xref: /freebsd/sbin/mount/mount.8 (revision 61ba55bcf70f2340f9c943c9571113b3fd8eda69)
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30.Dd October 4, 2023
31.Dt MOUNT 8
32.Os
33.Sh NAME
34.Nm mount
35.Nd mount file systems
36.Sh SYNOPSIS
37.Nm
38.Op Fl -libxo
39.Op Fl adflpruvw
40.Op Fl F Ar fstab
41.Op Fl o Ar options
42.Op Fl t Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm Ar type Ns Op Cm , Ns Ar type ...
43.Nm
44.Op Fl -libxo
45.Op Fl dfpruvw
46.Ar special | node
47.Nm
48.Op Fl -libxo
49.Op Fl dfpruvw
50.Op Fl o Ar options
51.Op Fl t Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm Ar type Ns Op Cm , Ns Ar type ...
52.Ar special node
53.Sh DESCRIPTION
54The
55.Nm
56utility calls the
57.Xr nmount 2
58system call to prepare and graft a
59.Ar special
60device or the remote node (rhost:path) on to the file system tree at the point
61.Ar node .
62If either
63.Ar special
64or
65.Ar node
66are not provided, the appropriate information is taken from the
67.Xr fstab 5
68file.
69.Pp
70The system maintains a list of currently mounted file systems.
71If no arguments are given to
72.Nm ,
73this list is printed.
74.Pp
75The options are as follows:
76.Bl -tag -width indent
77.It Fl -libxo
78Generate output via
79.Xr libxo 3
80in a selection of different human and machine readable formats.
81See
82.Xr xo_parse_args 3
83for details on command line arguments.
84.It Fl a
85All the file systems described in
86.Xr fstab 5
87are mounted.
88Exceptions are those marked as
89.Dq Li noauto ,
90those marked as
91.Dq Li late
92(unless the
93.Fl l
94option was specified),
95those excluded by the
96.Fl t
97flag (see below), or if they are already mounted (except the
98root file system which is always remounted to preserve
99traditional single user mode behavior).
100.It Fl d
101Causes everything to be done except for the actual system call.
102This option is useful in conjunction with the
103.Fl v
104flag to
105determine what the
106.Nm
107command is trying to do.
108.It Fl F Ar fstab
109Specify the
110.Pa fstab
111file to use.
112.It Fl f
113Forces the revocation of write access when trying to downgrade
114a file system mount status from read-write to read-only.
115Also
116forces the R/W mount of an unclean file system (dangerous; use with
117caution).
118.It Fl L
119When used in conjunction with the
120.Fl a
121option, mount
122.Em only
123those file systems which are marked as
124.Dq Li late .
125.It Fl l
126When used in conjunction with the
127.Fl a
128option, also mount those file systems which are marked as
129.Dq Li late .
130.It Fl n
131For compatibility with some other implementations, this flag is
132currently a no-op.
133.It Fl o
134Options are specified with a
135.Fl o
136flag followed by a comma separated string of options.
137In case of conflicting options being specified, the rightmost option
138takes effect.
139The following options are available:
140.Bl -tag -width indent
141.It Cm acls
142Enable POSIX.1e Access Control Lists, or ACLs, which can be customized via the
143.Xr setfacl 1
144and
145.Xr getfacl 1
146commands.
147This flag is mutually exclusive with
148.Cm nfsv4acls
149flag.
150.It Cm async
151All I/O to the file system should be done asynchronously.
152This is a
153.Em dangerous
154flag to set, since it does not guarantee that the file system structure
155on the disk will remain consistent.
156For this reason, the
157.Cm async
158flag should be used sparingly, and only when some data recovery
159mechanism is present.
160.It Cm automounted
161This flag indicates that the file system was mounted by
162.Xr automountd 8 .
163Automounted file systems are automatically unmounted by
164.Xr autounmountd 8 .
165.It Cm autoro
166Mount the file system read-write.
167If that fails with an error that suggests that the media could be read-only,
168then automatically try to mount the file system read-only.
169.It Cm current
170When used with the
171.Fl u
172flag, this is the same as specifying the options currently in effect for
173the mounted file system.
174.It Cm emptydir
175Require that the mount point directory be empty.
176.It Cm force
177The same as
178.Fl f ;
179forces the revocation of write access when trying to downgrade
180a file system mount status from read-write to read-only.
181Also
182forces the R/W mount of an unclean file system (dangerous; use with caution).
183.It Cm fstab
184When used with the
185.Fl u
186flag, this is the same as specifying all the options listed in the
187.Xr fstab 5
188file for the file system.
189.It Cm late
190This file system should be skipped when
191.Nm
192is run with the
193.Fl a
194flag but without the
195.Fl l
196flag.
197.It Cm mountprog Ns = Ns Aq Ar program
198Force
199.Nm
200to use the specified program to mount the file system, instead of calling
201.Xr nmount 2
202directly.
203For example:
204.Bd -literal
205mount -t foofs -o mountprog=/mydir/fooprog /dev/cd0 /mnt
206.Ed
207.It Cm multilabel
208Enable multi-label Mandatory Access Control, or MAC, on the specified file
209system.
210If the file system supports multilabel operation, individual labels will
211be maintained for each object in the file system, rather than using a
212single label for all objects.
213An alternative to the
214.Fl l
215flag in
216.Xr tunefs 8 .
217See
218.Xr mac 4
219for more information, which cause the multilabel mount flag to be set
220automatically at mount-time.
221.It Cm nfsv4acls
222Enable NFSv4 ACLs, which can be customized via the
223.Xr setfacl 1
224and
225.Xr getfacl 1
226commands.
227This flag is mutually exclusive with
228.Cm acls
229flag.
230.It Cm noasync
231Metadata I/O should be done synchronously, while data I/O should be done
232asynchronously.
233This is the default.
234.It Cm noatime
235Do not update the file access time when reading from a file.
236This option
237is useful on file systems where there are large numbers of files and
238performance is more critical than updating the file access time (which is
239rarely ever important).
240This option is currently only supported on local file systems.
241.It Cm noauto
242This file system should be skipped when
243.Nm
244is run with the
245.Fl a
246flag.
247.It Cm noclusterr
248Disable read clustering.
249.It Cm noclusterw
250Disable write clustering.
251.It Cm nocover
252Do not mount if the requested mount point is already
253the root of a mount point.
254.It Cm noexec
255Do not allow execution of any binaries on the mounted file system.
256This option is useful for a server that has file systems containing
257binaries for architectures other than its own.
258Note: This option was not designed as a security feature and no
259guarantee is made that it will prevent malicious code execution; for
260example, it is still possible to execute scripts which reside on a
261.Cm noexec
262mounted partition.
263.It Cm nosuid
264Do not allow set-user-identifier or set-group-identifier bits to take effect.
265Note: this option is worthless if a public available suid or sgid
266wrapper is installed on your system.
267It is set automatically when the user does not have super-user privileges.
268.It Cm nosymfollow
269Do not follow symlinks
270on the mounted file system.
271.It Cm ro
272The same as
273.Fl r ;
274mount the file system read-only (even the super-user may not write it).
275.It Cm snapshot
276Take a snapshot of the specified filesystem.
277When this option is used, all other options are ignored.
278The
279.Fl u
280flag is required with this option.
281.Pp
282Snapshot files must be created in the file system that is being
283snapshotted.
284You may create up to 20 snapshots per file system.
285Active snapshots are recorded in the superblock, so they persist across unmount
286and remount operations and across system reboots.
287When you are done with a snapshot, it can be removed with the
288.Xr rm 1
289command.
290Snapshots may be removed in any order, however you may not get back all the
291space contained in the snapshot as another snapshot may claim some of the blocks
292that it is releasing.
293Note that the schg flag is set on snapshots to ensure that not even the root
294user can write to them.
295The unlink command makes an exception for snapshot files in that it allows them
296to be removed even though they have the schg flag set, so it is not necessary to
297clear the schg flag before removing a snapshot file.
298.Pp
299Once you have taken a snapshot, there are three interesting things that you can
300do with it:
301.Pp
302.Bl -enum -compact
303.It
304Run
305.Xr fsck 8
306on the snapshot file.
307Assuming that the file system was clean when it was mounted, you should always
308get a clean (and unchanging) result from running fsck on the snapshot.
309This is essentially what the background fsck process does.
310.Pp
311.It
312Run
313.Xr dump 8
314on the snapshot.
315You will get a dump that is consistent with the file system as of the timestamp
316of the snapshot.
317.Pp
318.It
319Mount the snapshot as a frozen image of the file system.
320To mount the snapshot
321.Pa /var/snapshot/snap1 :
322.Bd -literal
323mdconfig -a -t vnode -f /var/snapshot/snap1 -u 4
324mount -r /dev/md4 /mnt
325.Ed
326.Pp
327You can now cruise around your frozen
328.Pa /var
329file system at
330.Pa /mnt .
331Everything will be in the same state that it was at the time the snapshot was
332taken.
333The one exception is that any earlier snapshots will appear as zero length
334files.
335When you are done with the mounted snapshot:
336.Bd -literal
337umount /mnt
338mdconfig -d -u 4
339.Ed
340.El
341.It Cm suiddir
342A directory on the mounted file system will respond to the SUID bit
343being set, by setting the owner of any new files to be the same
344as the owner of the directory.
345New directories will inherit the bit from their parents.
346Execute bits are removed from
347the file, and it will not be given to root.
348.Pp
349This feature is designed for use on fileservers serving PC users via
350ftp, SAMBA, or netatalk.
351It provides security holes for shell users and as
352such should not be used on shell machines, especially on home directories.
353This option requires the SUIDDIR
354option in the kernel to work.
355Only UFS file systems support this option.
356See
357.Xr chmod 2
358for more information.
359.It Cm sync
360All I/O to the file system should be done synchronously.
361.It Cm update
362The same as
363.Fl u ;
364indicate that the status of an already mounted file system should be changed.
365.It Cm union
366Causes the namespace at the mount point to appear as the union
367of the mounted file system root and the existing directory.
368Lookups will be done in the mounted file system first.
369If those operations fail due to a non-existent file the underlying
370directory is then accessed.
371All creates are done in the mounted file system.
372.It Cm untrusted
373The file system is untrusted and the kernel should use more
374extensive checks on the file-system's metadata before using it.
375This option is intended to be used when mounting file systems
376from untrusted media such as USB memory sticks or other
377externally-provided media.
378.El
379.Pp
380Any additional options specific to a file system type that is not
381one of the internally known types (see the
382.Fl t
383option) may be passed as a comma separated list; these options are
384distinguished by a leading
385.Dq \&-
386(dash).
387For example, the
388.Nm
389command:
390.Bd -literal -offset indent
391mount -t cd9660 -o -e /dev/cd0 /cdrom
392.Ed
393.Pp
394causes
395.Nm
396to execute the equivalent of:
397.Bd -literal -offset indent
398/sbin/mount_cd9660 -e /dev/cd0 /cdrom
399.Ed
400.Pp
401Options that take a value are specified using the -option=value syntax:
402.Bd -literal -offset indent
403mount -t msdosfs -o -u=fred,-g=wheel /dev/da0s1 /mnt
404.Ed
405.Pp
406is equivalent to
407.Bd -literal -offset indent
408/sbin/mount_msdosfs -u fred -g wheel /dev/da0s1 /mnt
409.Ed
410.Pp
411Additional options specific to file system types
412which are not internally known
413(see the description of the
414.Fl t
415option below)
416may be described in the manual pages for the associated
417.Pa /sbin/mount_ Ns Sy XXX
418utilities.
419.It Fl p
420Print mount information in
421.Xr fstab 5
422format.
423Implies also the
424.Fl v
425option.
426.It Fl r
427The file system is to be mounted read-only.
428Mount the file system read-only (even the super-user may not write it).
429The same as the
430.Cm ro
431argument to the
432.Fl o
433option.
434.It Fl t Oo Cm no Oc Ns Cm Ar type Ns Op Cm , Ns Ar type ...
435The argument following the
436.Fl t
437is used to indicate the file system type.
438The type
439.Cm ufs
440is the default.
441The
442.Fl t
443option can be used
444to indicate that the actions should only be taken on
445file systems of the specified type.
446More than one type may be specified in a comma separated list.
447The list of file system types can be prefixed with
448.Cm no
449to specify the file system types for which action should
450.Em not
451be taken.
452For example, the
453.Nm
454command:
455.Bd -literal -offset indent
456mount -a -t nonfs,nullfs
457.Ed
458.Pp
459mounts all file systems except those of type NFS and NULLFS.
460.Pp
461The default behavior of
462.Nm
463is to pass the
464.Fl t
465option directly to the
466.Xr nmount 2
467system call in the
468.Li fstype
469option.
470.Pp
471However, for the following file system types:
472.Cm cd9660 ,
473.Cm mfs ,
474.Cm msdosfs ,
475.Cm nfs ,
476.Cm nullfs ,
477.Cm smbfs ,
478.Cm udf ,
479and
480.Cm unionfs
481.Nm
482will not call
483.Xr nmount 2
484directly and will instead attempt to execute a program in
485.Pa /sbin/mount_ Ns Ar type
486where
487.Ar type
488is replaced by the file system type name.
489For example,
490.Cm nfs
491file systems are mounted by the program
492.Pa /sbin/mount_nfs .
493.Pp
494Most file systems will be dynamically loaded by the kernel
495if not already present, and if the kernel module is available.
496.It Fl u
497The
498.Fl u
499flag indicates that the status of an already mounted file
500system should be changed.
501Any of the options discussed above (the
502.Fl o
503option)
504may be changed;
505also a file system can be changed from read-only to read-write
506or vice versa.
507An attempt to change from read-write to read-only will fail if any
508files on the file system are currently open for writing unless the
509.Fl f
510flag is also specified.
511The set of options is determined by applying the options specified
512in the argument to
513.Fl o
514and finally applying the
515.Fl r
516or
517.Fl w
518option.
519.It Fl v
520Verbose mode.
521If the
522.Fl v
523is used alone, show all file systems, including those that were mounted with the
524.Dv MNT_IGNORE
525flag and show additional information about each file system (including fsid
526when run by root).
527.It Fl w
528The file system object is to be read and write.
529.El
530.Sh ENVIRONMENT
531.Bl -tag -width ".Ev PATH_FSTAB"
532.It Ev PATH_FSTAB
533If the environment variable
534.Ev PATH_FSTAB
535is set, all operations are performed against the specified file.
536.Ev PATH_FSTAB
537will not be honored if the process environment or memory address space is
538considered
539.Dq tainted .
540(See
541.Xr issetugid 2
542for more information.)
543.El
544.Sh FILES
545.Bl -tag -width /etc/fstab -compact
546.It Pa /etc/fstab
547file system table
548.El
549.Sh DIAGNOSTICS
550Various, most of them are self-explanatory.
551.Pp
552.Dl XXXXX file system is not available
553.Pp
554The kernel does not support the respective file system type.
555Note that
556support for a particular file system might be provided either on a static
557(kernel compile-time), or dynamic basis (loaded as a kernel module by
558.Xr kldload 8 ) .
559.Sh SEE ALSO
560.Xr getfacl 1 ,
561.Xr setfacl 1 ,
562.Xr nmount 2 ,
563.Xr acl 3 ,
564.Xr libxo 3 ,
565.Xr xo_parse_args 3 ,
566.Xr mac 4 ,
567.Xr cd9660 5 ,
568.Xr devfs 5 ,
569.Xr ext2fs 5 ,
570.Xr fstab 5 ,
571.Xr procfs 5 ,
572.Xr tarfs 5 ,
573.Xr tmpfs 5 ,
574.Xr automount 8 ,
575.Xr fstyp 8 ,
576.Xr kldload 8 ,
577.Xr mount_cd9660 8 ,
578.Xr mount_msdosfs 8 ,
579.Xr mount_nfs 8 ,
580.Xr mount_nullfs 8 ,
581.Xr mount_smbfs 8 ,
582.Xr mount_udf 8 ,
583.Xr mount_unionfs 8 ,
584.Xr umount 8 ,
585.Xr zfs 8 ,
586.Xr zpool 8
587.Sh HISTORY
588A
589.Nm
590utility appeared in
591.At v1 .
592.Sh CAVEATS
593After a successful
594.Nm ,
595the permissions on the original mount point determine if
596.Pa ..\&
597is accessible from the mounted file system.
598The minimum permissions for
599the mount point for traversal across the mount point in both
600directions to be possible for all users is 0111 (execute for all).
601.Pp
602Use of the
603.Nm
604is preferred over the use of the file system specific
605.Pa mount_ Ns Sy XXX
606commands.
607In particular,
608.Xr mountd 8
609gets a
610.Dv SIGHUP
611signal (that causes an update of the export list)
612only when the file system is mounted via
613.Nm .
614.Sh BUGS
615It is possible for a corrupted file system to cause a crash.
616