mount_smbfs
—
mount a shared resource from an SMB file server
mount_smbfs |
[-N ] [-o
options] [-d
mode] [-f
mode] [-h ]
[-s ] [-t
gmt_token] [-v ]
//[domain;][user[:password]@]server[/share]
path |
The mount_smbfs
command mounts a share
from a remote server using SMB/CIFS protocol.
The options are as follows:
-N
- Do not ask for a password. At run time,
mount_smbfs
reads the
~/Library/Preferences/nsmb.conf file for
additional configuration parameters and a password. If no password is
found, mount_smbfs
prompts for it.
-o
- Options passed to mount(2) are specified with the
-o
option followed by a comma separated string of
options. See the mount(8) man page for possible options
and their meanings. All listed options are currently supported except for
the ``force, update, strictatime, sync and [no]async'' options. Additional
options supported by the mount_smbfs are as follows:
- nobrowse
- This option indicates that the mount point should not be visible via
the GUI (i.e., appear on the Desktop as a separate volume).
- automounted
- Set flags on the mountpoint to indicate that the volume has been
mounted by the automounter.
- nostreams
- Don't use NTFS Streams even if they are supported by the server.
- soft
- Make the mount soft. Fail file system calls after a number of
seconds.
- nonotification, noforcenotify
- Turn off using notifications for this volume.
- nodatacache
- Turn off using file data caching for this volume.
- nomdatacache
- Turn off using meta data caching for this volume.
- sessionencrypt
- Force session encryption to be used
- shareencrypt
- Force share encryption to be used for that share and also for IPC$
traffic
- filemode
- Specify permissions that should be assigned to files. The value must
be specified as an octal number. Default value is taken from mount
point.
Note that these permissions can differ from the rights granted by SMB
server.
- dirmode
- Specify permissions that should be assigned to directories. The value
must be specified as an octal number. Default value adds execute
permission where the file mode gives read permission.
Note that these permissions can differ from the rights granted by SMB
server.
- snapshot
- Do a read only mount using the specific snapshot of the share. A new
session is created to allow multiple snapshots of the same share to be
mounted. Value must be in GMT format e.g.
@GMT-YYYY.MM.DD-HH.MM.SS
- nopassprompt
- Do not ask for a password. At run time, mount_smbfs reads the
~/Library/Preferences/nsmb.conf file for additional configuration
parameters and a password. If no password is found, mount_smbfs
prompts for it.
- forcenewsession
- Force a new session to be created to the server.
-f
mode, -d
mode
- Specify permissions that should be assigned to files and directories. The
values must be specified as octal numbers. Default value for the file mode
is taken from mount point, default value for the directory mode adds
execute permission where the file mode gives read permission.
Note that these permissions can differ from the rights granted
by SMB server.
-h
- Prints a help message, much like the SYNOPSIS above.
-s
- Force a new session to be created to the server.
-t
gmt_token
- Do a read only mount using the specific snapshot of the share. A new
session is created to allow multiple snapshots of the same share to be
mounted. Value must be in GMT format e.g. @GMT-YYYY.MM.DD-HH.MM.SS
-v
- Prints version.
- //[domain;][user[:password]@]
server[/share]
- The
mount_smbfs
command will use
server as the NetBIOS name of remote computer,
user as the remote user name and
share as the resource name on a remote server.
Domain and/or password may be
specified here. If user is omitted the logged in
user id will be used. Omitting share is an error
when mount_smbfs
is run from the command line,
otherwise a browsing dialogue is presented.
- path
- Path to mount point.
- nsmb.conf
- Keeps static parameters for connections and other information. See
man nsmb.conf for details.
This example shows the proper url to use to mount the share PUBLIC
from the SMB server myserver :
mkdir /smb/public
mount -t smbfs //username:userpass@myserver/PUBLIC /smb/public
This example shows the proper url to use to mount the share PUBLIC from the SMB
server myserver as guest:
mkdir /smb/public
mount -t smbfs //guest:@myserver/PUBLIC /smb/public
Note: You should always use the system mount command and never call
mount_smbfs directly.
Please report bugs to Apple.
Boris Popov ⟨bp@butya.kz⟩,
⟨bp@FreeBSD.org⟩