On Wed, Jul 29, 2015 at 04:18:02PM +0800, Yu Liu wrote:
[...]
Let's make an example:
#guestfish -a disk.img
>run
>mount /dev/sda1 /
>write-append /a.txt "Hello\n"
>write-append /a.txt "World\n"
>cat /a.txt
Hello
World
>quit
Another try:
eval `guestfish --listen`
guestfish --remote add disk.img
guestfish --remote run
guestfish --remote mount /dev/sda1 /
guestfish --remote write-append /a.txt "Hello\n"
guestfish --remote write-append /a.txt "World\n"
guestfish --remote cat /a.txt
Hello\nWorld\n
#
libguestfs-1.20.11-11.el6.x86_64
The problem is that \n is handled "specially" by guestfish when it is
reading the ><fs> command line, but not when it is parsing commands
sent via --remote.
The way to do this is:
$ guestfish --remote write /a.txt "hello
world"
$ guestfish --remote cat /a.txt
hello
world
Note that you have to actually press the [Return] key after "hello
Probably a better plan is to use something like python remoting:
https://rwmj.wordpress.com/2013/05/07/using-libguestfs-remotely-with-pyth...
which will be more predictable.
Rich.
--
Richard Jones, Virtualization Group, Red Hat
http://people.redhat.com/~rjones
Read my programming and virtualization blog:
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