"-t msdosfs". The conversion has been happening since 1.43, but
no equivalent conversion happens in "umount -t", which led to some
confusion with some users.
PR: 79296
Submitted by: Nobuhiro Yasutomi <nobuhiro yasutomi nifty ne jp>
For filesystems which use vfs_mount_error() to log an error, this
char buffer will be populated with a string error message.
If nmount() fails, in addition to printing out strerror(errno),
print out the "errmsg" populated by vfs_mount_error().
in /etc/fstab.
This has been happening due to the priority inversion; options
specified on the command line should take precedence over options
from fstab over default "noro" option, but since both the default
"noro" and options specified on the command line (-w, -r, -o ...)
were put into the same "options" variable, "noro" took precedence
over fstab "ro" (this is easily visible with "mount -d").
PR: bin/100164
not be mounted unless the -l flag was specified.
Add an rc script, mountlate, which basically runs 'mount -a -l'. It runs
after DAEMON but before LOGIN.
This is useful for things like loopback mounts, because mountcritremote
runs before mountd / nfsd (since /usr might be a remote file system), so
an attempt to mount a loopback network file system in mountcritremote will
fail.
Also add a progress message to mountcritlocal, for the sake of symmetry
with similar messages in mountcritremote and mountlate.
Reviewed by: freebsd-rc
MFC after: 3 weeks
keeping a flag to check whether we actually wanted to mount the filesystem
readonly, setup the options list so that we start off by assuming rw is what's
desired and let later flags change that.
additional -r (read-only) flag or or -w (read-write) flag,
then assume we want, mount -u -w.
When doing a mount update, this will implicitly pass a "noro" mount
option down to the VFS layer.
vfs_mergeopts() in vfs_mount.c will then remove the "ro" mount option
if it exists in the mount options for a mounted file system.
This means that "mount -u" works the same as "mount -u -w"
and will convert a read-only mount to read-write.
- mount(8) now calls the nmount(2) system call directly, not mount(2)
- specifying a filesystem type with -t will not automatically
invoke an external /sbin/mount_XXXX program....this only happens for
certain file system types. For all other file system types, nmount(2)
is called directly.
system is mounted. This prevevents duplicated mounts.
The change I made against the original patch is to fall back to the given
path on realpath(2) failure instead of exiting with an error.
Submitted by: Andreas Kohn <andreas@syndrom23.de>
PR: bin/89782
MFC after: 3 days
external mounting program list as well; otherwise, entry like the following
in /etc/fstab wouldn't work:
/dev/acd0 /mnt/cdrom cd9660 ro,-C=big5 0 0
Reviewed by: rodrigc
- Add build_iovec_argf() helper function, for help converting old
mount options which used the mount_argf() function for the mount() syscall.
Discussed with: phk
- Teach the mount program to call the nmount() syscall directly
- Preserve existing method of calling mount() for UFS, until we clean things
up.
- Preserve existing method of forking and calling external mount programs for
mfs, msdosfs, nfs, nfs4, ntfs, nwfs, nullfs, portalfs, reiserfs, smbfs,
udf, umapfs, unionfs
- devfs, linprocfs, procfs, ext2fs call nmount() syscall directly, since
that is all those external mount programs were doing
Reviewed by: phk
Discussed on: arch
use of the macro in sbin/mount*'s, by replacing:
mopts[] = {
MOPT_STDOPTS,
{ NULL }
}
With:
mopts[] = {
MOPT_STDOPTS,
MOPT_NULL
}
This change will help to reduce the situation that we don't explicitly
initialize "struct mntopt"'s. It should not contribute to any
functional/logical changes as far as I can tell.
This unbreaks "/rescue/mount -t foo" -- previously it was necessary to
explicitly call "/rescue/mount_foo".
Hints from: gordon
X-MFC after: 3 days (if approved by re@)
libufs, which only works for Charlie root.
This change reverts the introduction of libufs and moves the
check into the kernel. Since the f_fstypename is the same
for both ufs and ufs2, we check fs_magic for presence of
ufs2 and copy "ufs2" explicitly instead.
Submitted by: Christian S.J. Peron <maneo@bsdpro.com>
MAC support on the file system, if supported, which causes MAC to treat
each object as having its own label, rather than using a single label
for all objects on the file system. This doesn't have to be used in
combination with the tunefs/newfs flags -- it's an alternative.
in those cases:
1. File system was mounted by an unprivileged user.
2. File system was mounted by an unprivileged root user.
3. File system was mounted by a privileged non-root user.
Point 1 is when file system was mounted by unprivileged user
(sysctl vfs.usermount was equal to 1 then).
Point 2 is when file system was mounted by root, while sysctl
security.bsd.suser_enabled is set to 0 and sysctl vfs.usermount
is set to 1.
Point 3 is because we want to be ready for capabilities.
Reviewed by: rwatson
Approved by: scottl (mentor)
is all zeros. The kernel now consistently zeroes FSIDs for non-root
users, so there's no point in printing these.
Also fix a number of compiler warnings, including two real bugs:
- a bracket placement bug caused `mount -t ufs localhost:/foo /mnt'
to override the `-t ufs' specification and use mount_nfs.
- an unitialised variable was used instead of _PATH_SYSPATH when
warning that the mount_* program cound not be found.
Submitted by: Rudolf Cejka <cejkar@fit.vutbr.cz> (FSID part)
Approved by: re (scottl)
ID for each file system in addition to the normal information.
In umount(8), accept filesystem IDs as well as the usual device and
path names. This makes it possible to unambiguously specify which
file system is to be unmounted even when two or more file systems
share the same device and mountpoint names (e.g. NFS mounts from
the same export into different chroots).
Suggested by: Dan Nelson <dnelson@allantgroup.com>
remove all the code which was trying to do so.
This code was nasty in several ways, it was hiding
the kernel bug where the kernel was unable to properly
load a module, and it was quitting if it wasn't able
to load the module. The consequence is that an ABI
breakage of the vfsconf API would have broken *every*
mount utility.
kernel access control.
Teach mount(8) to understand the MNT_MULTILABEL flag, which is used
to determine whether a file system operates with individual per-vnode
labels, or treats the entire file system as a single object with a
single (mount) label. The behavior here will probably evolve some
now that nmount(2) is available and can more flexibly support mount
options.
Obtained from: TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by: DARPA, NAI Labs
the filesystem type isn't given in the command line. In the case of
an IPv6 address containing ':', one must use the '@' separator for it
to be properly parsed (mount_nfs(8) still needs fixing at the moment
though).
PR: bin/37230
Reviewed by: obrien
MFC after: 1 week
least in -w's case, simply unsetting the correct bit in init_flags was not
enough. The bit may be reset later if, say, the filesystem is marked `ro'
in fstab. The command line option should override the fstab setting, but
did not. The implementation of -r was changed for consistency.
PR: 26886
Reviewed by: archie
verbose mode) is specified. This should really have been the case
when this extra cruft was first introduced in rev 1.23.
PR: 20710
Reported by: Mike Meyer <mwm@mired.org>
Kirk argees that the comment about corruption caused by switching the flags
on an already mounted manpage are bogus, it doesn't happen.
Ok by: mckusick
Changes are:
- rpc.umntall is called at the right places now in /etc/rc*
- rpc.umntall timeout has been lowered from two days (too high) to one
- verbose messages in rpc.umntall have been clarified
- kill double entries in /var/db/mounttab when rpc.umntall is invoked
- ${early_nfs_mounts} has been removed from /etc/rc
- patched mount(8) -p to print different pass/dump values for ufs filesystems.
(last patch recieved from dan <bugg@bugg.strangled.net>)
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mbr@imp.ch>, dan <bugg@bugg.strangled.net>
1. Get rid of the evilly bogus strdup(fstab) and free if (fstab == "")
as in umount.
2. Don't use /etc/fstab info if the mount instance does not exactly match
the fstab entry.
3. Reversed the mountpoint checking order in getmntpt().
4. Clarify the "not mounted" error message in mount -u. The previous
"unknown special file or file system" wasn't quite right.
5. Get rid of a 1-byte memory leak; this was reported by jhb.
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
Made mount more userfriendly (bad slashes are now filtered out)
and we remove in mount_nfs trailing slashes if there are any.
Fixed mount_xxx binarys to resolve with realpath(3)
the mountpoint.
Translate the deprecated nfs-syntax with '@' to ':' .
The ':' syntax has now precedence, but '@' still works.
Notify the user that the '@' syntax should not be used.
PR: 7846
PR: 13692
Submitted by: Martin Blapp <mb@imp.ch>
Reviewed by: phk
Original patch from Adrian. Martin added a check for free().
- Included the filesystem type in output of mount
PR: bin/13143
Submitted-By: Martin Blapp <mblapp@kassiopeja.lan.attic.ch>
options:
-o fstab brings in filesystem options specified in /etc/fstab
-o current incorporates the current set of options for the file
system
The rightmost option wins in the case of conflicting options being
specified.
E.g.:-
# mount -u -o current,nosuid /home
will preserve the current mount options while adding the 'nosuid' flag.
2. Rewording of manual page to be hopefully clearer; small -Wall
cleanups.
Thanks to David Malone for his patience and willingness to work
multiple patches on request.
PR: bin/6399
Submitted by: David Malone <dwmalone@maths.tcd.ie>
getvfsent() in most cases. (The main exception is when /etc/fstab
still hasn't been converted to use a slice for the root device, the
root device is a SCSI device, and the /dev/sd* inode for this device
still hasn't been renamed to /dev/da*.)