Difference between revisions of "Guestmount"
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− | -i --inspector | + | -i --inspector inspect the disks looking for an operating system and mount filesystems as they would be mounted on the real virtual machine |
guestmount -a path_to_image.[[qcow2]] -i --ro /mount_point | guestmount -a path_to_image.[[qcow2]] -i --ro /mount_point |
Revision as of 15:24, 4 February 2020
guestmount -a path_to_image.qcow2 -i --ro /mount_point
-i --inspector inspect the disks looking for an operating system and mount filesystems as they would be mounted on the real virtual machine
guestmount -a path_to_image.qcow2 -i --ro /mount_point
guestmount: no operating system was found on this disk If using guestfish '-i' option, remove this option and instead use the commands 'run' followed by 'list-filesystems'. You can then mount filesystems you want by hand using the 'mount' or 'mount-ro' command. If using guestmount '-i', remove this option and choose the filesystem(s) you want to see by manually adding '-m' option(s). Use 'virt-filesystems' to see what filesystems are available. If using other virt tools, this disk image won't work with these tools. Use the guestfis
See also
- KVM, Installation, QEMU,
virsh
,virtinst
,libguestfs-tools
, libvirt, qemu, Red Hat Virtualization (RHV), MacVTap, Virtio, oVirt, KVM services, KVM networking, KVM graphics, CPU, KVM on ARM libguestfs-tools
:virt-sysprep
,virt-clone
,virt-builder
,virt-customize
,virt-resize
,virt-rescue
,virt-sparsify
,guestmount
,guestfish
,virt-inspector
,virt-cat
,virt-log
,virt-df
,virt-ls
,virt-filesystems
,virt-list-filesystems
,virt-edit
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