1.9 KiB
Name
mount - mount a filesystem
Synopsis
#include <unistd.h>
int mount(const char* source, const char* target, const char* fs_type, int flags);
Description
mount()
mounts a filesystem stored at source
by overlaying its contents over target
.
fs_type
must be one of the following supported filesystems:
Ext2FS
(orext2
): The ext2 filesystem.ProcFS
(orproc
): The process pseudo-filesystem (normally mounted at/proc
).DevPtsFS
(ordevpts
): The pseudoterminal pseudo-filesystem (normally mounted at/dev/pts
).TmpFS
(ortmp
): A non-persistent filesystem that stores all its data in RAM. An instance of this filesystem is normally mounted at/tmp
.
For Ext2FS, source
must be a path to a block device storing the filesystem contents. All
the other filesystems ignore the source
argument (by convention, it should have the same
value as fs_type
).
The following flags
are supported:
MS_NODEV
: Disallow opening any devices from this file system.MS_NOEXEC
: Disallow executing any executables from this file system.MS_NOSUID
: Ignore set-user-id bits on executables from this file system.MS_BIND
: Perform a bind-mount (see below).
These flags can be used as a security measure to limit the possible abuses of the newly mounted file system.
Bind mounts
If MS_BIND
is specified in flags
, fs_type
is ignored and a bind mount is performed
instead. In this case source
is treated as a path to a file or directory whose contents
are overlayed over target
. This can be used as an alternative to symlinks or hardlinks.
Errors
EPERM
: The current process does not have superuser privileges.ENODEV
: Thefs_type
is unrecognized, or the device is not found, or the device doesn't contain a valid filesystem image.
All of the usual path resolution errors may also occur.