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These APIs were an experimental feature for passing through 9p filesystems from the host to the libguestfs appliance. It was never possible to use this without hacking the qemu command line of the appliance to add such drives by hand. It also didn't fit the libguestfs model very well. And 9p is generally deprecated in upstream qemu. Note that for ABI reasons these APIs are not actually removed, they have been changed so that they always return an error. These APIs were actually hard-removed from all versions of RHEL. See-also: https://bugzilla.redhat.com/921710
This program generates a large amount of code and documentation for all the daemon actions. To add a new action there are only two files you need to change, 'actions_*.ml' to describe the interface, and daemon/<somefile>.c to write the implementation. After editing these files, build it (make -C generator) to regenerate all the output files. 'make' will rerun this automatically when necessary. IMPORTANT: This program should NOT print any warnings at compile time or run time. If it prints warnings, you should treat them as errors. OCaml tips: (1) In emacs, install tuareg-mode to display and format OCaml code correctly. 'vim' comes with a good OCaml editing mode by default. (2) Read the resources at http://ocaml.org/learn/ (3) A module called 'Foo' is defined in one or two files called 'foo.mli' and 'foo.ml' (NB: lowercase first letter). The *.mli file, if present, defines the public interface for the module. The *.ml file is the implementation. If the *.mli file is missing then everything is exported. Some notable files in this directory: actions_*.ml The libguestfs API. proc_nr.ml Procedure numbers associated with each API. structs.ml Structures returned by the API. c.ml Generate C API. <lang>.ml Generate bindings for <lang>. main.ml The main generator program. Note about long descriptions: When referring to another action, use the format C<guestfs_other> (ie. the full name of the C function). This will be replaced as appropriate in other language bindings. Apart from that, long descriptions are just perldoc paragraphs. Note about extending functions: In general you cannot change the name, number of required arguments or type of required arguments of a function, since this would break backwards compatibility. You may add another optional argument, *if* the function has >= 1 optional arguments already. Add it at the end of the list. You may add optional arguments to a function that doesn't have any. However you *must* set the once_had_no_optargs flag to true, so that the relevant backwards compatibility bindings can be added.