The USBmount package automatically mounts USB mass storage devices (e.g.,
USB pen drives or HDs in USB enclosures) when they are plugged in. The
mountpoints (/media/usb[0-7]
by default), filesystem types to consider,
and mount options are configurable. When multiple devices are plugged
in, the first available mountpoint is automatically selected.
If the device plugged provides a model name, a symbolic link at
/var/run/usbmount/MODELNAME
pointing to the mountpoint is automatically
created.
If the device plugged has a label (e2label), a symbolic link at
/var/run/usbmount/LABEL
pointing to the mountpoint is automatically
created.
When the device is not present anymore in the system (e.g., after it has been unplugged), usbmount deletes the symbolic links that were created.
The script that does the (un)mounting is called by the udev
daemon.
Therefore, USBmount requires a 2.6 (or newer) kernel.
USBmount is intended as a lightweight solution which is independent of a desktop environment. Users which would like an icon to appear when an USB device is plugged in should use other alternatives.
The comments in the configuration file /etc/usbmount/usbmount.conf
describe how to configure the package.
Users should be aware that, independently of the filesystem used by the mass storage device, ANY filesystem that resides in flash memory will become unreadable after some time. This unfortunate situation is intrinsic to the storage medium and better quality flash drives perform a "wear levelling" operation, distributing the load of operations across the whole device. [*]
Filesystems using flash memory and mounted with the sync
option can
degrade earlier due to the fact that the sync mount option forces the
operating system to write data more frequently to the device than if it
were mounted without the sync
option.
So, why mount filesystems with the sync
option then? The reason is to
keep the written data on the drive reflecting what the user thinks is on
the flash drive, and, more importantly, to avoid the problem of the user
unplugging the device before it is finished receiving data that the
kernel has on the memory of the computer and that is meant to be written
to the device.
If you don't like the sync
option with your filesystems, then you can
remove it from the configuration file of usbmount and use your devices
with better performance and longer life time. BUT you should always
make sure that you use the sync
command (on a shell) to ensure that
there is no writes pending for the device in question, so that you don't
loose any data when you unplug the device from the computer.
[*] You can see if your flash drives support wear levelling by seeing the technical specifications of your specific drives in the manufacturer's site (e.g., the manufacturer Kingston provides such information regarding its drives and others quite probably do that too).
Of course, usbmount doesn't only work with flash drives. Common hard drives put into enclosures are perfectly used with usbmount and usbmount, despite its name, can mount drives connected via Firewire ports, provided that the kernel has support for it (most distribution kernels, including the ones shipped with Debian and Ubuntu do).
This package depends on a few other packages for installation. These are properly declared in the built package and apt-get will install all required packages if the package is installed from a remote repository but dpkg doesn't install dependencies when the package is installed from a local file.
There are a few ways to deal with dependencies when installing files directly, ex:
Option 1: let apt-get fix missing dependencies.
# Try install, will not necessarily complete if you're missing a dependency
dpkg -i <package>.deb
# Will install missing dependencies and finish the install process
apt-get install -f
Option 2: use a package installer that fetches dependencies even for local packages (ex. gdebi).
# Only required the first time you do this with any package
apt-get install gdebi
# Actually install the package and it's dependencies
gdebi <package>.deb
You can choose which filesystems you want usbmount to automatically
handle by listing the filesystem types provided by the operating system
in the configuration variable FILESYSTEMS
.
The vfat filesystem is one of the most commonly used filesystems in pen drives. Unfortunately, due to its age, it is very poor regarding features and, in particular, it doesn't feature the most basic access control present in Unix systems, namely: permissions on files.
Linux works around this by creating "virtual" permissions and restrictions based on who mounted the filesystem. As usbmount is used, the user assigned to the vfat filesystem is, by default, root.
For a more flexible configuration, some useful options for vfat filesystems are to specify explicitly who the user and permissions are. Please, read the manpage of the mount command to get details.
An example is to specify -fstype=vfat,gid=floppy,dmask=0007,fmask=0117
in the FS_MOUNTOPTIONS
variable of the configuration file. The
particular options specified in the example mean that members of the
floppy group can read from and write to the medium, but nobody else can
access it.
No software is free of problems and the situation isn't different with USBmount. To ease the troubleshooting of problems, you may try to check the following:
-
Do you have HAL running? Any GNOME or KDE daemon automounting devices?
-
Let's suppose that the partition containing the filesystem that you want USBmount to automatically handle is
/dev/sda1
(your case may, quite possibly, vary). Then, check the result of the following command:udevadm test --action=add /sys/class/block/sda1
The command above just gives diagnostics of what USBmount would do with the device, but it doesn't actually mount or interfere with the device. It is intended for debugging purposes. Be careful that it generates a lot of output. Many screens, depending on the device.
-
Under the same assumptions as the above, another good diagnostic tool is the following:
udevadm info -a -p $(udevadm info -q path -n /dev/sdb1)
After a device or partition has been mounted, the command run-parts /etc/usbmount/mount.d
is executed. This runs all scripts in
/etc/usbmount/mount.d
which adhere to a certain naming convention; see
the run-parts
manual page for details.
The following environment variables are available to the scripts (in
addition to those set in /etc/usbmount/usbmount.conf
and by the hotplug
and udev systems):
Variable | Description |
---|---|
UM_DEVICE |
file name of the device node |
UM_MOUNTPOINT |
mountpoint |
UM_FILESYSTEM |
filesystem type |
UM_MOUNTOPTIONS |
mount options that have been passed to the mount command |
UM_VENDOR |
vendor of the device (empty if unknown) |
UM_MODEL |
model name of the device (empty if unknown) |
Likewise, the command run-parts /etc/usbmount/umount.d
is executed
after a device or partition has been unmounted. The scripts can make use
of the environment variables UM_DEVICE
, UM_MOUNTPOINT
and UM_FILESYSTEM
.
Note that vendor and model name are no longer easily available when the
device has been removed. If you need this information in an unmount hook
script, write it to a file in a mount hook script and read it back in
the unmount hook script.
As it is not possible for the system to detect when the device should be unmounted (such information is only present when the device has already been unplugged, which is too late for some clean ups, like flushing unwritten buffers to disk and marking the filesystem as clean), the user should manually unmount the device that were automatically mounted.
This situation is similar to those in graphical desktop environments where the user has to click on an icon and inform the system that it wants to remove the device from the computer.
A recommended solution for this problem is to use the pumount
command
(provided by the pmount
package), which acts as a wrapper around the
regular mount command and lets regular users (i.e., not root) to unmount
the filesystems, conveniently.
Warning: carelessly removing the device/filesystem without unmounting it first can (and does) lead to massive filesystem corruption and should only be performed if you know exactly what you are doing.
Many users use removable drives with NTFS filesystems and the user-space filesystem NTFS-3g, since it provides more flexibility than the native module present in the Linux kernel.
Such users have difficulty when unmounting the filesystems, since they
are present in the system /etc/mtab
with a filesystem type of fuseblk
,
not with ntfs
(or ntfs-3g
) as one might expect.
For such filesystems, it may be convenient to:
- add
ntfs-3g
to/etc/usbmount/usbmount.conf
's variableFILESYSTEMS
(for mounting purposes) - add
fuseblk
to/etc/usb/usbmount.conf
's variableFILESYSTEMS
(for unmounting purposes).
Similar comments may apply to other FUSE-managed filesystems. In general,
if you need a FUSE filesystem, it may be a good idea to add the name of
that filesystem to the FILESYSTEMS
variable as well as making sure that the
special fuseblk
filesystem is contained in that list.
This subsection is an adaptation of descriptions made by Thomas Jancar and Jan Schulz.
usbmount operates (read: "mounts or unmounts filesystems") based on events issued by the Linux kernel/udev. As a consequence, if you happen to unmount a filesystem and want to mount it again, you have basically two choices:
- unplug and plug the device, which may not be desired, for a number of reasons.
- make the kernel/udev generate another event so that usbmount knows that it has some work to do.
The latter can be accomplished by the use of the command
udevadm trigger --action=add /dev/sdd2
where /dev/sdd2
should be substituted with the proper partition. This
command is likely needed to be run with superuser privileges.
Triggering kernel events is also a way to get a particular filesystem
mounted after a cold boot.
In order to build this package, debhelper and build-essential are required. The package can be built with the simple commands:
# Install dependencies
sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install -y debhelper build-essential
# Build
sudo dpkg-buildpackage -us -uc -b