Re: sys_umount() returns EBUSY when doing: sh -c "mount /dev/sdc1/mnt; umount /mnt"

From: Robert Hancock
Date: Sun Mar 14 2010 - 12:22:13 EST


On 03/13/2010 02:56 AM, Francis Moreau wrote:
Hello

I've some shell scripts which try to find out the filesystem hosted by
a block device.

They basically do this:

mount /dev/sdc1 /mnt
fs=$(stat -f -c %T $mount_point)
umount /mnt

It happens to work but since an unknown upgrade (kernel, libs or tools
upgrade), umount(8) returns -EBUSY.

I found that it's actually the sys_umount() which return -EBUSY.

So the question, is this expected or is this a regression ?

If it's expected then which operation should I add between the
mount(8) and umount(8) to make the mount operation completely finish
(inside the kernel) so the next umount won't return -EBUSY ?

If no other process were involved I would say it's likely a bug. However, my guess is that some other process (HAL, something in GNOME, etc.) detects the mount and decides to start accessing the drive. Then when you immediately try to unmount, it fails because it's busy. I suspect if you try this in single-user mode with no unnecessary processes running you won't see this.


Oh I'm currently using the kernel shipped with F12: 2.6.32.9-67.fc12.x86_64

Thanks

--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/