FUSE is constantly(every 2 - 3 days) giving me this Transport endpoint is not connected error on my mount point and the only thing that seems to fix it is rebooting.

I currently have my mount points setup like this, I'm not sure what other details I should add here so let me know if I missed anything..

/dev/sdc1 /mnt/hdd2 ext4 defaults 0 0
/dev/sdb1 /mnt/hdd1 ext4 defaults 0 0
mhddfs#/mnt/hdd1,/mnt/hdd2 /data fuse defaults,allow_other 0 0
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up vote 2 down vote accepted

There is a segmentation fault problem which was introduced in 0.1.39. You may check my repository that fixed this one in meanwhile: https://github.com/vdudouyt/mhddfs-nosegfault

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I have exactly the same problem. I haven't found a solution anywhere, but I have been able to fix it without rebooting by simply unmounting and remounting the mountpoint.

For your system the commands would be:

fusermount -uz /data
mount /data

The -z forces the unmount, which solved the need to reboot for me. You may need to do this as sudo depending on your setup. You may encounter the below error if the command does not have the required elevated permissions:

fusermount: entry for /data not found in /etc/mtab

I'm using Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, with the current version of mhddfs.

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1  
This doesn't exactly fix it but I guess it's the best answer for now. – Alexis Tyler Oct 1 '14 at 8:49
2  
I was getting the same error message with SSHFS, and this fixed it too. Thanks. – jesusiniesta Feb 26 '15 at 8:31
5  
Not work for me - fusermount -uz /media/srv2/tickets/ fusermount: entry for /media/srv2/tickets not found in /etc/mtab – Oleg Abrazhaev Jun 1 '15 at 3:24
    
kinda works for me in my context, thanks for sharing. – Leo Ufimtsev Aug 11 '16 at 14:50
    
This should be marked as the answer! – Sonu Mishra Aug 30 '16 at 17:52

This typically is caused by the mount directory being left mounted due to a crash of your filesystem. Go to the parent directory of the mount point and enter fusermount -u YOUR_MNT_DIR.

If this doesn't do the trick, do sudo umount -l YOUR_MNT_DIR.

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4  
Instead of Shannon answer this worked for me. Thank – Oleg Abrazhaev Jun 1 '15 at 3:25
1  
in my case it was not a crash but a previously failed sshfs mount command and not a fs crash. Still it had been mounted and neeed unmounting. This answer worked perfectly – Paul Nov 25 '15 at 13:09
    
sudo umount -l DIR works for me as @Paul said, mine was due to stopping sshfs while executing. – cyc115 Jul 6 '16 at 15:07

I get this error from the sshfs command from Fedora 17 linux to debian linux on the Mindstorms EV3 brick over the LAN and through a wireless connection.

Bash command:

el@defiant /mnt $ sshfs root@192.168.13.102:/root -p 22 /mnt/ev3
fuse: bad mount point `/mnt/ev3': Transport endpoint is not connected

This is remedied with the following command and trying again:

fusermount -u /mnt/ev3

These additional sshfs options prevent the above error from concurring:

sudo sshfs -d -o allow_other -o reconnect -o ServerAliveInterval=15 root@myremoteserver.com:/var/lib/redmine/plugins /mnt -p 12345 -C

In order to use allow_other above, you need to uncomment the last line in /etc/fuse.conf:

# Set the maximum number of FUSE mounts allowed to non-root users.
# The default is 1000.
#
#mount_max = 1000

# Allow non-root users to specify the 'allow_other' or 'allow_root'
# mount options.
#
user_allow_other

Source: http://slopjong.de/2013/04/26/sshfs-transport-endpoint-is-not-connected/

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