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xl(1)				      Xen				 xl(1)

NAME
       XL - Xen	management tool, based on LibXenlight

SYNOPSIS
       xl subcommand [args]

DESCRIPTION
       The xl program is the new tool for managing Xen guest domains. The
       program can be used to create, pause, and shutdown domains. It can also
       be used to list current domains,	enable or pin VCPUs, and attach	or
       detach virtual block devices.

       The basic structure of every xl command is almost always:

	 xl subcommand [OPTIONS] domain-id

       Where subcommand	is one of the subcommands listed below,	domain-id is
       the numeric domain id, or the domain name (which	will be	internally
       translated to domain id), and OPTIONS are subcommand specific options.
       There are a few exceptions to this rule in the cases where the
       subcommand in question acts on all domains, the entire machine, or
       directly	on the Xen hypervisor.	Those exceptions will be clear for
       each of those subcommands.

NOTES
       start the script	/etc/init.d/xencommons at boot time
	   Most	xl operations rely upon	xenstored and xenconsoled: make	sure
	   you start the script	/etc/init.d/xencommons at boot time to
	   initialize all the daemons needed by	xl.

       setup a xenbr0 bridge in	dom0
	   In the most common network configuration, you need to setup a
	   bridge in dom0 named	xenbr0 in order	to have	a working network in
	   the guest domains.  Please refer to the documentation of your Linux
	   distribution	to know	how to setup the bridge.

       autoballoon
	   If you specify the amount of	memory dom0 has, passing dom0_mem to
	   Xen,	it is highly recommended to disable autoballoon. Edit
	   /etc/xen/xl.conf and	set it to 0.

       run xl as root
	   Most	xl commands require root privileges to run due to the
	   communications channels used	to talk	to the hypervisor.  Running as
	   non root will return	an error.

GLOBAL OPTIONS
       Some global options are always available:

       -v  Verbose.

       -N  Dry run: do not actually execute the	command.

       -f  Force execution: xl will refuse to run some commands	if it detects
	   that	xend is	also running, this option will force the execution of
	   those commands, even	though it is unsafe.

       -t  Always use carriage-return-based overwriting	for printing progress
	   messages without scrolling the screen.  Without -t, this is done
	   only	if stderr is a tty.

DOMAIN SUBCOMMANDS
       The following subcommands manipulate domains directly.  As stated
       previously, most	commands take domain-id	as the first parameter.

       button-press domain-id button
	   This	command	is deprecated. Please use "xl trigger" in preference

	   Indicate an ACPI button press to the	domain.	button is may be
	   'power' or 'sleep'. This command is only available for HVM domains.

       create [configfile] [OPTIONS]
	   The create subcommand takes a config	file as	first argument:	see
	   xl.cfg for full details of that file	format and possible options.
	   If configfile is missing XL creates the domain starting from	the
	   default value for every option.

	   configfile has to be	an absolute path to a file.

	   Create will return as soon as the domain is started.	 This does not
	   mean	the guest OS in	the domain has actually	booted,	or is
	   available for input.

	   If the -F option is specified, create will start the	domain and not
	   return until	its death.

	   OPTIONS

	   -q, --quiet
	       No console output.

	   -f=FILE, --defconfig=FILE
	       Use the given configuration file.

	   -p  Leave the domain	paused after it	is created.

	   -F  Run in foreground until death of	the domain.

	   -V, --vncviewer
	       Attach to domain's VNC server, forking a	vncviewer process.

	   -A, --vncviewer-autopass
	       Pass VNC	password to vncviewer via stdin.

	   -c  Attach console to the domain as soon as it has started.	This
	       is useful for determining issues	with crashing domains and just
	       as a general convenience	since you often	want to	watch the
	       domain boot.

	   key=value
	       It is possible to pass key=value	pairs on the command line to
	       provide options as if they were written in the configuration
	       file; these override whatever is	in the configfile.

	       NB: Many	config options require characters such as quotes or
	       brackets	which are interpreted by the shell (and	often
	       discarded) before being passed to xl, resulting in xl being
	       unable to parse the value correctly.  A simple work-around is
	       to put all extra	options	within a single	set of quotes,
	       separated by semicolons.	 (See below for	an example.)

	   EXAMPLES

	   with	config file
		 xl create DebianLenny

	       This creates a domain with the file /etc/xen/DebianLenny, and
	       returns as soon as it is	run.

	   with	extra parameters
		 xl create hvm.cfg 'cpus="0-3";	pci=["01:05.1","01:05.2"]'

	       This creates a domain with the file hvm.cfg, but	additionally
	       pins it to cpus 0-3, and	passes through two PCI devices.

       config-update domid [configfile]	[OPTIONS]
	   Update the saved configuration for a	running	domain.	This has no
	   immediate effect but	will be	applied	when the guest is next
	   restarted. This command is useful to	ensure that runtime
	   modifications made to the guest will	be preserved when the guest is
	   restarted.

	   Since Xen 4.5 xl has	improved capabilities to handle	dynamic	domain
	   configuration changes and will preserve any changes made a runtime
	   when	necessary. Therefore it	should not normally be necessary to
	   use this command any	more.

	   configfile has to be	an absolute path to a file.

	   OPTIONS

	   -f=FILE, --defconfig=FILE
	       Use the given configuration file.

	   key=value
	       It is possible to pass key=value	pairs on the command line to
	       provide options as if they were written in the configuration
	       file; these override whatever is	in the configfile.  Please see
	       the note	under create on	handling special characters when
	       passing key=value pairs on the command line.

       console [OPTIONS] domain-id
	   Attach to domain domain-id's	console.  If you've set	up your
	   domains to have a traditional log in	console	this will look much
	   like	a normal text log in screen.

	   Use the key combination Ctrl+] to detach the	domain console.

	   OPTIONS

	   -t [pv|serial]
	       Connect to a PV console or connect to an	emulated serial
	       console.	 PV consoles are the only consoles available for PV
	       domains while HVM domains can have both.	If this	option is not
	       specified it defaults to	emulated serial	for HVM	guests and PV
	       console for PV guests.

	   -n NUM
	       Connect to console number NUM. Console numbers start from 0.

       destroy [OPTIONS] domain-id
	   Immediately terminate the domain domain-id.	This doesn't give the
	   domain OS any chance	to react, and is the equivalent	of ripping the
	   power cord out on a physical	machine.  In most cases	you will want
	   to use the shutdown command instead.

	   OPTIONS

	   -f  Allow domain 0 to be destroyed.	Because	domain cannot destroy
	       itself, this is only possible when using	a disaggregated
	       toolstack, and is most useful when using	a hardware domain
	       separated from domain 0.

       domid domain-name
	   Converts a domain name to a domain id.

       domname domain-id
	   Converts a domain id	to a domain name.

       rename domain-id	new-name
	   Change the domain name of domain-id to new-name.

       dump-core domain-id [filename]
	   Dumps the virtual machine's memory for the specified	domain to the
	   filename specified, without pausing the domain.  The	dump file will
	   be written to a distribution	specific directory for dump files.
	   Such	as: /var/db/xen/dump.

       help [--long]
	   Displays the	short help message (i.e. common	commands).

	   The --long option prints out	the complete set of xl subcommands,
	   grouped by function.

       list [OPTIONS] [domain-id ...]
	   Prints information about one	or more	domains.  If no	domains	are
	   specified it	prints out information about all domains.

	   OPTIONS

	   -l, --long
	       The output for xl list is not the table view shown below, but
	       instead presents	the data in as a JSON data structure.

	   -Z, --context Also prints the security labels.
	   -v, --verbose
	       Also prints the domain UUIDs, the shutdown reason and security
	       labels.

	   -c, <--cpupool>
	       Also prints the cpupool the domain belong to.

	   -n, <--numa>
	       Also prints the domain NUMA node	affinity.

	   EXAMPLE

	   An example format for the list is as	follows:

	       Name					   ID	Mem VCPUs      State   Time(s)
	       Domain-0					    0	750	4     r-----   11794.3
	       win					    1  1019	1     r-----	   0.3
	       linux					    2  2048	2     r-----	5624.2

	   Name	is the name of the domain.  ID the numeric domain id.  Mem is
	   the desired amount of memory	to allocate to the domain (although it
	   may not be the currently allocated amount).	VCPUs is the number of
	   virtual CPUs	allocated to the domain.  State	is the run state (see
	   below).  Time is the	total run time of the domain as	accounted for
	   by Xen.

	   STATES

	   The State field lists 6 states for a	Xen domain, and	which ones the
	   current domain is in.

	   r - running
	       The domain is currently running on a CPU.

	   b - blocked
	       The domain is blocked, and not running or runnable.  This can
	       be caused because the domain is waiting on IO (a	traditional
	       wait state) or has gone to sleep	because	there was nothing else
	       for it to do.

	   p - paused
	       The domain has been paused, usually occurring through the
	       administrator running xl	pause.	When in	a paused state the
	       domain will still consume allocated resources like memory, but
	       will not	be eligible for	scheduling by the Xen hypervisor.

	   s - shutdown
	       The guest OS has	shut down (SCHEDOP_shutdown has	been called)
	       but the domain is not dying yet.

	   c - crashed
	       The domain has crashed, which is	always a violent ending.
	       Usually this state can only occur if the	domain has been
	       configured not to restart on crash.  See	xl.cfg(5) for more
	       info.

	   d - dying
	       The domain is in	process	of dying, but hasn't completely
	       shutdown	or crashed.

	   NOTES

	       The Time	column is deceptive.  Virtual IO (network and block
	       devices)	used by	domains	requires coordination by Domain0,
	       which means that	Domain0	is actually charged for	much of	the
	       time that a DomainU is doing IO.	 Use of	this time value	to
	       determine relative utilizations by domains is thus very
	       suspect,	as a high IO workload may show as less utilized	than a
	       high CPU	workload.  Consider yourself warned.

       mem-max domain-id mem
	   Specify the maximum amount of memory	the domain is able to use,
	   appending 't' for terabytes,	'g' for	gigabytes, 'm' for megabytes,
	   'k' for kilobytes and 'b' for bytes.

	   The mem-max value may not correspond	to the actual memory used in
	   the domain, as it may balloon down its memory to give more back to
	   the OS.

       mem-set domain-id mem
	   Set the domain's used memory	using the balloon driver; append 't'
	   for terabytes, 'g' for gigabytes, 'm' for megabytes,	'k' for
	   kilobytes and 'b' for bytes.

	   Because this	operation requires cooperation from the	domain
	   operating system, there is no guarantee that	it will	succeed.  This
	   command will	definitely not work unless the domain has the required
	   paravirt driver.

	   Warning: There is no	good way to know in advance how	small of a
	   mem-set will	make a domain unstable and cause it to crash.  Be very
	   careful when	using this command on running domains.

       migrate [OPTIONS] domain-id host
	   Migrate a domain to another host machine. By	default	xl relies on
	   ssh as a transport mechanism	between	the two	hosts.

	   OPTIONS

	   -s sshcommand
	       Use <sshcommand>	instead	of ssh.	 String	will be	passed to sh.
	       If empty, run <host> instead of ssh <host> xl migrate-receive
	       [-d -e].

	   -e  On the new host,	do not wait in the background (on <host>) for
	       the death of the	domain.	See the	corresponding option of	the
	       create subcommand.

	   -C config
	       Send <config> instead of	config file from creation.

	   --debug
	       Print huge (!) amount of	debug during the migration process.

       remus [OPTIONS] domain-id host
	   Enable Remus	HA or COLO HA for domain. By default xl	relies on ssh
	   as a	transport mechanism between the	two hosts.

	   NOTES

	       Remus support in	xl is still in experimental (proof-of-concept)
	       phase.  Disk replication	support	is limited to DRBD disks.

	       COLO support in xl is still in experimental (proof-of-concept)
	       phase. All options are subject to change	in the future.

	   COLO	disk configuration looks like:

	     disk = ['...,colo,colo-host=xxx,colo-port=xxx,colo-export=xxx,active-disk=xxx,hidden-disk=xxx...']

	   The supported options are:

	   colo-host	  :Secondary host's ip address.
	   colo-port	  :Secondary host's port, we will run a	nbd server on
	   secondary host, and the nbd server will listen this port.
	   colo-export	  :Nbd server's	disk export name of secondary host.
	   active-disk	  :Secondary's guest write will	be buffered in this
	   disk, and it's used by secondary.
	   hidden-disk	  :Primary's modified contents will be buffered	in
	   this	disk, and it's used by secondary.

	   COLO	network	configuration looks like:

	     vif = [ '...,forwarddev=xxx,...']

	   The supported options are:

	   forwarddev	  :Forward devices for primary and secondary, they are
	   directly connected.

	   OPTIONS

	   -i MS
	       Checkpoint domain memory	every MS milliseconds (default 200ms).

	   -u  Disable memory checkpoint compression.

	   -s sshcommand
	       Use <sshcommand>	instead	of ssh.	 String	will be	passed to sh.
	       If empty, run <host> instead of ssh <host> xl migrate-receive
	       -r [-e].

	   -e  On the new host,	do not wait in the background (on <host>) for
	       the death of the	domain.	See the	corresponding option of	the
	       create subcommand.

	   -N netbufscript
	       Use <netbufscript> to setup network buffering instead of	the
	       default script (/etc/xen/scripts/remus-netbuf-setup).

	   -F  Run Remus in unsafe mode. Use this option with caution as
	       failover	may not	work as	intended.

	   -b  Replicate memory	checkpoints to /dev/null (blackhole).
	       Generally useful	for debugging. Requires	enabling unsafe	mode.

	   -n  Disable network output buffering. Requires enabling unsafe
	       mode.

	   -d  Disable disk replication. Requires enabling unsafe mode.

	   -c  Enable COLO HA. This conflicts with -i and -b, and memory
	       checkpoint compression must be disabled.

       pause domain-id
	   Pause a domain.  When in a paused state the domain will still
	   consume allocated resources such as memory, but will	not be
	   eligible for	scheduling by the Xen hypervisor.

       reboot [OPTIONS]	domain-id
	   Reboot a domain.  This acts just as if the domain had the reboot
	   command run from the	console.  The command returns as soon as it
	   has executed	the reboot action, which may be	significantly before
	   the domain actually reboots.

	   For HVM domains this	requires PV drivers to be installed in your
	   guest OS. If	PV drivers are not present but you have	configured the
	   guest OS to behave appropriately you	may be able to use the -F
	   option trigger a reset button press.

	   The behavior	of what	happens	to a domain when it reboots is set by
	   the on_reboot parameter of the domain configuration file when the
	   domain was created.

	   OPTIONS

	   -F  If the guest does not support PV	reboot control then fallback
	       to sending an ACPI power	event (equivalent to the reset option
	       to trigger.

	       You should ensure that the guest	is configured to behave	as
	       expected	in response to this event.

       restore [OPTIONS] [ConfigFile] CheckpointFile
	   Build a domain from an xl save state	file.  See save	for more info.

	   OPTIONS

	   -p  Do not unpause domain after restoring it.

	   -e  Do not wait in the background for the death of the domain on
	       the new host.  See the corresponding option of the create
	       subcommand.

	   -d  Enable debug messages.

	   -V, --vncviewer
	       Attach to domain's VNC server, forking a	vncviewer process.

	   -A, --vncviewer-autopass
	       Pass VNC	password to vncviewer via stdin.

       save [OPTIONS] domain-id	CheckpointFile [ConfigFile]
	   Saves a running domain to a state file so that it can be restored
	   later.  Once	saved, the domain will no longer be running on the
	   system, unless the -c or -p options are used.  xl restore restores
	   from	this checkpoint	file.  Passing a config	file argument allows
	   the user to manually	select the VM config file used to create the
	   domain.

	   -c  Leave domain running after creating the snapshot.

	   -p  Leave domain paused after creating the snapshot.

       sharing [domain-id]
	   List	count of shared	pages.

	   OPTIONS

	   domain_id
	       List specifically for that domain. Otherwise, list for all
	       domains.

       shutdown	[OPTIONS] -a|domain-id
	   Gracefully shuts down a domain.  This coordinates with the domain
	   OS to perform graceful shutdown, so there is	no guarantee that it
	   will	succeed, and may take a	variable length	of time	depending on
	   what	services must be shutdown in the domain.

	   For HVM domains this	requires PV drivers to be installed in your
	   guest OS. If	PV drivers are not present but you have	configured the
	   guest OS to behave appropriately you	may be able to use the -F
	   option trigger a power button press.

	   The command returns immediately after signally the domain unless
	   that	-w flag	is used.

	   The behavior	of what	happens	to a domain when it reboots is set by
	   the on_shutdown parameter of	the domain configuration file when the
	   domain was created.

	   OPTIONS

	   -a, --all
	       Shutdown	all guest domains.  Often used when doing a complete
	       shutdown	of a Xen system.

	   -w, --wait
	       Wait for	the domain to complete shutdown	before returning.

	   -F  If the guest does not support PV	shutdown control then fallback
	       to sending an ACPI power	event (equivalent to the power option
	       to trigger.

	       You should ensure that the guest	is configured to behave	as
	       expected	in response to this event.

       sysrq domain-id letter
	   Send	a <Magic System	Request> to the	domain,	each type of request
	   is represented by a different letter.  It can be used to send SysRq
	   requests to Linux guests, see sysrq.txt in your Linux Kernel
	   sources for more information.  It requires PV drivers to be
	   installed in	your guest OS.

       trigger domain-id nmi|reset|init|power|sleep|s3resume [VCPU]
	   Send	a trigger to a domain, where the trigger can be: nmi, reset,
	   init, power or sleep.  Optionally a specific	vcpu number can	be
	   passed as an	argument.  This	command	is only	available for HVM
	   domains.

       unpause domain-id
	   Moves a domain out of the paused state.  This will allow a
	   previously paused domain to now be eligible for scheduling by the
	   Xen hypervisor.

       vcpu-set	domain-id vcpu-count
	   Enables the vcpu-count virtual CPUs for the domain in question.
	   Like	mem-set, this command can only allocate	up to the maximum
	   virtual CPU count configured	at boot	for the	domain.

	   If the vcpu-count is	smaller	than the current number	of active
	   VCPUs, the highest number VCPUs will	be hotplug removed.  This may
	   be important	for pinning purposes.

	   Attempting to set the VCPUs to a number larger than the initially
	   configured VCPU count is an error.  Trying to set VCPUs to <	1 will
	   be quietly ignored.

	   Some	guests may need	to actually bring the newly added CPU online
	   after vcpu-set, go to SEE ALSO section for information.

       vcpu-list [domain-id]
	   Lists VCPU information for a	specific domain.  If no	domain is
	   specified, VCPU information for all domains will be provided.

       vcpu-pin	[-f|--force] domain-id vcpu cpus hard cpus soft
	   Set hard and	soft affinity for a vcpu of <domain-id>. Normally
	   VCPUs can float between available CPUs whenever Xen deems a
	   different run state is appropriate.

	   Hard	affinity can be	used to	restrict this, by ensuring certain
	   VCPUs can only run on certain physical CPUs.	Soft affinity
	   specifies a preferred set of	CPUs. Soft affinity needs special
	   support in the scheduler, which is only provided in credit1.

	   The keyword all can be used to apply	the hard and soft affinity
	   masks to all	the VCPUs in the domain. The symbol '-'	can be used to
	   leave either	hard or	soft affinity alone.

	   For example:

	    xl vcpu-pin	0 3 - 6-9

	   will	set soft affinity for vCPU 3 of	domain 0 to pCPUs 6,7,8	and 9,
	   leaving its hard affinity untouched.	On the othe hand:

	    xl vcpu-pin	0 3 3,4	6-9

	   will	set both hard and soft affinity, the former to pCPUs 3 and 4,
	   the latter to pCPUs 6,7,8, and 9.

	   Specifying -f or --force will remove	a temporary pinning done by
	   the operating system	(normally this should be done by the operating
	   system).  In	case a temporary pinning is active for a vcpu the
	   affinity of this vcpu can't be changed without this option.

       vm-list
	   Prints information about guests. This list excludes information
	   about service or auxiliary domains such as dom0 and stubdoms.

	   EXAMPLE

	   An example format for the list is as	follows:

	       UUID				     ID	   name
	       59e1cf6c-6ab9-4879-90e7-adc8d1c63bf5  2	  win
	       50bc8f75-81d0-4d53-b2e6-95cb44e2682e  3	  linux

       vncviewer [OPTIONS] domain-id
	   Attach to domain's VNC server, forking a vncviewer process.

	   OPTIONS

	   --autopass
	       Pass VNC	password to vncviewer via stdin.

XEN HOST SUBCOMMANDS
       debug-keys keys
	   Send	debug keys to Xen. It is the same as pressing the Xen
	   "conswitch" (Ctrl-A by default) three times and then	pressing
	   "keys".

       dmesg [-c]
	   Reads the Xen message buffer, similar to dmesg on a Linux system.
	   The buffer contains informational, warning, and error messages
	   created during Xen's	boot process.  If you are having problems with
	   Xen,	this is	one of the first places	to look	as part	of problem
	   determination.

	   OPTIONS

	   -c, --clear
	       Clears Xen's message buffer.

       info [-n, --numa]
	   Print information about the Xen host	in name	: value	format.	 When
	   reporting a Xen bug,	please provide this information	as part	of the
	   bug report. See http://wiki.xen.org/xenwiki/ReportingBugs on	how to
	   report Xen bugs.

	   Sample output looks as follows:

	    host		   : scarlett
	    release		   : 3.1.0-rc4+
	    version		   : #1001 SMP Wed Oct 19 11:09:54 UTC 2011
	    machine		   : x86_64
	    nr_cpus		   : 4
	    nr_nodes		   : 1
	    cores_per_socket	   : 4
	    threads_per_core	   : 1
	    cpu_mhz		   : 2266
	    hw_caps		   : bfebfbff:28100800:00000000:00003b40:009ce3bd:00000000:00000001:00000000
	    virt_caps		   : hvm hvm_directio
	    total_memory	   : 6141
	    free_memory		   : 4274
	    free_cpus		   : 0
	    outstanding_claims	   : 0
	    xen_major		   : 4
	    xen_minor		   : 2
	    xen_extra		   : -unstable
	    xen_caps		   : xen-3.0-x86_64 xen-3.0-x86_32p hvm-3.0-x86_32 hvm-3.0-x86_32p hvm-3.0-x86_64
	    xen_scheduler	   : credit
	    xen_pagesize	   : 4096
	    platform_params	   : virt_start=0xffff800000000000
	    xen_changeset	   : Wed Nov 02	17:09:09 2011 +0000 24066:54a5e994a241
	    xen_commandline	   : com1=115200,8n1 guest_loglvl=all dom0_mem=750M console=com1
	    cc_compiler		   : gcc version 4.4.5 (Debian 4.4.5-8)
	    cc_compile_by	   : sstabellini
	    cc_compile_domain	   : uk.xensource.com
	    cc_compile_date	   : Tue Nov  8	12:03:05 UTC 2011
	    xend_config_format	   : 4

	   FIELDS

	   Not all fields will be explained here, but some of the less obvious
	   ones	deserve	explanation:

	   hw_caps
	       A vector	showing	what hardware capabilities are supported by
	       your processor.	This is	equivalent to, though more cryptic,
	       the flags field in /proc/cpuinfo	on a normal Linux machine:
	       they both derive	from the feature bits returned by the cpuid
	       command on x86 platforms.

	   free_memory
	       Available memory	(in MB)	not allocated to Xen, or any other
	       domains,	or claimed for domains.

	   outstanding_claims
	       When a claim call is done (see xl.conf) a reservation for a
	       specific	amount of pages	is set and also	a global value is
	       incremented. This global	value (outstanding_claims) is then
	       reduced as the domain's memory is populated and eventually
	       reaches zero. Most of the time the value	will be	zero, but if
	       you are launching multiple guests, and claim_mode is enabled,
	       this value can increase/decrease. Note that the value also
	       affects the free_memory	- as it	will reflect the free memory
	       in the hypervisor minus the outstanding pages claimed for
	       guests.	See xl info claims parameter for detailed listing.

	   xen_caps
	       The Xen version and architecture.  Architecture values can be
	       one of: x86_32, x86_32p (i.e. PAE enabled), x86_64, ia64.

	   xen_changeset
	       The Xen mercurial changeset id.	Very useful for	determining
	       exactly what version of code your Xen system was	built from.

	   OPTIONS

	   -n, --numa
	       List host NUMA topology information

       top Executes the	xentop command,	which provides real time monitoring of
	   domains.  Xentop is a curses	interface, and reasonably self
	   explanatory.

       uptime
	   Prints the current uptime of	the domains running.

       claims
	   Prints information about outstanding	claims by the guests. This
	   provides the	outstanding claims and currently populated memory
	   count for the guests.  These	values added up	reflect	the global
	   outstanding claim value, which is provided via the info argument,
	   outstanding_claims value.  The Mem column has the cumulative	value
	   of outstanding claims and the total amount of memory	that has been
	   right now allocated to the guest.

	   EXAMPLE

	   An example format for the list is as	follows:

	    Name					ID   Mem VCPUs	    State   Time(s)  Claimed
	    Domain-0					 0  2047     4	   r-----      19.7	0
	    OL5						 2  2048     1	   --p---	0.0   847
	    OL6						 3  1024     4	   r-----	5.9	0
	    Windows_XP					 4  2047     1	   --p---	0.0  1989

	   In which it can be seen that	the OL5	guest still has	847MB of
	   claimed memory (out of the total 2048MB where 1191MB	has been
	   allocated to	the guest).

SCHEDULER SUBCOMMANDS
       Xen ships with a	number of domain schedulers, which can be set at boot
       time with the sched= parameter on the Xen command line.	By default
       credit is used for scheduling.

       sched-credit [OPTIONS]
	   Set or get credit scheduler parameters.  The	credit scheduler is a
	   proportional	fair share CPU scheduler built from the	ground up to
	   be work conserving on SMP hosts.

	   Each	domain (including Domain0) is assigned a weight	and a cap.

	   OPTIONS

	   -d DOMAIN, --domain=DOMAIN
	       Specify domain for which	scheduler parameters are to be
	       modified	or retrieved.  Mandatory for modifying scheduler
	       parameters.

	   -w WEIGHT, --weight=WEIGHT
	       A domain	with a weight of 512 will get twice as much CPU	as a
	       domain with a weight of 256 on a	contended host.	Legal weights
	       range from 1 to 65535 and the default is	256.

	   -c CAP, --cap=CAP
	       The cap optionally fixes	the maximum amount of CPU a domain
	       will be able to consume,	even if	the host system	has idle CPU
	       cycles. The cap is expressed in percentage of one physical CPU:
	       100 is 1	physical CPU, 50 is half a CPU,	400 is 4 CPUs, etc.
	       The default, 0, means there is no upper cap.

	       NB: Many	systems	have features that will	scale down the
	       computing power of a cpu	that is	not 100% utilized.  This can
	       be in the operating system, but can also	sometimes be below the
	       operating system	in the BIOS.  If you set a cap such that
	       individual cores	are running at less than 100%, this may	have
	       an impact on the	performance of your workload over and above
	       the impact of the cap. For example, if your processor runs at
	       2GHz, and you cap a vm at 50%, the power	management system may
	       also reduce the clock speed to 1GHz; the	effect will be that
	       your VM gets 25%	of the available power (50% of 1GHz) rather
	       than 50%	(50% of	2GHz).	If you are not getting the performance
	       you expect, look	at performance and cpufreq options in your
	       operating system	and your BIOS.

	   -p CPUPOOL, --cpupool=CPUPOOL
	       Restrict	output to domains in the specified cpupool.

	   -s, --schedparam
	       Specify to list or set pool-wide	scheduler parameters.

	   -t TSLICE, --tslice_ms=TSLICE
	       Timeslice tells the scheduler how long to allow VMs to run
	       before pre-empting.  The	default	is 30ms.  Valid	ranges are 1ms
	       to 1000ms.  The length of the timeslice (in ms) must be higher
	       than the	length of the ratelimit	(see below).

	   -r RLIMIT, --ratelimit_us=RLIMIT
	       Ratelimit attempts to limit the number of schedules per second.
	       It sets a minimum amount	of time	(in microseconds) a VM must
	       run before we will allow	a higher-priority VM to	pre-empt it.
	       The default value is 1000 microseconds (1ms).  Valid range is
	       100 to 500000 (500ms).  The ratelimit length must be lower than
	       the timeslice length.

	   COMBINATION

	   The following is the	effect of combining the	above options:

	   <nothing>		 : List	all domain params and sched params
	   from	all pools
	   -d [domid]		 : List	domain params for domain [domid]
	   -d [domid] [params]	 : Set domain params for domain	[domid]
	   -p [pool]		 : list	all domains and	sched params for
	   [pool]
	   -s			 : List	sched params for poolid	0
	   -s [params]		 : Set sched params for	poolid 0
	   -p [pool] -s		 : List	sched params for [pool]
	   -p [pool] -s	[params] : Set sched params for	[pool]
	   -p [pool] -d...	 : Illegal
       sched-credit2 [OPTIONS]
	   Set or get credit2 scheduler	parameters.  The credit2 scheduler is
	   a proportional fair share CPU scheduler built from the ground up to
	   be work conserving on SMP hosts.

	   Each	domain (including Domain0) is assigned a weight.

	   OPTIONS

	   -d DOMAIN, --domain=DOMAIN
	       Specify domain for which	scheduler parameters are to be
	       modified	or retrieved.  Mandatory for modifying scheduler
	       parameters.

	   -w WEIGHT, --weight=WEIGHT
	       A domain	with a weight of 512 will get twice as much CPU	as a
	       domain with a weight of 256 on a	contended host.	Legal weights
	       range from 1 to 65535 and the default is	256.

	   -p CPUPOOL, --cpupool=CPUPOOL
	       Restrict	output to domains in the specified cpupool.

       sched-rtds [OPTIONS]
	   Set or get rtds (Real Time Deferrable Server) scheduler parameters.
	   This	rt scheduler applies Preemptive	Global Earliest	Deadline First
	   real-time scheduling	algorithm to schedule VCPUs in the system.
	   Each	VCPU has a dedicated period and	budget.	 VCPUs in the same
	   domain have the same	period and budget.  While scheduled, a VCPU
	   burns its budget.  A	VCPU has its budget replenished	at the
	   beginning of	each period; Unused budget is discarded	at the end of
	   each	period.

	   OPTIONS

	   -d DOMAIN, --domain=DOMAIN
	       Specify domain for which	scheduler parameters are to be
	       modified	or retrieved.  Mandatory for modifying scheduler
	       parameters.

	   -v VCPUID/all, --vcpuid=VCPUID/all
	       Specify vcpu for	which scheduler	parameters are to be modified
	       or retrieved.

	   -p PERIOD, --period=PERIOD
	       Period of time, in microseconds,	over which to replenish	the
	       budget.

	   -b BUDGET, --budget=BUDGET
	       Amount of time, in microseconds,	that the VCPU will be allowed
	       to run every period.

	   -c CPUPOOL, --cpupool=CPUPOOL
	       Restrict	output to domains in the specified cpupool.

	   EXAMPLE

	       1) Use -v all to	see the	budget and period of all the VCPUs of
	       all the domains:

		   xl sched-rtds -v all
		   Cpupool Pool-0: sched=RTDS
		   Name			       ID VCPU	  Period    Budget
		   Domain-0			0    0	   10000      4000
		   vm1				1    0	     300       150
		   vm1				1    1	     400       200
		   vm1				1    2	   10000      4000
		   vm1				1    3	    1000       500
		   vm2				2    0	   10000      4000
		   vm2				2    1	   10000      4000

	       Without any arguments, it will output the default scheduing
	       parameters for each domain:

		   xl sched-rtds
		   Cpupool Pool-0: sched=RTDS
		   Name			       ID    Period    Budget
		   Domain-0			0     10000	 4000
		   vm1				1     10000	 4000
		   vm2				2     10000	 4000

	       2) Use, for instance -d vm1, -v all to see the budget and
	       period of all VCPUs of a	specific domain	(vm1):

		   xl sched-rtds -d vm1	-v all
		   Name			       ID VCPU	  Period    Budget
		   vm1				1    0	     300       150
		   vm1				1    1	     400       200
		   vm1				1    2	   10000      4000
		   vm1				1    3	    1000       500

	       To see the parameters of	a subset of the	VCPUs of a domain,
	       use:

		   xl sched-rtds -d vm1	-v 0 -v	3
		   Name			       ID VCPU	  Period    Budget
		   vm1				1    0	     300       150
		   vm1				1    3	    1000       500

	       If no -v	is speficified,	the default scheduling parameter for
	       the domain are shown:

		   xl sched-rtds -d vm1
		   Name			       ID    Period    Budget
		   vm1				1     10000	 4000

	       3) Users	can set	the budget and period of multiple VCPUs	of a
	       specific	domain with only one command, e.g., "xl	sched-rtds -d
	       vm1 -v 0	-p 100 -b 50 -v	3 -p 300 -b 150".

	       To change the parameters	of all the VCPUs of a domain, use -v
	       all, e.g., "xl sched-rtds -d vm1	-v all -p 500 -b 250".

CPUPOOLS COMMANDS
       Xen can group the physical cpus of a server in cpu-pools. Each physical
       CPU is assigned at most to one cpu-pool.	Domains	are each restricted to
       a single	cpu-pool. Scheduling does not cross cpu-pool boundaries, so
       each cpu-pool has an own	scheduler.  Physical cpus and domains can be
       moved from one cpu-pool to another only by an explicit command.	Cpu-
       pools can be specified either by	name or	by id.

       cpupool-create [OPTIONS]	[ConfigFile] [Variable=Value ...]
	   Create a cpu	pool based an config from a ConfigFile or command-line
	   parameters.	Variable settings from the ConfigFile may be altered
	   by specifying new or	additional assignments on the command line.

	   See the xlcpupool.cfg(5) manpage for	more information.

	   OPTIONS

	   -f=FILE, --defconfig=FILE
	       Use the given configuration file.

       cpupool-list [-c|--cpus]	[cpu-pool]
	   List	CPU pools on the host.	If -c is specified, xl prints a	list
	   of CPUs used	by cpu-pool.

       cpupool-destroy cpu-pool
	   Deactivates a cpu pool.  This is possible only if no	domain is
	   active in the cpu-pool.

       cpupool-rename cpu-pool <newname>
	   Renames a cpu-pool to newname.

       cpupool-cpu-add cpu-pool	cpus|node:nodes
	   Adds	one or more CPUs or NUMA nodes to cpu-pool. CPUs and NUMA
	   nodes can be	specified as single CPU/node IDs or as ranges.

	   For example:

	    (a)	xl cpupool-cpu-add mypool 4
	    (b)	xl cpupool-cpu-add mypool 1,5,10-16,^13
	    (c)	xl cpupool-cpu-add mypool node:0,nodes:2-3,^10-12,8

	   means adding	CPU 4 to mypool, in (a); adding	CPUs
	   1,5,10,11,12,14,15 and 16, in (b); and adding all the CPUs of NUMA
	   nodes 0, 2 and 3, plus CPU 8, but keeping out CPUs 10,11,12,	in
	   (c).

	   All the specified CPUs that can be added to the cpupool will	be
	   added to it.	If some	CPU can't (e.g., because they're already part
	   of another cpupool),	an error is reported about each	one of them.

       cpupool-cpu-remove cpus|node:nodes
	   Removes one or more CPUs or NUMA nodes from cpu-pool. CPUs and NUMA
	   nodes can be	specified as single CPU/node IDs or as ranges, using
	   the exact same syntax as in cpupool-cpu-add above.

       cpupool-migrate domain cpu-pool
	   Moves a domain specified by domain-id or domain-name	into a cpu-
	   pool.  Domain-0 can't be moved to another cpu-pool.

       cpupool-numa-split
	   Splits up the machine into one cpu-pool per numa node.

VIRTUAL	DEVICE COMMANDS
       Most virtual devices can	be added and removed while guests are running,
       assuming	that the necessary support exists in the guest.	 The effect to
       the guest OS is much the	same as	any hotplug event.

   BLOCK DEVICES
       block-attach domain-id disc-spec-component(s) ...
	   Create a new	virtual	block device.  This will trigger a hotplug
	   event for the guest.

	   Note	that only PV block devices are supported by block-attach.
	   Requests to attach emulated devices (eg, vdev=hdc) will result in
	   only	the PV view being available to the guest.

	   OPTIONS

	   domain-id
	       The domain id of	the guest domain that the device will be
	       attached	to.

	   disc-spec-component
	       A disc specification in the same	format used for	the disk
	       variable	in the domain config file. See
	       <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-disk-configuration.txt>.

       block-detach domain-id devid [--force]
	   Detach a domain's virtual block device. devid may be	the symbolic
	   name	or the numeric device id given to the device by	domain 0.  You
	   will	need to	run xl block-list to determine that number.

	   Detaching the device	requires the cooperation of the	domain.	 If
	   the domain fails to release the device (perhaps because the domain
	   is hung or is still using the device), the detach will fail.	 The
	   --force parameter will forcefully detach the	device,	but may	cause
	   IO errors in	the domain.

       block-list domain-id
	   List	virtual	block devices for a domain.

       cd-insert domain-id VirtualDevice target
	   Insert a cdrom into a guest domain's	existing virtial cd drive. The
	   virtual drive must already exist but	can be current empty.

	   Only	works with HVM domains.

	   OPTIONS

	   VirtualDevice
	       How the device should be	presented to the guest domain; for
	       example "hdc".

	   target
	       the target path in the backend domain (usually domain 0)	to be
	       exported; Can be	a block	device or a file etc. See target in
	       docs/misc/xl-disk-configuration.txt.

       cd-eject	domain-id VirtualDevice
	   Eject a cdrom from a	guest's	virtual	cd drive. Only works with HVM
	   domains.

	   OPTIONS

	   VirtualDevice
	       How the device should be	presented to the guest domain; for
	       example "hdc".

   NETWORK DEVICES
       network-attach domain-id	network-device
	   Creates a new network device	in the domain specified	by domain-id.
	   network-device describes the	device to attach, using	the same
	   format as the vif string in the domain config file. See xl.cfg and
	   <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-network-configuration.html>
	   for more informations.

	   Note	that only attaching PV network interface is supported.

       network-detach domain-id	devid|mac
	   Removes the network device from the domain specified	by domain-id.
	   devid is the	virtual	interface device number	within the domain
	   (i.e. the 3 in vif22.3). Alternatively the mac address can be used
	   to select the virtual interface to detach.

       network-list domain-id
	   List	virtual	network	interfaces for a domain.

   CHANNEL DEVICES
       channel-list domain-id
	   List	virtual	channel	interfaces for a domain.

   VTPM	DEVICES
       vtpm-attach domain-id vtpm-device
	   Creates a new vtpm device in	the domain specified by	domain-id.
	   vtpm-device describes the device to attach, using the same format
	   as the vtpm string in the domain config file. See xl.cfg for	more
	   information.

       vtpm-detach domain-id devid|uuid
	   Removes the vtpm device from	the domain specified by	domain-id.
	   devid is the	numeric	device id given	to the virtual trusted
	   platform module device. You will need to run	xl vtpm-list to
	   determine that number.  Alternatively the uuid of the vtpm can be
	   used	to select the virtual device to	detach.

       vtpm-list domain-id
	   List	virtual	trusted	platform modules for a domain.

PCI PASS-THROUGH
       pci-assignable-list
	   List	all the	assignable PCI devices.	 These are devices in the
	   system which	are configured to be available for passthrough and are
	   bound to a suitable PCI backend driver in domain 0 rather than a
	   real	driver.

       pci-assignable-add BDF
	   Make	the device at PCI Bus/Device/Function BDF assignable to
	   guests.  This will bind the device to the pciback driver.  If it is
	   already bound to a driver, it will first be unbound,	and the
	   original driver stored so that it can be re-bound to	the same
	   driver later	if desired.  If	the device is already bound, it	will
	   return success.

	   CAUTION: This will make the device unusable by Domain 0 until it is
	   returned with pci-assignable-remove.	 Care should therefore be
	   taken not to	do this	on a device critical to	domain 0's operation,
	   such	as storage controllers,	network	interfaces, or GPUs that are
	   currently being used.

       pci-assignable-remove [-r] BDF
	   Make	the device at PCI Bus/Device/Function BDF assignable to
	   guests.  This will at least unbind the device from pciback.	If the
	   -r option is	specified, it will also	attempt	to re-bind the device
	   to its original driver, making it usable by Domain 0	again.	If the
	   device is not bound to pciback, it will return success.

       pci-attach domain-id BDF
	   Hot-plug a new pass-through pci device to the specified domain.
	   BDF is the PCI Bus/Device/Function of the physical device to	pass-
	   through.

       pci-detach [-f] domain-id BDF
	   Hot-unplug a	previously assigned pci	device from a domain. BDF is
	   the PCI Bus/Device/Function of the physical device to be removed
	   from	the guest domain.

	   If -f is specified, xl is going to forcefully remove	the device
	   even	without	guest's	collaboration.

       pci-list	domain-id
	   List	pass-through pci devices for a domain.

USB PASS-THROUGH
       usbctrl-attach domain-id	usbctrl-device
	   Create a new	USB controller in the domain specified by domain-id,
	   usbctrl-device describes the	device to attach, using	form
	   "KEY=VALUE KEY=VALUE	..." where KEY=VALUE has the same meaning as
	   the usbctrl description in the domain config	file.  See xl.cfg for
	   more	information.

       usbctrl-detach domain-id	devid
	   Destroy a USB controller from the specified domain.	devid is devid
	   of the USB controller.

       usbdev-attach domain-id usbdev-device
	   Hot-plug a new pass-through USB device to the domain	specified by
	   domain-id, usbdev-device describes the device to attach, using form
	   "KEY=VALUE KEY=VALUE	..." where KEY=VALUE has the same meaning as
	   the usbdev description in the domain	config file.  See xl.cfg for
	   more	information.

       usbdev-detach domain-id controller=devid	port=number
	   Hot-unplug a	previously assigned USB	device from a domain.
	   controller=devid and	port=number is USB controller:port in guest
	   where the USB device	is attached to.

       usb-list	domain-id
	   List	pass-through usb devices for a domain.

TMEM
       tmem-list I[<-l>] domain-id
	   List	tmem pools. If -l is specified,	also list tmem stats.

       tmem-freeze domain-id
	   Freeze tmem pools.

       tmem-thaw domain-id
	   Thaw	tmem pools.

       tmem-set	domain-id [OPTIONS]
	   Change tmem settings.

	   OPTIONS

	   -w WEIGHT
	       Weight (int)

	   -c CAP
	       Cap (int)

	   -p COMPRESS
	       Compress	(int)

       tmem-shared-auth	domain-id [OPTIONS]
	   De/authenticate shared tmem pool.

	   OPTIONS

	   -u UUID
	       Specify uuid (abcdef01-2345-6789-1234-567890abcdef)

	   -a AUTH
	       0=auth,1=deauth

       tmem-freeable
	   Get information about how much freeable memory (MB) is in-use by
	   tmem.

FLASK
       FLASK is	a security framework that defines a mandatory access control
       policy providing	fine-grained controls over Xen domains,	allowing the
       policy writer to	define what interactions between domains, devices, and
       the hypervisor are permitted. Some example of what you can do using
       XSM/FLASK:
	- Prevent two domains from communicating via event channels or grants
	- Control which	domains	can use	device passthrough (and	which devices)
	- Restrict or audit operations performed by privileged domains
	- Prevent a privileged domain from arbitrarily mapping pages from
       other
	  domains.

       You can find more details on how	to use FLASK and an example security
       policy here: <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xsm-flask.txt>

       getenforce
	   Determine if	the FLASK security module is loaded and	enforcing its
	   policy.

       setenforce 1|0|Enforcing|Permissive
	   Enable or disable enforcing of the FLASK access controls. The
	   default is permissive, but this can be changed to enforcing by
	   specifying "flask=enforcing"	or "flask=late"	on the hypervisor's
	   command line.

       loadpolicy policy-file
	   Load	FLASK policy from the given policy file. The initial policy is
	   provided to the hypervisor as a multiboot module; this command
	   allows runtime updates to the policy. Loading new security policy
	   will	reset runtime changes to device	labels.

PLATFORM SHARED	RESOURCE MONITORING/CONTROL
       Intel Haswell and later server platforms	offer shared resource
       monitoring and control technologies. The	availability of	these
       technologies and	the hardware capabilities can be shown with psr-
       hwinfo.

       See <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-psr.html> for more
       information.

       psr-hwinfo [OPTIONS]
	   Show	Platform Shared	Resource (PSR) hardware	information.

	   OPTIONS

	   -m, --cmt
	       Show Cache Monitoring Technology	(CMT) hardware information.

	   -a, --cat
	       Show Cache Allocation Technology	(CAT) hardware information.

   CACHE MONITORING TECHNOLOGY
       Intel Haswell and later server platforms	offer monitoring capability in
       each logical processor to measure specific platform shared resource
       metric, for example, L3 cache occupancy.	In the Xen implementation, the
       monitoring granularity is domain	level. To monitor a specific domain,
       just attach the domain id with the monitoring service. When the domain
       doesn't need to be monitored any	more, detach the domain	id from	the
       monitoring service.

       Intel Broadwell and later server	platforms also offer total/local
       memory bandwidth	monitoring. Xen	supports per-domain monitoring for
       these two additional monitoring types. Both memory bandwidth monitoring
       and L3 cache occupancy monitoring share the same	set of underlying
       monitoring service. Once	a domain is attached to	the monitoring
       service,	monitoring data	can be shown for any of	these monitoring
       types.

       psr-cmt-attach [domain-id]
	   attach: Attach the platform shared resource monitoring service to a
	   domain.

       psr-cmt-detach [domain-id]
	   detach: Detach the platform shared resource monitoring service from
	   a domain.

       psr-cmt-show [psr-monitor-type] [domain-id]
	   Show	monitoring data	for a certain domain or	all domains. Current
	   supported monitor types are:
	    - "cache-occupancy": showing the L3	cache occupancy(KB).
	    - "total-mem-bandwidth": showing the total memory bandwidth(KB/s).
	    - "local-mem-bandwidth": showing the local memory bandwidth(KB/s).

   CACHE ALLOCATION TECHNOLOGY
       Intel Broadwell and later server	platforms offer	capabilities to
       configure and make use of the Cache Allocation Technology (CAT)
       mechanisms, which enable	more cache resources (i.e. L3 cache) to	be
       made available for high priority	applications. In the Xen
       implementation, CAT is used to control cache allocation on VM basis. To
       enforce cache on	a specific domain, just	set capacity bitmasks (CBM)
       for the domain.

       Intel Broadwell and later server	platforms also offer Code/Data
       Prioritization (CDP) for	cache allocations, which support specifying
       code or data cache for applications. CDP	is used	on a per VM basis in
       the Xen implementation. To specify code or data CBM for the domain, CDP
       feature must be enabled and CBM type options need to be specified when
       setting CBM, and	the type options (code and data) are mutually
       exclusive.

       psr-cat-cbm-set [OPTIONS] domain-id cbm
	   Set cache capacity bitmasks(CBM) for	a domain. For how to specify
	   cbm please refer to
	   <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-psr.html>.

	   OPTIONS

	   -s SOCKET, --socket=SOCKET
	       Specify the socket to process, otherwise	all sockets are
	       processed.

	   -c, --code
	       Set code	CBM when CDP is	enabled.

	   -d, --data
	       Set data	CBM when CDP is	enabled.

       psr-cat-show [domain-id]
	   Show	CAT settings for a certain domain or all domains.

IGNORED	FOR COMPATIBILITY WITH XM
       xl is mostly command-line compatible with the old xm utility used with
       the old Python xend.  For compatibility,	the following options are
       ignored:

       xl migrate --live

TO BE DOCUMENTED
       We need better documentation for:

       tmem
	   Transcendent	Memory.

SEE ALSO
       The following man pages:

       xl.cfg(5), xlcpupool.cfg(5), xentop(1)

       And the following documents on the xen.org website:

       <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-network-configuration.html>
       <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-disk-configuration.txt>
       <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xsm-flask.txt>
       <http://xenbits.xen.org/docs/unstable/misc/xl-psr.html>

       For systems that	don't automatically bring CPU online:

       <http://wiki.xen.org/wiki/Paravirt_Linux_CPU_Hotplug>

BUGS
       Send bugs to xen-devel@lists.xen.org, see
       http://wiki.xen.org/xenwiki/ReportingBugs on how	to send	bug reports.

4.7.2				  2017-07-02				 xl(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | NOTES | GLOBAL OPTIONS | DOMAIN SUBCOMMANDS | XEN HOST SUBCOMMANDS | SCHEDULER SUBCOMMANDS | CPUPOOLS COMMANDS | VIRTUAL DEVICE COMMANDS | PCI PASS-THROUGH | USB PASS-THROUGH | TMEM | FLASK | PLATFORM SHARED RESOURCE MONITORING/CONTROL | IGNORED FOR COMPATIBILITY WITH XM | TO BE DOCUMENTED | SEE ALSO | BUGS

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<https://www.freebsd.org/cgi/man.cgi?query=xl&manpath=FreeBSD+11.1-RELEASE+and+Ports>

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