Re: request for patches: showing mount options

From: Miklos Szeredi
Date: Wed Aug 01 2007 - 02:53:21 EST


> > The removal of /etc/mtab in favor of /proc/mounts is a new requirement,
> > and is not as trivial as you might hope. Internally the NFS client
> > represents the mount options as a binary data structure, and it contains
> > only the information that has traditionally been passed into the kernel
> > by the current mount command. The user-space-only options are not
> > passed to the kernel nor stored in the data structure.
> >
> > Adding facilities to store information about every possible mount
> > option, including the user-space-only ones, will take a bit of time, but
> > is possible, if not straightforward. We just have to understand all the
> > dependencies.
>
> I still have doubts. The removal of /etc/mtab is nice, but a little
> unreal wish. Do we really want to store non-kernel data (options) in
> kernel? What about options that are not closely related to any
> filesystem -- for example "loop="?

"loop=DEV" is special, we've already talked about that.

For example if we have an mtab entry like this:

/dir/foo.iso /mnt/image ext3 rw,loop=/dev/loop/0 0 0

It says: /dev/loop/0 has been automatically set up by mount(8) from
/dir/foo.iso and so needs to be torn down by umount(8). It is not a
property of the mount, rather the property of the device.

So what we really want is a file to store this, and only this info:

/var/lib/mount/loop:

/dev/loop/0 /dir/foo.iso
/dev/loop/2 /dir/bar.img
...

Notice, there's nothing about the _mountpoint_ in this file.

> Maybe we can replace /etc/mtab with something more useful
> (e.g. /var/run/mount/<mntid>.tab) for really user-space-only information.

The problem with storing mount options in userspace is that
unprivileged mounts/umounts won't work in the presense of those, we
cannot _force_ an unprivileged user to update a file.

So we want to avoid storing options in userspace as long as possible.

Miklos
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/