+ if (mount_id != mount_id_parent)
+ return 1;
+
+ /* Hmm, so, the mount ids are the same. This leaves one
+ * special case though for the root file system. For that,
+ * let's see if the parent directory has the same inode as we
+ * are interested in. Hence, let's also do fstat() checks now,
+ * too, but avoid the st_dev comparisons, since they aren't
+ * that useful on unionfs mounts. */
+ check_st_dev = false;
+
+fallback_fstat:
+ /* yay for fstatat() taking a different set of flags than the other
+ * _at() above */
+ if (flags & AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW)
+ flags &= ~AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW;
+ else
+ flags |= AT_SYMLINK_NOFOLLOW;
+ if (fstatat(fd, filename, &a, flags) < 0)
+ return -errno;
+
+ if (fstatat(fd, "", &b, AT_EMPTY_PATH) < 0)
+ return -errno;
+
+ /* A directory with same device and inode as its parent? Must
+ * be the root directory */
+ if (a.st_dev == b.st_dev &&
+ a.st_ino == b.st_ino)
+ return 1;
+
+ return check_st_dev && (a.st_dev != b.st_dev);
+}
+
+/* flags can be AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW or 0 */
+int path_is_mount_point(const char *t, int flags) {
+ _cleanup_close_ int fd = -1;
+ _cleanup_free_ char *canonical = NULL, *parent = NULL;
+ int r;
+
+ assert(t);
+
+ if (path_equal(t, "/"))
+ return 1;
+
+ /* we need to resolve symlinks manually, we can't just rely on
+ * fd_is_mount_point() to do that for us; if we have a structure like
+ * /bin -> /usr/bin/ and /usr is a mount point, then the parent that we
+ * look at needs to be /usr, not /. */
+ if (flags & AT_SYMLINK_FOLLOW) {
+ canonical = canonicalize_file_name(t);
+ if (!canonical)
+ return -errno;
+ }
+
+ r = path_get_parent(canonical ?: t, &parent);