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- #
- # For a description of the syntax of this configuration file,
- # see docs/Kconfig-language.txt.
- #
- menu "Linux System Utilities"
- INSERT
- comment "Common options for mount/umount"
- depends on MOUNT || UMOUNT
- config FEATURE_MOUNT_LOOP
- bool "Support loopback mounts"
- default y
- depends on MOUNT || UMOUNT
- help
- Enabling this feature allows automatic mounting of files (containing
- filesystem images) via the linux kernel's loopback devices.
- The mount command will detect you are trying to mount a file instead
- of a block device, and transparently associate the file with a
- loopback device. The umount command will also free that loopback
- device.
- You can still use the 'losetup' utility (to manually associate files
- with loop devices) if you need to do something advanced, such as
- specify an offset or cryptographic options to the loopback device.
- (If you don't want umount to free the loop device, use "umount -D".)
- config FEATURE_MOUNT_LOOP_CREATE
- bool "Create new loopback devices if needed"
- default y
- depends on FEATURE_MOUNT_LOOP
- help
- Linux kernels >= 2.6.24 support unlimited loopback devices. They are
- allocated for use when trying to use a loop device. The loop device
- must however exist.
- This feature lets mount to try to create next /dev/loopN device
- if it does not find a free one.
- config FEATURE_MTAB_SUPPORT
- bool "Support old /etc/mtab file"
- default n
- depends on MOUNT || UMOUNT
- select FEATURE_MOUNT_FAKE
- help
- Historically, Unix systems kept track of the currently mounted
- partitions in the file "/etc/mtab". These days, the kernel exports
- the list of currently mounted partitions in "/proc/mounts", rendering
- the old mtab file obsolete. (In modern systems, /etc/mtab should be
- a symlink to /proc/mounts.)
- The only reason to have mount maintain an /etc/mtab file itself is if
- your stripped-down embedded system does not have a /proc directory.
- If you must use this, keep in mind it's inherently brittle (for
- example a mount under chroot won't update it), can't handle modern
- features like separate per-process filesystem namespaces, requires
- that your /etc directory be writable, tends to get easily confused
- by --bind or --move mounts, won't update if you rename a directory
- that contains a mount point, and so on. (In brief: avoid.)
- About the only reason to use this is if you've removed /proc from
- your kernel.
- source util-linux/volume_id/Config.in
- endmenu
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