Karel Zak <k...@redhat.com> wrote:

> >     write(mfd, "d /dev/sdb1"); // note I'm ignoring write's length arg
> 
> Not sure about 'd', in many cases it is not device, for mount(2)
> syscall we call it "source".

sys_mount() calls it devname.  But whatever - I'm not particularly attached to
the letter 'd' for this.

> The very basic mount(2) problem is that you have to parse
> /proc/self/mountinfo to get information about the mounted filesystem.
> It seems that your read() is also one way communication.
> 
> What we really need is to have a way how to specify *what* you want to
> read. The error message is not enough, I want to know the finally used
> mount options, mount ID, etc. It would be nice to have something like
> 
> 
>    fsmount(mfd, AT_FDCWD, "/mnt", 0);
> 
>    write(mfd, "o");
>    read(mfd, ....);     // read mount options
> 
>    write(mdf, "i");
>    read(mfd, ....);     // read mount ID
> 
> 
> but it seems ugly. Maybe introduce another function like 
> 
>     fsinfo(mdf, "o", buf, bufsz)
> 
> to get mount options (etc.) and to avoid separate write & read.

What is it you're trying to do?  Just read back the state of the new mount?
Or read back the state of a specified extant mount?

David

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