[systemd-devel] Fwd: messing with .mount/.automount units

Andrei Borzenkov arvidjaar at gmail.com
Sat Jan 30 22:18:21 PST 2016


30.01.2016 19:40, arnaud gaboury пишет:
> On Sat, Jan 30, 2016, 5:28 PM Andrei Borzenkov <arvidjaar at gmail.com> wrote:
> 
>> 30.01.2016 13:44, arnaud gaboury пишет:
>>>>> My first attempt was to add this line in my /etc/fstab:
>>>>> -------------------------------------------------------
>>>>> UUID=868560c1-ab69-423f-b76d-b8ea5af1b066     /mnt/backup
>>>>>   ext2
>> noauto,x-systemd.automount,x-systemd.device-timeout=5,x-systemd.idle-timeout=60
>>>>>        0    2
>>>>> -----------------------------------------------------------
>>>>>
>>>>> $ ls /run/systemd/generator
>>>>> .....
>>>>> mnt-backup.automount
>>>>> mnt-backup.mount
>>>>> ----------------------------------------
>>>>>
>>>>> For unknown reasons, the partition did mount at boot and never umount.
>>>>
>>>> Do you mean - you boot with USB stick inserted (before system power on)
>>>> and after boot USB stick is mounted (not automounted)?
>>>
>>> Yes, I boot with the external USB drive plugged. The drive is LVM
>>> partitioned, and yes, the /mnt/backup is mounted with the above fstab
>>> Could you show
>>>> /proc/mounts output?
>>> ....................
>>> systemd-1 /mnt/backup autofs
>>> rw,relatime,fd=26,pgrp=1,timeout=60,minproto=5,maxproto=5,direct 0 0
>>> .............................................
>>>>
>>
>> So you configured directory for automount and systemd did automount. I
>> do not understand what you complain about here.
>>
> 
> I was just looking for a solution using only fstab, no additional
> .mount/.automount files in /etc/systemd/system, as it is was is
> recommended. Nothing else.

Solution for *what*? Your system behaves absolutely normal. If you
prefer to mount this device manually, remove x-systemd.automount then. I
assumed you knew what this option does when you added it.


> 
>>
>> Your USB stick is *not* mounted.
>>
>>



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