Auto mount usb drive from udev rules and shell script

Arkaik picture Arkaik · Jul 19, 2017 · Viewed 11.8k times · Source

I'm currently trying to mount any usb drive connected to my computer automaticaly. My goal is to mount usb devices either with the label if they have one or with the uuid if they don't.

To do it I write a udev rule in /etc/udev/rules.d/10-usb-detect.rules :

ACTION=="add", KERNEL=="sd?[0-9]", SUBSYSTEM=="block", RUN+="/usr/local/bin/add.sh"

The script is called everytime an add event append on the block subsystem.

The udev rule works fine however when I try to mount the file system from the script it doesn't work. What is strange is that the mount command from the script always return $?=0, so logically the file system should be mounted but it's not.

Here is my script :

#!/bin/bash

LOG_FILE=<path_to_file>

echo "New usb device detected at $DEVNAME" >> $LOG_FILE

echo "mount $DEVNAME /media/usb/test" >> $LOG_FILE

mount $DEVNAME /media/usb/test &>> $LOG_FILE

ret=$?
echo "$ret" >> $LOG_FILE

if [ $ret == "0" ]; then
    echo "$DEVNAME mounted at /media/usb/test"  >> $LOG_FILE
else
    echo "Failed to mount $DEVNAME at /media/usb/test"  >> $LOG_FILE
fi

echo "" >> $LOG_FILE

I tried with /media/usb/test not existing and I have the expected error from the mount command. But when the folder exists he mount command returns 0 even if the filesystem is not mounted.

Here is an output of the log file :

New usb device detected at /dev/sdc1
mount /dev/sdc1 /media/usb/test
mount: mount point /media/usb/test does not exist
32
Failed to mount /dev/sdc1 at /media/usb/test

New usb device detected at /dev/sdc1
mount /dev/sdc1 /media/usb/test
0
/dev/sdc1 mounted at /media/usb/test

/dev/sdc1 is not mounted even if mount returns 0.

I precise that when I mount the file system from command line, there is absolutely no problem and the file system is mounted as it should.

Does someone has a clue about how I could debug this?

I think the problem is because the script is called from udev because if I call it from command line it also works.

Answer

Arkaik picture Arkaik · Jul 24, 2017

I think I identified the problem. Apparently, udev uses a specific namespace, indeed I can see the mount point by printing the content of /proc/<daemon_pid>/mountinfo where is the pid of the systemd-udevd service.

$ cat /proc/240/mountinfo
[...]
228 43 8:17 / /media/usb/test rw,relatime - vfat /dev/sdb1 rw,fmask=0022,dmask=0022,codepage=437,iocharset=ascii,shortname=mixed,utf8,errors=remount-ro

$ df
Sys. de fichiers blocs de 1K  Utilisé Disponible Uti% Monté sur
udev                 1975740        0    1975740   0% /dev
tmpfs                 397376     5916     391460   2% /run
/dev/sda2           75733088 69473400    2389532  97% /
tmpfs                1986868   111860    1875008   6% /dev/shm
tmpfs                   5120        4       5116   1% /run/lock
tmpfs                1986868        0    1986868   0% /sys/fs/cgroup
tmpfs                 397372       28     397344   1% /run/user/112
tmpfs                 397372       24     397348   1% /run/user/1001

So the solution should be to force udev to execute the script in root userspace. I tried the solution I found here https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/330094/udev-rule-to-mount-disk-does-not-work

However, my system doesn't have a /usr/lib/systemd/system/systemd-udevd.service file. I created a file /etc/systemd/system/systemd-udevd.service with content

MountFlags=shared 

But with this solution, my system is not able to boot anymore.

Does someone know how I could either execute the script in root userspace or share the mount point with users?

PS : I precise I'm running a 64 bits Debian 9

Solved edit : Finally the file was located at /lib/systemd/system/systemd-udevd.service. I duplicated it in /etc/systemd/system/systemd-udevd.service and changed MountFlags=slave to MountFlags=shared and now it works perfectly :)