linux_wiki:auto_mount_network_shares

This is an old revision of the document!


Auto Mount Network Shares

General Information

Automatically mounting network shares with autofs. This is the client configuration and assumes a working server setup with NFS or CIFS shares already.

Checklist

  • Distro(s): Enterprise Linux 6/7
  • Other: Network server with shared directory (NFS or CIFS)

Install Required Packages

Pre-reqs:

  • Assuming that all client/server regular nfs/cifs mounting works before continuing. See below for configuration.


Install autofs

yum install autofs

Autofs Config

The master map file contains entries that point to other config files for specific mount instructions.

  • EL6: /etc/auto.master
  • EL7: /etc/auto.master.d/<name>.autofs
    • In EL7, the “/etc/auto.master” file is part of the RPM; any updates to the autofs package could overwrite changes you make, so it is recommended to create your own master map file under /etc/auto.master.d/. The name does not matter, as long as it ends in “.autofs”


Master Map File Contents

  • First column = name of the mount point on the local client system
  • Second column = config file that controls its mounting
  • Third column (optional) = default mount options for all mounts defined in config file

Example

# File: /etc/auto.master OR /etc/auto.master.d/<name>.autofs
 
# Direct mounts: look in auto.direct for mappings
/-     /etc/auto.direct
 
# Indirect mounts: look in auto.home for mappings of subdirectories of /home/
/home  /etc/auto.home --timeout=600
  • Direct Maps ⇒ Network file systems that are mounted from different servers or that don't all start with the same file system path on the same server.
    • Above example: /- /etc/auto.direct
  • Indirect Maps ⇒ Directories on the remote server that can all be mounted under the same local mount point.
    • Above example: /home /etc/auto.home –timeout=600

Note: All direct map entries must be defined as “/-” in the /etc/auto.master or /etc/auto.master.d/<name>.autofs file.

# File: /etc/auto.direct
 
/network-shares/nfs-share    -rw    192.168.1.151:/data/nfs
/network-shares/nfs-share2   -rw    192.168.1.151:/data/nfs2
/network-shares/cifs  -fstype=cifs,rw,credentials=/root/.ssh/.cifs-share  ://192.168.1.151/cifs-share
  • First column ⇒ local mount point
  • Second column ⇒ mount options
  • Third column ⇒ remote shared directory

Note: This example works best when implemented using LDAP authentication to ensure that user id's are matched up between NFS server and clients.

Naming local and remote directories

# File: /etc/auto.home
 
yoda    192.168.1.151:/home/yoda
luke    192.168.1.151:/home/luke
vader   192.168.1.200:/home/vader


Naming local only (Ampersand Wildcard)

yoda    192.168.1.151:/home/& 
  • The “&” is replaced by the key in the first column (yoda)


All wild cards (Asterisk and Ampersand Wildcards)

*    192.168.1.151:/home/&
  • The “&” is replaced by the key in the first column (*)
  • “*” is assigned the value that triggered access. If someone tried to access /home/luke, then “luke” will be the value of the key in the first column (“*”)

Start and Enable Auto Mounter on Boot

  • EL7
    systemctl start autofs
    systemctl enable autofs
  • EL6
    service autofs start
    chkconfig autofs on

Reload Auto Mount Config (to enable changes made after service startup)

  • EL7
    systemctl reload autofs
  • EL6
    service autofs reload

  • linux_wiki/auto_mount_network_shares.1521603607.txt.gz
  • Last modified: 2019/05/25 23:50
  • (external edit)