Go to main content

man pages section 1M: System Administration Commands

Exit Print View

Updated: July 2017
 
 

automount(1M)

Name

automount - install automatic mount points

Synopsis

/usr/sbin/automount [-t duration] [-v]

Description

The automount utility installs autofs mount points and associates an automount map with each mount point. It starts the automountd(1M) daemon if it finds any non-trivial entries in either local or distributed automount maps and if the daemon is not already running. The autofs file system monitors attempts to access directories within it and notifies the automountd(1M) daemon. The daemon uses the map to locate a file system, which it then mounts at the point of reference within the autofs file system. A map can be assigned to an autofs mount using an entry in the /etc/auto_master map or a direct map.

If the file system is not accessed within an appropriate interval (10 minutes by default), the automountd daemon unmounts the file system.

The file /etc/auto_master determines the locations of all autofs mount points. By default, this file contains three entries:

# Master map for automounter
#
+auto_master
/net          -hosts    -nosuid
/home         auto_home

The +auto_master entry is a reference to an external NIS master map. If one exists, then its entries are read as if they occurred in place of the +auto_master entry. The remaining entries in the master file specify a directory on which an autofs mount will be made followed by the automounter map to be associated with it. Optional mount options may be supplied as an optional third field in the each entry. These options are used for any entries in the map that do not specify mount options explicitly. The automount command is usually run without arguments. It compares the entries /etc/auto_master with the current list of autofs mounts in /etc/mnttab and adds, removes or updates autofs mounts to bring the /etc/mnttab up to date with the /etc/auto_master. At boot time it installs all autofs mounts from the master map. Subsequently, it may be run to install autofs mounts for new entries in the master map or the direct map, or to perform unmounts for entries that have been removed from these maps.

SMF Management

The automount service is managed by the service management facility, smf(5), under the service identifier:

svc:/system/filesystem/autofs:default

Administrative actions on this service, such as enabling, disabling, or requesting restart, can be performed using svcadm(1M). The service's status can be queried using the svcs(1) command.

Startup autofs SMF parameters for automount can be manipulated using sharectl(1M). Refer to sharectl(1M) for instructions for viewing and updating these parameters. Supported parameters are:

timeout=num

Specifies a duration, in seconds, that a file system is to remain mounted when not in use. The default value is 600 (10 minutes). Equivalent to the –t option in automount.

automount_verbose=TRUE | FALSE

Verbose mode. Causes you to be notified of non-critical events, suchs as autofs mounts and unmounts. The default value is FALSE. Equivalent to the –v option in automount.

Automount with Oracle Solaris Trusted Extensions

If a system is configured with Oracle Solaris Trusted Extensions, users have home directories at each label within their clearance. Therefore a home directory needs to be available in each corresponding labeled zone. Instead of using the auto_home map, a special map is automatically generated, using the zone's name as a suffix. By default the map contains the single entry:

-fstype=lofs   :/export/home/&

When a home directory is referenced and the name does not match any other keys in the zone's auto_home_zonename map, it will match this loopback mount specification. If this loopback match occurs and the name corresponds to a valid user whose home directory does not exist in the zone, the directory is automatically created on behalf of the user.

It is also possible to share home directories in a zone, in read-only mode, with higher-level zones, using NFS. In this case, the higher-level zone needs to have an automap entry for each lower-level zone that is to be imported. A typical map entry for the public zone, to be interpreted in the internal zone, would be called auto_home_public, and would look like this:

+auto_home_public

public-zone-IP-address:/export/home/&

This automap entry would then be included in /etc/auto_master, as follows:

/zone/public/home      auto_home_public      -nobrowse

Users in higher-level zones can use the updatehome(1) utility to synchronize specific startup files using their minimum labeled zone as the source.

Options

The following options are supported:

–t duration

Specifies a duration, in seconds, that a file system is to remain mounted when not in use. The default is 10 minutes.

–v

Verbose mode. Notifies of autofs mounts, unmounts, or other non-essential information.

Usage

Map Entry Format

A simple map entry (mapping) takes the form:

key [ -mount-options ] location . . .

where key is the full pathname of the directory to mount when used in a direct map, or the simple name of a subdirectory in an indirect map. mount-options is a comma-separated list of mount options, and location specifies a file system from which the directory may be mounted. In the case of a simple NFS mount, the options that can be used are as specified in mount_nfs(1M), and location takes the form:

host: pathname

host is the name of the host from which to mount the file system, and pathname is the absolute pathname of the directory to mount.

Options to other file systems are documented on the other mount_* reference manual pages, for example, mount_nfs(1M).

Replicated File Systems

Multiple location fields can be specified for replicated NFS file systems, in which case automount and the kernel will each try to use that information to increase availability. If the read-only flag is set in the map entry, automountd mounts a list of locations that the kernel may use, sorted by several criteria. Only locations available at mount time will be mounted, and thus be available to the kernel. When a server does not respond, the kernel will switch to an alternate server. The sort ordering of automount is used to determine how the next server is chosen. If the read-only flag is not set, automount will mount the best single location, chosen by the same sort ordering, and new servers will only be chosen when an unmount has been possible, and a remount is done. Servers on the same local subnet are given the strongest preference, and servers on the local net are given the second strongest preference. Among servers equally far away, response times will determine the order if no weighting factors (see below) are used.

If the list includes server locations using both the NFS Version 2 Protocol and the NFS Version 3 Protocol, automount will choose only a subset of the server locations on the list, so that all entries will be the same protocol. It will choose servers with the NFS Version 3 Protocol so long as an NFS Version 2 Protocol server on a local subnet will not be ignored.

If each location in the list shares the same pathname then a single location may be used with a comma-separated list of hostnames:

hostname,hostname . . . : pathname

Requests for a server may be weighted, with the weighting factor appended to the server name as an integer in parentheses. Servers without a weighting are assumed to have a value of zero (most likely to be selected). Progressively higher values decrease the chance of being selected. In the example,

man -ro alpha,bravo,charlie(1),delta(4) : /usr/man

hosts alpha and bravo have the highest priority; host delta has the lowest.

Server proximity takes priority in the selection process. In the example above, if the server delta is on the same network segment as the client, but the others are on different network segments, then delta will be selected; the weighting value is ignored. The weighting has effect only when selecting between servers with the same network proximity. The automounter always selects the localhost over other servers on the same network segment, regardless of weighting.

In cases where each server has a different export point, the weighting can still be applied. For example:


man -ro alpha:/usr/man  bravo,charlie(1):/usr/share/man  
     delta(3):/export/man

A mapping can be continued across input lines by escaping the NEWLINE with a backslash (\) Comments begin with a number sign (#) and end at the subsequent NEWLINE.

Map Key Substitution

The ampersand (&) character is expanded to the value of the key field for the entry in which it occurs. In this case:

jane sparcserver : /home/&

the & expands to jane.

Wildcard Key

The asterisk (*) character, when supplied as the key field, is recognized as the catch-all entry. Such an entry will match any key not previously matched. For instance, if the following entry appeared in the indirect map for /config:

*         & : /export/config/&

this would allow automatic mounts in /config of any remote file system whose location could be specified as:


hostname : /export/config/hostname

Note that the wildcard key does not work in conjunction with the –browse option.

Variable Substitution

Client specific variables can be used within an automount map. For instance, if $HOST appeared within a map, automount would expand it to its current value for the client's host name. Supported variables are:

ARCH
The output of arch
The architecture name. For example, sun4 on a sun4u machine.
CPU
The output of uname –p
The processor type.
For example, “sparc”
HOST
The output of uname –n
The host name.
For example, myhost.
KARCH
The output of arch -k or uname –m
The kernel architecture name or machine hardware name. For example, sun4u.
OSNAME
The output of uname –s
The OS name.
For example, “SunOS”
OSREL
The output of uname –r
The OS release name.
For example “5.3”
OSVERS
The output of uname –v
The OS version.
For example, “beta1.0”
NATISA
The output of isainfo –n
The native instruction set architecture for the system.
For example, “sparcv9”
PLATFORM
The output of uname -i
The platform name. For example, SUNW,Sun-Fire-V240.

If a reference needs to be protected from affixed characters, you can surround the variable name with curly braces ( { } ).

Multiple Mounts

A multiple mount entry takes the form:

key [-mount-options] [ [mountpoint] [-mount-options] location. . . ] . . .

The initial /[mountpoint ] is optional for the first mount and mandatory for all subsequent mounts. The optional mountpoint is taken as a pathname relative to the directory named by key. If mountpoint is omitted in the first occurrence, a mountpoint of / (root) is implied.

Given an entry in the indirect map for /src


beta     -ro\
  /           svr1,svr2:/export/src/beta  \
  /1.0        svr1,svr2:/export/src/beta/1.0  \
  /1.0/man    svr1,svr2:/export/src/beta/1.0/man

All offsets must exist on the server under beta. automount will automatically mount /src/beta, /src/beta/1.0, and /src/beta/1.0/man, as needed, from either svr1 or svr2 , whichever host is nearest and responds first.

Other File System Types

The automounter assumes NFS mounts as a default file system type. Other file system types can be described using the fstype mount option. Other mount options specific to this file system type can be combined with the fstype option. The location field must contain information specific to the file system type. If the location field begins with a slash, a colon character must be prepended, for instance, to mount a CD file system:

cdrom -fstype=hsfs,ro   : /dev/sr0

or to perform an autofs mount:

src –fstype=autofs    auto_src

Use this procedure only if you are not using Volume Manager.

See the NOTES section for information on option inheritance.

Indirect Maps

An indirect map allows you to specify mappings for the subdirectories you wish to mount under the directory indicated on the command line. In an indirect map, each key consists of a simple name that refers to one or more file systems that are to be mounted as needed.

Direct Maps

Entries in a direct map are associated directly with autofs mount points. Each key is the full pathname of an autofs mount point. The direct map as a whole is not associated with any single directory.

Direct maps are distinguished from indirect maps by the /- key. For example:

# Master map for automounter
#
+auto_master
/net            -hosts          -nosuid,nobrowse
/home           auto_home       -nobrowse
/-              auto_direct

Included Maps

The contents of another map can be included within a map with an entry of the form

+mapname

If mapname begins with a slash, it is assumed to be the pathname of a local file. Otherwise, the location of the map is determined by the policy of the name service switch according to the entry for the automounter in /etc/nsswitch.conf, such as

automount: files nis

If the name service is files, then the name is assumed to be that of a local file in /etc. If the key being searched for is not found in the included map, the search continues with the next entry.

Special Maps

There are three special maps available: -hosts, -fedfs and -null. The -hosts map is used with the /net directory and assumes that the map key is the hostname of an NFS server. The automountd daemon dynamically constructs a map entry from the server's list of exported file systems. References to a directory under /net/hermes will refer to the corresponding directory relative to hermes root.

The -fedfs map is used with the /nfs4 directory and assumes that the map key is the DNS domain for which the domain root filesystem is needed. The automountd daemon looks up the domain root servers with a query equivalent to:

% nslookup -q=srv _nfs4._domainroot._tcp.domain

...and mounts server-list:/.domainroot-domain at /nfs4/domain.

This supports the pending IETF standard documented in:

http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/\
draft-ietf-nfsv4-federated-fs-dns-srv-namespace/

The –null map cancels a previous map for the directory indicated. This is most useful in the /etc/auto_master for cancelling entries that would otherwise be inherited from the +auto_master include entry. To be effective, the –null entries must be inserted before the included map entry.

Executable Maps

Local maps that have the execute bit set in their file permissions will be executed by the automounter and provided with a key to be looked up as an argument. The executable map is expected to return the content of an automounter map entry on its stdout or no output if the entry cannot be determined. A direct map cannot be made executable.

Configuration and the auto_master Map

When initiated without arguments, automount consults the master map for a list of autofs mount points and their maps. It mounts any autofs mounts that are not already mounted, and unmounts autofs mounts that have been removed from the master map or direct map.

The master map is assumed to be called auto_master and its location is determined by the name service switch policy. Normally the master map is located initially as a local file /etc/auto_master.

Browsing

The automount daemon supports browsability of indirect maps. This allows all of the potential mount points to be visible, whether or not they are mounted. The –nobrowse option can be added to any indirect autofs map to disable browsing. For example:


/net     -hosts      -nosuid,nobrowse
/home    auto_home

In this case, any hostnames would only be visible in /net after they are mounted, but all potential mount points would be visible under /home. The –browse option enables browsability of autofs file systems. This is the default for all indirect maps.

The –browse option does not work in conjunction with the wildcard key.

Restricting Mount Maps

Options specified for a map are used as the default options for all the entries in that map. They are ignored when map entries specify their own mount options.

In some cases, however, it is desirable to force nosuid, nodevices, nosetuid, or noexec for a complete mount map and its submounts. This can be done by specifying the additional mount option, -restrict.


 /home     auto_home       -restrict,nosuid,hard

The -restrict option forces the inheritance of all the restrictive options nosuid, nodevices, nosetuid, and noexec as well as the restrict option itself. In this particular example, the nosuid and restrict option are inherited but the hard option is not. The restrict option also prevents the execution of “executable maps” and is enforced for auto mounts established by programs with fewer than all privileges available in their zone.

Exit Status

The following exit values are returned:

0

Successful completion.

1

An error occurred.

Files

/etc/auto_master

Master automount map.

/etc/auto_home

Map to support automounted home directories.

/etc/nsswitch.conf

Name service switch configuration file. See nsswitch.conf(4).

Attributes

See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

ATTRIBUTE TYPE
ATTRIBUTE VALUE
Availability
system/core-os

See Also

isainfo(1), ls(1), svcs(1), uname(1), updatehome(1), automountd(1M), mount(1M), mount_nfs(1M), sharectl(1M), svcadm(1M), attributes(5), nfssec(5), smf(5)

Managing Network File Systems in Oracle Solaris 11.3

Notes

autofs mount points must not be hierarchically related. automount does not allow an autofs mount point to be created within another autofs mount.

Since each direct map entry results in a new autofs mount such maps should be kept short.

Entries in both direct and indirect maps can be modified at any time. The new information is used when automountd next uses the map entry to do a mount.

New entries added to a master map or direct map will not be useful until the automount command is run to install them as new autofs mount points. New entries added to an indirect map may be used immediately.

As of the Solaris 2.6 release, a listing (see ls(1)) of the autofs directory associated with an indirect map shows all potential mountable entries. The attributes associated with the potential mountable entries are temporary. The real file system attributes will only be shown once the file system has been mounted.

Default mount options can be assigned to an entire map when specified as an optional third field in the master map. These options apply only to map entries that have no mount options. Note that map entities with options override the default options, as at this time, the options do not concatenate. The concatenation feature is planned for a future release.

When operating on a map that invokes an NFS mount, the default number of retries for the automounter is 0, that is, a single mount attempt, with no retries. Note that this is significantly different from the default (10000) for the mount_nfs(1M) utility.

The Network Information Service (NIS) was formerly known as Sun Yellow Pages (YP). The functionality of the two remains the same.