On Sunday 26 July 2009, Colin Watson wrote: > On Sat, Jul 25, 2009 at 02:55:57PM +0200, Frans Pop wrote: > > Won't that have the /target prefix in it for some mounts and thus be > > unusable inside a chroot? > > /proc/mounts is sensitive to the root directory of the process reading > it.
Well, only to a degree. It will still show all the mounts of the host system besides the ones in the chroot. So you'd have to be damned careful when parsing it. f...@aragorn:~$ grep proc /proc/mounts none /proc proc rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime 0 0 proc /srv/chroots/amd64-etch/proc proc rw,relatime 0 0 proc /srv/chroots/amd64-sid/proc proc rw,relatime 0 0 proc /srv/chroots/i386-sid/proc proc rw,relatime 0 0 f...@aragorn:~$ sudo chroot /srv/chroots/amd64-sid (amd64-sid)r...@aragorn:/# grep proc /proc/mounts none /proc proc rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime 0 0 proc /srv/chroots/amd64-etch/proc proc rw,relatime 0 0 proc /proc proc rw,relatime 0 0 proc /srv/chroots/i386-sid/proc proc rw,relatime 0 0 In the example above, how would you know to take the third line and not the first line? You could have something like: /dev/hda1 /home [...] /dev/hda2 /chroot/home [...] Which in the chroot would show up as: /dev/hda1 /home [...] /dev/hda2 /home [...] Probably in the D-I case the mounts in the D-I environment are normally straightforward enough [1] so they can be taken into account, but it still seems quite tricky. We'd have to be careful about /. Even then it seems to me that we could easily have breakage if a user mounts anything manually in unexpected places. [1] Especially as we use an unusual dir for hd-media; maybe we should consider also using an unusual dir for the installation CD in the D-I environment. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-bugs-dist-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org