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I've written a small FUSE-based filesystem and now the only part's missing is that I want to register it with fstab(5) to auto-mount it on system startup and/or manually mount it with just mount /srv/virtual-db. How can I achieve this?

I know, I can just run /usr/bin/vdbfs.py /srv/virtual-db from some init script, but that's not exactly pretty.

I'm sorry because this may be not exactly a programming question, but it's highly related, as the packaging and deployment is still the programmer's job.

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Good question, but not programming related and there is serverfault.com now. – ypnos Oct 12 at 12:53
If that's only administrative problem (like adding an entry to some file), then, yes, probably. But registering in-kernel filesystems are certainly a programming problem (the only admin part is adding module to modprobe.conf), and I don't know about FUSE... So, I don't know where this really belongs. – drdaeman Oct 12 at 14:26

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In general, one "registers" a new mount filesystem type by creating an executable mount.fstype.

$ ln -s /usr/bin/vdbfs.py /usr/sbin/mount.vdbfs

If vdbfs.py takes mount-ish arguments (i.e. dev path [-o opts]), then mount -t vdbfs and using vdbfs as the 3rd field in fstab will work. If it doesn't, you can create a wrapper which does take arguments of that form and maps them to whatever your vdbfs.py takes.

FUSE should also install a mount.fuse executable; mount.fuse 'vdbfs.py#dev' path -o opts will go on and call vdbfs.py dev path -o opts. In that case, you can use fuse as your filesystem type and prefix your device with vdbfs.py#.

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