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<refentry id= "systemd.mount" >
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<refentryinfo >
<title > systemd.mount</title>
<productname > systemd</productname>
<authorgroup >
<author >
<contrib > Developer</contrib>
<firstname > Lennart</firstname>
<surname > Poettering</surname>
<email > lennart@poettering.net</email>
</author>
</authorgroup>
</refentryinfo>
<refmeta >
<refentrytitle > systemd.mount</refentrytitle>
<manvolnum > 5</manvolnum>
</refmeta>
<refnamediv >
<refname > systemd.mount</refname>
<refpurpose > Mount unit configuration</refpurpose>
</refnamediv>
<refsynopsisdiv >
<para > <filename > <replaceable > mount</replaceable> .mount</filename> </para>
</refsynopsisdiv>
<refsect1 >
<title > Description</title>
<para > A unit configuration file whose name ends in
<literal > .mount</literal> encodes information about a file system
mount point controlled and supervised by systemd.</para>
<para > This man page lists the configuration options specific to
this unit type. See
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.unit</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
for the common options of all unit configuration files. The common
configuration items are configured in the generic [Unit] and
[Install] sections. The mount specific configuration options are
configured in the [Mount] section.</para>
<para > Additional options are listed in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.exec</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
which define the execution environment the
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<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > mount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
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binary is executed in, and in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.kill</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
which define the way the processes are terminated, and in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
which configure resource control settings for the processes of the
service. Note that the User= and Group= options are not
particularly useful for mount units specifying a
<literal > Type=</literal> option or using configuration not
specified in <filename > /etc/fstab</filename> ;
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<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > mount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
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will refuse options that are not listed in
<filename > /etc/fstab</filename> if it is not run as UID 0.</para>
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<para > Mount units must be named after the mount point directories they control. Example: the mount point <filename
noindex='true'>/home/lennart</filename> must be configured in a unit file <filename > home-lennart.mount</filename> .
For details about the escaping logic used to convert a file system path to a unit name, see
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.unit</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> . Note that mount
units cannot be templated, nor is possible to add multiple names to a mount unit by creating additional symlinks to
it.</para>
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<para > Optionally, a mount unit may be accompanied by an automount
unit, to allow on-demand or parallelized mounting. See
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.automount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> .</para>
<para > Mount points created at runtime (independently of unit files
or <filename > /etc/fstab</filename> ) will be monitored by systemd
and appear like any other mount unit in systemd. See
<filename > /proc/self/mountinfo</filename> description in
<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > proc</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> .
</para>
<para > Some file systems have special semantics as API file systems
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for kernel-to-userspace and userspace-to-userspace interfaces. Some
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of them may not be changed via mount units, and cannot be
disabled. For a longer discussion see <ulink
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url="https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/APIFileSystems">API
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File Systems</ulink> .</para>
</refsect1>
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<refsect1 >
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<title > Implicit Dependencies</title>
<para > The following dependencies are implicitly added:</para>
<itemizedlist >
<listitem > <para > If a mount unit is beneath another mount unit in the file
system hierarchy, both a requirement dependency and an ordering
dependency between both units are created automatically.</para> </listitem>
<listitem > <para > Block device backed file systems automatically gain
<varname > BindsTo=</varname> and <varname > After=</varname> type
dependencies on the device unit encapsulating the block
device (see below).</para> </listitem>
<listitem > <para > If traditional file system quota is enabled for a mount
unit, automatic <varname > Wants=</varname> and
<varname > Before=</varname> dependencies on
<filename > systemd-quotacheck.service</filename> and
<filename > quotaon.service</filename> are added.</para> </listitem>
<listitem > <para > Additional implicit dependencies may be added as result of
execution and resource control parameters as documented in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.exec</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
and
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> .
</para> </listitem>
</itemizedlist>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 >
<title > Default Dependencies</title>
<para > The following dependencies are added unless <varname > DefaultDependencies=no</varname> is set:</para>
<itemizedlist >
<listitem > <para > All mount units acquire automatic <varname > Before=</varname> and <varname > Conflicts=</varname> on
<filename > umount.target</filename> in order to be stopped during shutdown.</para> </listitem>
<listitem > <para > Mount units referring to local file systems automatically gain
an <varname > After=</varname> dependency on <filename > local-fs-pre.target</filename> .</para> </listitem>
<listitem > <para > Network mount units
automatically acquire <varname > After=</varname> dependencies on <filename > remote-fs-pre.target</filename> ,
<filename > network.target</filename> and <filename > network-online.target</filename> . Towards the latter a
<varname > Wants=</varname> unit is added as well.</para> </listitem>
</itemizedlist>
<para > Mount units referring to local and network file systems are
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distinguished by their file system type specification. In some cases this is not sufficient (for example network
block device based mounts, such as iSCSI), in which case <option > _netdev</option> may be added to the mount option
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string of the unit, which forces systemd to consider the mount unit a network mount.</para>
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</refsect1>
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<refsect1 >
<title > <filename > fstab</filename> </title>
<para > Mount units may either be configured via unit files, or via
<filename > /etc/fstab</filename> (see
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<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > fstab</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
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for details). Mounts listed in <filename > /etc/fstab</filename>
will be converted into native units dynamically at boot and when
the configuration of the system manager is reloaded. In general,
configuring mount points through <filename > /etc/fstab</filename>
is the preferred approach. See
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd-fstab-generator</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
for details about the conversion.</para>
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<para > The NFS mount option <option > bg</option> for NFS background mounts
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as documented in <citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > nfs</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
fstab-generator: handle NFS "bg" mounts correctly. (#6103)
When "bg" is specified for NFS mounts, and if the server is
not accessible, two behaviors are possible depending on networking
details.
If a definitive error is received, such a EHOSTUNREACH or ECONNREFUSED,
mount.nfs will fork and continue in the background, while /bin/mount
will report success.
If no definitive error is reported but the connection times out
instead, then the mount.nfs timeout will normally be longer than the
systemd.mount timeout, so mount.nfs will be killed by systemd.
In the first case the mount has appeared to succeed even though
it hasn't. This can be confusing. Also the background mount.nfs
will never get cleaned up, even if the mount unit is stopped.
In the second case, mount.nfs is killed early and so the mount will
not complete when the server comes back.
Neither of these are ideal.
This patch modifies the options when an NFS bg mount is detected to
force an "fg" mount, but retain the default "retry" time of 10000
minutes that applies to "bg" mounts.
It also imposes "nofail" behaviour and sets the TimeoutSec for the
mount to "infinity" so the retry= time is allowed to complete.
This provides near-identical behaviour to an NFS bg mount started directly
by "mount -a". The only difference is that systemd will not wait for
the first mount attempt, while "mount -a" will.
Fixes #6046
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is detected by <command > systemd-fstab-generator</command> and the options
are transformed so that systemd fulfills the job-control implications of
that option. Specifically <command > systemd-fstab-generator</command> acts
as though <literal > x-systemd.mount-timout=infinity,retry=10000</literal> was
prepended to the option list, and <literal > fg,nofail</literal> was appended.
Depending on specific requirements, it may be appropriate to provide some of
these options explicitly, or to make use of the
<literal > x-systemd.automount</literal> option described below instead
of using <literal > bg</literal> .</para>
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<para > When reading <filename > /etc/fstab</filename> a few special
mount options are understood by systemd which influence how
dependencies are created for mount points. systemd will create a
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dependency of type <varname > Wants=</varname> or
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<option > Requires</option> (see option <option > nofail</option>
below), from either <filename > local-fs.target</filename> or
<filename > remote-fs.target</filename> , depending whether the file
system is local or remote.</para>
<variablelist class= 'fstab-options' >
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-systemd.requires=</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > Configures a <varname > Requires=</varname> and
an <varname > After=</varname> dependency between the created
mount unit and another systemd unit, such as a device or mount
unit. The argument should be a unit name, or an absolute path
to a device node or mount point. This option may be specified
more than once. This option is particularly useful for mount
point declarations that need an additional device to be around
(such as an external journal device for journal file systems)
or an additional mount to be in place (such as an overlay file
system that merges multiple mount points). See
<varname > After=</varname> and <varname > Requires=</varname> in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.unit</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
for details.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-systemd.before=</option> </term>
<term > <option > x-systemd.after=</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > Configures a <varname > Before=</varname>
dependency or <varname > After=</varname> between the created
mount unit and another systemd unit, such as a mount unit.
The argument should be a unit name or an absolute path
to a mount point. This option may be specified more than once.
This option is particularly useful for mount point declarations
with <option > nofail</option> option that are mounted
asynchronously but need to be mounted before or after some unit
start, for example, before <filename > local-fs.target</filename>
unit.
See <varname > Before=</varname> and <varname > After=</varname> in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.unit</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
for details.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-systemd.requires-mounts-for=</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > Configures a
<varname > RequiresMountsFor=</varname> dependency between the
created mount unit and other mount units. The argument must be
an absolute path. This option may be specified more than once.
See <varname > RequiresMountsFor=</varname> in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.unit</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
for details.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-systemd.device-bound</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > The block device backed file system will be upgraded
to <varname > BindsTo=</varname> dependency. This option is only useful
when mounting file systems manually with
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<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > mount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
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as the default dependency in this case is <varname > Requires=</varname> .
This option is already implied by entries in <filename > /etc/fstab</filename>
or by mount units.
</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-systemd.automount</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > An automount unit will be created for the file
system. See
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.automount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
for details.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-systemd.idle-timeout=</option> </term>
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<listitem > <para > Configures the idle timeout of the
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automount unit. See <varname > TimeoutIdleSec=</varname> in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.automount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
for details.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-systemd.device-timeout=</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > Configure how long systemd should wait for a
device to show up before giving up on an entry from
<filename > /etc/fstab</filename> . Specify a time in seconds or
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explicitly append a unit such as <literal > s</literal> ,
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<literal > min</literal> , <literal > h</literal> ,
<literal > ms</literal> .</para>
<para > Note that this option can only be used in
<filename > /etc/fstab</filename> , and will be
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ignored when part of the <varname > Options=</varname>
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setting in a unit file.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-systemd.mount-timeout=</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > Configure how long systemd should wait for the
mount command to finish before giving up on an entry from
<filename > /etc/fstab</filename> . Specify a time in seconds or
explicitly append a unit such as <literal > s</literal> ,
<literal > min</literal> , <literal > h</literal> ,
<literal > ms</literal> .</para>
<para > Note that this option can only be used in
<filename > /etc/fstab</filename> , and will be
ignored when part of the <varname > Options=</varname>
setting in a unit file.</para>
<para > See <varname > TimeoutSec=</varname> below for
details.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > _netdev</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > Normally the file system type is used to determine if a
mount is a "network mount", i.e. if it should only be started after the
network is available. Using this option overrides this detection and
specifies that the mount requires network.</para>
<para > Network mount units are ordered between <filename > remote-fs-pre.target</filename>
and <filename > remote-fs.target</filename> , instead of
<filename > local-fs-pre.target</filename> and <filename > local-fs.target</filename> .
They also pull in <filename > network-online.target</filename> and are ordered after
it and <filename > network.target</filename> .</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <option > noauto</option> </term>
<term > <option > auto</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > With <option > noauto</option> , this mount will
not be added as a dependency for
<filename > local-fs.target</filename> or
<filename > remote-fs.target</filename> . This means that it will
not be mounted automatically during boot, unless it is pulled
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in by some other unit. The <option > auto</option> option has the
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opposite meaning and is the default.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry >
<term > <option > nofail</option> </term>
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<listitem > <para > With <option > nofail</option> , this mount will
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be only wanted, not required, by
<filename > local-fs.target</filename> or
<filename > remote-fs.target</filename> . This means that the
boot will continue even if this mount point is not mounted
successfully.</para>
</listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry >
<term > <option > x-initrd.mount</option> </term>
<listitem > <para > An additional filesystem to be mounted in the
initramfs. See <filename > initrd-fs.target</filename>
description in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.special</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 7</manvolnum> </citerefentry> .
</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para > If a mount point is configured in both
<filename > /etc/fstab</filename> and a unit file that is stored
below <filename > /usr</filename> , the former will take precedence.
If the unit file is stored below <filename > /etc</filename> , it
will take precedence. This means: native unit files take
precedence over traditional configuration files, but this is
superseded by the rule that configuration in
<filename > /etc</filename> will always take precedence over
configuration in <filename > /usr</filename> .</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 >
<title > Options</title>
<para > Mount files must include a [Mount] section, which carries
information about the file system mount points it supervises. A
number of options that may be used in this section are shared with
other unit types. These options are documented in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.exec</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
and
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.kill</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> .
The options specific to the [Mount] section of mount units are the
following:</para>
<variablelist class= 'unit-directives' >
<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > What=</varname> </term>
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<listitem > <para > Takes an absolute path of a device node, file or other resource to mount. See <citerefentry
project='man-pages'><refentrytitle > mount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry> for details. If
this refers to a device node, a dependency on the respective device unit is automatically created. (See
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.device</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> for more
information.) This option is mandatory. Note that the usual specifier expansion is applied to this setting,
literal percent characters should hence be written as <literal > %%</literal> .</para> </listitem>
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</varlistentry>
<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > Where=</varname> </term>
fstab-generator: Chase symlinks where possible (#6293)
This has a long history; see see 5261ba901845c084de5a8fd06500ed09bfb0bd80
which originally introduced the behavior. Unfortunately that commit
doesn't include any rationale, but IIRC the basic issue is that
systemd wants to model the real mount state as units, and symlinks
make canonicalization much more difficult.
At the same time, on a RHEL6 system (upstart), one can make e.g. `/home` a
symlink, and things work as well as they always did; but one doesn't have
access to the sophistication of mount units (dependencies, introspection, etc.)
Supporting symlinks here will hence make it easier for people to do upgrades to
RHEL7 and beyond.
The `/home` as symlink case also appears prominently for OSTree; see
https://ostree.readthedocs.io/en/latest/manual/adapting-existing/
Further work has landed in the nspawn case for this; see e.g.
d944dc9553009822deaddec76814f5642a6a8176
A basic limitation with doing this in the fstab generator (and that I hit while
doing some testing) is that we obviously can't chase symlinks into mounts,
since the generator runs early before mounts. Or at least - doing so would
require multiple passes over the fstab data (as well as looking at existing
mount units), and potentially doing multi-phase generation. I'm not sure it's
worth doing that without a real world use case. For now, this will fix at least
the OSTree + `/home` <https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=1382873> case
mentioned above, and in general anyone who for whatever reason has symlinks in
their `/etc/fstab`.
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<listitem > <para > Takes an absolute path of a directory for the
mount point; in particular, the destination cannot be a symbolic
link. If the mount point does not exist at the time of
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mounting, it is created. This string must be reflected in the
unit filename. (See above.) This option is
mandatory.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > Type=</varname> </term>
<listitem > <para > Takes a string for the file system type. See
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<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > mount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
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for details. This setting is optional.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > Options=</varname> </term>
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<listitem > <para > Mount options to use when mounting. This takes a comma-separated list of options. This setting
is optional. Note that the usual specifier expansion is applied to this setting, literal percent characters
should hence be written as <literal > %%</literal> .</para> </listitem>
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</varlistentry>
<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > SloppyOptions=</varname> </term>
<listitem > <para > Takes a boolean argument. If true, parsing of
the options specified in <varname > Options=</varname> is
relaxed, and unknown mount options are tolerated. This
corresponds with
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<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > mount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry> 's
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<parameter > -s</parameter> switch. Defaults to
off.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > LazyUnmount=</varname> </term>
<listitem > <para > Takes a boolean argument. If true, detach the
filesystem from the filesystem hierarchy at time of the unmount
operation, and clean up all references to the filesystem as
soon as they are not busy anymore.
This corresponds with
<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > umount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry> 's
<parameter > -l</parameter> switch. Defaults to
off.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > ForceUnmount=</varname> </term>
<listitem > <para > Takes a boolean argument. If true, force an
unmount (in case of an unreachable NFS system).
This corresponds with
<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > umount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry> 's
<parameter > -f</parameter> switch. Defaults to
off.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
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<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > DirectoryMode=</varname> </term>
<listitem > <para > Directories of mount points (and any parent
directories) are automatically created if needed. This option
specifies the file system access mode used when creating these
directories. Takes an access mode in octal notation. Defaults
to 0755.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
<varlistentry >
<term > <varname > TimeoutSec=</varname> </term>
<listitem > <para > Configures the time to wait for the mount
command to finish. If a command does not exit within the
configured time, the mount will be considered failed and be
shut down again. All commands still running will be terminated
forcibly via <constant > SIGTERM</constant> , and after another
delay of this time with <constant > SIGKILL</constant> . (See
<option > KillMode=</option> in
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.kill</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> .)
Takes a unit-less value in seconds, or a time span value such
as "5min 20s". Pass 0 to disable the timeout logic. The
default value is set from the manager configuration file's
2016-08-29 05:02:36 +03:00
<varname > DefaultTimeoutStartSec=</varname>
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variable.</para> </listitem>
</varlistentry>
</variablelist>
<para > Check
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.exec</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
and
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.kill</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
for more settings.</para>
</refsect1>
<refsect1 >
<title > See Also</title>
<para >
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemctl</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 1</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.unit</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.exec</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.kill</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.resource-control</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.service</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.device</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > proc</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 5</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
2015-03-14 05:22:39 +03:00
<citerefentry project= 'man-pages' > <refentrytitle > mount</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
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<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd-fstab-generator</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 8</manvolnum> </citerefentry> ,
<citerefentry > <refentrytitle > systemd.directives</refentrytitle> <manvolnum > 7</manvolnum> </citerefentry>
</para>
</refsect1>
2010-07-02 02:29:15 +04:00
</refentry>