# Example showing how to create a disk image. import guestfs output = "disk.img" # All new Python code should pass python_return_dict=True # to the constructor. It indicates that your program wants # to receive Python dicts for methods in the API that return # hashtables. g = guestfs.GuestFS(python_return_dict=True) # Create a raw-format sparse disk image, 512 MB in size. g.disk_create(output, "raw", 512 * 1024 * 1024) # Set the trace flag so that we can see each libguestfs call. g.set_trace(1) # Attach the disk image to libguestfs. g.add_drive_opts(output, format="raw", readonly=0) # Run the libguestfs back-end. g.launch() # Get the list of devices. Because we only added one drive # above, we expect that this list should contain a single # element. devices = g.list_devices() assert (len(devices) == 1) # Partition the disk as one single MBR partition. g.part_disk(devices[0], "mbr") # Get the list of partitions. We expect a single element, which # is the partition we have just created. partitions = g.list_partitions() assert (len(partitions) == 1) # Create a filesystem on the partition. g.mkfs("ext4", partitions[0]) # Now mount the filesystem so that we can add files. g.mount(partitions[0], "/") # Create some files and directories. g.touch("/empty") message = "Hello, world\n" g.write("/hello", message) g.mkdir("/foo") # This one uploads the local file /etc/resolv.conf into # the disk image. g.upload("/etc/resolv.conf", "/foo/resolv.conf") # Because we wrote to the disk and we want to detect write # errors, call g.shutdown. You don't need to do this: # g.close will do it implicitly. g.shutdown() # Note also that handles are automatically closed if they are # reaped by reference counting. You only need to call close # if you want to close the handle right away. g.close()