Hello,

not sure if someone has written you back about this already, but what you are trying to do (look 'underneath' a mount point) can be done easily without kernel modifications.

You can bind mount an existing filesystem to a new location, and examine its contents without following existing mount points.

e.g. suppose you want to look at the directory on your root filesystem upon which /proc is mounted:

        # mount |grep 'on /proc type proc'
        none on /proc type proc (rw)

this is what the root of the /proc filesystem looks like:

        # ls -ld /proc
        dr-xr-xr-x  200 root root 0 Mar  1 18:06 /proc


Now, temporarily bind mount the root to someplace else:

        # mkdir /tmp/look
        # mount --bind / /tmp/look


Now you can examine the directory underlying /proc in the root:

        # ls -ld /tmp/look/proc
        drwxr-xr-x  2 root root 4096 Sep 26  2005 /tmp/look/proc

        # umount /tmp/look



In general I would assume that a package manager shouldn't be concerned about these types of things, since permanent mountpoints should always be mounted when a system is in its normal state, thus there would be no reason to care about what's 'underneath' a mountpoint. (If someone had root access, they could be hiding stuff there, but it they had root access they could do a whole lot of other bad things)


-Chris Wing
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
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