21 On-demand mounting with autofs #
autofs is a program that automatically mounts
specified directories on an on-demand basis. It is based on a kernel module
for high efficiency, and can manage both local directories and network
shares. These automatic mount points are mounted only when they are
accessed, and unmounted after a certain period of inactivity. This
on-demand behavior saves bandwidth and results in better performance than
static mounts managed by /etc/fstab. While
autofs is a control script,
automount is the command (daemon) that does the actual
auto-mounting.
21.1 Installation #
autofs is not installed on SUSE Linux Enterprise Server by
default. To use its auto-mounting capabilities, first install it with
>sudozypper install autofs
21.2 Configuration #
You need to configure autofs manually by editing
its configuration files with a text editor, such as vim.
There are two basic steps to configure
autofs—the master map
file, and specific map files.
21.2.1 The master map file #
The default master configuration file for autofs
is /etc/auto.master. You can change its location by
changing the value of the DEFAULT_MASTER_MAP_NAME option
in /etc/sysconfig/autofs. Here is the content of the
default one for SUSE Linux Enterprise Server:
# # Sample auto.master file # This is an automounter map and it has the following format # key [ -mount-options-separated-by-comma ] location # For details of the format look at autofs(5).1 # #/misc /etc/auto.misc2 #/net -hosts # # Include /etc/auto.master.d/*.autofs3 # #+dir:/etc/auto.master.d # # Include central master map if it can be found using # nsswitch sources. # # Note that if there are entries for /net or /misc (as # above) in the included master map any keys that are the # same will not be seen as the first read key seen takes # precedence. # +auto.master4
The | |
Although commented out (#) by default, this is an example of a simple automounter mapping syntax. | |
In case you need to split the master map into several files, uncomment
the line, and put the mappings (suffixed with | |
|
Entries in auto.master have three fields with the
following syntax:
mount point map name options
- mount point
The base location where to mount the
autofsfile system, such as/home.- map name
The name of a map source to use for mounting. For the syntax of the map files, see Section 21.2.2, “Map files”.
- options
These options (if specified) will apply as defaults to all entries in the given map.
For more detailed information on the specific values of the optional
map-type, format, and
options, see the manual
page (man 5 auto.master).
The following entry in auto.master tells
autofs to look in
/etc/auto.smb, and create mount points in the
/smb directory:
/smb /etc/auto.smb
21.2.1.1 Direct mounts #
Direct mounts create a mount point at the path specified inside the
relevant map file. Instead of specifying the mount point in
auto.master, replace the mount point field with
/-. For example, the following line tells
autofs to create a mount point in the place
specified in auto.smb:
/- /etc/auto.smb
If the map file is not specified with its full local or network path, it is located using the Name Service Switch (NSS) configuration:
/- auto.smb
21.2.2 Map files #
Although files are the most common types of maps for
auto-mounting with autofs, there are other types
as well. A map specification can be the output of a command, or a result
of a query in LDAP or a database. For more detailed information on map
types, see the manual page man 5 auto.master.
Map files specify the (local or network) source location, and the mount point where to mount the source locally. The general format of maps is similar to the master map. The difference is that the options appear between the mount point and the location instead of at the end of the entry:
mount point options location
Make sure that map files are not marked as executable. You can remove
the executable bits by executing chmod -x MAP_FILE.
- mount point
Specifies where to mount the source location. This can be either a single directory name (so-called indirect mount) to be added to the base mount point specified in
auto.master, or the full path of the mount point (direct mount, see Section 21.2.1.1, “Direct mounts”).- options
Specifies an optional comma-separated list of mount options for the relevant entries. If
auto.mastercontains options for this map file as well, these are appended.- location
Specifies from where the file system is to be mounted. It is usually an NFS or SMB volume in the usual notation
host_name:path_name. If the file system to be mounted begins with a '/' (such as local/deventries or smbfs shares), a colon symbol ':' needs to be prefixed, such as:/dev/sda1.
21.3 Operation and debugging #
This section introduces information on how to control the
autofs service operation, and how to view more
debugging information when tuning the automounter operation.
21.3.1 Controlling the autofs service #
The operation of the autofs service is controlled
by systemd. The general syntax of the systemctl
command for autofs is
>sudosystemctl SUB_COMMAND autofs
where SUB_COMMAND is one of:
- enable
Starts the automounter daemon at boot.
- start
Starts the automounter daemon.
- stop
Stops the automounter daemon. Automatic mount points are not accessible.
- status
Prints the current status of the
autofsservice together with a part of a relevant log file.- restart
Stops and starts the automounter, terminating all running daemons and starting new ones.
- reload
Checks the current
auto.mastermap, restarts those daemons whose entries have changed, and starts new ones for new entries.
21.3.2 Debugging automounter problems #
If you experience problems when mounting directories with
autofs, it is useful to run the
automount daemon manually and watch its output messages:
Stop
autofs.>sudosystemctl stop autofsFrom one terminal, run
automountmanually in the foreground, producing verbose output.>sudoautomount -f -vFrom another terminal, try to mount the auto-mounting file systems by accessing the mount points (for example by
cdorls).Check the output of
automountfrom the first terminal for more information on why the mount failed, or why it was not even attempted.
21.4 Auto-mounting an NFS share #
The following procedure illustrates how to configure
autofs to auto-mount an NFS share available on your
network. It uses the information mentioned above, and assumes you
are familiar with NFS exports. For more information on NFS, see
Chapter 19, Sharing file systems with NFS.
Edit the master map file
/etc/auto.master:>sudovim /etc/auto.masterAdd a new entry for the new NFS mount at the end of
/etc/auto.master:/nfs /etc/auto.nfs --timeout=10
This tells
autofsthat the base mount point is/nfs, the NFS shares are specified in the/etc/auto.nfsmap, and that all shares in this map will be automatically unmounted after 10 seconds of inactivity.Create a new map file for NFS shares:
>sudovim /etc/auto.nfs/etc/auto.nfsnormally contains a separate line for each NFS share. Its format is described in Section 21.2.2, “Map files”. Add the line describing the mount point and the NFS share network address:export jupiter.com:/home/geeko/doc/export
The above line means that the
/home/geeko/doc/exportdirectory on thejupiter.comhost will be auto-mounted to the/nfs/exportdirectory on the local host (/nfsis taken from theauto.mastermap) when requested. The/nfs/exportdirectory will be created automatically byautofs.Optionally comment out the related line in
/etc/fstabif you previously mounted the same NFS share statically. The line should look similar to this:#jupiter.com:/home/geeko/doc/export /nfs/export nfs defaults 0 0
Reload
autofsand check if it works:>sudosystemctl restart autofs# ls -l /nfs/export total 20 drwxr-xr-x 5 1001 users 4096 Jan 14 2017 .images/ drwxr-xr-x 10 1001 users 4096 Aug 16 2017 .profiled/ drwxr-xr-x 3 1001 users 4096 Aug 30 2017 .tmp/ drwxr-xr-x 4 1001 users 4096 Apr 25 08:56 manual/
If you can see the list of files on the remote share, then
autofsis functioning.
21.5 Advanced topics #
This section describes topics that are beyond the basic introduction to
autofs—auto-mounting of NFS shares that are
available on your network, using wild cards in map files, and information
specific to the CIFS file system.
21.5.1 /net mount point #
This helper mount point is useful if you use a lot of NFS shares.
/net auto-mounts all NFS shares on your local network
on demand. The entry is already present in the
auto.master file, so all you need to do is uncomment
it and restart autofs:
/net -hosts
>sudosystemctl restart autofs
For example, if you have a server named jupiter with an
NFS share called /export, you can mount it by typing
>sudocd /net/jupiter/export
on the command line.
21.5.2 Using wild cards to auto-mount subdirectories #
If you have a directory with subdirectories that you need to auto-mount
individually—the typical case is the /home
directory with individual users' home directories
inside—autofs offers a clever solution.
In case of home directories, add the following line in
auto.master:
/home /etc/auto.home
Now you need to add the correct mapping to the
/etc/auto.home file, so that the users' home
directories are mounted automatically. One solution is to create separate
entries for each directory:
wilber jupiter.com:/home/wilber penguin jupiter.com:/home/penguin tux jupiter.com:/home/tux [...]
This is very awkward as you need to manage the list of users inside
auto.home. You can use the asterisk '*' instead of the
mount point, and the ampersand '&' instead of the directory to be
mounted:
* jupiter:/home/&
21.5.3 Auto-mounting CIFS file system #
If you want to auto-mount an SMB/CIFS share (see
Chapter 20, Samba for more information on the SMB/CIFS protocol),
you need to modify the syntax of the map file. Add
-fstype=cifs in the option field, and prefix the share
location with a colon ':'.
mount point -fstype=cifs ://jupiter.com/export