Montowanie
Mounting typically involves the attaching of an additional filesystem to the currently accessible filesystem of a computer.[1]
Instalacja
The mount command is part of the util-linux package. In Gentoo Linux, sys-apps/util-linux is part of the system set and is installed on all Gentoo systems by default.
If for some strange and unordinary reason it is missing it can be re-installed by running a simple emerge command (always use the --oneshot
option). This can also be used after changing USE flags:
root #
emerge --ask sys-apps/util-linux
Zastosowanie
root #
mount --help
Usage: mount [-lhV] mount -a [options] mount [options] [--source] <source> | [--target] <directory> mount [options] <source> <directory> mount <operation> <mountpoint> [<target>] Mount a filesystem. Options: -a, --all mount all filesystems mentioned in fstab -c, --no-canonicalize don't canonicalize paths -f, --fake dry run; skip the mount(2) syscall -F, --fork fork off for each device (use with -a) -T, --fstab <path> alternative file to /etc/fstab -i, --internal-only don't call the mount.<type> helpers -l, --show-labels show also filesystem labels -m, --mkdir[=<mode>] alias to '-o X-mount.mkdir[=<mode>]' -n, --no-mtab don't write to /etc/mtab --options-mode <mode> what to do with options loaded from fstab --options-source <source> mount options source --options-source-force force use of options from fstab/mtab -o, --options <list> comma-separated list of mount options -O, --test-opts <list> limit the set of filesystems (use with -a) -r, --read-only mount the filesystem read-only (same as -o ro) -t, --types <list> limit the set of filesystem types --source <src> explicitly specifies source (path, label, uuid) --target <target> explicitly specifies mountpoint --target-prefix <path> specifies path used for all mountpoints -v, --verbose say what is being done -w, --rw, --read-write mount the filesystem read-write (default) -N, --namespace <ns> perform mount in another namespace -h, --help display this help -V, --version display version Source: -L, --label <label> synonym for LABEL=<label> -U, --uuid <uuid> synonym for UUID=<uuid> LABEL=<label> specifies device by filesystem label UUID=<uuid> specifies device by filesystem UUID PARTLABEL=<label> specifies device by partition label PARTUUID=<uuid> specifies device by partition UUID ID=<id> specifies device by udev hardware ID <device> specifies device by path <directory> mountpoint for bind mounts (see --bind/rbind) <file> regular file for loopdev setup Operations: -B, --bind mount a subtree somewhere else (same as -o bind) -M, --move move a subtree to some other place -R, --rbind mount a subtree and all submounts somewhere else --make-shared mark a subtree as shared --make-slave mark a subtree as slave --make-private mark a subtree as private --make-unbindable mark a subtree as unbindable --make-rshared recursively mark a whole subtree as shared --make-rslave recursively mark a whole subtree as slave --make-rprivate recursively mark a whole subtree as private --make-runbindable recursively mark a whole subtree as unbindable For more details see mount(8).
List mounts
Pokaż zamontowane systemy plików, uruchamiając polecenie mount bez argumentów lub opcji:
root #
mount
There is also a more visual way of showing mounted filesystems using the findmnt tool also provided by sys-apps/util-linux. For more details see man 8 findmnt.
Mount filesystem
To mount a filesystem, a device file, UUID or label or other means of locating the partition or data source and a mount point are required. Non-system relevant filesystems are normally mounted in the /mnt directory. The proper syntax for mounting a file system is as follows:
root #
mount <URZĄDZENIE> <ŚCIEŻKA>
Więcej szczegółowych informacji znajduje się w man 8 mount
The /media directory is generally used to mount removable devices such as USB drives or SD cards. After determining which device the USB drive shows up as, a command like the following could be used to mount its contents to a newly created usb folder in /media:
root #
mkdir /media/usb
root #
mount /dev/sdb1 /media/usb
{{{1}}}
Unmount a filesystem
To unmount a filesystem, the device file or the mount point can be specified:
root #
umount <URZĄDZENIE>
root #
umount <ŚCIEŻKA>
Invocation information:
user $
umount --help
Usage: umount [-hV] umount -a [options] umount [options] <source> | <directory> Unmount filesystems. Options: -a, --all unmount all filesystems -A, --all-targets unmount all mountpoints for the given device in the current namespace -c, --no-canonicalize don't canonicalize paths -d, --detach-loop if mounted loop device, also free this loop device --fake dry run; skip the umount(2) syscall -f, --force force unmount (in case of an unreachable NFS system) -i, --internal-only don't call the umount.<type> helpers -n, --no-mtab don't write to /etc/mtab -l, --lazy detach the filesystem now, clean up things later -O, --test-opts <list> limit the set of filesystems (use with -a) -R, --recursive recursively unmount a target with all its children -r, --read-only in case unmounting fails, try to remount read-only -t, --types <list> limit the set of filesystem types -v, --verbose say what is being done -q, --quiet suppress 'not mounted' error messages -N, --namespace <ns> perform umount in another namespace -h, --help display this help -V, --version display version For more details see umount(8).
Mount options
Czasem montowanie systemu plików wymaga specjalnych opcji.
root #
mount [OPCJE] <URZĄDZENIE> <ŚCIEŻKA>
Option | Description |
---|---|
-f
|
Simulate the mount |
-t
|
Specify the filesystem, e.g ext4 |
-o OPTION1,OPTION2,...
|
Specify the mount options (see below) |
-a
|
Mount all filesystems in /etc/fstab |
The filesystem being used must support the mount option being passed. Many options are common, but some are filesystem specific.
Option | Description |
---|---|
defaults
|
Use the default mount options: rw , suid , dev , exec , auto , nouser , async .
|
auto
|
Mount the filesystem automatically on boot. |
noauto
|
Do not mount the filesystem automatically on boot. |
ro
|
Mount the filesystem read-only. |
rw
|
Mount the filesystem read-write. |
sw
|
Mount a swap partition. |
atime
|
Update inode access times on every read. |
relatime
|
Update inode access times only on writes to improve I/O performance. |
noatime
|
Never update inode access times for best I/O performance. |
sync
|
Sync drive after each write. Can shorten lifespan for e.g. some flash drives. |
async
|
Sync drive asynchronously. |
discard
|
The equivalent of trim support on Linux. |
exec
|
Allow execution of binaries. |
noexec
|
Do not allow execution of binaries. |
suid
|
Follow SUID and SGID bits. |
nosuid
|
Do not follow SUID and SGID bits. |
user
|
Allow a user to mount the filesystem. Implies nodev , noexec , and nosuid options unless explicitly setting dev , exec , or suid respectively.
|
users
|
Allow every user to mount the filesystem. |
nouser
|
Allow only "root" to mount the filesystem. |
Mount options of already-mounted filesystems can be changed using remount
option. For example, setting a filesystem on /dev/foo to be mounted as read-write can be achieved using:
root #
mount -o remount,rw /dev/foo /dir
Tips
Mounting as non-superuser
According to man mount, only the superuser can mount filesystems. However, when /etc/fstab contains the user
option on a line, any user will be capable of mounting the corresponding partition, device, drive, etc.
Mounting removable media
See the relevant section in the Removable media article.
Despite /etc/fstab entries, non-superuser mounts of Windows shares will fail (for security reasons). In the following example is found a fstab entry for Windows share; pay close attention to the cifs
option:
[...]
//server/folder /home/larry/winmount cifs noauto,user 0 0
[...]
user $
mount /home/larry/winmount
This program is not installed setuid root - "user" CIFS mounts not supported.
The solution is to use sudo mount /home/larry/winmount in combination with a corresponding entry in /etc/sudoers to allow passwordless mounting.
[...]
larry ALL = NOPASSWD: /bin/mount /home/larry/winmount/, /bin/mount /home/larry/winmount
larry ALL = NOPASSWD: /bin/umount /home/larry/winmount/, /bin/umount /home/larry/winmount
[...]
Zobacz również
- Mounting partitions in the Security Handbook
- /etc/fstab — a configuration file that defines how and where the main filesystems are to be mounted, especially at boot time.
- Removable media — any media that is easily removed from a system.
- AutoFS — a program that uses the Linux kernel automounter to automatically mount filesystems on demand.
- Udevil — a small auto-mount utility created to be a "a hassle-free replacement for udisks."
- CurlFtpFS — allows for mounting an FTP folder as a regular directory to the local directory tree.
- USB/Guide - Mounting a USB Mass Storage device
- UUIDs and labels