I have 2 directories which both have stuff in them:
-
/home/user/folderApple
-
/mnt/drive/folderBanana
I want to mount folderBanana
onto folderApple
like this:
sudo mount --bind "/mnt/drive/folderBanana" "/home/user/folderApple"
But I still want to be able to access the contents of folderApple
while this is activated. From what I am reading, binding the original directory to a new location should make it available, like this:
mkdir "/home/user/folderApple-original"
sudo mount --bind "/home/user/folderApple" "/home/user/folderApple-original"
But this just binds /mnt/drive/folderBanana
to /home/user/folderApple-original
as well. I tried reversing the order and result is the same.
How do I tell mount
to look for the underlying directory?
I am happy to use symlinks or something else if it’ll reliably get the job done, I am not wedded to this mechanism.
(The purpose of all this is that when an external drive is connected, I can have the storage conveniently available, but when it is not connected, the system will fallback to internal storage. But then I will want to move files between the fallback and external locations when both are available. So I need to see both locations at once.)
Basically, yeah. Bind the “local” path on boot and then have systemd triggers for when USB mounts and unmounts to swap them automatically.
(Personally I wouldn’t do it like this though because it will become trouble with any open files or shell or whatever in a path that is replaced by a different mount.)