What does that mean?DItch the bind mounts, you don't need them for Samba.
It means stop using those bind mounts.
Samba doesn't need them. Windows clients don't need them and know nothing about them. All windows clients see is the share name which may but does not have to bear some resemblance to the underlying file tree on the server. It's perfectly possible to have a share named "garbage" with "path = /mnt/very/important/stuff".
Most common use of a bind mount that I'm aware of is to access directories masked by mounting something on a directory. If /mnt/foo/bar exists and you later mount a partition on /mnt/foo you lose access to /mnt/foo/bar* unless you had previously bind mounted it somewhere else.
Unless you want a local user logged in to the Pi to access those directories as /mnt/music as well as /mnt/nvme02/Music there is no advantage in using them. Even if that is the case a symbolic link may be a simpler and better choice for those users.
*: Unless the partition you mounted also has a directory named bar. But that's not the same directory as previously.
Statistics: Posted by thagrol — Sat Aug 09, 2025 10:21 pm