On Fri, Jan 11, 2013 at 2:28 PM, Wanlong Gao <gaowanl...@cn.fujitsu.com>wrote:

> On 01/11/2013 11:39 AM, 马磊 wrote:
> >
> >
> > On Thu, Jan 10, 2013 at 8:20 PM, Daniel P. Berrange 
> > <berra...@redhat.com<mailto:
> berra...@redhat.com>> wrote:
> >
> >     On Wed, Jan 09, 2013 at 09:37:54PM +0000, Blue Swirl wrote:
> >     > On Wed, Jan 9, 2013 at 7:31 AM, 马磊 <aware....@gmail.com <mailto:
> aware....@gmail.com>> wrote:
> >     > >
> >     > >
> >     > >>> Hi,
> >     > >>>     The final effect is as follows:
> >     > >>>
> >     > >>>
> >     > >>> [malei@xentest-4-1 Fri Dec 28 ~/honeypot/xen/xen-4.1.2]$
> qemu-img-xen cat
> >     > >>> -f /1/boot.ini ~/vm-check.img
> >     > >>> [boot loader]
> >     > >>> timeout=30
> >     > >>> default=multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS
> >     > >>> [operating systems]
> >     > >>> multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows
> XP
> >     > >>> Professional" /noexecute=optin /fastdetect
> >     > >>>
> >     > >>> [malei@xentest-4-1 Fri Dec 28 ~/honeypot/xen/xen-4.1.2]$
> qemu-img-xen ls
> >     > >>> -l -d /1/ ~/vm-check.img
> >     > >>> 【name                 size(bytes) dir?      date
> >     > >>> create-time】
> >     > >>> AUTOEXEC.BAT 0                file 2010-12-22        17:30:37
> >     > >>> boot.ini               211                file 2010-12-23
>    01:24:41
> >     > >>> bootfont.bin  322730                file 2004-11-23
>  20:00:00
> >     > >>>
> >     > >>>
> >     > >>>
> >     > >>> As you see above, the patch add two sub-commands for
> qemu-img-xen:cat and
> >     > >>> ls.
> >     > >>>
> >     > >>> For details in the patch, please check the attachment.
> >     > >>>
> >     > >>>
> >     > >
> >     > > Does anyone prefer this feature?!
> >     >
> >     > Nice feature, but this approach would just clutter QEMU and give
> only
> >     > readonly FAT or NTFS support. I think a more generally useful
> approach
> >     > would be to use NBD or iSCSI to export the block device data from
> the
> >     > image file (qemu-nbd already exists) and then make a tool that uses
> >     > some combination of NBD/iSCSI client, all GRUB file systems and
> FUSE
> >     > or other user space methods to access the contents of the
> filesystem.
> >     > Probably also UML with a simple guest agent could provide
> read/write
> >     > access to any file system that Linux supports.
> >
> >     The latter is what libguestfs already provides. It boots a Linux
> kernel
> >     and mini initrd containing a guest agent, to provide APIs to do
> arbitrary
> >     manipulation of guest OS images.
> >
> >     The reason libguestfs used a linux guest was precisely to avoid
> having
> >     to re-implement drivers for every filesystem in existance like this
> >     patch is trying todo.
> >
> >     I don't think QEMU wants to be in the business of maintaining
> filesystem
> >     drivers, so I'd reject this proposed patch.
> >
> >     Regards,
> >     Daniel
> >     --
> >     |: http://berrange.com      -o-
> http://www.flickr.com/photos/dberrange/ :|
> >     |: http://libvirt.org              -o-
> http://virt-manager.org :|
> >     |: http://autobuild.org       -o-
> http://search.cpan.org/~danberr/ :|
> >     |: http://entangle-photo.org       -o-
> http://live.gnome.org/gtk-vnc :|
> >
> >
> >
> > This feature could be configured to be optional in make file
> configuration according to individual preference.
> > _In addition, the fat32 and ntfs filesystem driver will not change for a
> long time so it needs no much maintainence  once implemented._
>
> As Daniel and Stefan said, you can try to use libguestfs [libguestfs.org]
> and qemu-nbd.
> In libguestfs, we provide virt-cat, virt-ls, etc. And support all the disk
> type which QEMU supported.
>
> Thanks,
> Wanlong Gao
>
>
*I used libguest, it's startup takes too long to meet specific requirements
under some time-sensitive circumstance. *

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