On 03/12/2012 02:32 PM, Karel Zak wrote: > On Sun, Mar 11, 2012 at 07:06:26PM +0000, Matt Burgess wrote: >> On Fri, 2012-03-09 at 13:29 +0100, Karel Zak wrote: >>> On Fri, Mar 09, 2012 at 04:30:02AM -0700, Matthew Burgess wrote: >>>> On Fri, 9 Mar 2012 11:53:04 +0100, Karel Zak <kzak@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >>>>> On Thu, Mar 08, 2012 at 08:25:00PM +0000, Matt Burgess wrote: >>>>>> I've attached LIBMOUNT_DEBUG output from the 'mount -a' call that our >>>>>> bootscript does. Note how mount correctly detects that /proc, /sys >>>>> >>>>> No, it calls mount(2) syscall for /proc. The problem is that the >>>>> detection code expects /proc/self/mountinfo (used on systems with >>>>> mtab -> /proc/mounts symlink), but your system uses regular mtab. >>>>> >>>>> I'll fix it. Thanks. >>> >>> Fixed, try git pull. >> >> Thanks, that's sorted it! >>> >>>> Thanks! Is there a consensus opinion on whether users should be >>>> using a regular mtab or a symlink to /proc/self/mountinfo? >>> >>> - disadvantage is that some userspace utils (e.g. df(1) are not able >>> to de-duplicate list of mounted filesystem (bind mounts)) >>> >>> + advantage is that there is only one list of mounted filesystems >>> with always valid mount options (on systems with mtab is not problem >>> to have 'rw' in mtab for read-only NFS, etc.), no problems with >>> namespaces, not writable files in /etc, no mtab lock, etc. >>> >>> The symlink is required for systemd. >> >> Thanks for the info. Looks like there are more advantages than >> disadvantages. Without wishing to stray too far off-topic, do you know >> if the Coreutils folks are aware of/looking at the 'df' issue? Well we know about it. I've not looked at it as I was holding out hope that those that changed the interface might know how to handle it, and propose a fix. > My wish: > > - add FS de-duplicate function to libmount > - add SIZE, USE, AVAILABLE, USE% columns to findmnt > - add --df to findmnt > - try to implement df(1) compatible output if findmnt argv[0] is > df ;-))) That sounds like a bit of an extreme solution, which doesn't help any other processes that want to query file systems like df does. For example is `stat %m` handled OK these days? Is there really no way to know if something is a bind mount? For example they were handled fine with some heuristics before this symlink was introduced: http://git.sv.gnu.org/gitweb/?p=coreutils.git;a=commit;h=0380e4c9 Could we perhaps depend on the order of returned entries. cheers, Pádraig. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe util-linux" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html