other translations for OCaml, Python, etc.  See "USING LIBGUESTFS WITH OTHER
       PROGRAMMING LANGUAGES" in guestfs(3) for a list of man pages which contain this example code.

   GETTING INSPECTION DATA FROM GUESTFISH
       If you use the guestfish -i option, then the main C inspection API "guestfs_inspect_os" in guestfs(3)  is
       called.   This  is  equivalent  to  the guestfish command "inspect-os".  You can also call this guestfish
       command by hand.

       "inspect-os" performs inspection on the current disk image,  returning  the  list  of  operating  systems
       found.   Each  OS  is  represented by its root filesystem device.  In the majority of cases, this command
       prints nothing (no OSes found), or a single root device, but beware that it can print multiple  lines  if
       there are multiple OSes or if there is an install CD attached to the guest.

        $ guestfish --ro -a F15x32.img
        ><fs> run
        ><fs> inspect-os
        /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root

       Using the root device, you can fetch further information about the guest:

        ><fs> inspect-get-type /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root
        linux
        ><fs> inspect-get-distro /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root
        fedora
        ><fs> inspect-get-major-version /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root
        15
        ><fs> inspect-get-product-name /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root
        Fedora release 15 (Lovelock)

       Limitations  of  guestfish  make it hard to assign the root device to a variable (since guestfish doesn't
       have variables), so if you want to do this reproducibly you are better off writing a script using one  of
       the other languages that the libguestfs API supports.

       To list applications, you have to first mount up the disks:

        ><fs> inspect-get-mountpoints /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root
        /: /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root
        /boot: /dev/vda1
        ><fs> mount-ro /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root /
        ><fs> mount-ro /dev/vda1 /boot

       and then call the inspect-list-applications API:

        ><fs> inspect-list-applications /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root | head -28
        [0] = {
          app_name: ConsoleKit
          app_display_name:
          app_epoch: 0
          app_version: 0.4.5
          app_release: 1.fc15
          app_install_path:
          app_trans_path:
          app_publisher:
          app_url:
          app_source_package:
          app_summary:
          app_description:
        }
        [1] = {
          app_name: ConsoleKit-libs
          app_display_name:
          app_epoch: 0
          app_version: 0.4.5
          app_release: 1.fc15
          app_install_path:
          app_trans_path:
          app_publisher:
          app_url:
          app_source_package:
          app_summary:
          app_description:
        }

       To display an icon for the guest, note that filesystems must also be mounted as above.  You can then do:

        ><fs> inspect-get-icon /dev/vg_f15x32/lv_root | display -

OLD VERSIONS OF VIRT-INSPECTOR

       As  described above, early versions of libguestfs shipped with a different virt-inspector program written
       in Perl (the current version is written in C).  The XML output of the Perl virt-inspector  was  different
       and it could also output in other formats like text.

       The old virt-inspector is no longer supported or shipped with libguestfs.

       To  confuse  matters  further,  in Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6 we ship two versions of virt-inspector with
       different names:

        virt-inspector     Old Perl version.
        virt-inspector2    New C version.

EXIT STATUS

       This program returns 0 if successful, or non-zero if there was an error.

SEE ALSO

       guestfs(3), guestfish(1), http://www.w3.org/TR/xpath/, base64(1), xmlstarlet(1), http://libguestfs.org/.

AUTHORS

       •   Richard W.M. Jones http://people.redhat.com/~rjones/

       •   Matthew Booth mbooth@redhat.com

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright (C) 2010-2012 Red Hat Inc.

LICENSE

       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  it  under  the  terms  of  the  GNU
       General  Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
       (at your option) any later version.

       This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY  WARRANTY;  without  even
       the  implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the GNU General Public
       License for more details.

       You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not,  write
       to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.

BUGS

       To      get      a      list      of      bugs      against      libguestfs,      use      this     link:
       https://bugzilla.redhat.com/buglist.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools

       To      report      a      new       bug       against       libguestfs,       use       this       link:
       https://bugzilla.redhat.com/enter_bug.cgi?component=libguestfs&product=Virtualization+Tools

       When reporting a bug, please supply:

       •   The version of libguestfs.

       •   Where you got libguestfs (eg. which Linux distro, compiled from source, etc)

       •   Describe the bug accurately and give a way to reproduce it.

       •   Run libguestfs-test-tool(1) and paste the complete, unedited output into the bug report.

libguestfs-1.40.2                                  2019-02-07                                  virt-inspector(1)