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z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

z/OS V1R9.0 UNIX System Services Command ... - Christian Grothoff

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mount<br />

Options<br />

–a<br />

yes|include,sysname1,...,sysnameN|exclude,sysname1,...,sysnameN|no|unmount<br />

The -a option specifies the AUTOMOVE attribute of the file system in a<br />

sysplex environment where systems are exploiting the shared file system<br />

capability.<br />

–a yes allows the system to automatically move logical ownership for a<br />

specified file system as needed. This is the default.<br />

–a no prevents ownership movement in some situations.<br />

–a unmount unmounts the file system in some situations.<br />

–a include,sysname1,...,sysnameN specifies a list of systems, in priority<br />

order, to which the file system's ownership can be moved. include can<br />

be abbreviated to i.<br />

–a exclude,sysname1,...,sysnameN specifies a list of systems, in<br />

priority order, to which the file system's ownership cannot be moved.<br />

exclude can be abbreviated to e.<br />

See z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> <strong>System</strong> <strong>Services</strong> Planning for details about the behavior of<br />

the AUTOMOVE options.<br />

–d destsys<br />

Specifies the name of the system in a shared file system environment that<br />

will be the logical owner of the mount. Note, if –q is specified, the mount<br />

–q output will only list mounts that are owned by destsys.<br />

–f fsname<br />

Names the file system to be mounted. All file system names must be<br />

unique. File system names are case sensitive. However, if the file system<br />

type is HFS, fsname will be translated to uppercase. The file system name<br />

has a maximum length of 44 characters, any additional characters will be<br />

truncated. Options –q and –f are mutually exclusive, but one must be<br />

specified.<br />

-wn Specifies the amount of time the mount will wait in seconds for async<br />

mounts to complete. If n is specified as a 0 the wait will be indefinite. This<br />

option flag is tolerated on any form of the mount command and is ignored if<br />

not appropriate (no wait needs to be done).<br />

–o fsoptions<br />

Specifies an option string to be passed to the file system type. NFS, for<br />

example, uses this to identify the remote server and the object on that<br />

server. The format and content are specified by the physical file system that<br />

is to perform the logical mount. You can specify lowercase or uppercase<br />

characters. Enclose the string in single quotes.<br />

434 z/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>V1R9.0</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> <strong>System</strong> <strong>Services</strong> <strong>Command</strong> Reference<br />

Refer to the following for the appropriate file system-specific options to<br />

specify for fsoptions:<br />

v For HFS-specific options, see Managing hierarchical file system data<br />

sets, in z/<strong>OS</strong> DFSMSdfp Advanced <strong>Services</strong>.<br />

v For zFS-specific options, see Mount, inz/<strong>OS</strong> Distributed File Service<br />

<strong>System</strong> z File <strong>System</strong> Administration.<br />

v For NFS-specific options, see Mount processing parameters, in z/<strong>OS</strong><br />

Network File <strong>System</strong> Guide and Reference.<br />

v For TFS-specific options, see Mounting the TFS, inz/<strong>OS</strong> <strong>UNIX</strong> <strong>System</strong><br />

<strong>Services</strong> Planning.

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