MOUNT_HSFS man page on SmartOS

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   16655 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
SmartOS logo
[printable version]

MOUNT_HSFS(1M)							MOUNT_HSFS(1M)

NAME
       mount_hsfs - mount hsfs file systems

SYNOPSIS
       mount -F hsfs [generic_options]
	    [-o FSType-specific_options] [-O ] special | mount_point

       mount -F hsfs [generic_options]
	    [-o FSType-specific_options] [-O] special mount_point

DESCRIPTION
       mount  attaches	an  ISO 9660 filesystem (the High Sierra  file system,
       hsfs,  is  a  draft predecessor to ISO 9660, so the name	 reflects  the
       filesystem's   history)	 to    the   file   system  hierarchy  at  the
       mount_point, which is the pathname of a directory. If  mount_point  has
       any  contents  prior to the mount operation, these are hidden until the
       file system is unmounted.

       If  mount is invoked with  special or  mount_point as  the  only	 argu‐
       ments,	mount  will  search   /etc/vfstab to fill in the missing argu‐
       ments, including the  FSType-specific_options; see mount(1M)  for  more
       details.

       The  hsfs  file system supports direct mounting of files containing the
       file system as well as block devices. See mount(1M) and lofiadm(1M).

       A file system conforming to ISO 9660 can contain extensions that	 allow
       it  to  overcome	 limitations of the original ISO 9660:1988 (version 1)
       standard. The following types of extensions are supported by hsfs:

       Rock Ridge extensions

	   This	 is  the  preferred  type  of  extension  as  it  allows  file
	   attributes,	name  length,  and  types equivalent to those on other
	   UNIX-style filesystems. Example of supported	 features  are	device
	   special  files, POSIX permissions, symbolic links, and filenames of
	   up to 255 bytes in length. Rock Ridge  extensions also  remove  the
	   ISO9660:1988	 restriction on	 maximum nesting depth for directories
	   (eight levels). hsfs	 automatically detects the  presence  of  Rock
	   Ridge  extensions and uses them, unless mount options are specified
	   to disable the use of Rock Ridge or to use a different extension.

       ISO9660:1999 (version 2) extensions

	   The first version of ISO9660, released  in  1988,  supported	  only
	   uppercase  ASCII filenames of no more than 31 characters in length.
	   ISO9660 version 2, released in 1999,	 provides  an  extension  that
	   allows  filenames  of at least 207 bytes that can use UTF-8 charac‐
	   ters and removes the limitation on the nesting depth	 for  directo‐
	   ries.  Unlike  Rock	Ridge,	it does not provide support  for UNIX-
	   style file types and file attributes.  hsfs	automatically  detects
	   this extension and will use it for filename lookup if no Rock Ridge
	   extensions are found on the media.

       Joliet extensions

	   The Joliet extension was devised  by	 Microsoft  to	allow  Unicode
	   (UCS-2)  long  filenames with CDROM-based media. It allows filename
	   lengths of up to 110 Unicode characters and does not support	 UNIX-
	   style  file	types and attributes.  hsfs falls back to using Joliet
	   if such an extension is present and neither Rock Ridge nor  ISO9660
	   version 2 extensions are found.

	   If  filenames  are  longer  than the 64 UCS-2 characters officially
	   allowed by Microsoft (that is, 110 Unicode  characters),  they  can
	   translate  to  up  to 330 UTF-8 octets. Filenames that translate to
	   more than 255 UTF-8 octets will be truncated.

OPTIONS
       generic_options

	   See mount(1M) for the list of supported options.

       -o

	   Specify  hsfs file system specific options.	If invalid options are
	   specified, a warning message is printed and the invalid options are
	   ignored.  The following options are available:

	   global |  noglobal

	       If global is specified and supported on the  file  system,  and
	       the  system  in	question is part of a cluster, the file system
	       will be globally visible	 on  all  nodes	 of  the  cluster.  If
	       noglobal	 is specified, the mount will not be globally visible.
	       The default behavior is noglobal.

	   ro

	       Mount the file system read-only.	 This option is required.

	   rr | nrr

	       Enable (rr) or disable (nrr) the use of Rock Ridge. rr  is  the
	       default	and  need  not	be  specified. If you use nrr and Rock
	       Ridge extensions are present in the file	 system,  ignore  them
	       and search for other available extensions or fall back to plain
	       ISO9660.

	   vers2 | novers2

	       Enable or disable the use of ISO9660 version 2  extensions.  If
	       vers2  is specified and ISO9660 version 2 extensions are avail‐
	       able, hsfs will use ISO9660  version 2 even if the file	system
	       contains	 the  preferred	 Rock  Ridge  extensions  as  well. If
	       novers2 is specified, it will fall back to using either	Joliet
	       extensions  or  plain  ISO9660 even if ISO9660 version 2 exten‐
	       sions are available.

	   joliet | nojoliet

	       Enable or disable the use of Joliet extensions.	If  joliet  is
	       specified  and  Joliet extensions are available, hsfs  will use
	       them even if the file system contains the preferred Rock	 Ridge
	       and/or ISO9660 version 2 extensions.  If nojoliet is specified,
	       it will fall back to using plain ISO9660.

	   notraildot

	       File names on High Sierra file systems consist of a proper name
	       and  an	extension  separated  by  a  '.'  (dot) character.  By
	       default, the separating dot is always considered	 part  of  the
	       file's name for all file access operations, even if there is no
	       extension present. Specifying  notraildot makes it optional  to
	       specify	the  trailing dot to access a file whose name lacks an
	       extension.

	       Exceptions: This option is effective only on file  systems  for
	       which  Rock  Ridge,  ISO9660 version 2 or Joliet extensions are
	       not active, either because they are not present on the  CD-ROM,
	       or  they	 have  been deliberately disabled via the nrr, novers2
	       and nojoliet option. If either extension is active,  hsfs  qui‐
	       etly ignores this option.

	   nomaplcase

	       File  names  on	High Sierra/ISO9660 CD-ROMs with no extensions
	       present should be uppercase characters only. By default,	  hsfs
	       maps  file  names read from a non-Rock Ridge disk to all lower‐
	       case characters. nomaplcase turns off this mapping. The	excep‐
	       tions for  notraildot discussed above apply to nomaplcase.

       -O

	   Overlay  mount.  Allow the file system to be mounted over an exist‐
	   ing mount point, making the underlying  file	 system	 inaccessible.
	   If  a  mount is attempted on a preexisting mount point without set‐
	   ting this flag, the mount will fail, producing  the	error:	device
	   busy.

EXAMPLES
       Example 1 Mounting and Unmounting a DVD Image Directly

       The following commands mount and unmount a DVD image.

	 # mount -F hsfs /images/solaris.iso /mnt/solaris-image
	 # umount /mnt/solaris-image

FILES
       /etc/mnttab

	   table of mounted file systems

       /etc/vfstab

	   list of default parameters for each file system

SEE ALSO
       lofiadm(1M),  mount(1M),	 mountall(1M), mount(2), mnttab(4), vfstab(4),
       attributes (5)

NOTES
       If the directory on which a file system is to be mounted is a  symbolic
       link, the file system is mounted on the directory to which the symbolic
       link refers, rather than on top of the symbolic link itself.

				 May 29, 2008			MOUNT_HSFS(1M)
[top]

List of man pages available for SmartOS

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net