Command Reference Guide

2.1 NAME 8
–umount
Linux systems: The command fse –mount | –umount should not be
used by the FSE administrator directly. It is called by fse–svc daemon dur-
ing recovery of FSE file system.
Windows systems: Use the command fse –mount | –umount with great
care. It should be used instead of mountvol command if you want to ad-
ministrate an FSE partition (for example to enable or disable it).
fse –mount command will create a mount point MountPoint for the vol-
ume VolumeName and trigger HSM FS filter to connect to volume device
file and start FSE–HSM.
fse –umount command will stop FSE–HSM and switch the HSM FS filter
operation for managing accesses to the volume VolumeName from Full Ac-
cess Mode to Limited Access Mode. See description of the –limit–access
option for information on Limited Access Mode.
MountPoint
A directory path that represents the mount point to which the VolumeName
NTFS volume will be mounted.
VolumeName
An NTFS volume that stores an HSM file system on a Windows client.
–dismount–ntfs
Windows systems only: This option dismounts the newly formatted
NTFS volume VolumeName. It sends an appropriate code (the FSCTL_-
DISMOUNT_VOLUME ioctrl code) to the volume. Later, when the vol-
ume is mounted again, the HSM FS filter can attach to it before NTFS, and
thus gain control over it. Note that the fse –dismount–ntfs command will
fail in case the volume is in use, that is, when some processes have open
handles on it.
–limit–access
Windows systems only: This option switches the HSM FS filter operation
for managing accesses to the volume VolumeName from Full Access Mode
to Limited Access Mode. In this mode, modifications on the corresponding
HSM file system are not allowed. The volume remains mounted to its mount
File System Extender 3.2 Command Line Reference