MOUNT(2) manual page
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mount - mount filesystem
#include <sys/mount.h>
int mount(const char *source, const char *target, const char *filesystemtype,
unsigned long mountflags, const void *data);
mount()
attaches the filesystem specified by source (which is often a device name,
but can also be a directory name or a dummy) to the directory specified
by target.
Appropriate privilege (Linux: the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability)
is required to mount filesystems.
Since Linux 2.4 a single filesystem can
be visible at multiple mount points, and multiple mounts can be stacked
on the same mount point.
Values for the filesystemtype argument supported
by the kernel are listed in /proc/filesystems (e.g., "minix", "ext2", "ext3",
"jfs", "xfs", "reiserfs", "msdos", "proc", "nfs", "iso9660"). Further types
may become available when the appropriate modules are loaded.
The mountflags
argument may have the magic number 0xC0ED (MS_MGC_VAL) in the top 16 bits
(this was required in kernel versions prior to 2.4, but is no longer required
and ignored if specified), and various mount flags in the low order 16
bits:
- MS_BIND (Linux 2.4 onward)
- Perform a bind mount, making a file or a directory subtree visible at
another point within a filesystem. Bind mounts may cross filesystem boundaries
and span chroot(2)
jails. The filesystemtype and data arguments are ignored.
Up until Linux 2.6.26, mountflags was also ignored (the bind mount has the
same mount options as the underlying mount point).
- MS_DIRSYNC (since Linux
2.5.19)
- Make directory changes on this filesystem synchronous. (This property
can be obtained for individual directories or subtrees using chattr(1)
.)
- MS_MANDLOCK
- Permit mandatory locking on files in this filesystem. (Mandatory
locking must still be enabled on a per-file basis, as described in fcntl(2)
.)
- MS_MOVE
- Move a subtree. source specifies an existing mount point and target
specifies the new location. The move is atomic: at no point is the subtree
unmounted. The filesystemtype, mountflags, and data arguments are ignored.
- MS_NOATIME
- Do not update access times for (all types of) files on this
filesystem.
- MS_NODEV
- Do not allow access to devices (special files) on this
filesystem.
- MS_NODIRATIME
- Do not update access times for directories on
this filesystem. This flag provides a subset of the functionality provided
by MS_NOATIME; that is, MS_NOATIME implies MS_NODIRATIME.
- MS_NOEXEC
- Do not
allow programs to be executed from this filesystem.
- MS_NOSUID
- Do not
honor set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits when executing programs from this filesystem.
- MS_RDONLY
- Mount filesystem read-only.
- MS_RELATIME (since Linux 2.6.20)
- When a file on this filesystem is accessed, update the file’s last access
time (atime) only if the current value of atime is less than or equal to
the file’s last modification time (mtime) or last status change time (ctime).
This option is useful for programs, such as mutt(1)
, that need to know
when a file has been read since it was last modified. Since Linux 2.6.30,
the kernel defaults to the behavior provided by this flag (unless MS_NOATIME
was specified), and the MS_STRICTATIME flag is required to obtain traditional
semantics. In addition, since Linux 2.6.30, the file’s last access time is
always updated if it is more than 1 day old.
- MS_REMOUNT
- Remount an existing
mount. This allows you to change the mountflags and data of an existing
mount without having to unmount and remount the filesystem. target should
be the same value specified in the initial mount() call; source and filesystemtype
are ignored. The mountflags and data arguments should match the values used
in the original mount() call, except for those parameters that are being
deliberately changed.
The following mountflags can be changed: MS_RDONLY,
MS_SYNCHRONOUS, MS_MANDLOCK; before kernel 2.6.16, the following could also
be changed: MS_NOATIME and MS_NODIRATIME; and, additionally, before kernel
2.4.10, the following could also be changed: MS_NOSUID, MS_NODEV, MS_NOEXEC.
- MS_SILENT (since Linux 2.6.17)
- Suppress the display of certain (printk())
warning messages in the kernel log. This flag supersedes the misnamed and
obsolete MS_VERBOSE flag (available since Linux 2.4.12), which has the same
meaning.
- MS_STRICTATIME (since Linux 2.6.30)
- Always update the last access
time (atime) when files on this filesystem are accessed. (This was the default
behavior before Linux 2.6.30.) Specifying this flag overrides the effect of
setting the MS_NOATIME and MS_RELATIME flags.
- MS_SYNCHRONOUS
- Make writes
on this filesystem synchronous (as though the O_SYNC flag to open(2)
was
specified for all file opens to this filesystem).
From Linux 2.4 onward,
the MS_NODEV, MS_NOEXEC, and MS_NOSUID flags are settable on a per-mount-point
basis. From kernel 2.6.16 onward, MS_NOATIME and MS_NODIRATIME are also settable
on a per-mount-point basis. The MS_RELATIME flag is also settable on a per-mount-point
basis.
The data argument is interpreted by the different filesystems. Typically
it is a string of comma-separated options understood by this filesystem.
See mount(8)
for details of the options available for each filesystem type.
On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and errno
is set appropriately.
The error values given below result from filesystem
type independent errors. Each filesystem type may have its own special errors
and its own special behavior. See the Linux kernel source code for details.
- EACCES
- A component of a path was not searchable. (See also path_resolution(7)
.)
Or, mounting a read-only filesystem was attempted without giving the MS_RDONLY
flag. Or, the block device source is located on a filesystem mounted with
the MS_NODEV option.
- EBUSY
- source is already mounted. Or, it cannot be
remounted read-only, because it still holds files open for writing. Or, it
cannot be mounted on target because target is still busy (it is the working
directory of some thread, the mount point of another device, has open files,
etc.).
- EFAULT
- One of the pointer arguments points outside the user address
space.
- EINVAL
- source had an invalid superblock. Or, a remount (MS_REMOUNT)
was attempted, but source was not already mounted on target. Or, a move
(MS_MOVE) was attempted, but source was not a mount point, or was aq/aq.
- ELOOP
- Too many links encountered during pathname resolution. Or, a move
was attempted, while target is a descendant of source.
- EMFILE
- (In case no
block device is required:) Table of dummy devices is full.
- ENAMETOOLONG
- A pathname was longer than MAXPATHLEN.
- ENODEV
- filesystemtype not configured
in the kernel.
- ENOENT
- A pathname was empty or had a nonexistent component.
- ENOMEM
- The kernel could not allocate a free page to copy filenames or data
into.
- ENOTBLK
- source is not a block device (and a device was required).
- ENOTDIR
- target, or a prefix of source, is not a directory.
- ENXIO
- The major number
of the block device source is out of range.
- EPERM
- The caller does not have
the required privileges.
The definitions of MS_DIRSYNC, MS_MOVE,
MS_REC, MS_RELATIME, and MS_STRICTATIME were added to glibc headers in
version 2.12.
This function is Linux-specific and should not
be used in programs intended to be portable.
The original MS_SYNC flag
was renamed MS_SYNCHRONOUS in 1.1.69 when a different MS_SYNC was added to
<mman.h>.
Before Linux 2.4 an attempt to execute a set-user-ID or set-group-ID program
on a filesystem mounted with MS_NOSUID would fail with EPERM. Since Linux
2.4 the set-user-ID and set-group-ID bits are just silently ignored in this
case.
Starting with kernel 2.4.19, Linux provides per-process
mount namespaces. A mount namespace is the set of filesystem mounts that
are visible to a process. Mount-point namespaces can be (and usually are)
shared between multiple processes, and changes to the namespace (i.e., mounts
and unmounts) by one process are visible to all other processes sharing
the same namespace. (The pre-2.4.19 Linux situation can be considered as one
in which a single namespace was shared by every process on the system.)
A child process created by fork(2)
shares its parent’s mount namespace;
the mount namespace is preserved across an execve(2)
.
A process can obtain
a private mount namespace if: it was created using the clone(2)
CLONE_NEWNS
flag, in which case its new namespace is initialized to be a copy of the
namespace of the process that called clone(2)
; or it calls unshare(2)
with
the CLONE_NEWNS flag, which causes the caller’s mount namespace to obtain
a private copy of the namespace that it was previously sharing with other
processes, so that future mounts and unmounts by the caller are invisible
to other processes (except child processes that the caller subsequently
creates) and vice versa.
The Linux-specific /proc/PID/mounts file exposes
the list of mount points in the mount namespace of the process with the
specified ID; see proc(5)
for details.
umount(2)
, namespaces(7)
,
path_resolution(7)
, lsblk(8)
, mount(8)
, umount(8)
This page is
part of release 3.78 of the Linux man-pages project. A description of the
project, information about reporting bugs, and the latest version of this
page, can be found at http://www.kernel.org/doc/man-pages/.
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