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These translations are shared with snapd trunk series template snappy.

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32.

The fde-setup-result command sets the result data for a fde-setup hook
reading it from stdin.

For example:
When the fde-setup hook is called with "op":"features:
$ echo '{"features": []}' | snapctl fde-setup-result

When the fde-setup hook is called with "op":"initial-setup":
$ echo "{"sealed-key":"$base64_encoded_sealed_key"}" | snapctl fde-setup-result
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Located in overlord/hookstate/ctlcmd/fde_setup.go:101
33.

The file-access command returns information about a snap's file system access.

This command is used by the xdg-document-portal service to identify
files that do not need to be proxied to provide access within
confinement.

File paths are interpreted as host file system paths. The tool may
return false negatives (e.g. report that a file path is unreadable,
despite being readable under a different path). It also does not
check if file system permissions would render a file unreadable.
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Located in cmd/snap/cmd_routine_file_access.go:43
34.

The find command queries the store for available packages.

With the --private flag, which requires the user to be logged-in to the store
(see 'snap help login'), it instead searches for private snaps that the user
has developer access to, either directly or through the store's collaboration
feature.

A green check mark (given color and unicode support) after a publisher name
indicates that the publisher has been verified.
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Located in cmd/snap/cmd_find.go:40
35.

The forget command deletes a snapshot. This operation can not be
undone.

A snapshot contains archives for the user, system and configuration
data of each snap included in the snapshot.

By default, this command forgets all the data in a snapshot.
Alternatively, you can specify the data of which snaps to forget.
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Located in cmd/snap/cmd_snapshot.go:66
36.

The get command prints configuration options for the current snap.

$ snapctl get username
frank

If multiple option names are provided, a document is returned:

$ snapctl get username password
{
"username": "frank",
"password": "..."
}

Nested values may be retrieved via a dotted path:

$ snapctl get author.name
frank

Values of interface connection settings may be printed with:

$ snapctl get :myplug usb-vendor
$ snapctl get :myslot path

This will return the named setting from the local interface endpoint,
regardless whether it's a plug or a slot. Returning the setting from the
connected snap's endpoint is also possible by requesting the setting explicitly
with optional --plug and --slot command options:

$ snapctl get :myplug --slot usb-vendor

This requests the "usb-vendor" setting from the slot that is connected to
"myplug".
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Located in overlord/hookstate/ctlcmd/get.go:52
37.

The get command prints configuration options for the provided snap.

$ snap get snap-name username
frank

If multiple option names are provided, the corresponding values are returned:

$ snap get snap-name username password
Key Value
username frank
password ...

Nested values may be retrieved via a dotted path:

$ snap get snap-name author.name
frank
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Located in cmd/snap/cmd_get.go:35
40.

The install command installs the named snaps on the system.

To install multiple instances of the same snap, append an underscore and a
unique identifier (for each instance) to a snap's name.

Parallel instances are installed with --unaliased passed implicitly to avoid
conflicts with existing installs. This behaviour can be altered by passing
--prefer which will enable all aliases of the given snap in preference to
conflicting aliases of other snaps whose automatic aliases will be disabled and
manual aliases will be removed.

With no further options, the snaps are installed tracking the stable channel,
with strict security confinement. All available channels of a snap are listed in
its 'snap info' output.

When --revision is used, a later refresh will typically undo the revision
override, taking the snap back to the current revision of the channel it's
tracking.

Use --name to set the instance name when installing from snap file.
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Located in cmd/snap/cmd_snap_op.go:52
42.

The interfaces command lists interfaces available in the system.

By default all slots and plugs, used and offered by all snaps, are displayed.

$ snap interfaces <snap>:<slot or plug>

Lists only the specified slot or plug.

$ snap interfaces <snap>

Lists the slots offered and plugs used by the specified snap.

$ snap interfaces -i=<interface> [<snap>]

Filters the complete output so only plugs and/or slots matching the provided
details are listed.

NOTE this command is deprecated and has been replaced with the 'connections'
command.
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Located in cmd/snap/cmd_interfaces.go:40
43.

The is-connected command returns success if the given plug or slot of the
calling snap is connected, and failure otherwise.

$ snapctl is-connected plug
$ echo $?
1

Snaps can only query their own plugs and slots - snap name is implicit and
implied by the snapctl execution context.

The --list option lists all connected plugs and slots.

The --pid and --aparmor-label options can be used to determine whether
a plug or slot is connected to the snap identified by the given
process ID or AppArmor label. In this mode, additional failure exit
codes may be returned: 10 if the other snap is not connected but uses
classic confinement, or 11 if the other process is not snap confined.

The --pid and --apparmor-label options may only be used with slots of
interface type "pulseaudio", "audio-record", or "cups-control".
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Located in overlord/hookstate/ctlcmd/is_connected.go:54
45.

The kmod command handles loading and unloading of kernel modules.
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Located in overlord/hookstate/ctlcmd/kmod.go:35
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This translation is managed by Ubuntu Galician Translators, assigned by Ubuntu Translators.

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Contributors to this translation: Antón Méixome, Marcos Lans, Marcos Lans, Xosé.