ansible.posix.mount module – Control active and configured mount points

Note

This module is part of the ansible.posix collection (version 1.4.0).

You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible package. It is not included in ansible-core. To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list.

To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install ansible.posix.

To use it in a playbook, specify: ansible.posix.mount.

New in version 1.0.0: of ansible.posix

Synopsis

  • This module controls active and configured mount points in /etc/fstab.

Parameters

Parameter

Comments

backup

boolean

Create a backup file including the timestamp information so you can get the original file back if you somehow clobbered it incorrectly.

Choices:

  • no ← (default)

  • yes

boot

boolean

Determines if the filesystem should be mounted on boot.

Only applies to Solaris and Linux systems.

For Solaris systems, true will set yes as the value of mount at boot in /etc/vfstab.

For Linux, FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD systems, false will add noauto to mount options in /etc/fstab.

To avoid mount option conflicts, if noauto specified in opts, mount module will ignore boot.

Choices:

  • no

  • yes ← (default)

dump

string

Dump (see fstab(5)).

Note that if set to null and state set to present, it will cease to work and duplicate entries will be made with subsequent runs.

Has no effect on Solaris systems.

Default: “0”

fstab

string

File to use instead of /etc/fstab.

You should not use this option unless you really know what you are doing.

This might be useful if you need to configure mountpoints in a chroot environment.

OpenBSD does not allow specifying alternate fstab files with mount so do not use this on OpenBSD with any state that operates on the live filesystem.

This parameter defaults to /etc/fstab or /etc/vfstab on Solaris.

fstype

string

Filesystem type.

Required when state is present or mounted.

opts

string

Mount options (see fstab(5), or vfstab(4) on Solaris).

passno

string

Passno (see fstab(5)).

Note that if set to null and state set to present, it will cease to work and duplicate entries will be made with subsequent runs.

Deprecated on Solaris systems.

Default: “0”

path

aliases: name

path / required

Path to the mount point (e.g. /mnt/files).

Before Ansible 2.3 this option was only usable as dest, destfile and name.

src

path

Device (or NFS volume, or something else) to be mounted on path.

Required when state set to present or mounted.

state

string / required

If mounted, the device will be actively mounted and appropriately configured in fstab. If the mount point is not present, the mount point will be created.

If unmounted, the device will be unmounted without changing fstab.

present only specifies that the device is to be configured in fstab and does not trigger or require a mount.

absent specifies that the device mount’s entry will be removed from fstab and will also unmount the device and remove the mount point.

remounted specifies that the device will be remounted for when you want to force a refresh on the mount itself (added in 2.9). This will always return changed=true. If opts is set, the options will be applied to the remount, but will not change fstab. Additionally, if opts is set, and the remount command fails, the module will error to prevent unexpected mount changes. Try using mounted instead to work around this issue.

Choices:

  • absent

  • mounted

  • present

  • unmounted

  • remounted

Notes

Note

  • As of Ansible 2.3, the name option has been changed to path as default, but name still works as well.

  • Using remounted with opts set may create unexpected results based on the existing options already defined on mount, so care should be taken to ensure that conflicting options are not present before hand.

Examples

# Before 2.3, option 'name' was used instead of 'path'
- name: Mount DVD read-only
  ansible.posix.mount:
    path: /mnt/dvd
    src: /dev/sr0
    fstype: iso9660
    opts: ro,noauto
    state: present

- name: Mount up device by label
  ansible.posix.mount:
    path: /srv/disk
    src: LABEL=SOME_LABEL
    fstype: ext4
    state: present

- name: Mount up device by UUID
  ansible.posix.mount:
    path: /home
    src: UUID=b3e48f45-f933-4c8e-a700-22a159ec9077
    fstype: xfs
    opts: noatime
    state: present

- name: Unmount a mounted volume
  ansible.posix.mount:
    path: /tmp/mnt-pnt
    state: unmounted

- name: Remount a mounted volume
  ansible.posix.mount:
    path: /tmp/mnt-pnt
    state: remounted

# The following will not save changes to fstab, and only be temporary until
# a reboot, or until calling "state: unmounted" followed by "state: mounted"
# on the same "path"
- name: Remount a mounted volume and append exec to the existing options
  ansible.posix.mount:
    path: /tmp
    state: remounted
    opts: exec

- name: Mount and bind a volume
  ansible.posix.mount:
    path: /system/new_volume/boot
    src: /boot
    opts: bind
    state: mounted
    fstype: none

- name: Mount an NFS volume
  ansible.posix.mount:
    src: 192.168.1.100:/nfs/ssd/shared_data
    path: /mnt/shared_data
    opts: rw,sync,hard
    state: mounted
    fstype: nfs

- name: Mount NFS volumes with noauto according to boot option
  ansible.posix.mount:
    src: 192.168.1.100:/nfs/ssd/shared_data
    path: /mnt/shared_data
    opts: rw,sync,hard
    boot: no
    state: mounted
    fstype: nfs

Authors

  • Ansible Core Team

  • Seth Vidal (@skvidal)