FINDMNT
Section: Maintenance Commands (8)Updated: Apr 2010
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NAME
findmnt - find a filesystemSYNOPSIS
findmnt [options]findmnt [options] device|mountpoint
findmnt [options] [--source] device [--target] mountpoint
DESCRIPTION
findmnt will list all mounted filesytems or search for a filesystem. The findmnt command is able to search in /etc/fstab, /etc/fstab.d, /etc/mtab or /proc/self/mountinfo. If device or mountpoint is not given, all filesystems are shown.The command prints all mounted filesystems in the tree-like format by default.
OPTIONS
- -h, --help
- Print help and exit.
- -s, --fstab
- Search in /etc/fstab and /etc/fstab.d. The output is in the list format (see --list).
- -m, --mtab
- Search in /etc/mtab. The output is in the list format (see --list).
- -k, --kernel
- Search in /proc/self/mountinfo. The output is in the tree-like format. This is the default.
- -c, --canonicalize
- Canonicalize all printed paths.
- -d, --direction word
- The search direction - forward or backward.
- -e, --evaluate
- Convert all tags (LABEL or UUID) to the device names.
- -f, --first-only
- Print the first matching filesystem only.
- -i, --invert
- Invert the sense of matching.
- -l, --list
- Use the list output format. This output format is automatically enabled if the output is restricted by -t, -O, -S or -T option and the option --submounts is not used.
- -v, --nofsroot
- Do not print a [/dir] in the SOURCE column for bind-mounts or btrfs subvolumes.
- -n, --noheadings
- Do not print a header line.
- -u, --notruncate
- Do not truncate text in columns. The default is to not truncate the TARGET, SOURCE, UUID and LABEL columns. This option disables text truncation also in all other columns.
- -O, --options list
- Used to limit the set of printed filesystems. More than one option may be specified in a comma-separated list. The -t and -O options are cumulative in effect. It is different from -t in that each option is matched exactly; a leading no at the beginning of one option does not negate the rest. For more details see mount(8).
- -o, --output list
- Define output columns. Currently supported are SOURCE, TARGET, FSTYPE, OPTIONS, VFS-OPTIONS, FS-OPTIONS, LABEL and UUID. The TARGET column contains tree formatting if the --list or --raw options are not specified.
- -r, --raw
- Use raw output format.
- -a, --ascii
- Use ascii characters for tree formatting.
- -t, --types list
- Used to limit the set of printed filesystems. More than one type may be specified in a comma-separated list. The list of filesystem types can be prefixed with no to specify the filesystem types on which no action should be taken. For more details see mount(8).
- -R, --submounts
- Print recursively all submounts for the selected filesystems. The restrictions defined by options -t, -O, -S, -T and --direction are not applied to submounts. All submounts are always printed in tree-like order. The option enables the tree-like output format by default. This option has no effect for --mtab or --fstab.
- -S, --source spec
- Explicitly define the mount source. Supported are device, LABEL= or UUID=.
- -T, --target dir
- Explicitly define the mount target (mountpoint directory).
EXAMPLES
- findmnt --fstab -t nfs
- Prints all nfs filesystems defined in /etc/fstab.
- findmnt --fstab /mnt/foo
- Prints all /etc/fstab filesystems where the mountpoint directory is /mnt/foo. It also prints bind mounts where /mnt/foo is a source.
- findmnt --fstab --target /mnt/foo
- Prints all /etc/fstab filesystems where the mountpoint directory is /mnt/foo.
- findmnt --fstab --evaluate
- Prints all /etc/fstab filesystems and converts LABEL= and UUID= tags to the real device names.
- findmnt -n --raw --evaluate --output=target LABEL=/boot
- Prints only the mountpoint where the filesystem with label "/boot" is mounted.
AUTHORS
Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
SEE ALSO
mount(8), fstab(5)AVAILABILITY
The findmnt command is part of the util-linux package and is available from ftp://ftp.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.
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Time: 05:34:25 GMT, December 24, 2015