mount
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mount is an application used to access file systems, partition tables, and shared folders. It can mount file systems supported by the Linux kernel, but can be extended with other drivers or applications, such as ntfs-3g for mounting NTFS filesystems.
Contents
Supported file systems
To view the supported file systems by your kernel and their configurations:
$ zgrep -e 'FS_' -e _FS -e 'CONFIG_ISO' -e '_NLS=' -e CONFIG_NLS_ISO /proc/config.gz
You can read about supported file systems by the mount command in the manual: man mount
.
Mounting a file system
The file /etc/fstab (see fstab(5)), may contain lines describing what devices are usually mounted where, using which options. A filesystem specified in /etc/fstab
will be mounted at boot time, with some exceptions. For example, any device whose line contains the noauto
option will not be mounted. This is useful for things like partitions for other OSes. External devices that are to be mounted when present, but ignored if absent, may require the nofail
option. See external devices for more information.
When mounting a filesystem mentioned in fstab or mtab, it is sufficient to give only the device, or only the mount point.
# mount /dev/sdXY
The mount program does not read the /etc/fstab file if device (or LABEL/UUID) and dir (mount point) are specified. For example:
# mount /dev/foo /dir
If the mount point does not exist, it may be necessary to create it first. To mount to MYDIR1:
# mkdir /mnt/mydir1 # mount /dev/sdXY /mnt/mydir1
See /etc/fstab, man fstab
and man mount
for more information.
Seeing what's been mounted
You can see what's been mounted by looking at the /etc/mtab
and //proc/mounts
files.
mtab
The /etc/mtab is a system-generated file created and updated by the mount application whenever any file system is mounted or unmounted.
It lists each device node, mount point and mount options used. Whenever the mount
program is executed without any arguments, this file is printed.
mtab File Definition
Each line in the file represents a file system that is currently mounted and displays the following information:
- The file system.
- The mount point.
- The file system type.
- Mount options used while mounting the file system.
Alternatives that can be used to change the default options for mounting
Here are a few examples about how to extend mount functionality and modify default options. To change the default settings in the kernel you will need to compile the kernel yourself. If the script does not exist then the default options will be used.
- By compiling the kernel yourself
- By using scripts
- By editing fstab
- By creating udev / udisks rules - device manager for the Linux kernel.
- Manually mounting as shown above
The mount.X scripts or symbolic links, where X is the name of a file system, can be used to alter the default mount options for almost any of its supported file systems. Use the -i
option to ignore mount.X scripts, mount -i -t reiserfs /dev/sdXY /mnt/sdXY
. There are two ways to list available altered settings:
- Write mount and press a
Tab
key. - Execute
ls /usr/bin/mount.*
.
Some other file systems
VFAT, FAT, DOS
Here is an example of the default mount configuration in the kernel:
$ zgrep -e FAT -e DOS /proc/config.gz | sort -r
# DOS/FAT/NT Filesystems CONFIG_FAT_FS=m CONFIG_MSDOS_PARTITION=y CONFIG_FAT_FS=m CONFIG_MSDOS_FS=m CONFIG_VFAT_FS=m CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_CODEPAGE=437 CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_IOCHARSET="iso8859-1" CONFIG_NCPFS_SMALLDOS=y
A short description of the options:
- Language settings: CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_CODEPAGE, CONFIG_FAT_DEFAULT_IOCHARSET
- All filenames to lower letters on a FAT partitions if enabled: CONFIG_NCPFS_SMALLDOS
- Enables support of the FAT file systems: CONFIG_FAT_FS, CONFIG_MSDOS_FS, CONFIG_VFAT_FS
- Enables support of a FAT partitioned harddisks on 86x PCs: CONFIG_MSDOS_PARTITION
If the partition type detected by mount is VFAT then it will run the /usr/bin/mount.vfat
script.
/usr/bin/mount.vfat
#!/bin/bash #mount VFAT with full rw (read-write) permissions for all users #/usr/bin/mount -i -t vfat -oumask=0000,iocharset=utf8 "$@" #The above is the same as mount -i -t vfat -oiocharset=utf8,fmask=0000,dmask=0000 "$@"
See also: more details about mounting of the FAT file systems.
NTFS
The default configuration:
$ zgrep ^CONFIG_NTFS /proc/config.gz
CONFIG_NTFS_FS=m CONFIG_NTFS_RW=y
The kernel config option CONFIG_NTFS_RW=y
enables read-write support for NTFS file systems. It also means the kernel is predefined to use the ntfs-3g driver in read-write mode. The build in support of the NTFS file systems by the kernel is read-only even if read-write is activated by an option.
The default mount options can be altered when running mount.ntfs
by renaming the /usr/bin/mount.ntfs
symlink if exists and creating a script in its place with a preferred options or use the -i option (mount -i -t ntfs
) to ignore all the mount.X files and use the natively supported functionality by the kernel. This example will mount NTFS as a read-only:
/usr/bin/mount.ntfs
#!/bin/bash #mount -i -oro "$@" #mount with a read-only rights ntfs-3g -oro "$@" & disown
See man 8 ntfs-3g
for more information about the ntfs-3g driver.
You can add more actions for when an external storage device, such as a USB drive or image file (ISO, img, dd), is mounted by using scripts.
See also
- Documentation of file systems supported by kernel: kernel.org
- Manual for the mount command: linux.die.net
- Wikipedia:Mount (Unix)
- Creating and using disk images mini-howto: darkdust.net