=head1 NAME virt-diff - Differences between files in two virtual machines =head1 SYNOPSIS virt-diff [--options] -d domain1 -D domain2 virt-diff [--options] -a disk1.img [-a ...] -A disk2.img [-A ...] =head1 DESCRIPTION C lists the differences between files in two virtual machines or disk images. The usual use case is to show the changes in a VM after it has been running for a while, by taking a snapshot, running the VM, and then using this tool to show what changed between the new VM state and the old snapshot. This tool will find differences in filenames, file sizes, checksums, extended attributes, file content and more from a virtual machine or disk image. However it B look at the boot loader, unused space between partitions or within filesystems, "hidden" sectors and so on. In other words, it is not a security or forensics tool. To specify two guests, you have to use the I<-a> or I<-d> option(s) for the first guest, and the I<-A> or I<-D> option(s) for the second guest. The common case is: virt-diff -a old.img -A new.img or using names known to libvirt: virt-diff -d oldguest -D newguest =head1 OPTIONS =over 4 =item B<--help> Display brief help. =item B<-a> file =item B<--add> file Add I which should be a disk image from the first virtual machine. If the virtual machine has multiple block devices, you must supply all of them with separate I<-a> options. The format of the disk image is auto-detected. To override this and force a particular format use the I<--format=..> option. =item B<-a> URI =item B<--add> URI Add a remote disk. See L. =item B<--all> Same as I<--extra-stats> I<--times> I<--uids> I<--xattrs>. =item B<--atime> The default is to ignore changes in file access times, since those are unlikely to be interesting. Using this flag shows atime differences as well. =item B<-A> file =item B<-A> URI Add a disk image from the second virtual machine. =item B<--checksum> =item B<--checksum=crc|md5|sha1|sha224|sha256|sha384|sha512> Use a checksum over file contents to detect when regular files have changed content. With no argument, this defaults to using I. Using an argument, you can select the checksum type to use. If the flag is omitted then file times and size are used to determine if a file has changed. =item B<-c> URI =item B<--connect> URI If using libvirt, connect to the given I. If omitted, then we connect to the default libvirt hypervisor. If you specify guest block devices directly (I<-a>), then libvirt is not used at all. =item B<--csv> Write out the results in CSV format (comma-separated values). This format can be imported easily into databases and spreadsheets, but read L below. =item B<--dir-links> The default is to ignore changed in the number of links in directory entries, since those are unlikely to be interesting. Using this flag shows changes to the nlink field of directories. =item B<--dir-times> The default is to ignore changed times on directory entries, since those are unlikely to be interesting. Using this flag shows changes to the time fields of directories. =item B<-d> guest =item B<--domain> guest Add all the disks from the named libvirt guest, as the first guest. Domain UUIDs can be used instead of names. =item B<-D> guest Add all the disks from the named libvirt guest, as the second guest. Domain UUIDs can be used instead of names. =item B<--echo-keys> When prompting for keys and passphrases, virt-diff 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. =item B<--extra-stats> Display extra stats. =item B<--format=raw|qcow2|..> =item B<--format> The default for the I<-a>/I<-A> option is to auto-detect the format of the disk image. Using this forces the disk format for I<-a>/I<-A> options which follow on the command line. Using I<--format> with no argument switches back to auto-detection for subsequent I<-a>/I<-A> options. For example: virt-diff --format=raw -a disk.img [...] forces raw format (no auto-detection) for F. virt-diff --format=raw -a disk.img --format -a another.img [...] forces raw format (no auto-detection) for F and reverts to auto-detection for F. If you have untrusted raw-format guest disk images, you should use this option to specify the disk format. This avoids a possible security problem with malicious guests (CVE-2010-3851). =item B<-h> =item B<--human-readable> Display file sizes in human-readable format. =item B<--keys-from-stdin> Read key or passphrase parameters from stdin. The default is to try to read passphrases from the user by opening F. =item B<--times> Display time fields. =item B<--time-days> Display time fields as days before now (negative if in the future). Note that C<0> in output means "up to 1 day before now", or that the age of the file is between 0 and 86399 seconds. =item B<--time-relative> Display time fields as seconds before now (negative if in the future). =item B<--time-t> Display time fields as seconds since the Unix epoch. =item B<--uids> Display UID and GID fields. =item B<-v> =item B<--verbose> Enable verbose messages for debugging. =item B<-V> =item B<--version> Display version number and exit. =item B<-x> Enable tracing of libguestfs API calls. =item B<--xattrs> Display extended attributes. =back =head1 NOTE ABOUT CSV FORMAT Comma-separated values (CSV) is a deceptive format. It I like it should be easy to parse, but it is definitely not easy to parse. Myth: Just split fields at commas. Reality: This does I work reliably. This example has two columns: "foo,bar",baz Myth: Read the file one line at a time. Reality: This does I work reliably. This example has one row: "foo bar",baz For shell scripts, use C (L also packaged in major Linux distributions). For other languages, use a CSV processing library (eg. C for Perl or Python’s built-in csv library). Most spreadsheets and databases can import CSV directly. =head1 EXIT STATUS This program returns 0 if successful, or non-zero if there was an error. =head1 SEE ALSO L, L, L, L, L, L, L. =head1 AUTHOR Richard W.M. Jones L =head1 COPYRIGHT Copyright (C) 2009-2017 Red Hat Inc.