mount, umount - mount or unmount file systems and remote resources umount



  • System Administration Commands					     mount(1M)
    
    
    
    NAME
           mount, umount - mount or	unmount	file systems and remote	resources
    
    SYNOPSIS
           mount [-p | -v]
    
    
           mount [-F FSType] [generic_options] [-o specific_options]
    	    [-O] special | mount_point
    
    
           mount [-F FSType] [generic_options] [-o specific_options]
    	    [-O] special mount_point
    
    
           mount -a	[-F FSType] [-V] [current_options]
    	    [-o	specific_options] [mount_point]...
    
    
           umount [-f] [-V]	[-o specific_options] special |	mount_point
    
    
           umount -a [-f] [-V] [-o specific_options] [mount_point]...
    
    
    DESCRIPTION
           mount  attaches	a  file	 system	 to  the  file system hierarchy	at the
           mount_point, which is the pathname of a directory. If  mount_point  has
           any  contents  prior to the mount operation, these are hidden until the
           file system is unmounted.
    
    
           umount unmounts a currently mounted file	system,	which may be specified
           either  as  a  mount_point  or as special, the device on	which the file
           system resides.
    
    
           The table of currently mounted file systems can be found	 by  examining
           the  mounted  file  system information file. This is provided by	a file
           system that is usually mounted on /etc/mnttab. The mounted file	system
           information  is	described in mnttab(4).	Mounting a file	system adds an
           entry to	the mount table; a umount removes an entry from	the table.
    
    
           When invoked with both the special and mount_point arguments and	the -F
           option,	mount  validates  all arguments	except for special and invokes
           the appropriate FSType-specific mount module. If	invoked	with no	 argu-
           ments,  mount  lists all	the mounted file systems recorded in the mount
           table, /etc/mnttab. If invoked with a partial argument list (with  only
           one  of	special	 or  mount_point,  or with both	special	or mount_point
           specified but not FSType), mount	will search /etc/vfstab	for  an	 entry
           that  will  supply the missing arguments. If no entry is	found, and the
           special argument	starts with /, the  default  local  file  system  type
           specified in /etc/default/fs will be used. Otherwise the	default	remote
           file system type	will be	used. The default remote file system  type  is
           determined by the first entry in	the /etc/dfs/fstypes file. After fill-
           ing in missing arguments, mount will invoke the	FSType-specific	 mount
           module.
    
    
           For  file  system types that support it,	a file can be mounted directly
           as a file system	by specifying the full path to the file	as the special
           argument.  In  such  a case, the	nosuid option is enforced. If specific
           file system support for such loopback file mounts is not	 present,  you
           can  still  use lofiadm(1M) to mount a file system image. In this case,
           no special options are enforced.
    
    
           Only a user with	sufficient privilege  (at  least  PRIV_SYS_MOUNT)  can
           mount or	unmount	file systems using mount and umount. However, any user
           can use mount to	list mounted file systems and resources.
    
    OPTIONS
           -F FSType
    
    	   Used	to specify the FSType on which to operate. The FSType must  be
    	   specified  or must be determinable from /etc/vfstab,	or by consult-
    	   ing /etc/default/fs or /etc/dfs/fstypes.
    
    
           -a [ mount_points. . . ]
    
    	   Perform mount or umount operations in parallel, when	possible.
    
    	   If mount points are not specified, mount will mount all  file  sys-
    	   tems	 whose	/etc/vfstab  "mount  at	 boot"	field is yes. If mount
    	   points are specified, then /etc/vfstab "mount at boot"  field  will
    	   be ignored.
    
    	   If  mount points are	specified, umount will only umount those mount
    	   points. If none is specified, then umount will attempt  to  unmount
    	   all file systems in /etc/mnttab, with the exception of certain sys-
    	   tem required	file  systems:	/,  /usr,  /var,  /var/adm,  /var/run,
    	   /proc, /dev/fd and /tmp.
    
    
           -f
    
    	   Forcibly unmount a file system.
    
    	   Without  this  option,  umount  does	 not allow a file system to be
    	   unmounted if	a file on the file system is busy. Using  this	option
    	   can	cause  data  loss  for open files; programs which access files
    	   after the file system has been unmounted will get an	error (EIO).
    
    
           -p
    
    	   Print the list of mounted file systems in the  /etc/vfstab  format.
    	   Must	be the only option specified. See BUGS.
    
    
           -v
    
    	   Print  the  list of mounted file systems in verbose format. Must be
    	   the only option specified.
    
    
           -V
    
    	   Echo	the complete command line, but do  not	execute	 the  command.
    	   umount  generates a command line by using the options and arguments
    	   provided by the user	and adding to them  information	 derived  from
    	   /etc/mnttab.	 This option should be used to verify and validate the
    	   command line.
    
    
           generic_options
    
    	   Options that	are commonly supported by most FSType-specific command
    	   modules. The	following options are available:
    
    	   -m
    
    	       Mount the file system without making an entry in	/etc/mnttab.
    
    
    	   -g
    
    	       Globally	 mount	the  file  system. On a	clustered system, this
    	       globally	mounts the file	system on all nodes of the cluster. On
    	       a non-clustered system this has no effect.
    
    
    	   -o
    
    	       Specify	FSType-specific	 options in a comma separated (without
    	       spaces) list of	suboptions  and	 keyword-attribute  pairs  for
    	       interpretation  by  the	FSType-specific	module of the command.
    	       (See mount_ufs(1M).) When you use -o with a  file  system  that
    	       has an entry in /etc/vfstab, any	mount options entered for that
    	       file system in /etc/vfstab are ignored.
    
    	       The following options are supported:
    
    	       devices | nodevices
    
    		   Allow or disallow the opening of device-special files.  The
    		   default is devices.
    
    		   If you use nosuid in	conjunction with devices, the behavior
    		   is equivalent to that of nosuid.
    
    
    	       exec | noexec
    
    		   Allow or disallow executing programs	in  the	 file  system.
    		   Allow  or  disallow mmap(2) with PROT_EXEC for files	within
    		   the file system. The	default	is exec.
    
    
    	       loop
    
    		   Ignored for compatibility.
    
    
    	       nbmand |	nonbmand
    
    		   Allow or disallow non-blocking mandatory locking  semantics
    		   on this file	system.	Non-blocking mandatory locking is dis-
    		   allowed by default.
    
    		   If the file system is mounted with the nbmand option,  then
    		   applications	 can  use the fcntl(2) interface to place non-
    		   blocking mandatory locks on files and the  system  enforces
    		   those  semantics.  If  you enable this option, it can cause
    		   standards conformant	applications to	see unexpected errors.
    
    		   To avoid the	possibility of obtaining  mandatory  locks  on
    		   system files, do not	use the	nbmand option with the follow-
    		   ing file systems:
    
    		     /
    		     /usr
    		     /etc
    		     /var
    		     /proc
    		     /dev
    		     /devices
    		     /system/contract
    		     /system/object
    		     /etc/mnttab
    		     /etc/dfs/sharetab
    
    
    		   Do not use the remount option to change the nbmand disposi-
    		   tion	 of  the  file	system.	 The nbmand option is mutually
    		   exclusive of	the global option. See -g.
    
    
    	       ro | rw
    
    		   Specify read-only or	read-write. The	default	is rw.
    
    
    	       setuid |	nosetuid
    
    		   Allow or disallow setuid or setgid execution.  The  default
    		   is setuid.
    
    		   If  you  specify  setuid  in	 conjunction  with nosuid, the
    		   behavior is the same	as nosuid.
    
    		   nosuid is equivalent	to nosetuid and	nodevices.  When  suid
    		   or  nosuid  is combined with	setuid or nosetuid and devices
    		   or nodevices, the most restrictive options take effect.
    
    		   This	option is highly recommended whenever the file	system
    		   is  shared by way of	NFS with the root= option. Without it,
    		   NFS clients could add setuid	programs to the	server or cre-
    		   ate devices that could open security	holes.
    
    
    	       suid | nosuid
    
    		   Allow  or  disallow setuid or setgid	execution. The default
    		   is suid. This option	also allows or disallows  opening  any
    		   device-special entries that appear within the filesystem.
    
    		   nosuid  is  equivalent to nosetuid and nodevices. When suid
    		   or nosuid is	combined with setuid or	nosetuid  and  devices
    		   or nodevices, the most restrictive options take effect.
    
    		   This	 option	is highly recommended whenever the file	system
    		   is shared using NFS with the	root=option, because,  without
    		   it, NFS clients could add setuid programs to	the server, or
    		   create devices that could open security holes.
    
    
    	       rstchown	| norstchown
    
    		   Allow or disallow restricted	chown. If the file  system  is
    		   mounted  with  rstchown, the	owner of the file is prevented
    		   from	changing the owner ID  of the file. If the file	system
    		   is  mounted	with norstchown, the user can permit ownership
    		   changes for files they own. Only the	super-user or  a  user
    		   with	 appropriate   privilege  can arbitrarily change owner
    		   IDs.
    
    
    
    	   -O
    
    	       Overlay mount. Allow the	file system  to	 be  mounted  over  an
    	       existing	 mount	point, making the underlying file system inac-
    	       cessible. If a mount is attempted on a pre-existing mount point
    	       without	setting	 this flag, the	mount will fail, producing the
    	       error "device busy".
    
    
    	   -r
    
    	       Mount the file system read-only.
    
    
    
    EXAMPLES
           Example 1 Mounting and Unmounting a DVD Image Directly
    
    
           The following commands mount and	unmount	a DVD image.
    
    
    	 # mount -F hsfs /images/solaris.iso /mnt/solaris-image
    	 # umount /mnt/solaris-image
    
    
    
    USAGE
           See largefile(5)	for the	description  of	 the  behavior	of  mount  and
           umount  when encountering files greater than or equal to	2 Gbyte	( 2^31
           bytes).
    
    FILES
           /etc/mnttab
    
    	   Table of mounted file systems.
    
    
           /etc/default/fs
    
    	   Default local file system type. Default values can be set  for  the
    	   following flags in /etc/default/fs. For example: LOCAL=ufs
    
    	   LOCAL:
    
    	       The default partition for a command if no FSType	is specified.
    
    
    
           /etc/vfstab
    
    	   List	of default parameters for each file system.
    
    
    ATTRIBUTES
           See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:
    
    
    
    
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
           |      ATTRIBUTE	TYPE	     |	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   |
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
           |Availability		     |system/core-os		   |
           +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+
    
    SEE ALSO
           lofiadm(1M),	mount_hsfs(1M),	    mount_nfs(1M),     mount_pcfs(1M),
           mount_smbfs(1M),	  mount_tmpfs(1M),    mount_udfs(1M),	mount_ufs(1M),
           mountall(1M),  umountall(1M),  fcntl(2),	mmap(2), mnttab(4), vfstab(4),
           attributes(5), largefile(5), privileges(5), lofs(7FS), pcfs(7FS)
    
    NOTES
           If the directory	on which a file	system is to be	mounted	is a  symbolic
           link, the file system is	mounted	on the directory to which the symbolic
           link refers, rather than	on top of the symbolic link itself.
    
    
    
    SunOS 5.11			  17 Feb 2014			     mount(1M)
    


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