From e0a8e194a2e3ca0a405dadfcbc9b5347e46fe8c0 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: NeilBrown <neil@brown.name>
Date: Wed, 7 Jun 2017 22:28:23 +1000
Subject: [PATCH] core/mount: pass "-c" flag to /bin/umount (#6093)
"-c", which is short for "--no-canonicalize", tells /bin/umount
that the path name is canonical (no .. or symlinks etc).
systemd always uses a canonical name, so this flag is appropriate
for systemd to use.
Knowing that the path is canonical allows umount to avoid
some calls to lstat() on the path.
From v2.30 "-c" goes further and causes umount to avoid all
attempts to 'lstat()' (or similar) the path. This is important
when automatically unmounting a filesystem, as lstat() can
hang indefinitely in some cases such as when an NFS server
is not accessible.
"-c" has been supported since util-linux 2.17 which is before the
earliest version supported by systemd.
So "-c" is safe to use now, and once util-linux v2.30 is in use,
it will allow mounts from non-responsive NFS servers to be
unmounted.
(cherry picked from commit 83897d5470190a9818df50026cf38cd97114f77d)
---
src/core/mount.c | 2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/src/core/mount.c b/src/core/mount.c
index ca0c4b0d5e..214364d87d 100644
--- a/src/core/mount.c
+++ b/src/core/mount.c
@@ -886,7 +886,7 @@ static void mount_enter_unmounting(Mount *m) {
m->control_command_id = MOUNT_EXEC_UNMOUNT;
m->control_command = m->exec_command + MOUNT_EXEC_UNMOUNT;
- r = exec_command_set(m->control_command, UMOUNT_PATH, m->where, NULL);
+ r = exec_command_set(m->control_command, UMOUNT_PATH, m->where, "-c", NULL);
if (r >= 0 && m->lazy_unmount)
r = exec_command_append(m->control_command, "-l", NULL);
if (r >= 0 && m->force_unmount)