Automount mini-Howto
 [email protected]
 v0.4, 17 April 1999

 This file describes the autofs automounter, how to configure it, and
 points out some problems to avoid.
 ______________________________________________________________________

 Table of Contents


 1. Introduction

    1.1 Automount - what and why
    1.2 Types of automounting

 2. Installation

 3. Configuration

 4. That long wait to unmount

 5. Questions

    5.1 I don't see /auto/floppy, or whatever mountpoint I'm looking for.
    5.2 How do I see what's mounted?
    5.3 I put in a win95 disk ("vfat") and it was autodetected as only a regular FAT disk.
    5.4 My filesystem
    5.5 What happens if I make / the directory for the automounter
    5.6 Can I have two map files on the same directory?
    5.7 I'm using SuSE 6.0 and needed
    5.8 How do I set the permissions and ownership for the filesystem (IE FAT)
    5.9 Who do I thank for autofs?
    5.10 Where can I learn more about automounting?


 ______________________________________________________________________

 1.  Introduction

 1.1.  Automount - what and why

 Automouting is the process where mounting (and unmounting) of certain
 filesystems is done automatically by a daemon. If the filesystem is
 unmounted, and a user attempts to access it, it will be automatically
 (re)mounted. This is especially useful in large networked environments
 and for crossmounting filesystems between a few machines (especially
 ones which are not always online). It may also be very useful for
 removable devices, or a few other uses, such as easy switching between
 a forced-on ascii conversion mount of a dos filesystem and a forced-
 off ascii conversion mount of the same dos fs.


 1.2.  Types of automounting

 There are two types of automounters in linux; AMD and autofs. AMD is
 the automount daemon, and supposedly works like the SunOS AMD. It is
 implemented in user space, meaning it's not part of the kernel. It's
 not necessary for the kernel to understand automounting if you NFS
 mount to the local host, through the AMD daemon, which routes all
 automount filesystem traffic through the NFS system. Autofs is a newer
 system assisted by the kernel, meaning that the kernel's filesystem
 code knows where the automount mount points are on an otherwise normal
 underlying fs, and the automount program takes it from there. Only
 autofs will be described in this mini-howto.

 2.  Installation

 Because autofs is implemented in kernel-space, your kernel must have
 support compiled in. In 2.0.xx it is an experimental option, but
 appears to be quite stable. In 2.2.xx it is a normal option.


 The automount program and its configuration files are also necessary;
 using the rpms (from RedHat, as part of the install) is a great way to
 go. The automount program should be started by an rc script under the
 /etc/rc.d/init.d directory . The rpm installs this, but you will need
 to make sure it gets started, either by linking it from your rc?.d
 directory, using Redhat's control-panel, or on another distribution by
 getting the thing started anyway you care to.  Non-rpm distros will
 have to do whatever's applicable to their system. And don't look too
 hard at what the rc script does; if you're reading this howto you
 probably don't want to know.


 3.  Configuration

 Installing the RPM's will get you to this point easily enough, but
 here's the part you might not be sure about if you haven't done this
 before.


 There are two files in /etc, one called auto.master and one called
 auto.misc.  My auto.master looks like this:

 /auto   /etc/auto.misc  --timeout 60

 The first entry is not the mount point. It's where the set of mount
 points (found in the second entry) are going to be. The third option
 says that the mounted filesystems can try to unmount themselves 60
 seconds after use. They can't unmount if being used, of course.

 Auto.misc is a "map file". The map file can have any name; this one is
 named auto.misc because it originally controlled /misc. Multiple map
 files can be defined in auto.master.  My auto.misc looks like this:

 kernel          -ro,soft,intr           ftp.kernel.org:/pub/linux
 cd              -fstype=iso9660,ro      :/dev/cdrom
 zip             -fstype=auto            :/dev/hdd4
 floppy          -fstype=vfat            :/dev/fd0

 The first column (the "key") is the mount point. In this case it would
 be /auto/floppy or whatever. The middle set are the options; read the
 mount manpage for details on this. And the last column specifies where
 the fs comes from. The "kernel" entry is supposed to be an NFS mount.
 The : on all the other lines means its a local device.

 4.  That long wait to unmount

 Some of you may be eyeing that 60 second timeout and thinking, that's
 a long time to wait to eject a floppy.. Maybe I'll just sync the disks
 and pop it out mounted and nobody will notice. Let me suggest saner
 alternatives.  First of all, you can change the timeout. But that
 could be a little inefficient; telling the system to unmount stuff
 after only 15 seconds or whatever. Depending on your setup, you may be
 able to simply run the umount command as a normal user.  But there is
 actually a way to ask the automount program to umount. If you send
 (with the program kill) the signal SIGUSR1 to the automount process,
 it will unmount everything it can. But before people start making
 unmount buttons on their window managers, there's a little problem.

 The automount process is run by root, and it will only accept signals
 from root. Half of the reason you're probably doing automounting is so
 you can mount an unmount *without* being root. It would be easy to
 make a suid-root C program which does the dirty deed. However, by
 using sudo it is possible to allow users to send the proper kill
 signal. The only problem is that sudo will not let you use ` to
 process subcommands, which you would have to do to find the current
 PID. You should have a program called killall, which will let you do
 this: (thanks for the suggestions)

 ALL     ALL=NOPASSWD:/usr/bin/killall -USR1 automount


 Otherwise, you would have to allow your users to send -SIGUSR1 to all
 processes.  That has various effects on programs; it will recycle some
 window managers, but kills xemacs. So here's hoping there's no buffer
 overruns in killall...


 5.  Questions

 5.1.  I don't see /auto/floppy, or whatever mountpoint I'm looking
 for.

 If automount is setup properly, whatever mount point you're looking
 for will be there if you try and use it, even though you don't see it
 when not in use. If you're browsing the directory with a graphical
 tool, you may need to type in the name manually; most programs will
 try what you give it, and the drive will be mounted before it notices.
 Unfortunately not being able to choose from the available invisible
 mount points is probably the major drawback of autofs. If it really
 bugs you, edit the configuration files.  (Hint, the ones that end in
 .c for "configuration")

 One workaround several people have tried is to create symbolic links
 to where automount will create something once it's mounted. This will
 likely prevent the program from complaining a directory doesn't exist
 (if the mount works, that is) but careless directory listings will
 cause filesystems to be mounted.


 5.2.  How do I see what's mounted?

 The df command. mount with no options will do the same, plus show the
 options its mounted with.

 5.3.  I put in a win95 disk ("vfat") and it was autodetected as only a
 regular FAT disk.

 This is not a problem with automount. As of this writing, the "auto"
 fs type does not attempt a vfat mount before it successfully mounts an
 msdos filesystem. VFAT is the Win95 and WinNT long filenames crammed
 into a FAT/MSDOS filesystem.

 According to one of the authors of mount, since mount is only a
 wrapper around a system call which must specify the filesystem type,
 it's still the responsibility of the user to come up with the fs type.
 Having mount take a list of filesystems to try in order, rather than
 the current "heuristic" is under consideration. Some users have simply
 not compiled msdos into the kernel; this prevents it from being tested
 prior to vfat. This will work for most people; a few actually need
 msdos fs and it caused me quite some frustration to not have a module
 handy when I actually needed it.

 I'm sure that if anyone wants to go to the effort of finding the
 owner(s) of the mount program, your comments would be welcome. So
 unless you don't compile msdos in, for now this means that you can't
 mount vfat unless you give up the ability to autodetect all other
 fs's. Hopefully it will be configurable someday. In the mean time,
 feel free to create multiple mount points with different fs types
 specified.

 5.4.  My filesystem /auto/grumblesmurf  is mounted and kill -SIGUSR1
 won't unmount it.

 It's being used by something. Root probably can't manually unmount it
 either. If you're the one who caused it to be mounted (i.e. it can't
 be someone else using it) look around for a shell that might be in
 that directory. If there are none, look for something else
 (particularly something that might have gone though that directory
 like a directory browser) that might have left an invisible foot in
 the door so to speak. If you've given up looking, try using the fuser
 program.


 5.5.  What happens if I make / the directory for the automounter

 Oooh. Well, out of a statistical sample of only one person, none of
 the results were positive. You have been warned. If you want
 /grumblesmurf, then I suggest a symbolic link. Much safer.


 5.6.  Can I have two map files on the same directory?

 Not as far as I know. Try using one map file, with specific options
 for individual entries.


 5.7.  I'm using SuSE 6.0 and needed ---timeout  instead of --timeout

 Uh. Ok, I've made a note about it. Another solution to "timeout not
 working" problems would be to add a -t time option to the autofs
 script.


 5.8.  How do I set the permissions and ownership for the filesystem
 (IE FAT)

 Check the man page for mount for some of the options, such as setting
 the uid=value or umask=value options. One option that appears to be
 missing for FAT filesystems is mode=value. Sorry. Check in with the
 people who do mounting.


 5.9.  Who do I thank for autofs?

 Not me. I didn't have anything to do with it. I just wanted to bring
 everyone's attention to what a great job had been done with autofs,
 and how easy it is to use. Compared to the original perpetrators of
 AMD (Hint, they sell an overpriced unice with prehistoric versions of
 free tools) the autofs is very well documented and the implementors
 have my sincere thanks. Everything is stamped copyright Transmeta so
 sorry I can't provide a credits list, but I would bet Peter Anvin is
 responsible for quite a bit of it. Peter also held a session on autofs
 at linuxworldexpo on March 3, 1999.


 5.10.  Where can I learn more about automounting?

 There's a autofs tutorial at  <
 http://www.linuxhq.com/lg/issue24/nielsen.html>.  See also am-utils at
 <http://www.cs.columbia.edu/~ezk/am-utils>

 (Thanks for these URLs)