/* mountpoint.c - Check if a directory is a mountpoint. * * Copyright 2012 Elie De Brauwer USE_MOUNTPOINT(NEWTOY(mountpoint, "<1qdx[-dx]", TOYFLAG_BIN)) config MOUNTPOINT bool "mountpoint" default y help usage: mountpoint [-qd] DIR mountpoint [-qx] DEVICE Check whether the directory or device is a mountpoint. -q Be quiet, return zero if directory is a mountpoint -d Print major/minor device number of the directory -x Print major/minor device number of the block device */ #define FOR_mountpoint #include "toys.h" static void die(char *gripe) { if (!(toys.optflags & FLAG_q)) printf("%s: not a %s\n", *toys.optargs, gripe); toys.exitval++; xexit(); } void mountpoint_main(void) { struct stat st1, st2; char *arg = *toys.optargs; int quiet = toys.optflags & FLAG_q; if (lstat(arg, &st1)) perror_exit_raw(arg); if (toys.optflags & FLAG_x) { if (S_ISBLK(st1.st_mode)) { if (!quiet) printf("%u:%u\n", dev_major(st1.st_rdev), dev_minor(st1.st_rdev)); return; } die("block device"); } // TODO: Ignore the fact a file can be a mountpoint for --bind mounts. if (!S_ISDIR(st1.st_mode)) die("directory"); arg = xmprintf("%s/..", arg); xstat(arg, &st2); if (CFG_TOYBOX_FREE) free(arg); // If the device is different, it's a mount point. If the device _and_ // inode are the same, it's probably "/". This misses --bind mounts from // elsewhere in the same filesystem, but so does the other one and in the // absence of a spec I guess that's the expected behavior? toys.exitval = !(st1.st_dev != st2.st_dev || st1.st_ino == st2.st_ino); if (toys.optflags & FLAG_d) printf("%u:%u\n", dev_major(st1.st_dev), dev_minor(st1.st_dev)); else if (!quiet) printf("%s is %sa mountpoint\n", *toys.optargs, toys.exitval ? "not " : ""); }