umount (2)
Leading comments
Copyright (C) 1993 Rickard E. Faith <faith@cs.unc.edu> and Copyright (C) 1994 Andries E. Brouwer <aeb@cwi.nl> and Copyright (C) 2002, 2005 Michael Kerrisk <mtk.manpages@gmail.com> %%%LICENSE_START(VERBATIM) Permission is granted to make and distribute verbatim copies of this manual provided the copyright notice and this permission notice are preserved on all copies. Permission is granted to copy and distribute modified versions of this manual under the conditions for verbatim copying, provi...
NAME
umount, umount2 - unmount filesystemSYNOPSIS
#include <sys/mount.h> int umount(const char *target); int umount2(const char *target, int flags);
DESCRIPTION
umount() and umount2() remove the attachment of the (topmost) filesystem mounted on target.Appropriate privilege (Linux: the CAP_SYS_ADMIN capability) is required to unmount filesystems.
Linux 2.1.116 added the umount2() system call, which, like umount(), unmounts a target, but allows additional flags controlling the behavior of the operation:
- MNT_FORCE (since Linux 2.1.116)
- Force unmount even if busy. This can cause data loss. (Only for NFS mounts.)
- MNT_DETACH (since Linux 2.4.11)
- Perform a lazy unmount: make the mount point unavailable for new accesses, immediately disconnect the filesystem and all filesystems mounted below it from each other and from the mount table, and actually perform the unmount when the mount point ceases to be busy.
- MNT_EXPIRE (since Linux 2.6.8)
- Mark the mount point as expired. If a mount point is not currently in use, then an initial call to umount2() with this flag fails with the error EAGAIN, but marks the mount point as expired. The mount point remains expired as long as it isn't accessed by any process. A second umount2() call specifying MNT_EXPIRE unmounts an expired mount point. This flag cannot be specified with either MNT_FORCE or MNT_DETACH.
- UMOUNT_NOFOLLOW (since Linux 2.6.34)
- Don't dereference target if it is a symbolic link. This flag allows security problems to be avoided in set-user-ID-root programs that allow unprivileged users to unmount filesystems.
RETURN VALUE
On success, zero is returned. On error, -1 is returned, and errno is set appropriately.ERRORS
The error values given below result from filesystem type independent errors. Each filesystem type may have its own special errors and its own special behavior. See the Linux kernel source code for details.- EAGAIN
- A call to umount2() specifying MNT_EXPIRE successfully marked an unbusy filesystem as expired.
- EBUSY
- target could not be unmounted because it is busy.
- EFAULT
- target points outside the user address space.
- EINVAL
- target is not a mount point.
- EINVAL
- umount2() was called with MNT_EXPIRE and either MNT_DETACH or MNT_FORCE.
- EINVAL (since Linux 2.6.34)
- umount2() was called with an invalid flag value in flags.
- ENAMETOOLONG
- A pathname was longer than MAXPATHLEN.
- ENOENT
- A pathname was empty or had a nonexistent component.
- ENOMEM
- The kernel could not allocate a free page to copy filenames or data into.
- EPERM
- The caller does not have the required privileges.
VERSIONS
MNT_DETACH and MNT_EXPIRE are available in glibc since version 2.11.CONFORMING TO
These functions are Linux-specific and should not be used in programs intended to be portable.NOTES
umount() and shared mount points
Shared mount points cause any mount activity on a mount point, including umount(2) operations, to be forwarded to every shared mount point in the peer group and every slave mount of that peer group. This means that umount(2) of any peer in a set of shared mounts will cause all of its peers to be unmounted and all of their slaves to be unmounted as well.This propagation of unmount activity can be particularly surprising on systems where every mount point is shared by default. On such systems, recursively bind mounting the root directory of the filesystem onto a subdirectory and then later unmounting that subdirectory with MNT_DETACH will cause every mount in the mount namespace to be lazily unmounted.
To ensure umount(2) does not propagate in this fashion, the mount point may be remounted using a mount(2) call with a mount_flags argument that includes both MS_REC and MS_PRIVATE prior to umount(2) being called.