# xm # Xen management user interface. # Shows information about the Xen host xm info # Shows information about doms (states include r for running, b for blocked, c # for crashed, p for paused and the worse, d for dying). xm list # Shows virtual interfaces for doms xm network-list # Shows information from the Xen logs xm log # Reboots a VM xm reboot # Shows dom virtual processors xm vcpu-list # Shows hosts and domains similar to how top works in *nix xm top # Shows uptime xm uptime # Shows the send message buffer xm dmesg # Create a node called ${domain_name} xm create ${domain_name} # Attach to the console of the ${domain_name} node xm console ${domain_name} # Deletes that newly created ${domain_name} node xm destroy ${domain_name} # Invoke an interactive shell environment of your xend xm shell # Turn off a VM xm shutdown # Rather than shut the VM down, just pause it (starts back up much faster), # but if the host is rebooted then state is lost (otherwise use suspend) xm pause # Suspends VM, which writes data to disk, so changes won't be lost on restart. xm suspend # Rename installed VMs xm rename # If a VM is paused, fire it up xm resume # Similar to suspend except with user definable state file xm save # Similar to resume except can be restored with exports that used the save verb xm restore # Dumps core per domain xm dump-core # Sends system requests per domain xm sysrq # Lists block devices per domain xm block-list # Configure the maximum memory for a domain xm mem-max # Configure the current memory allowance for a domain xm mem-set # Configure active processors for a domain xm vcpu-set # Move a domain to another server (e.g. using the -l operator to do so live) xm migrate