| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344 |
- // Package mountinfo provides a set of functions to retrieve information about OS mounts.
- //
- // Currently it supports Linux. For historical reasons, there is also some support for FreeBSD and OpenBSD,
- // and a shallow implementation for Windows, but in general this is Linux-only package, so
- // the rest of the document only applies to Linux, unless explicitly specified otherwise.
- //
- // In Linux, information about mounts seen by the current process is available from
- // /proc/self/mountinfo. Note that due to mount namespaces, different processes can
- // see different mounts. A per-process mountinfo table is available from /proc/<PID>/mountinfo,
- // where <PID> is a numerical process identifier.
- //
- // In general, /proc is not a very efficient interface, and mountinfo is not an exception.
- // For example, there is no way to get information about a specific mount point (i.e. it
- // is all-or-nothing). This package tries to hide the /proc ineffectiveness by using
- // parse filters while reading mountinfo. A filter can skip some entries, or stop
- // processing the rest of the file once the needed information is found.
- //
- // For mountinfo filters that accept path as an argument, the path must be absolute,
- // having all symlinks resolved, and being cleaned (i.e. no extra slashes or dots).
- // One way to achieve all of the above is to employ filepath.Abs followed by
- // filepath.EvalSymlinks (the latter calls filepath.Clean on the result so
- // there is no need to explicitly call filepath.Clean).
- //
- // NOTE that in many cases there is no need to consult mountinfo at all. Here are some
- // of the cases where mountinfo should not be parsed:
- //
- // 1. Before performing a mount. Usually, this is not needed, but if required (say to
- // prevent over-mounts), to check whether a directory is mounted, call os.Lstat
- // on it and its parent directory, and compare their st.Sys().(*syscall.Stat_t).Dev
- // fields -- if they differ, then the directory is the mount point. NOTE this does
- // not work for bind mounts. Optionally, the filesystem type can also be checked
- // by calling unix.Statfs and checking the Type field (i.e. filesystem type).
- //
- // 2. After performing a mount. If there is no error returned, the mount succeeded;
- // checking the mount table for a new mount is redundant and expensive.
- //
- // 3. Before performing an unmount. It is more efficient to do an unmount and ignore
- // a specific error (EINVAL) which tells the directory is not mounted.
- //
- // 4. After performing an unmount. If there is no error returned, the unmount succeeded.
- //
- // 5. To find the mount point root of a specific directory. You can perform os.Stat()
- // on the directory and traverse up until the Dev field of a parent directory differs.
- package mountinfo
|