| Support is available for filesystems that wish to do automounting |
| support (such as kAFS which can be found in fs/afs/ and NFS in |
| fs/nfs/). This facility includes allowing in-kernel mounts to be |
| performed and mountpoint degradation to be requested. The latter can |
| also be requested by userspace. |
| |
| |
| ====================== |
| IN-KERNEL AUTOMOUNTING |
| ====================== |
| |
| See section "Mount Traps" of Documentation/filesystems/autofs.rst |
| |
| Then from userspace, you can just do something like: |
| |
| [root@andromeda root]# mount -t afs \#root.afs. /afs |
| [root@andromeda root]# ls /afs |
| asd cambridge cambridge.redhat.com grand.central.org |
| [root@andromeda root]# ls /afs/cambridge |
| afsdoc |
| [root@andromeda root]# ls /afs/cambridge/afsdoc/ |
| ChangeLog html LICENSE pdf RELNOTES-1.2.2 |
| |
| And then if you look in the mountpoint catalogue, you'll see something like: |
| |
| [root@andromeda root]# cat /proc/mounts |
| ... |
| #root.afs. /afs afs rw 0 0 |
| #root.cell. /afs/cambridge.redhat.com afs rw 0 0 |
| #afsdoc. /afs/cambridge.redhat.com/afsdoc afs rw 0 0 |
| |
| |
| =========================== |
| AUTOMATIC MOUNTPOINT EXPIRY |
| =========================== |
| |
| Automatic expiration of mountpoints is easy, provided you've mounted the |
| mountpoint to be expired in the automounting procedure outlined separately. |
| |
| To do expiration, you need to follow these steps: |
| |
| (1) Create at least one list off which the vfsmounts to be expired can be |
| hung. |
| |
| (2) When a new mountpoint is created in the ->d_automount method, add |
| the mnt to the list using mnt_set_expiry() |
| mnt_set_expiry(newmnt, &afs_vfsmounts); |
| |
| (3) When you want mountpoints to be expired, call mark_mounts_for_expiry() |
| with a pointer to this list. This will process the list, marking every |
| vfsmount thereon for potential expiry on the next call. |
| |
| If a vfsmount was already flagged for expiry, and if its usage count is 1 |
| (it's only referenced by its parent vfsmount), then it will be deleted |
| from the namespace and thrown away (effectively unmounted). |
| |
| It may prove simplest to simply call this at regular intervals, using |
| some sort of timed event to drive it. |
| |
| The expiration flag is cleared by calls to mntput. This means that expiration |
| will only happen on the second expiration request after the last time the |
| mountpoint was accessed. |
| |
| If a mountpoint is moved, it gets removed from the expiration list. If a bind |
| mount is made on an expirable mount, the new vfsmount will not be on the |
| expiration list and will not expire. |
| |
| If a namespace is copied, all mountpoints contained therein will be copied, |
| and the copies of those that are on an expiration list will be added to the |
| same expiration list. |
| |
| |
| ======================= |
| USERSPACE DRIVEN EXPIRY |
| ======================= |
| |
| As an alternative, it is possible for userspace to request expiry of any |
| mountpoint (though some will be rejected - the current process's idea of the |
| rootfs for example). It does this by passing the MNT_EXPIRE flag to |
| umount(). This flag is considered incompatible with MNT_FORCE and MNT_DETACH. |
| |
| If the mountpoint in question is in referenced by something other than |
| umount() or its parent mountpoint, an EBUSY error will be returned and the |
| mountpoint will not be marked for expiration or unmounted. |
| |
| If the mountpoint was not already marked for expiry at that time, an EAGAIN |
| error will be given and it won't be unmounted. |
| |
| Otherwise if it was already marked and it wasn't referenced, unmounting will |
| take place as usual. |
| |
| Again, the expiration flag is cleared every time anything other than umount() |
| looks at a mountpoint. |