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To mount a file system inside a container, you have several choices:
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== Mounting filesystems within a container ==
  
* [[NFS]], when container as an NFS client
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To mount filesystems inside a container, you have several choices:
* [[FUSE]] (filesystem in userspace)
 
* [[Bind mounts]] from Hardware Node
 
  
Also, you can grant a container an access  a physical block device, and use that device from inside the container. Not all file systems are working inside a container; check /proc/filesystems inside a container to find out.
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* NFS (the container will be an NFS Client) - see [[NFS]]
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* FUSE - see [[FUSE]]
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* Bind mount from Hardware Node
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=== Bind mount from Hardware Node ===
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Recent Linux kernels support an operation called 'bind mounting' which makes part of a mounted filesystem visible at some other mount point. See 'man bind' for more information.
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Bind mounts can be used to make directories on the hardware node visible to the container.
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OpenVZ uses two directories. Assuming our container is numbered 777, these directories are:
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$VZROOT/private/777
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$VZROOT/root/777
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{{Note|<code>$VZROOT</code> is usually <code>/vz</code>, on Debian systems however this is <code>/var/lib/vz</code>. In this document this is further referred to as <code>$VZROOT</code> -- substitute it with what you have.}}
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The $VZROOT/private directory contains root directory contents. This directory or subdirectory may be symlinked onto a different file system, for example:
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  $VZROOT/private -> /mnt/openvz
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Putting container root directories onto a separate file system (not the hardware node root file system) is good storage management practice. It protects the Hardware Node root file system from being filled up by a container; this could cause problems on the Hardware Node.
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=== Requirement ===
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'''On the HN we have a directory <code>/home</code> which we wish to make available (shared) to all containers.'''
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You would think that you could bind mount this directory, as in: <code>mount --bind /home $VZROOT/private/777/home</code> but this does not work — the contents of <code>/home</code> cannot be seen within the container.
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This is where the second directory listed above (<code>$VZROOT/root/777</code>) is used. If a container is not started, this directory is empty. But after starting a container, this directory contains what the container sees as its mounted file systems.
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The correct command to issue on the HN is:
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  mount --bind /home $VZROOT/root/777/home
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The container must be started and the destination directory must exist. The container will see this directory mounted like this:
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# df
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Filesystem          1K-blocks      Used Available Use% Mounted on
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simfs                10485760    298728  10187032  3% /
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tmpfs                  484712        0    484712  0% /lib/init/rw
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tmpfs                  484712        0    484712  0% /dev/shm
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ext3                117662052 104510764  7174408  94% /home
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----
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=== Attention ===
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Partition with <b>reiserfs</b> file system don't mounted in container now (may be later). You can mount reiserfs on the HN added two rows in /etc/vz/cron:
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# Mount disks after reboot.
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*/5 * * * * root mount /dev/sda1 $VZROOT/root/777/mnt/sda1
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Partition /dev/sda1 be mount after VE 777 is started.
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[[Category:HOWTO]]

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