davfs2

From ArchWiki
The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

davfs2 is a Linux file system driver that allows to mount a WebDAV resource. WebDAV is an extension to HTTP/1.1 that allows remote collaborative authoring of Web resources.

Installing davfs2

Install davfs2 from official repositories.

Mount WebDAV-resource

Configuration and mount options

There is a system wide configuration file /etc/davfs2/davfs2.conf and a user configuration file ~/.davfs2/davfs2.conf. The latter is read in addition to the system configuration when invoked by an ordinary user and takes precedence. There are general, WebDAV related, cache related and debugging options. All the available options and their syntax can be found in davfs2.conf(5).

There are also mount options used to define if needed the path of the configuration file, the owner and group of the filesystem and some other options related to file access. The list of recognised options can be obtained with the following command:

$ mount.davfs -h

Also see mount.davfs(8) for description and options.

Using command-line

To mount a WebDAV-resource use mount, not mount.davfs directly.

# mount -t davfs http(s)://addres:<port>/path /mount/point
Note: Ordinary users can mount a davfs2 file system if they are a member of the group dav_group as defined in the system wide configuration, by default the network group.

Using systemd

To use systemd mounting:

/etc/systemd/system/mnt-webdav-service.mount
[Unit]
Description=Mount WebDAV Service
After=network-online.target
Wants=network-online.target

[Mount]
What=http(s)://address:<port>/path
Where=/mnt/webdav/service
Options=uid=1000,file_mode=0664,dir_mode=2775,grpid
Type=davfs
TimeoutSec=15

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

You can create an systemd automount unit to set a timeout

/etc/systemd/system/mnt-webdav-service.automount
[Unit]
Description=Mount WebDAV Service

[Automount]
Where=/mnt/webdav/service
TimeoutIdleSec=300

[Install]
WantedBy=remote-fs.target

See Fstab#Automount with systemd for more tips and tricks when using systemd mount units.

Using fstab

To define how the webdav resource should be mounted into the filesystem, append a fstab entry under the following format:

/etc/fstab
https://webdav.example/path /mnt/webdav davfs rw,user,uid=username,noauto 0 0

where username is the owner of the mounted file system. It may be a numeric ID or a user name and only root can mount a uid different from the mounting user. _netdev mount option could be used to automount network drives.

Tips and tricks

Storing credentials

Create a secrets file to store credentials for a WebDAV-service using ~/.davfs2/secrets for user, and /etc/davfs2/secrets for root:

/etc/davfs2/secrets
https://webdav.example/path davusername davpassword

Make sure the secrets file contains the correct permissions, for root mounting:

# chmod 600 /etc/davfs2/secrets
# chown root:root /etc/davfs2/secrets

And for user mounting:

$ chmod 600 ~/.davfs2/secrets

Troubleshooting

Creating/copying files not possible and/or freezes

If creating/copying files is not possible and/or freezes occur, edit the #Configuration and mount options to use use_locks 0 as option. Default for this parameter is 1 which locks files on the server when they are opened for writing.

Password in secrets file

Be careful for special characters in passwords such as \ and ". Escape them with \.

See also