03-23-2009
I tested out on another system (a test box), and this is apparently normal LOFS behaviour.
Q. Is this normal behaviour for LOFS mounted filesystems? If I mount x on top of y, and create a mountpoint z that uses x as part of the directory name, will I not be able to access the mountpoint z by using y as part of the directory name?
A. Yes. To be able to access mountpoint z for a different filesystem that uses either x or y as part of the pathname, z will have to contain the pathname x when it gets mounted. Then you can access it via either /x/z or /y/z.
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LEARN ABOUT LINUX
mounted
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 con-
tinuing with other filesystems.
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)