Encrypted Volume and File System v1.1 Administrator's Guide

# fsck /dev/evfs/vg01/rlvol5
Step 2c: Creating the Mount Point
Use the mkdir command to create the mount point. For example:
mkdir mount_point
where:
mount_point
Specifies the path for the mount point.
Example
The following command creates the mount point /opt/encrypted_data:
# mkdir /opt/encrypted_data
Step 2d: Mount the File System on the EVFS Volume
Mount the file system on the EVFS volume:
mount [-F file_sys_type] /dev/evfs/evfs_volume_path mount_point
where:
-F file_sys_type
Specifies the file system type. If you do not specify this option, the
mount command uses the file system type from the corresponding
entry in /etc/fstab. See mount(1m) for more information.
evfs_volume_path
Specifies the absolute pathname for the EVFS volume device file, such
as /dev/evfs/vg01/lvol5, /dev/evfs/vx/dsk/rootdg/vol05,
or /dev/evfs/dsk/c2t0d1.
mount_point
The path for the mount point.
Example
The following command mounts the EVFS-based file system on the mount point created in the
previous step:
# mount -F vxfs /dev/evfs/vg01/lvol5 /opt/encrypted_data
Step 2e: (Optional) Adding an Entry to /etc/fstab
Optionally, add an entry to the /etc/fstab file for the encrypted volume. The system can use
this entry for the mount -a command (mount all file systems in the /etc/fstab file) or to
automatically mount the file system at system startup. For file systems on EVFS volumes in the
/etc/fstab file that you want the system to mount at system startup, the key database must
reside on the local root file system (the system must be able access the keys early in the system
startup procedure).
The syntax for the entry is as follows:
evfs_volume_path mount_point file_sys_type [options]
where:
evfs_volume_path
Specifies the absolute pathname for the EVFS volume device file, such
as /dev/evfs/vg01/lvol5, /dev/evfs/vx/dsk/rootdg/vol05,
or /dev/evfs/dsk/c2t0d1.
mount_point
The path for the mount point.
file_sys_type
The file system type. This must be a file system type supported by the
underlying LVM, VxVM, or physical volume, such as hfs or vxfs.
options
Options for the entry. See fstab(4) for more information.
Option 1: Creating a New EVFS Volume 57