From f7afdbbb986bed7022976612a740027697ce93ec Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Sven Eden Date: Tue, 4 Jul 2017 16:59:46 +0200 Subject: Prep v232: Apply missing updates from upstream --- man/elogind-mount.xml | 295 -------------------------------------------------- 1 file changed, 295 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 man/elogind-mount.xml (limited to 'man') diff --git a/man/elogind-mount.xml b/man/elogind-mount.xml deleted file mode 100644 index a691e3867..000000000 --- a/man/elogind-mount.xml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,295 +0,0 @@ - - - - - - - - - elogind-mount - elogind - - - - Developer - Lennart - Poettering - lennart@poettering.net - - - - - - elogind-mount - 1 - - - - elogind-mount - Establish a mount or auto-mount point transiently - - - - - elogind-mount - OPTIONS - WHAT - WHERE - - - elogind-mount - OPTIONS - - - - - - Description - - elogind-mount may be used to create and start a transient .mount or - .automount unit of the file system WHAT on the mount point - WHERE. - - In many ways, elogind-mount is similar to the lower-level - mount8 command, however instead - of executing the mount operation directly and immediately, elogind-mount schedules it through - the service manager job queue, so that it may pull in further dependencies (such as parent mounts, or a file system - checker to execute a priori), and may make use of the auto-mounting logic. - - The command takes either one or two arguments. If only one argument is specified it should refer to a block - device containing a file system (e.g. /dev/sdb1), which is then probed for a label and other - metadata, and is mounted to a directory whose name is generated from the label. In this mode the block device must - exist at the time of invocation of the command, so that it may be probed. If the device is found to be a removable - block device (e.g. a USB stick) an automount point instead of a regular mount point is created (i.e. the - option is implied, see below). - - If two arguments are specified the first indicates the mount source (the WHAT) and - the second indicates the path to mount it on (the WHERE). In this mode no probing of the - source is attempted, and a backing device node doesn't have to exist yet. However, if this mode is combined with - , device node probing for additional metadata is enabled, and – much like in the - single-argument case discussed above – the specified device has to exist at the time of invocation of the - command. - - Use the command to show a terse table of all local, known block devices with file - systems that may be mounted with this command. - - - - Options - - The following options are understood: - - - - - - - - Do not synchronously wait for the requested operation to finish. If this is not specified, the job will - be verified, enqueued and elogind-mount will wait until the mount or automount unit's - start-up is completed. By passing this argument, it is only verified and enqueued. - - - - - - - - - - - Suppresses additional informational output while running. - - - - - - Enable probing of the mount source. This switch is implied if a single argument is specified on - the command line. If passed, additional metadata is read from the device to enhance the unit to create. For - example, a descriptive string for the transient units is generated from the file system label and device - model. Moreover if a removable block device (e.g. USB stick) is detected an automount unit instead of a regular - mount unit is created, with a short idle time-out, in order to ensure the file-system is placed in a clean - state quickly after each access. - - - - - - - Specifies the file system type to mount (e.g. vfat, ext4, - …). If omitted (or set to auto) the file system is determined automatically. - - - - - - - Additional mount options for the mount point. - - - - - - Takes a boolean argument, defaults to on. Controls whether to run a file system check - immediately before the mount operation. In the automount case (see below) the - check will be run the moment the first access to the device is made, which might slightly delay the - access. - - - - - - Provide a description for the mount or automount unit. See Description= in - elogind.unit5. - - - - - - - - Sets a unit property for the mount unit that is created. This takes an assignment in the same - format as systemctl1's - set-property command. - - - - - - - Takes a boolean argument. Controls whether to create an automount point or a regular mount - point. If true an automount point is created that is backed by the actual file system at the time of first - access. If false a plain mount point is created that is backed by the actual file system immediately. Automount - points have the benefit that the file system stays unmounted and hence in clean state until it is first - accessed. In automount mode the switch (see below) may be used to ensure - the mount point is unmounted automatically after the last access and an idle period passed. - - If this switch is not specified it defaults to false. If not specified and is - used (or only a single argument passed, which implies , see above), and the file - system block device is detected to be removable, it is set to true, in order to increase the chance that the - file system is in a fully clean state if the device is unplugged abruptly. - - - - - - Equivalent to . - - - - - - Takes a time value that controls the idle timeout in automount mode. If set to - infinity (the default) no automatic unmounts are done. Otherwise the file system backing the - automount point is detached after the last access and the idle timeout passed. See - elogind.time7 for details on - the time syntax supported. This option has no effect if only a regular mount is established, and automounting - is not used. - - Note that if is used (or only a single argument passed, which implies - , see above), and the file system block device is detected to be removable, - is implied. - - - - - - Similar to , but applies additional properties to the automount - unit created, instead of the mount unit. - - - - - - Takes a boolean argument, defaults to off. This option only has an effect in automount mode, - and controls whether the automount unit shall be bound to the backing device's lifetime. If enabled, the - automount point will be removed automatically when the backing device vanishes. If disabled the automount point - stays around, and subsequent accesses will block until backing device is replugged. This option has no effect - in case of non-device mounts, such as network or virtual file system mounts. - - Note that if is used (or only a single argument passed, which implies - , see above), and the file system block device is detected to be removable, this - option is implied. - - - - - - Instead of establishing a mount or automount point, print a terse list of block devices - containing file systems that may be mounted with elogind-mount, along with useful metadata - such as labels, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Exit status - - On success, 0 is returned, a non-zero failure - code otherwise. - - - - The udev Database - - If is used, elogind-mount honours a couple of additional udev - properties of block devices: - - - - SYSTEMD_MOUNT_OPTIONS= - - The mount options to use, if is not used. - - - - SYSTEMD_MOUNT_WHERE= - - The file system path to place the mount point at, instead of the automatically generated - one. - - - - - - See Also - - elogind1, - mount8, - systemctl1, - elogind.unit5, - elogind.mount5, - elogind.automount5, - elogind-run1 - - - - -- cgit v1.2.3