@ogra Thanks, I was not sure I could do this (again, not my domain). I have multiple users having their home under /accounts mount:
/home/user1 -> (links to) /accounts/user1
/home/user2 -> /accounts/user2
So the only volume candidate for bind mounting for me would be /accounts. The only solution would be to have a sub-volume for each user. I've just tried with a dummy user, but while I can I can mount @dummy subvol to /home/dummy, it complains that /home/dummy is not a folder when adding "bind" option:
# mount -o subvol=@dummy /dev/sdc1 /home/dummy => [OK]
# mount _o bind,subvol=@dummy /dev/sdc1 /home/dummy => [KO, /home/dummy not a folder (or directory, I'm not using an English console]
But... actually, following your suggestion I've insisted on the proposed solution and I can do a mount bind at the user folder level, that is exactly instead of links ((I did not know that). And, yes, it works now! Thanks!
@ogra Thanks, I was not sure I could do this (again, not my domain). I have multiple users having their home under /accounts mount:
/home/user1 -> (links to) /accounts/user1
/home/user2 -> /accounts/user2
So the only volume candidate for bind mounting for me would be /accounts. The only solution would be to have a sub-volume for each user. I've just tried with a dummy user, but while I can I can mount @dummy subvol to /home/dummy, it complains that /home/dummy is not a folder when adding "bind" option:
# mount -o subvol=@dummy /dev/sdc1 /home/dummy => [OK]
# mount _o bind,subvol=@dummy /dev/sdc1 /home/dummy => [KO, /home/dummy not a folder (or directory, I'm not using an English console]
But... actually, following your suggestion I've insisted on the proposed solution and I can do a mount bind at the user folder level, that is exactly instead of links ((I did not know that). And, yes, it works now! Thanks!