Autofs controls the operation of the automount daemons. The automount daemons automatically mount filesystems when they are accessed and unmount them after a period of inactivity. This is done based on a set of pre-configured maps.
Development versions of BLFS may not build or run some packages properly if LFS or dependencies have been updated since the most recent stable versions of the books.
Download (HTTP): https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/daemons/autofs/v5/autofs-5.1.9.tar.xz
Download MD5 sum: 06fb59a03c82364a0d788435b6853d70
Download size: 328 KB
Estimated disk space required: 5.7 MB
Estimated build time: less than 0.1 SBU
libtirpc-1.3.4 and rpcsvc-proto-1.4.4
nfs-utils-2.6.4, libnsl-2.0.1, libxml2-2.12.1, MIT Kerberos V5-1.21.2, OpenLDAP-2.6.6 (client only), and Cyrus SASL-2.1.28
Verify that automounter kernel support has been enabled:
File systems ---> <*/M> Kernel automounter support (supports v3, v4 and v5) [AUTOFS_FS]
Optionally, enable the following options in the kernel configuration:
File systems ---> [*] Network File Systems ---> [NETWORK_FILESYSTEMS] <*/M> NFS client support [NFS_FS] <*/M> SMB3 and CIFS support (advanced network filesystem) [CIFS]
Recompile and install the new kernel, if necessary.
Install Autofs by running the following commands:
./configure --prefix=/usr \ --with-mapdir=/etc/autofs \ --with-libtirpc \ --with-systemd \ --without-openldap \ --mandir=/usr/share/man && make
This package does not come with a test suite.
Now, as the root
user:
make install
If autofs is already installed on your system, be sure to backup your configuration files. They'll be overwritten by the following command.
Install the default configuration files, still as the
root
user:
make install_samples
--with-libtirpc
: This switch forces the package to
use libtirpc for RPC functionality instead of relying on implementation
from Glibc, which was removed in LFS 8.1.
--with-systemd
: This switch enables installation
of the bundled systemd units.
--without-openldap
: This switch disables openldap
if found. If openldap is desired, omit this switch. Note that openldap
support in autofs requires MIT Kerberos V5-1.21.2.
/etc/sysconfig/autofs.conf
,
/etc/autofs/auto.master
,
/etc/autofs/auto.misc
, and
/etc/autofs/auto.net
The installation process creates auto.master
,
auto.misc
, auto.smb
, and
auto.net
. Replace the
auto.master
file with the following commands
as the root
user:
mv /etc/autofs/auto.master /etc/autofs/auto.master.bak &&
cat > /etc/autofs/auto.master << "EOF"
# Begin /etc/autofs/auto.master
/media/auto /etc/autofs/auto.misc --ghost
#/home /etc/autofs/auto.home
# End /etc/autofs/auto.master
EOF
This file creates a new media directory,
/media/auto
that will overlay any existing
directory of the same name. In this example, the file,
/etc/autofs/auto.misc
, has a line:
cd -fstype=iso9660,ro,nosuid,nodev :/dev/cdrom
that will mount a cdrom as /media/auto/cd
if
that directory is accessed. The --ghost
option tells
the automounter to create “ghost” versions (i.e. empty
directories) of all the mount points listed in the configuration file
regardless whether any of the file systems are actually mounted or not.
This is very convenient and highly recommended, because it will show
you the available auto-mountable file systems as existing directories,
even when their file systems aren't currently mounted. Without the
--ghost
option, you'll have to remember the names of
the directories. As soon as you try to access one of them, the
directory will be created and the file system will be mounted. When
the file system gets unmounted again, the directory is destroyed too,
unless the --ghost
option was given.
An alternative method would be to specify another automount
location such as /var/lib/auto/cdrom
and create a
symbolic link from /media/cdrom
to the automount location.
The auto.misc
file must be configured to your
working hardware. The loaded configuration file should load your cdrom
if /dev/cdrom
is active or it can be edited to
match your device setup. Examples for floppies are available in the
file and easily activated. Documentation for this file is available
using the man 5 autofs command.
In the second line, if enabled, a user's home directory would be
mounted via NFS upon login. The /etc/home.auto
would need to exist and have an entry similar to:
joe example.org:/export/home/joe
where the directory /export/home/joe
is
exported via NFS from the system example.org. NFS shares
are covered on the next page.
This package could also be used to mount SMB shares, however that feature is not configured in these instructions. For additional configuration information, see the man pages for auto.master(5). There are also web resources such as this AUTOFS HOWTO available.
To start Autofs at boot, enable the
previously installed systemd unit by running the following command as
the root
user:
systemctl enable autofs
You can also specify OPTIONS
variable in the
/etc/sysconfig/autofs
file with any additional
parameters that you might want to pass to the automount daemon.