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AUTOFS(5)                     File Formats Manual                    AUTOFS(5)

NAME
       autofs - Format of the automounter maps

DESCRIPTION
       The automounter maps are FILE, NIS, NISPLUS or LDAP maps referred to by
       the master map of the automounter  (see  auto.master(5)).   These  maps
       describe  how  file  systems below the mount point of the map (given in
       the master map) are to be mounted.  This page  describes  the  sun  map
       format; if another map format, other than amd , is specified (e.g. hes-
       iod), this documentation does not apply.

       Indirect maps, except for the internal hosts map, can be changed on the
       fly  and the automouter will recognize those changes on the next opera-
       tion it performs on that map. Direct maps require a HUP signal be  sent
       to the daemon to refresh their contents as does the master map.

SUN FORMAT
       This is a description of the text file format.  Other methods of speci-
       fying these files may exist.  All empty lines or lines beginning with #
       are ignored. The basic format of one line in such maps is:

       key [-options] location

       key
              For  indirect  mounts  this is the part of the path name between
              the mount point and the path into  the  filesystem  when  it  is
              mounted.  Usually you can think about the key as a sub-directory
              name below the autofs managed mount point.

              For direct mounts this is the full path  of  each  mount  point.
              This  map  is  always  associated with the /- mount point in the
              master map.

       options
              Zero or more options may be given.  Options can also be given in
              the  auto.master  file  in which case both values are cumulative
              (this is a difference from SunOS).  The options are  a  list  of
              comma separated options as customary for the mount(8) command.

              There are several special options

              -fstype=
                     is used to specify a filesystem type if the filesystem is
                     not of the default NFS type.  This option is processed by
                     the automounter and not by the mount command.

              -strict
                     is  used  to  treat  errors when mounting file systems as
                     fatal. This  is  important  when  multiple  file  systems
                     should  be  mounted  (`multi-mounts').  If this option is
                     given, no file system is mounted at all if at  least  one
                     file system can't be mounted.

              -use-weight-only
                     is used to make the weight the sole factor in selecting a
                     server when multiple servers are present in a map  entry.
                     and

              -no-use-weight-only
                     can  be used to negate the option if it is present in the
                     master map entry for the map but is not  wanted  for  the
                     given mount.

       location
              The  location  specifies  from  where  the  file system is to be
              mounted.  In the most cases this will be an NFS volume  and  the
              usual  notation  host:pathname  is  used  to indicate the remote
              filesystem and path to be mounted.   If  the  filesystem  to  be
              mounted  begins  with  a  / (such as local /dev entries or smbfs
              shares) a : needs to be prefixed (e.g.  :/dev/sda1).

EXAMPLE
       Indirect map:

         kernel    -ro,soft,intr       ftp.kernel.org:/pub/linux
         boot      -fstype=ext2        :/dev/hda1
         windoze   -fstype=smbfs       ://windoze/c
         removable -fstype=ext2        :/dev/hdd
         cd        -fstype=iso9660,ro  :/dev/hdc
         floppy    -fstype=auto        :/dev/fd0
         server    -rw,hard,intr       / -ro myserver.me.org:/ \
                                       /usr myserver.me.org:/usr \
                                       /home myserver.me.org:/home

       In the first line we have a NFS remote mount of the kernel directory on
       ftp.kernel.org.   This is mounted read-only.  The second line mounts an
       ext2 volume from a local ide drive.  The third makes a  share  exported
       from  a Windows machine available for automounting.  The rest should be
       fairly self-explanatory. The last entry (the last three  lines)  is  an
       example of a multi-map (see below).

       If  you use the automounter for a filesystem without access permissions
       (like vfat), users usually can't write on such a filesystem because  it
       is  mounted  as  user  root.  You can solve this problem by passing the
       option gid=<gid>, e.g. gid=floppy. The filesystem is  then  mounted  as
       group floppy instead of root. Then you can add the users to this group,
       and they can write to the filesystem. Here's an example  entry  for  an
       autofs map:

         floppy-vfat  -fstype=vfat,sync,gid=floppy,umask=002  :/dev/fd0

       Direct map:

         /nfs/apps/mozilla             bogus:/usr/local/moxill
         /nfs/data/budgets             tiger:/usr/local/budgets
         /tst/sbin                     bogus:/usr/sbin

FEATURES
   Map Key Substitution
       An  &  character  in  the  location is expanded to the value of the key
       field that matched the line (which probably only makes  sense  together
       with a wildcard key).

   Wildcard Key
       A  map  key  of * denotes a wild-card entry. This entry is consulted if
       the specified key does not exist in the map.  A typical wild-card entry
       looks like this:

         *         server:/export/home/&

       The special character '&' will be replaced by the provided key.  So, in
       the example above, a lookup for the key 'foo' would yield  a  mount  of
       server:/export/home/foo.

   Variable Substitution
       The  following  special  variables  will be substituted in the location
       field of an automounter map entry if prefixed with $ as customary  from
       shell scripts (curly braces can be used to separate the field name):

         ARCH           Architecture (uname -m)
         CPU            Processor Type
         HOST           Hostname (uname -n)
         OSNAME         Operating System (uname -s)
         OSREL          Release of OS (uname -r)
         OSVERS         Version of OS (uname -v)

       autofs  provides  additional  variables  that are set based on the user
       requesting the mount:

         USER           The user login name
         UID            The user login ID
         GROUP          The user group name
         GID            The user group ID
         HOME           The user home directory
         SHOST          Short hostname (domain part removed if present)

       If a program map is used these standard environment variables will have
       a prefix of "AUTOFS_" to prevent interpreted languages like python from
       being able to load and execute arbitray code from a  user  home  direc-
       tory.

       Additional  entries can be defined with the -Dvariable=Value map-option
       to automount(8).

   Executable Maps
       A map can be marked as executable. A program map will  be  called  with
       the key as an argument.  It may return no lines of output if there's an
       error, or one or more lines containing a map entry (with \ quoting line
       breaks).  The map entry corresponds to what would normally follow a map
       key.

       An executable map can return an error code to indicate the  failure  in
       addition to no output at all.  All output sent to stderr is logged into
       the system logs.

   Multiple Mounts
       A multi-mount map can be used to name multiple  filesystems  to  mount.
       It takes the form:

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

       This  may extend over multiple lines, quoting the line-breaks with `\'.
       If present,  the  per-mountpoint  mount-options  are  appended  to  the
       default mount-options.

   Replicated Server
         Multiple replicated hosts, same path:
         <path> host1,host2,hostn:/path/path

         Multiple hosts, some with same path, some with another
         <path> host1,host2:/blah host3:/some/other/path

         Multiple replicated hosts, different (potentially) paths:
         <path> host1:/path/pathA host2:/path/pathB

         Mutliple weighted, replicated hosts same path:
         <path> host1(5),host2(6),host3(1):/path/path

         Multiple weighted, replicated hosts different (potentially) paths:
         <path> host1(3):/path/pathA host2(5):/path/pathB

         Anything else is questionable and unsupported, but these variations will also work:
         <path> host1(3),host:/blah

UNSUPPORTED
       This  version  of  the automounter supports direct maps stored in FILE,
       NIS, NISPLUS and LDAP only.

AMD FORMAT
       This is a description of the text file format. Other methods of  speci-
       fying mount map entries may be required for different map sources.  All
       empty lines or lines beginning with # are ignored. The basic format  of
       one line in such maps is:

       key location-list

       key
              A  key is a path (or a single path component alone) that may end
              in the wildcard key, "*", or the wildcard key alone and must not
              begin with the "/" character.

       location-list
              Following the key is a mount location-list.

       A location-list list has the following syntax:

       location[ location[ ... ]] [|| location[ location[ ... ]]

       A  mount  location-list  can use the cut operator, ||, to specify loca-
       tions that should be tried if none of the locations to the left  of  it
       where selected for a mount attempt.

       A mount location consists of an optional colon seperated list of selec-
       tors, followed by a colon seperated list of option:=value pairs.

       The selectors that may be used return a value or boolean result.  Those
       that return a value may be to used with the comparison operators == and
       != and those that return a boolean result may be negated with the !.

       For a location to be selected for a mount attempt all of its  selectors
       must  evaluate  to  true. If a location is selected for a mount attempt
       and succeeds the lookup is completed and returns success. If the  mount
       attempt  fails  the  proceedure  continues with the next location until
       they have all been tried.

       In addition some selectors take no argumenets, some  one  argument  and
       others optionally take two arguments.

       The selectors that take no arguments are:

              arch
                     The  machine architecture which, if not set in the confu-
                     gration, is obtained using uname(2).

              karch
                     The machine kernel architecture which, if not set in  the
                     confugration, is obtained using uname(2).

              os
                     The  operating  system  name, if not set in the confugra-
                     tion, is obtained using uname(2).

              osver
                     The operating system version, if not set in the confugra-
                     tion, is obtained using uname(2).

              full_os
                     The  full operating system name, if not set in the confu-
                     gration this selector has no value.

              vendor
                     The operating system vendor  name,  if  not  set  in  the
                     confugration this selector has the value "unknown".

              byte
                     The endianess of the hardware.

              cluster
                     The  name of the local cluster. It has a value only if it
                     is set in the configuration.

              autodir
                     The base path under which external  mounts  are  done  if
                     they  are needed.  Most mounts are done in place but some
                     can't be and this is the  base  path  under  which  those
                     mounts will be done.

              domain
                     The local domain name. It is set to the value of the con-
                     figuration option sub_domain. If sub_domain is not  given
                     in  the configuration it is set to the domain part of the
                     local host name, as given by gethostname(2).

              host
                     The local host name, without the domain part, as given by
                     gethostname(2).

              hostd
                     The full host name. If sub_domain is given in the config-
                     uration this is set to  the  contatenation  of  host  and
                     sub_domain  deperated by a .. If sub_domain is not set in
                     the configuration the value of domain is used instead  of
                     sub_domain.

              uid
                     The  numeric  value  of  the  uid  of the user that first
                     requested the mount. Note this is usual the same as  that
                     used by amd but can be different within autofs.

              gid
                     The  numeric  value  of  the  gid  of the user that first
                     requested the mount. Note this is usual the same as  that
                     used by amd but can be different within autofs.

              key
                     The string value of the key being looked up.

              map
                     The string value of the map name used to lookup keys.

              path
                     The  string  value  of  the  full path to the mount being
                     requested.

              dollar
                     Evaluates to the string "$".

       The selectors that take one argument are:

              in_network(network) ,  network(network) ,  netnumber(network)  ,
              wire(network)
                     These  selectors  are  all  the same. in_network() is the
                     preferred usage.  The  network  argument  is  an  address
                     (which  may  include  a subnet mask) or network name. The
                     function compares  network  against  each  interface  and
                     returns true if network belongs to the network the inter-
                     face is connected to.

              xhost(hostname)
                     The xhost() selector compares hostname to the ${host} and
                     if  it doesn't match it attempts to lookup the cannonical
                     name of hostname and compares it to {host} as well.

              exists(filename)
                     Returns true if filename exits as determined by lstat(2).

              true()
                     Evaluates to true, the argument is  ignored  and  may  be
                     empty.

              false()
                     Evaluates  to  false,  the argument is ignored and may be
                     empty.

       The selectors that take up to two arguments are:

              netgrp(netgroup[,hostname])
                     The netgrp() selector returns true if hostname is a  mem-
                     ber  of  the  netgroup netgroup. If hostname is not given
                     ${host} is used for the comparison.

              netgrpd(netgroup[,hostname])
                     The netgrpd()i selector  behaves  the  same  as  netgrp()
                     except  that if hostname is not given ${hostd}, the fully
                     qualified hostname, is used instead of ${host}.

       The options that may be used are:

              type
                     This is the mount filesystem type.  It can have  a  value
                     of  auto, link, linkx, host, lofs, ext2-4, xfs, nfs, nfsl
                     or cdfs.  Other types that are not yet implemented or are
                     not  available iin autofs are nfsx, lustre, jfs, program,
                     cachefs and direct.

              maptype
                     The maptype option specifies the type of the  map  source
                     and can have a value of file, nis, nisplus, exec, ldap or
                     hesiod. Map sources either not  yet  implemented  or  not
                     available in autofs are sss, ndbm, passwd and union.

              fs
                     The  option  fs  is used to specify the local filesystem.
                     The meaning of this option (and  whether  or  not  it  is
                     used) is dependent on the mount filesystem type.

              rhost
                     The remote host name for network mount requests.

              rfs
                     The   remote  host  filesystem  path  for  network  mount
                     requests.

              dev
                     Must resolve to the device file for  local  device  mount
                     requests.

              sublink
                     The  sublink  option  is  used  to specify a subdirectory
                     within the mount location to which this entry will point.

              pref
                     The pref option is used  to  specify  a  prefix  that  is
                     prepended  to  the  lookup  key before looking up the map
                     entry key.

              opts
                     The opts option is used to specify mount  options  to  be
                     used  for  the  mount.  If  a "-" is given it is ignored.
                     Options that may be  used  are  dependend  on  the  mount
                     filesystem.

              addopts
                     The  addopts  option  is used to specify additional mount
                     options used in addition to the default mount options for
                     the mount location.

              remopts
                     The  addopts option is used to specify mount options used
                     instead the options given in opts when the mount location
                     is on a remote retwork.

       A number of options aren't available or aren't yet implemented
              within autofs, these are:

              cache
                     The  cache  option  isn't  used  by autofs. The map entry
                     cache is continually updated and stale entries cleaned on
                     re-load when map changes are detected so these configura-
                     tion entries are not used.  The regex map key matching is
                     not implemented and may not be due to the potential over-
                     head of the full map scans needed on every key lookup.

              cachedir
                     The cachefs filesystem is not available on Linux, a  dif-
                     ferent implementation is used for caching network mounted
                     file systems.

              mount ,  unmount ,  umount
                     These options are used by  the  amd  program  mount  type
                     which is not yet implemented.

              delay
                     This  option is not used by the autofs implementation and
                     is ignored.

FEATURES
   Key Matching
       The amd parser key matching is unusual.

       The key string to be looked up is constructed by prepending the prefix,
       if there is one.

       The resulting relative path string is matched by first trying the sting
       itself. If no match is found the last component of the  key  string  is
       replaced with the wilcard match cahracter ("*") and a wildcard match is
       attemted. This process continues until a match is found  or  until  the
       last  match,  against the wilcard match key alone, fails to match a map
       entry and the key lookup fails.

   Macro Usage
       Macros are used a lot in the autofs amd implementation.

       Many of the option values are set as macro variables  corresponding  to
       the option name during the map entry parse. So they may be used in sub-
       sequent option values. Beware though, the order in which option  values
       is not necessarily left to right so you may get unexpected results.

EXAMPLE
       Example NFS mount map:

       Assuming we have the autofs master map entry:

         /test     file,amd:/etc/amd.test

       And the following map in /etc/amd.test:

         /defaults type:=nfs;rhost:=bilbo
         apps      rfs:=/autofs
         util      rhost:=zeus;rfs:=/work/util
         local     rfs:=/shared;sublink:=local

       In the first line we have an NFS remote mount of the exported directory
       /autofs from host bilbo which would  be  mounted  on  /test/apps.  Next
       another nfs mount for the exported directory /work/util from host zeus.
       This would be mounted on /test/util.

       Finally we have an example of the use of the sublink  option.  In  this
       case  the  filesystem bilbo:/shared would be mounted on a path external
       the automount directory (under  the  direcory  given  by  configuration
       option  auto_dir)  and  the  path  /test/local either symlinked or bind
       mounted (depending on the setting autofs_use_lofs) to the "local"  sub-
       directory of the external mount.

SEE ALSO
       automount(8),   auto.master(5),  autofs(8),  autofs.conf(5),  mount(8).
       autofs_ldap_auth.conf(5)

AUTHOR
       This manual page was written by Christoph  Lameter  <chris@waterf.org>,
       for  the Debian GNU/Linux system.  Edited by H. Peter Avian <hpa@trans-
       meta.com>,  Jeremy  Fitzhardinge   <jeremy@goop.org>   and   Ian   Kent
       <raven@themaw.net>.

                                  9 Feb 2014                         AUTOFS(5)

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