On 6/5/23 7:23 AM, Greg Wooledge <g...@wooledge.org> wrote:
>
> You can run the command "mount" with no arguments to see the details of
> each mounted file system. You don't even have to be root. I don't know
> how btrfs subvolumes work, so I don't know whether they appear in the
> output of mount, but you could try it and see.
>
This part is fine. I think when no subvolume is peocified with `-o`, it
will mount subvolid=5, the default subvolume.
Use `-o subvol=$NAME` to mount one of your choosing.
I'll be back to show the efects of `noauto`.