+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--personality=</option></term>
+
+ <listitem><para>Control the
+ architecture ("personality") reported
+ by
+ <citerefentry><refentrytitle>uname</refentrytitle><manvolnum>2</manvolnum></citerefentry>
+ in the container. Currently, only
+ <literal>x86</literal> and
+ <literal>x86-64</literal> are
+ supported. This is useful when running
+ a 32-bit container on a 64-bit
+ host. If this setting is not used,
+ the personality reported in the
+ container is the same as the one
+ reported on the
+ host.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>-q</option></term>
+ <term><option>--quiet</option></term>
+
+ <listitem><para>Turns off any status
+ output by the tool itself. When this
+ switch is used, the only output
+ from nspawn will be the console output
+ of the container OS itself.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <varlistentry>
+ <term><option>--volatile</option><replaceable>=MODE</replaceable></term>
+
+ <listitem><para>Boots the container in
+ volatile (ephemeral) mode. When no
+ mode parameter is passed or when mode
+ is specified as <literal>yes</literal>
+ full volatile mode is enabled. This
+ means the root directory is mounted as
+ mostly unpopulated
+ <literal>tmpfs</literal> instance, and
+ <filename>/usr</filename> from the OS
+ tree is mounted into it, read-only
+ (the system thus starts up with
+ read-only OS resources, but pristine
+ state and configuration, any changes
+ to the either are lost on
+ shutdown). When the mode parameter is
+ specified as <literal>state</literal>
+ the OS tree is mounted read-only, but
+ <filename>/var</filename> is mounted
+ as <literal>tmpfs</literal> instance
+ into it (the system thus starts up
+ with read-only OS resources and
+ configuration, but pristine state, any
+ changes to the latter are lost on
+ shutdown). When the mode parameter is
+ specified as <literal>no</literal>
+ (the default) the whole OS tree is made
+ available writable.</para>
+
+ <para>Note that setting this to
+ <literal>yes</literal> or
+ <literal>state</literal> will only
+ work correctly with operating systems
+ in the container that can boot up with
+ only <filename>/usr</filename>
+ mounted, and are able to populate
+ <filename>/var</filename>
+ automatically, as
+ needed.</para></listitem>
+ </varlistentry>
+
+ <xi:include href="standard-options.xml" xpointer="help" />
+ <xi:include href="standard-options.xml" xpointer="version" />