Filesystems
fileSystems
is a NixOS option that allows the user to mount filesystems at specific mount points. The mounted filesystems may also be encrypted. Also see the fileSystem option documentation.
Porting /etc/fstab
The options specified in /etc/fstab may not be fully compatible with NixOS fileSystems options. For example, here are some options NixOS doesn't recognized that are available on some linux distributions:
- rw but it seems to not be needed
- uid with username rather than actual uid
- iocharset
Mount order
Without any specification, the mount order is up to the implementation (probably alphabetic).
Should the order in which filesystems are mounted is important, users should make use of the fileSystems.<mount>.depends
option. This is useful for example in #Bind mounts
Bind mounts
Bind mounting allows a filesystem hierarchy or a file to be mounted at a different mount point. Unlike a symbolic link, a bind mount does not exist on the filesystem itself.[3] In the following example, the path
/olddir
will be mounted in/newdir
[1]
These are used to make files or folders available in other parts of the filesystem hierarchy. In order to do so both source and target filesystems have to be mounted first.
fileSystems."/mnt/datastore".label = "datastore";
fileSystems."/mnt/aggregator".label = "aggregator";
####################
# Bind mounts
# Mount /mnt/datastore/applications/app1 on /mnt/aggregator/app1
# Accessing /mnt/aggregator/app1 will actually access /mnt/datastore/...
fileSystems."/mnt/aggregator/app1" = {
depends = [
# The mounts above have to be mounted in this given order
"/mnt/datastore"
"/mnt/aggregator"
];
device = "/mnt/datastore/applications/app1";
fsType = "none";
options = [
"bind"
"ro" # The filesystem hierarchy will be read-only when accessed from /mnt/aggregator/app1
];
};