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Full Discussion: Best practices
Operating Systems Solaris Best practices Post 302760711 by Corona688 on Thursday 24th of January 2013 12:44:15 PM
Old 01-24-2013
That's actually a few questions.

The mountpoint itself, before its mounted, what permissions should it have? Probably root, and read-only to everything else. You don't want the mountpoint to be used when not mounted by accident, that could fill up your root filesystem.

When it's mounted, what permissions should it have? Well, a mountpoint is in effect just a folder like any other. It may have to have certain permissions; if you put a mountpoint on /var/cache/squid, it ought to belong to user squid, group squid, and be writable by squid, or it won't be a whole lot of use.

Given that in some ways it's easier to rearrange filesystems than files -- you can plant them literally wherever you want -- it may be best to mould filesystems to the layout you want rather than vice versa.

Last edited by Corona688; 01-24-2013 at 01:49 PM..
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mounted(7)						 Miscellaneous Information Manual						mounted(7)

NAME
mounted - event signalling that a filesystem has been mounted SYNOPSIS
mounted DEVICE=DEVICE MOUNTPOINT=MOUNTPOINT TYPE=TYPE OPTIONS=OPTIONS [ENV]... DESCRIPTION
The mounted event is generated by the mountall(8) daemon after it has mounted a filesystem. mountall(8) will wait for all services started by this event to be running, all tasks started by this event to have finished and all jobs stopped by this event to be stopped before emit- ting any other events related to this filesystem or continuing with other filesystems depending on this one. The DEVICE, MOUNTPOINT, TYPE and OPTIONS environment variables contain the values of the fstab(5) fields for this mountpoint. EXAMPLE
A tool that should be run after mounting the /tmp filesystem might use: start on mounted MOUNTPOINT=/tmp task SEE ALSO
mounting(7) virtual-filesystems(7) local-filesystems(7) remote-filesystems(7) all-swaps(7) filesystem(7) mountall 2009-12-21 mounted(7)
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