Bind Mounts in Linux
Bind mounts in Linux® enable you to mount an already-mounted file system to another location within the file system. Generally, bind mounts are used when restricting the access of specified users to designated parts of a website by replicating the website's directory into a jailed user's home directory.
Configure a Bind Mount
This section provides steps for how to grant a user access to a directory by using bind mounting to bind the directory to that user's home directory.
Configure a bind mount by using the following command:
mount --bind /path/to/domain /path/to/home/directory
Bind mounts are not persistent when you restart your server unless you create an entry for the bind mount in your server's File Systems Table (fstab).
Add a bind mount to the File Systems Table
Add an fstab entry for the bind mount by using the following command:
/path/to/domain /path/to/home/directory none bind,nobootwait 0 0
If the nobootwait option is not included in the fstab entry, you see the following message in the server console:
Continue to wait; or Press S to skip mounting or M for manual recovery.
Adding nobootwait to the options section of the fstab configuration ensures that the system boots even if the bind mount directory has been removed from the system.
Updated about 1 year ago