Flashnux

GNU/Linux man pages

Livre :
Expressions régulières,
Syntaxe et mise en oeuvre :

ISBN : 978-2-7460-9712-4
EAN : 9782746097124
(Editions ENI)

GNU/Linux

CentOS 4.8

i386

fstab-sync(8)


fstab-sync

fstab-sync

NAME
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
CONTROLLING WHAT ENTRIES TO ADD
DISABLING FSTAB-SYNC
OPTIONS
LOCKING
SEE ALSO
BUGS

NAME

fstab-sync − Update the /etc/fstab file in response to HAL events

SYNOPSIS

fstab-sync [-cv?] [-a|--add UDI] [-r|--remove UDI] [-c|--clean] [-v|--verbose] [-?|--help] [--usage]

DESCRIPTION

This program serves one major purpose: Update the file systems table file /etc/fstab and create/remove mount points in /media in response to HAL events. This program is usually never run directly from a shell; instead it is invoked as a callout from the /etc/hal/device.d directory by the HAL daemon.

Additionally, this program offers an option of removing any trace of its previous actions from the file systems table file. Specifically this happens when invoked by the HAL daemon for the root computer device object which only happens when the HAL daemon is starting up. Thus, when starting the HAL daemon, the /etc/fstab file will be completely sanitized, e.g. all entries previously added by the fstab-sync program will be removed. When probing for hardware during the startup of the HAL daemon, the fstab-sync program will be invoked several times to add new entries to the /etc/fstab file.

All entries added to /etc/fstab by fstab-sync can be identified by the use of the option managed in the options field. This option is a no-op; it is only used to uniquely identify entries added by the fstab-sync program.

When the /etc/fstab file is written by fstab-sync, a comment with a link to this manual page is added to the file.

CONTROLLING WHAT ENTRIES TO ADD

The fstab-sync program relies on properties on the relevant HAL device objects in order to determine if and how an entry to the /etc/fstab file should be added. Specifically, entries are added for hal device objects of respectively capability storage and volume only if appropriate storage.policy and volume.policy properties are set. Also, the storage.policy.default properties on the root computer device object are taken into account. See the HAL specification on http://freedesktop.org/Software/hal for more information.

By default, the /usr/share/hal/fdi/90defaultpolicy/storage-policy.fdi file specifies the policy - this file should never be edited by the system administrator as it might get updated by the OS vendor for security updates. Instead, system- or site-specific rules can be put in the /usr/share/hal/fdi/95userpolicy directory.

Device information files are processed for every hal device object in the /usr/share/hal/fdi/ directory in alphabetical order including directories. Hence, files in the 90defaultpolicy directory are processed before files 95userpolicy directory, 95userpolicy/a.fdi is processed before 95userpolicy/b.fdi and so on. In addition, directives in specific files are processed in a top-down fashion.

A number of sample policy files for various uses should be available in the /usr/share/doc/hal-0.4.2/conf directory. For example, the policy file storage-non-fixed.fdi ensures that only fixed optical and floppy drives gets tagged as mountable which ensures that e.g. hard disk partitions on a fixed disk won’t get added to the /etc/fstab file. Similarly the storage-skip-all.fdi file will ensure no entries are ever added.

DISABLING FSTAB-SYNC

Automatic updates of the /etc/fstab file by the fstab-sync program from the HAL daemon can be disabled by changing the 50-fstab-sync.hal symlink in /etc/hal/device.d directory to point to /bin/false

OPTIONS

The following options are supported:
--add=UDI

Add an entry to the /etc/fstab file by giving a HAL Unique Device Identifier

--remove=UDI

Remove an entry from fstab by giving a HAL Unique Device Identifier

--clean

Clean all entries generated by fstab-sync from the /etc/fstab file

--verbose

Report detailed information about operation progress

--usage

Display brief usage message

--help

Show options

LOCKING

The fstab-sync program uses flock(2) for locking the /etc/fstab file when adding or removing entries. This happens when the HAL daemon starts up, when there’s a media change event or when a storage device is hotplugged.

SEE ALSO

fstab(5), http://freedesktop.org/Software/hal

BUGS

One known bug is that the HAL daemon has to be running when cleaning the /etc/fstab file. Please send bug reports to the appropriate distribution bug tracker or the HAL mailing list - see http://freedesktop.org/Software/HalTraces for more information.



fstab-sync(8)