Got it, thanks Peter! Just wanted to make sure I wasn't overlooking some command or flag explicitly for returning such info. Best regards, -Adam -- Adam vonNieda JMIS technical support Capgemini Government Solutions JPATS Kansas City Desk 816-467-1935 -----Original Message----- From: Peter Krempa [mailto:pkrempa@xxxxxxxxxx] Sent: Thursday, May 30, 2013 11:10 AM To: vonNieda, Adam (USMS) Cc: libvirt-users@xxxxxxxxxx Subject: Re: Question, how to coorelate snapshot ID's to the files that they represent? On 05/30/13 17:33, vonNieda, Adam (USMS) wrote:> Hi folks, first post J > > I'm running Redhat 6 x64 with ibvirt-0.10.2-18 and > qemu-img-rhev-0.12.1.2-2.355 > > My question is, if I do something like the following.. > > [root@testbox ~]# virsh snapshot-list STIGtest > > Name Creation Time State > > ------------------------------------------------------------ > > 1369421485 2013-05-24 13:51:25 -0500 disk-snapshot > > 1369768781 2013-05-28 14:19:41 -0500 disk-snapshot > > 1369920434 2013-05-30 08:27:14 -0500 disk-snapshot > > 1369920574 2013-05-30 08:29:34 -0500 disk-snapshot > > 1369920859 2013-05-30 08:34:19 -0500 disk-snapshot > > 1369920888 2013-05-30 08:34:48 -0500 disk-snapshot > > 1369921298 2013-05-30 08:41:38 -0500 disk-snapshot > > Is there another command I can issue to get the OS snapshot file > that one of those snapshot names represents? To get more information about the snapshot you can issue virsh snapshot-dumpxml STIGtest 1369421485 This returns a XML document describing the snapshot. The default snapshot name is a unix timestamp of the time when the snapshot was taken. The name can be set to any string at the time the snapshot is created: virsh snapshot-create-as STIGtest snapshotname Peter > > Thanks very much! > > -Adam > _______________________________________________ libvirt-users mailing list libvirt-users@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/libvirt-users