pmount - mount arbitrary hotpluggable devices as normal user
pmount [ options ] device
pmount [ options ] device label
pmount --lock [ options ] device pid
pmount --unlock [ options ] device pid
pmount
pmount ("policy mount") is a wrapper around the standard
mount program which permits normal users to mount removable devices without
a matching /etc/fstab entry.
pmount also supports encrypted devices which use dm-crypt and have
LUKS metadata. If a LUKS-capable cryptsetup is installed, pmount will
use it to decrypt the device first and mount the mapped unencrypted device
instead.
pmount is invoked like this:
pmount device [ label ]
This will mount device to a directory below /media if
policy is met (see below). If label is given, the mount point will be
/media/label, otherwise it will be /media/device.
The device will be mounted with the following flags:
async,atime,nodev,noexec,noauto,nosuid,user,rw
Some applications like CD burners modify a raw device which must
not be mounted while the burning process is in progress. To prevent
automatic mounting, pmount offers a locking mechanism: pmount --lock
device pid will prevent the pmounting of device until it is
unlocked again using pmount --unlock device pid. The process
id pid assigns the lock to a particular process; this allows one
to lock a device by several processes.
During mount, the list of locks is cleaned, i. e. all locks whose
associated process does not exist any more are removed. This prevents
forgotten indefinite locks from crashed programs.
Running pmount without arguments prints the list of mounted
removable devices, a bit in the fashion of mount (1).
Please note that you can use labels and uuids as described in
fstab (5) for devices present in /etc/fstab. In this case, the
device name need to match exactly the corresponding entry in
/etc/fstab, including the LABEL= or UUID= part.
Important note for Debian: The permission to execute pmount
is restricted to members of the system group plugdev. Please add all
desktop users who shall be able to use pmount to this group by
executing
- adduser user plugdev
(as root).
The mount will succeed if all of the following conditions are
met:
- device is a block device in /dev/
- device is not in /etc/fstab (if it is, pmount executes mount
device as the calling user to handle this
transparently). See below for more details.
- device is not already mounted according to /etc/mtab and
/proc/mounts
- if the mount point already exists, there is no device already mounted at
it and the directory is empty
- device is removable (USB, FireWire, or MMC device, or
/sys/block/drive/removable is 1) or whitelisted in
/etc/pmount.allow.
- device is not locked
- -r, --read-only
- Force the device to be mounted read only. If neither -r nor -w is
specified, the kernel will choose an appropriate default.
- -w, --read-write
- Force the device to be mounted read/write. If neither -r nor -w is
specified, the kernel will choose an appropriate default.
- -s, --sync
- Mount the device with the sync option, i. e. without write caching.
Default is async (write-back). With this option, write operations
are much slower and due to the massive increase of updates of inode/FAT
structures, flash devices may suffer heavily if you write large files.
This option is intended to make it safe to just rip out USB drives without
proper unmounting.
- -A, --noatime
- Mount the device with the noatime option. Default is atime.
- -e, --exec
- Mount the device with the exec option. Default is noexec.
- -t filesystem, --type
filesystem
- Mount as specified file system type. The file system type is automatically
determined if this option is not given. See at the bottom for a list of
currently supported filesystems.
- -c charset, --charset
charset
- Use given I/O character set (default: utf8 if called in an UTF-8
locale, otherwise mount default). This corresponds with the mount option
iocharset (or nls for NTFS). This option is ignored for file
systems that do not support setting the character set (see mount
(8) for details). Important note: pmount will now mount VFAT
filesystems with iocharset=iso8859-1 as iocharset=utf8
currently makes the filesystem case-sensitive (which is pretty bad...).
- -u umask, --umask
umask
- Use specified umask instead of the default one. For UDF, the default is
'000', for VFAT and NTFS the default is '077'. This value is ignored for
file systems which do not support setting an umask. Note that you can use
a value of 077 to forbid anyone else to read/write the files, 027 to allow
your group to read the files and 022 to allow anyone to read the files
(but only you can write).
- --dmask
dmask
- --fmask
fmask
- Some filesystems (essentially VFAT and HFS) supports separate
umasks (see the -u option just above) for directories and
files, to avoid the annoying effect of having all files executable. For
these filesystems, you can specify separately the masks using these
options. By default, fmask is umask without all executable
permissions and dmask is umask. Most of the times, these
settings should just do what you want, so there should be seldom any need
for using directly the --fmask and --dmask options.
- -p file --passphrase file
- If the device is encrypted (dm-crypt with LUKS metadata), read the
passphrase from specified file instead of prompting at the
terminal.
- -h, --help
- Print a help message and exit successfully.
- -d, --debug
- Enable verbose debug messages.
- -V, --version
- Print the current version number and exit successfully.
- /etc/pmount.allow
- List of devices (one device per line) which are additionally permitted for
pmounting. Globs, such as /dev/sda[123] are permitted. See see
glob (7) for a more complete syntax.
For now, pmount supports the following filesystems:
udf, iso9660, vfat, ntfs, hfsplus,
hfs, ext3, ext2, ext4, reiserfs,
reiser4, xfs, jfs and omfs. They are tried
sequentially in that exact order when the filesystem is not specified.
Additionally, pmount supports the filesystem types
ntfs-fuse and ntfs-3g to mount NTFS volumes respectively with
ntfsmount (1) or ntfs-3g (1). If the file
/sbin/mount.ntfs-3g is found, then pmount will mount NTFS
filestystems with type ntfs-3g rather than plain ntfs. To
disable this behavior, just specify -t ntfs on the command-line, as
this happens only for autodetection.
pmount now fully resolve all symlinks both in its input and
in the /etc/fstab file, which means that if /dev/cdrom is a
symlink to /dev/hdc and you try to mount /dev/hdc directly,
pmount will delegate this to mount(1). This is a feature, and
it contrasts with previous unclear behavior of pmount about symlinks
in /etc/fstab.
Though we believe pmount is pretty much free from security
problems, there are quite a few glitches that probably will never be
fixed.
- •
- pmount needs to try several different times to mount to get the
filesystem right in the end; it is vital that pmount does know
which precise filesystem to mount in order to give it the right options
not to cause security holes. This is rather different from the behaviour
of mount with the -t auto options, which can have a look at
the device it is trying to mount and find out what its filesystem is.
pmount will never try to open a device and look at it to find out
which filesystem it is, as it might open quite a few security holes.
Moreover, the order in which the filesystems are tried are what we could
call the most commonly used filesystems on removable media. This order is
unlikely to change as well. In particular, that means that when you mount
an ext3 filesystem using pmount, you might get a lot of
fs-related kernel error messages. Sorry !
NOTE: Starting from version 0.9.17, pmount
uses the same mechanism as mount (1) to autodetect the filesystem
type, so this kind of problems should not happen anymore.
pmount was originally developed by Martin Pitt
<martin.pitt@canonical.com>. It is now maintained by Vincent Fourmond
<fourmond@debian.org>.