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MOUNT.NILFS2

NAME

mount.nilfs2 − mount a NILFS2 file system

SYNOPSIS

mount -t nilfs2 [−finrvw] [−o options [,...]] device dir
mount -t nilfs2
[−finrvw] [−o options [,...]] device | dir

mount.nilfs2 [−fnrvw] [−o options [,...]] device dir

mount.nilfs2 [−V]

DESCRIPTION

mount.nilfs2 serves to attach a NILFS2 file system on the specified directory dir. It is intended to be executed from mount(8), and will invoke the garbage collector nilfs_cleanerd(8) after an actual mount system call has succeeded. Conversely, umount.nilfs2(8) will shutdown the garbage collector before detaching the file system.

The standard command line interface is the first form:

mount −t nilfs2 [options] device dir

This tells the kernel to attach the NILFS2 file system on device at the directory dir. With the second form, the mount program tries to find out a missing device or dir argument from the /etc/fstab table.

The third form, which directly invokes mount.nilfs2, is also usable since mount.nilfs2 maintains by itself the system mount state such as the list of mounted file systems described in /etc/mtab. However, the first or the second form is usually recommended because some expansive options are not supported by the third form.

OPTIONS

The full set of options used by an invocation of mount(8) is determined by extracting the options from the fstab table, then applying any options specified by the −o argument, and finally applying a −r or −w option, when present.

See mount(8) for the full set of options. Commonly used options are as follows:

−V

Output version.

−f

Fakes mounting the file system, meaning that the actual system call will be skipped. This option is used to add entries for devices that were mounted earlier with the -n option. It can also be used for invoking nilfs_cleanerd(8) skipped previously.

−i

Don’t call mount.nilfs2. This disables garbage collection and handling of pseudo mount options.

−n

Mount without writing in /etc/mtab. This is necessary for example when /etc is on a read-only file system.

−r

Mount the file system read-only. A synonym is "−o ro".

−v

Verbose mode.

−w

Mount the file system read/write. This is the default. A synonym is "−o rw".

−o

Options are specified with a −o flag followed by a comma separated string of options. Some of these options are only useful when they appear in the /etc/fstab file. For standard filesystem options, see mount(8).

NILFS2 SPECIFIC MOUNT OPTIONS

The following options apply only to the NILFS2 filesystem. They all follow the −o flag.
barrier
/ nobarrier

These options enable/disable (default is enabled) barrier writes for the block I/O to a lower device. The barrier write serves an important role to ensure consistency of filesystems after a system crash or power failure. NILFS2 uses this feature by default to assure the reliability. For devices not supporting the barrier write, it will be disabled automatically and a warning will be logged.

cp=checkpoint-number

Specify the checkpoint-number of the snapshot to be mounted. Checkpoints and snapshots are listed by lscp(1). Only the checkpoints marked as snapshot are mountable with this option. Note that the read-only mount option must be specified together.

errors=continue / errors=remount-ro / errors=panic

Define the behaviour when an error is encountered. (Either ignore errors and just mark the file system erroneous and continue, or remount the file system read-only, or panic and halt the system.) The default is remount-ro. In earlier kernels than Linux 2.6.35, continue was the default.

pp=protection-period

Specify the protection-period for the cleaner daemon (in seconds). nilfs_cleanerd never deletes recent checkpoints whose elapsed time from its creation is smaller than protection-period.

nogc

Disable garbage collection. The cleaner daemon will not be started. It can be be started manually, but in that case it must also be stopped manually before unmounting.

order=relaxed / order=strict

Specify order semantics for file data. Metadata is always written to follow the POSIX semantics about the order of filesystem operations.
relaxed

Apply relaxed order semantics that allows modified data blocks to be written to disk without making a checkpoint if no metadata update is going. This mode is equivalent to the ordered data mode of the ext3 filesystem except for the updates on data blocks still conserve atomicity. This will improve synchronous write performance for overwriting. This is the default mode.

strict

Apply strict in-order semantics that preserves sequence of all file operations including overwriting of data blocks. That means, it is guaranteed that no overtaking of events occurs in the recovered file system after a crash. Unlike journaling filesystems, NILFS2 does not write a same block twice to disk. So there is no significant performance degradation in comparison with the relaxed mode except for file overwriting.

norecovery

Disable recovery of the filesystem on mount. This disables every write access on the device for read-only mounts or snapshots. This option will fail for r/w mounts on an unclean volume.

discard / nodiscard

These options enable/disable (default is disabled) the use of discard/TRIM commands. The discard/TRIM commands are sent to the underlying block device when blocks are freed. This is useful for SSD devices and sparse/thinly-provisioned LUNs. (since 2.6.34).

RETURN CODES

The return codes of mount.nilfs2 conform to those of mount(8); the following codes could be returned (the bits can be ORed):

0

success

1

incorrect invocation or permissions

2

system error (out of memory, cannot fork, no more loop devices)

4

internal bug

8

user interrupt

16

problems writing or locking /etc/mtab

32

mount failure

64

some mount succeeded

AUTHOR

mount.nilfs2 is written by Ryusuke Konishi <konishi DOT ryusuke AT gmail DOT com> for NILFS2, based on the mount program included in the util-linux package.

AVAILABILITY

mount.nilfs2 is part of the nilfs-utils package and is available from https://nilfs.sourceforge.io.

SEE ALSO

nilfs(8), mount(8), umount.nilfs2(8), nilfs_cleanerd(8), lscp(1).

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