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1Support is available for filesystems that wish to do automounting support (such
2as kAFS which can be found in fs/afs/). This facility includes allowing
3in-kernel mounts to be performed and mountpoint degradation to be
4requested. The latter can also be requested by userspace.
5
6
7======================
8IN-KERNEL AUTOMOUNTING
9======================
10
11A filesystem can now mount another filesystem on one of its directories by the
12following procedure:
13
14 (1) Give the directory a follow_link() operation.
15
16     When the directory is accessed, the follow_link op will be called, and
17     it will be provided with the location of the mountpoint in the nameidata
18     structure (vfsmount and dentry).
19
20 (2) Have the follow_link() op do the following steps:
21
22     (a) Call vfs_kern_mount() to call the appropriate filesystem to set up a
23         superblock and gain a vfsmount structure representing it.
24
25     (b) Copy the nameidata provided as an argument and substitute the dentry
26	 argument into it the copy.
27
28     (c) Call do_add_mount() to install the new vfsmount into the namespace's
29	 mountpoint tree, thus making it accessible to userspace. Use the
30	 nameidata set up in (b) as the destination.
31
32	 If the mountpoint will be automatically expired, then do_add_mount()
33	 should also be given the location of an expiration list (see further
34	 down).
35
36     (d) Release the path in the nameidata argument and substitute in the new
37	 vfsmount and its root dentry. The ref counts on these will need
38	 incrementing.
39
40Then from userspace, you can just do something like:
41
42	[root@andromeda root]# mount -t afs \#root.afs. /afs
43	[root@andromeda root]# ls /afs
44	asd  cambridge  cambridge.redhat.com  grand.central.org
45	[root@andromeda root]# ls /afs/cambridge
46	afsdoc
47	[root@andromeda root]# ls /afs/cambridge/afsdoc/
48	ChangeLog  html  LICENSE  pdf  RELNOTES-1.2.2
49
50And then if you look in the mountpoint catalogue, you'll see something like:
51
52	[root@andromeda root]# cat /proc/mounts
53	...
54	#root.afs. /afs afs rw 0 0
55	#root.cell. /afs/cambridge.redhat.com afs rw 0 0
56	#afsdoc. /afs/cambridge.redhat.com/afsdoc afs rw 0 0
57
58
59===========================
60AUTOMATIC MOUNTPOINT EXPIRY
61===========================
62
63Automatic expiration of mountpoints is easy, provided you've mounted the
64mountpoint to be expired in the automounting procedure outlined above.
65
66To do expiration, you need to follow these steps:
67
68 (3) Create at least one list off which the vfsmounts to be expired can be
69     hung. Access to this list will be governed by the vfsmount_lock.
70
71 (4) In step (2c) above, the call to do_add_mount() should be provided with a
72     pointer to this list. It will hang the vfsmount off of it if it succeeds.
73
74 (5) When you want mountpoints to be expired, call mark_mounts_for_expiry()
75     with a pointer to this list. This will process the list, marking every
76     vfsmount thereon for potential expiry on the next call.
77
78     If a vfsmount was already flagged for expiry, and if its usage count is 1
79     (it's only referenced by its parent vfsmount), then it will be deleted
80     from the namespace and thrown away (effectively unmounted).
81
82     It may prove simplest to simply call this at regular intervals, using
83     some sort of timed event to drive it.
84
85The expiration flag is cleared by calls to mntput. This means that expiration
86will only happen on the second expiration request after the last time the
87mountpoint was accessed.
88
89If a mountpoint is moved, it gets removed from the expiration list. If a bind
90mount is made on an expirable mount, the new vfsmount will not be on the
91expiration list and will not expire.
92
93If a namespace is copied, all mountpoints contained therein will be copied,
94and the copies of those that are on an expiration list will be added to the
95same expiration list.
96
97
98=======================
99USERSPACE DRIVEN EXPIRY
100=======================
101
102As an alternative, it is possible for userspace to request expiry of any
103mountpoint (though some will be rejected - the current process's idea of the
104rootfs for example). It does this by passing the MNT_EXPIRE flag to
105umount(). This flag is considered incompatible with MNT_FORCE and MNT_DETACH.
106
107If the mountpoint in question is in referenced by something other than
108umount() or its parent mountpoint, an EBUSY error will be returned and the
109mountpoint will not be marked for expiration or unmounted.
110
111If the mountpoint was not already marked for expiry at that time, an EAGAIN
112error will be given and it won't be unmounted.
113
114Otherwise if it was already marked and it wasn't referenced, unmounting will
115take place as usual.
116
117Again, the expiration flag is cleared every time anything other than umount()
118looks at a mountpoint.
119