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The mount command instructs the operating system that a file system is ready to use, and associates it with a particular point in the overall file system hierarchy (its mount point) and sets options relating to its access. Mounting makes file systems, files, directories, devices and special files available for use and available to the user.
Unionfs is a filesystem service for Linux, FreeBSD and NetBSD which implements a union mount for other file systems.It allows files and directories of separate file systems, known as branches, to be transparently overlaid, forming a single coherent file system.
OverlayFS is a union mount filesystem implementation for Linux. It combines multiple different underlying mount points into one, resulting in single directory structure that contains underlying files and sub-directories from all sources.
binfmt_misc (Miscellaneous Binary Format) is a capability of the Linux kernel which allows arbitrary executable file formats to be recognized and passed to certain user space applications, such as emulators and virtual machines. [1] It is one of a number of binary format handlers in the kernel that are involved in preparing a user-space program ...
As of version 5.0 of the Linux kernel, Btrfs implements the following features: [37] [38] Mostly self-healing in some configurations due to the nature of copy-on-write; Online defragmentation and an autodefrag mount option [27] Online volume growth and shrinking; Online block device addition and removal
MinFS [13] lets you mount a remote bucket (from a S3 compatible object store), as if it were a local directory. MooseFS: An open source distributed fault-tolerant file system available on every OS with FUSE implementation (Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenSolaris, OS X), able to store petabytes of data spread over several servers visible as one ...
mkswap — Set up a Linux swap area on a device or file. mktemp — Safely create a new file "DIR/TEMPLATE" and print its name. modinfo — Display module fields for modules specified by name or .ko path. mount — Mount new filesystems on directories. mountpoint — Check whether the directory or device is a mountpoint. mv — Move files.
As an example application of union mounting, consider the need to update the information contained on a CD-ROM or DVD. While a CD-ROM is not writable, one can overlay the CD's mount point with a writable directory in a union mount. Then, updating files in the union directory will cause them to end up in the writable directory, giving the ...