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moby--moby/pkg/mount/mount.go
Kir Kolyshkin a00310b54c pkg/mount: use sort.Slice
Sorting by mount point length can be implemented in a more
straightforward fashion since Go 1.8 introduced sort.Slice()
with an ability to provide a less() function in place.

Signed-off-by: Kir Kolyshkin <kolyshkin@gmail.com>
2018-03-06 12:46:58 -08:00

110 lines
3.4 KiB
Go

package mount // import "github.com/docker/docker/pkg/mount"
import (
"sort"
"strings"
"syscall"
"github.com/sirupsen/logrus"
)
// GetMounts retrieves a list of mounts for the current running process.
func GetMounts() ([]*Info, error) {
return parseMountTable()
}
// Mounted determines if a specified mountpoint has been mounted.
// On Linux it looks at /proc/self/mountinfo.
func Mounted(mountpoint string) (bool, error) {
entries, err := parseMountTable()
if err != nil {
return false, err
}
// Search the table for the mountpoint
for _, e := range entries {
if e.Mountpoint == mountpoint {
return true, nil
}
}
return false, nil
}
// Mount will mount filesystem according to the specified configuration, on the
// condition that the target path is *not* already mounted. Options must be
// specified like the mount or fstab unix commands: "opt1=val1,opt2=val2". See
// flags.go for supported option flags.
func Mount(device, target, mType, options string) error {
flag, _ := parseOptions(options)
if flag&REMOUNT != REMOUNT {
if mounted, err := Mounted(target); err != nil || mounted {
return err
}
}
return ForceMount(device, target, mType, options)
}
// ForceMount will mount a filesystem according to the specified configuration,
// *regardless* if the target path is not already mounted. Options must be
// specified like the mount or fstab unix commands: "opt1=val1,opt2=val2". See
// flags.go for supported option flags.
func ForceMount(device, target, mType, options string) error {
flag, data := parseOptions(options)
return mount(device, target, mType, uintptr(flag), data)
}
// Unmount lazily unmounts a filesystem on supported platforms, otherwise
// does a normal unmount.
func Unmount(target string) error {
if mounted, err := Mounted(target); err != nil || !mounted {
return err
}
return unmount(target, mntDetach)
}
// RecursiveUnmount unmounts the target and all mounts underneath, starting with
// the deepsest mount first.
func RecursiveUnmount(target string) error {
mounts, err := GetMounts()
if err != nil {
return err
}
// Make the deepest mount be first
sort.Slice(mounts, func(i, j int) bool {
return len(mounts[i].Mountpoint) > len(mounts[j].Mountpoint)
})
for i, m := range mounts {
if !strings.HasPrefix(m.Mountpoint, target) {
continue
}
logrus.Debugf("Trying to unmount %s", m.Mountpoint)
err = unmount(m.Mountpoint, mntDetach)
if err != nil {
// If the error is EINVAL either this whole package is wrong (invalid flags passed to unmount(2)) or this is
// not a mountpoint (which is ok in this case).
// Meanwhile calling `Mounted()` is very expensive.
//
// We've purposefully used `syscall.EINVAL` here instead of `unix.EINVAL` to avoid platform branching
// Since `EINVAL` is defined for both Windows and Linux in the `syscall` package (and other platforms),
// this is nicer than defining a custom value that we can refer to in each platform file.
if err == syscall.EINVAL {
continue
}
if i == len(mounts)-1 {
if mounted, e := Mounted(m.Mountpoint); e != nil || mounted {
return err
}
continue
}
// This is some submount, we can ignore this error for now, the final unmount will fail if this is a real problem
logrus.WithError(err).Warnf("Failed to unmount submount %s", m.Mountpoint)
continue
}
logrus.Debugf("Unmounted %s", m.Mountpoint)
}
return nil
}