1 ===================== 2 autofs - how it works 3 ===================== 4 5 Purpose 6 ======= 7 8 The goal of autofs is to provide on-demand mounting and race free 9 automatic unmounting of various other filesystems. This provides two 10 key advantages: 11 12 1. There is no need to delay boot until all filesystems that 13 might be needed are mounted. Processes that try to access those 14 slow filesystems might be delayed but other processes can 15 continue freely. This is particularly important for 16 network filesystems (e.g. NFS) or filesystems stored on 17 media with a media-changing robot. 18 19 2. The names and locations of filesystems can be stored in 20 a remote database and can change at any time. The content 21 in that data base at the time of access will be used to provide 22 a target for the access. The interpretation of names in the 23 filesystem can even be programmatic rather than database-backed, 24 allowing wildcards for example, and can vary based on the user who 25 first accessed a name. 26 27 Context 28 ======= 29 30 The "autofs" filesystem module is only one part of an autofs system. 31 There also needs to be a user-space program which looks up names 32 and mounts filesystems. This will often be the "automount" program, 33 though other tools including "systemd" can make use of "autofs". 34 This document describes only the kernel module and the interactions 35 required with any user-space program. Subsequent text refers to this 36 as the "automount daemon" or simply "the daemon". 37 38 "autofs" is a Linux kernel module which provides the "autofs" 39 filesystem type. Several "autofs" filesystems can be mounted and they 40 can each be managed separately, or all managed by the same daemon. 41 42 Content 43 ======= 44 45 An autofs filesystem can contain 3 sorts of objects: directories, 46 symbolic links and mount traps. Mount traps are directories with 47 extra properties as described in the next section. 48 49 Objects can only be created by the automount daemon: symlinks are 50 created with a regular `symlink` system call, while directories and 51 mount traps are created with `mkdir`. The determination of whether a 52 directory should be a mount trap is based on a master map. This master 53 map is consulted by autofs to determine which directories are mount 54 points. Mount points can be *direct*/*indirect*/*offset*. 55 On most systems, the default master map is located at */etc/auto.master*. 56 57 If neither the *direct* or *offset* mount options are given (so the 58 mount is considered to be *indirect*), then the root directory is 59 always a regular directory, otherwise it is a mount trap when it is 60 empty and a regular directory when not empty. Note that *direct* and 61 *offset* are treated identically so a concise summary is that the root 62 directory is a mount trap only if the filesystem is mounted *direct* 63 and the root is empty. 64 65 Directories created in the root directory are mount traps only if the 66 filesystem is mounted *indirect* and they are empty. 67 68 Directories further down the tree depend on the *maxproto* mount 69 option and particularly whether it is less than five or not. 70 When *maxproto* is five, no directories further down the 71 tree are ever mount traps, they are always regular directories. When 72 the *maxproto* is four (or three), these directories are mount traps 73 precisely when they are empty. 74 75 So: non-empty (i.e. non-leaf) directories are never mount traps. Empty 76 directories are sometimes mount traps, and sometimes not depending on 77 where in the tree they are (root, top level, or lower), the *maxproto*, 78 and whether the mount was *indirect* or not. 79 80 Mount Traps 81 =========== 82 83 A core element of the implementation of autofs is the Mount Traps 84 which are provided by the Linux VFS. Any directory provided by a 85 filesystem can be designated as a trap. This involves two separate 86 features that work together to allow autofs to do its job. 87 88 **DCACHE_NEED_AUTOMOUNT** 89 90 If a dentry has the DCACHE_NEED_AUTOMOUNT flag set (which gets set if 91 the inode has S_AUTOMOUNT set, or can be set directly) then it is 92 (potentially) a mount trap. Any access to this directory beyond a 93 "`stat`" will (normally) cause the `d_op->d_automount()` dentry operation 94 to be called. The task of this method is to find the filesystem that 95 should be mounted on the directory and to return it. The VFS is 96 responsible for actually mounting the root of this filesystem on the 97 directory. 98 99 autofs doesn't find the filesystem itself but sends a message to the 100 automount daemon asking it to find and mount the filesystem. The 101 autofs `d_automount` method then waits for the daemon to report that 102 everything is ready. It will then return "`NULL`" indicating that the 103 mount has already happened. The VFS doesn't try to mount anything but 104 follows down the mount that is already there. 105 106 This functionality is sufficient for some users of mount traps such 107 as NFS which creates traps so that mountpoints on the server can be 108 reflected on the client. However it is not sufficient for autofs. As 109 mounting onto a directory is considered to be "beyond a `stat`", the 110 automount daemon would not be able to mount a filesystem on the 'trap' 111 directory without some way to avoid getting caught in the trap. For 112 that purpose there is another flag. 113 114 **DCACHE_MANAGE_TRANSIT** 115 116 If a dentry has DCACHE_MANAGE_TRANSIT set then two very different but 117 related behaviours are invoked, both using the `d_op->d_manage()` 118 dentry operation. 119 120 Firstly, before checking to see if any filesystem is mounted on the 121 directory, d_manage() will be called with the `rcu_walk` parameter set 122 to `false`. It may return one of three things: 123 124 - A return value of zero indicates that there is nothing special 125 about this dentry and normal checks for mounts and automounts 126 should proceed. 127 128 autofs normally returns zero, but first waits for any 129 expiry (automatic unmounting of the mounted filesystem) to 130 complete. This avoids races. 131 132 - A return value of `-EISDIR` tells the VFS to ignore any mounts 133 on the directory and to not consider calling `->d_automount()`. 134 This effectively disables the **DCACHE_NEED_AUTOMOUNT** flag 135 causing the directory not be a mount trap after all. 136 137 autofs returns this if it detects that the process performing the 138 lookup is the automount daemon and that the mount has been 139 requested but has not yet completed. How it determines this is 140 discussed later. This allows the automount daemon not to get 141 caught in the mount trap. 142 143 There is a subtlety here. It is possible that a second autofs 144 filesystem can be mounted below the first and for both of them to 145 be managed by the same daemon. For the daemon to be able to mount 146 something on the second it must be able to "walk" down past the 147 first. This means that d_manage cannot *always* return -EISDIR for 148 the automount daemon. It must only return it when a mount has 149 been requested, but has not yet completed. 150 151 `d_manage` also returns `-EISDIR` if the dentry shouldn't be a 152 mount trap, either because it is a symbolic link or because it is 153 not empty. 154 155 - Any other negative value is treated as an error and returned 156 to the caller. 157 158 autofs can return 159 160 - -ENOENT if the automount daemon failed to mount anything, 161 - -ENOMEM if it ran out of memory, 162 - -EINTR if a signal arrived while waiting for expiry to 163 complete 164 - or any other error sent down by the automount daemon. 165 166 167 The second use case only occurs during an "RCU-walk" and so `rcu_walk` 168 will be set. 169 170 An RCU-walk is a fast and lightweight process for walking down a 171 filename path (i.e. it is like running on tip-toes). RCU-walk cannot 172 cope with all situations so when it finds a difficulty it falls back 173 to "REF-walk", which is slower but more robust. 174 175 RCU-walk will never call `->d_automount`; the filesystems must already 176 be mounted or RCU-walk cannot handle the path. 177 To determine if a mount-trap is safe for RCU-walk mode it calls 178 `->d_manage()` with `rcu_walk` set to `true`. 179 180 In this case `d_manage()` must avoid blocking and should avoid taking 181 spinlocks if at all possible. Its sole purpose is to determine if it 182 would be safe to follow down into any mounted directory and the only 183 reason that it might not be is if an expiry of the mount is 184 underway. 185 186 In the `rcu_walk` case, `d_manage()` cannot return -EISDIR to tell the 187 VFS that this is a directory that doesn't require d_automount. If 188 `rcu_walk` sees a dentry with DCACHE_NEED_AUTOMOUNT set but nothing 189 mounted, it *will* fall back to REF-walk. `d_manage()` cannot make the 190 VFS remain in RCU-walk mode, but can only tell it to get out of 191 RCU-walk mode by returning `-ECHILD`. 192 193 So `d_manage()`, when called with `rcu_walk` set, should either return 194 -ECHILD if there is any reason to believe it is unsafe to enter the 195 mounted filesystem, otherwise it should return 0. 196 197 autofs will return `-ECHILD` if an expiry of the filesystem has been 198 initiated or is being considered, otherwise it returns 0. 199 200 201 Mountpoint expiry 202 ================= 203 204 The VFS has a mechanism for automatically expiring unused mounts, 205 much as it can expire any unused dentry information from the dcache. 206 This is guided by the MNT_SHRINKABLE flag. This only applies to 207 mounts that were created by `d_automount()` returning a filesystem to be 208 mounted. As autofs doesn't return such a filesystem but leaves the 209 mounting to the automount daemon, it must involve the automount daemon 210 in unmounting as well. This also means that autofs has more control 211 over expiry. 212 213 The VFS also supports "expiry" of mounts using the MNT_EXPIRE flag to 214 the `umount` system call. Unmounting with MNT_EXPIRE will fail unless 215 a previous attempt had been made, and the filesystem has been inactive 216 and untouched since that previous attempt. autofs does not depend on 217 this but has its own internal tracking of whether filesystems were 218 recently used. This allows individual names in the autofs directory 219 to expire separately. 220 221 With version 4 of the protocol, the automount daemon can try to 222 unmount any filesystems mounted on the autofs filesystem or remove any 223 symbolic links or empty directories any time it likes. If the unmount 224 or removal is successful the filesystem will be returned to the state 225 it was before the mount or creation, so that any access of the name 226 will trigger normal auto-mount processing. In particular, `rmdir` and 227 `unlink` do not leave negative entries in the dcache as a normal 228 filesystem would, so an attempt to access a recently-removed object is 229 passed to autofs for handling. 230 231 With version 5, this is not safe except for unmounting from top-level 232 directories. As lower-level directories are never mount traps, other 233 processes will see an empty directory as soon as the filesystem is 234 unmounted. So it is generally safest to use the autofs expiry 235 protocol described below. 236 237 Normally the daemon only wants to remove entries which haven't been 238 used for a while. For this purpose autofs maintains a "`last_used`" 239 time stamp on each directory or symlink. For symlinks it genuinely 240 does record the last time the symlink was "used" or followed to find 241 out where it points to. For directories the field is used slightly 242 differently. The field is updated at mount time and during expire 243 checks if it is found to be in use (ie. open file descriptor or 244 process working directory) and during path walks. The update done 245 during path walks prevents frequent expire and immediate mount of 246 frequently accessed automounts. But in the case where a GUI continually 247 access or an application frequently scans an autofs directory tree 248 there can be an accumulation of mounts that aren't actually being 249 used. To cater for this case the "`strictexpire`" autofs mount option 250 can be used to avoid the "`last_used`" update on path walk thereby 251 preventing this apparent inability to expire mounts that aren't 252 really in use. 253 254 The daemon is able to ask autofs if anything is due to be expired, 255 using an `ioctl` as discussed later. For a *direct* mount, autofs 256 considers if the entire mount-tree can be unmounted or not. For an 257 *indirect* mount, autofs considers each of the names in the top level 258 directory to determine if any of those can be unmounted and cleaned 259 up. 260 261 There is an option with indirect mounts to consider each of the leaves 262 that has been mounted on instead of considering the top-level names. 263 This was originally intended for compatibility with version 4 of autofs 264 and should be considered as deprecated for Sun Format automount maps. 265 However, it may be used again for amd format mount maps (which are 266 generally indirect maps) because the amd automounter allows for the 267 setting of an expire timeout for individual mounts. But there are 268 some difficulties in making the needed changes for this. 269 270 When autofs considers a directory it checks the `last_used` time and 271 compares it with the "timeout" value set when the filesystem was 272 mounted, though this check is ignored in some cases. It also checks if 273 the directory or anything below it is in use. For symbolic links, 274 only the `last_used` time is ever considered. 275 276 If both appear to support expiring the directory or symlink, an action 277 is taken. 278 279 There are two ways to ask autofs to consider expiry. The first is to 280 use the **AUTOFS_IOC_EXPIRE** ioctl. This only works for indirect 281 mounts. If it finds something in the root directory to expire it will 282 return the name of that thing. Once a name has been returned the 283 automount daemon needs to unmount any filesystems mounted below the 284 name normally. As described above, this is unsafe for non-toplevel 285 mounts in a version-5 autofs. For this reason the current `automount(8)` 286 does not use this ioctl. 287 288 The second mechanism uses either the **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_EXPIRE_CMD** or 289 the **AUTOFS_IOC_EXPIRE_MULTI** ioctl. This will work for both direct and 290 indirect mounts. If it selects an object to expire, it will notify 291 the daemon using the notification mechanism described below. This 292 will block until the daemon acknowledges the expiry notification. 293 This implies that the "`EXPIRE`" ioctl must be sent from a different 294 thread than the one which handles notification. 295 296 While the ioctl is blocking, the entry is marked as "expiring" and 297 `d_manage` will block until the daemon affirms that the unmount has 298 completed (together with removing any directories that might have been 299 necessary), or has been aborted. 300 301 Communicating with autofs: detecting the daemon 302 =============================================== 303 304 There are several forms of communication between the automount daemon 305 and the filesystem. As we have already seen, the daemon can create and 306 remove directories and symlinks using normal filesystem operations. 307 autofs knows whether a process requesting some operation is the daemon 308 or not based on its process-group id number (see getpgid(1)). 309 310 When an autofs filesystem is mounted the pgid of the mounting 311 processes is recorded unless the "pgrp=" option is given, in which 312 case that number is recorded instead. Any request arriving from a 313 process in that process group is considered to come from the daemon. 314 If the daemon ever has to be stopped and restarted a new pgid can be 315 provided through an ioctl as will be described below. 316 317 Communicating with autofs: the event pipe 318 ========================================= 319 320 When an autofs filesystem is mounted, the 'write' end of a pipe must 321 be passed using the 'fd=' mount option. autofs will write 322 notification messages to this pipe for the daemon to respond to. 323 For version 5, the format of the message is:: 324 325 struct autofs_v5_packet { 326 struct autofs_packet_hdr hdr; 327 autofs_wqt_t wait_queue_token; 328 __u32 dev; 329 __u64 ino; 330 __u32 uid; 331 __u32 gid; 332 __u32 pid; 333 __u32 tgid; 334 __u32 len; 335 char name[NAME_MAX+1]; 336 }; 337 338 And the format of the header is:: 339 340 struct autofs_packet_hdr { 341 int proto_version; /* Protocol version */ 342 int type; /* Type of packet */ 343 }; 344 345 where the type is one of :: 346 347 autofs_ptype_missing_indirect 348 autofs_ptype_expire_indirect 349 autofs_ptype_missing_direct 350 autofs_ptype_expire_direct 351 352 so messages can indicate that a name is missing (something tried to 353 access it but it isn't there) or that it has been selected for expiry. 354 355 The pipe will be set to "packet mode" (equivalent to passing 356 `O_DIRECT`) to _pipe2(2)_ so that a read from the pipe will return at 357 most one packet, and any unread portion of a packet will be discarded. 358 359 The `wait_queue_token` is a unique number which can identify a 360 particular request to be acknowledged. When a message is sent over 361 the pipe the affected dentry is marked as either "active" or 362 "expiring" and other accesses to it block until the message is 363 acknowledged using one of the ioctls below with the relevant 364 `wait_queue_token`. 365 366 Communicating with autofs: root directory ioctls 367 ================================================ 368 369 The root directory of an autofs filesystem will respond to a number of 370 ioctls. The process issuing the ioctl must have the CAP_SYS_ADMIN 371 capability, or must be the automount daemon. 372 373 The available ioctl commands are: 374 375 - **AUTOFS_IOC_READY**: 376 a notification has been handled. The argument 377 to the ioctl command is the "wait_queue_token" number 378 corresponding to the notification being acknowledged. 379 - **AUTOFS_IOC_FAIL**: 380 similar to above, but indicates failure with 381 the error code `ENOENT`. 382 - **AUTOFS_IOC_CATATONIC**: 383 Causes the autofs to enter "catatonic" 384 mode meaning that it stops sending notifications to the daemon. 385 This mode is also entered if a write to the pipe fails. 386 - **AUTOFS_IOC_PROTOVER**: 387 This returns the protocol version in use. 388 - **AUTOFS_IOC_PROTOSUBVER**: 389 Returns the protocol sub-version which 390 is really a version number for the implementation. 391 - **AUTOFS_IOC_SETTIMEOUT**: 392 This passes a pointer to an unsigned 393 long. The value is used to set the timeout for expiry, and 394 the current timeout value is stored back through the pointer. 395 - **AUTOFS_IOC_ASKUMOUNT**: 396 Returns, in the pointed-to `int`, 1 if 397 the filesystem could be unmounted. This is only a hint as 398 the situation could change at any instant. This call can be 399 used to avoid a more expensive full unmount attempt. 400 - **AUTOFS_IOC_EXPIRE**: 401 as described above, this asks if there is 402 anything suitable to expire. A pointer to a packet:: 403 404 struct autofs_packet_expire_multi { 405 struct autofs_packet_hdr hdr; 406 autofs_wqt_t wait_queue_token; 407 int len; 408 char name[NAME_MAX+1]; 409 }; 410 411 is required. This is filled in with the name of something 412 that can be unmounted or removed. If nothing can be expired, 413 `errno` is set to `EAGAIN`. Even though a `wait_queue_token` 414 is present in the structure, no "wait queue" is established 415 and no acknowledgment is needed. 416 - **AUTOFS_IOC_EXPIRE_MULTI**: 417 This is similar to 418 **AUTOFS_IOC_EXPIRE** except that it causes notification to be 419 sent to the daemon, and it blocks until the daemon acknowledges. 420 The argument is an integer which can contain two different flags. 421 422 **AUTOFS_EXP_IMMEDIATE** causes `last_used` time to be ignored 423 and objects are expired if the are not in use. 424 425 **AUTOFS_EXP_FORCED** causes the in use status to be ignored 426 and objects are expired ieven if they are in use. This assumes 427 that the daemon has requested this because it is capable of 428 performing the umount. 429 430 **AUTOFS_EXP_LEAVES** will select a leaf rather than a top-level 431 name to expire. This is only safe when *maxproto* is 4. 432 433 Communicating with autofs: char-device ioctls 434 ============================================= 435 436 It is not always possible to open the root of an autofs filesystem, 437 particularly a *direct* mounted filesystem. If the automount daemon 438 is restarted there is no way for it to regain control of existing 439 mounts using any of the above communication channels. To address this 440 need there is a "miscellaneous" character device (major 10, minor 235) 441 which can be used to communicate directly with the autofs filesystem. 442 It requires CAP_SYS_ADMIN for access. 443 444 The 'ioctl's that can be used on this device are described in a separate 445 document `autofs-mount-control.txt`, and are summarised briefly here. 446 Each ioctl is passed a pointer to an `autofs_dev_ioctl` structure:: 447 448 struct autofs_dev_ioctl { 449 __u32 ver_major; 450 __u32 ver_minor; 451 __u32 size; /* total size of data passed in 452 * including this struct */ 453 __s32 ioctlfd; /* automount command fd */ 454 455 /* Command parameters */ 456 union { 457 struct args_protover protover; 458 struct args_protosubver protosubver; 459 struct args_openmount openmount; 460 struct args_ready ready; 461 struct args_fail fail; 462 struct args_setpipefd setpipefd; 463 struct args_timeout timeout; 464 struct args_requester requester; 465 struct args_expire expire; 466 struct args_askumount askumount; 467 struct args_ismountpoint ismountpoint; 468 }; 469 470 char path[]; 471 }; 472 473 For the **OPEN_MOUNT** and **IS_MOUNTPOINT** commands, the target 474 filesystem is identified by the `path`. All other commands identify 475 the filesystem by the `ioctlfd` which is a file descriptor open on the 476 root, and which can be returned by **OPEN_MOUNT**. 477 478 The `ver_major` and `ver_minor` are in/out parameters which check that 479 the requested version is supported, and report the maximum version 480 that the kernel module can support. 481 482 Commands are: 483 484 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_VERSION_CMD**: 485 does nothing, except validate and 486 set version numbers. 487 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_OPENMOUNT_CMD**: 488 return an open file descriptor 489 on the root of an autofs filesystem. The filesystem is identified 490 by name and device number, which is stored in `openmount.devid`. 491 Device numbers for existing filesystems can be found in 492 `/proc/self/mountinfo`. 493 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_CLOSEMOUNT_CMD**: 494 same as `close(ioctlfd)`. 495 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_SETPIPEFD_CMD**: 496 if the filesystem is in 497 catatonic mode, this can provide the write end of a new pipe 498 in `setpipefd.pipefd` to re-establish communication with a daemon. 499 The process group of the calling process is used to identify the 500 daemon. 501 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_REQUESTER_CMD**: 502 `path` should be a 503 name within the filesystem that has been auto-mounted on. 504 On successful return, `requester.uid` and `requester.gid` will be 505 the UID and GID of the process which triggered that mount. 506 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_ISMOUNTPOINT_CMD**: 507 Check if path is a 508 mountpoint of a particular type - see separate documentation for 509 details. 510 511 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_PROTOVER_CMD** 512 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_PROTOSUBVER_CMD** 513 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_READY_CMD** 514 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_FAIL_CMD** 515 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_CATATONIC_CMD** 516 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_TIMEOUT_CMD** 517 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_EXPIRE_CMD** 518 - **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_ASKUMOUNT_CMD** 519 520 These all have the same 521 function as the similarly named **AUTOFS_IOC** ioctls, except 522 that **FAIL** can be given an explicit error number in `fail.status` 523 instead of assuming `ENOENT`, and this **EXPIRE** command 524 corresponds to **AUTOFS_IOC_EXPIRE_MULTI**. 525 526 Catatonic mode 527 ============== 528 529 As mentioned, an autofs mount can enter "catatonic" mode. This 530 happens if a write to the notification pipe fails, or if it is 531 explicitly requested by an `ioctl`. 532 533 When entering catatonic mode, the pipe is closed and any pending 534 notifications are acknowledged with the error `ENOENT`. 535 536 Once in catatonic mode attempts to access non-existing names will 537 result in `ENOENT` while attempts to access existing directories will 538 be treated in the same way as if they came from the daemon, so mount 539 traps will not fire. 540 541 When the filesystem is mounted a _uid_ and _gid_ can be given which 542 set the ownership of directories and symbolic links. When the 543 filesystem is in catatonic mode, any process with a matching UID can 544 create directories or symlinks in the root directory, but not in other 545 directories. 546 547 Catatonic mode can only be left via the 548 **AUTOFS_DEV_IOCTL_OPENMOUNT_CMD** ioctl on the `/dev/autofs`. 549 550 The "ignore" mount option 551 ========================= 552 553 The "ignore" mount option can be used to provide a generic indicator 554 to applications that the mount entry should be ignored when displaying 555 mount information. 556 557 In other OSes that provide autofs and that provide a mount list to user 558 space based on the kernel mount list a no-op mount option ("ignore" is 559 the one use on the most common OSes) is allowed so that autofs file 560 system users can optionally use it. 561 562 This is intended to be used by user space programs to exclude autofs 563 mounts from consideration when reading the mounts list. 564 565 autofs, name spaces, and shared mounts 566 ====================================== 567 568 With bind mounts and name spaces it is possible for an autofs 569 filesystem to appear at multiple places in one or more filesystem 570 name spaces. For this to work sensibly, the autofs filesystem should 571 always be mounted "shared". e.g. :: 572 573 mount --make-shared /autofs/mount/point 574 575 The automount daemon is only able to manage a single mount location for 576 an autofs filesystem and if mounts on that are not 'shared', other 577 locations will not behave as expected. In particular access to those 578 other locations will likely result in the `ELOOP` error :: 579 580 Too many levels of symbolic links
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