.TH BTRFS 8 "" "btrfs" "btrfs" .\" .\" Man page written by Goffredo Baroncelli (Feb 2010) .\" Modified by Qu Wenruo (Jun 2013) .\" .SH NAME btrfs \- control a btrfs filesystem .SH SYNOPSIS \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsubvolume create\fP [-i \fI\fP] [\fI\fP/]\fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsubvolume delete\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP [\fI...\fP] .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsubvolume list\fP [\fIoptions\fP] [-G [+|-]\fIvalue\fP] [-C [+|-]\fIvalue\fP] [--sort=rootid,gen,ogen,path] \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsubvolume snapshot\fP [-r] \fI\fP \fI\fP|[\fI\fP/]\fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsubvolume get-default\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsubvolume set-default\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsubvolume find-new\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsubvolume show\fP\fI \fP .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBfilesystem df\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBfilesystem show\fP [\fI--mounted\fP|\fI--all-devices\fP|\fI\fP]\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBfilesystem sync\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBfilesystem defragment\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP|\fI\fP [\fI\fP|\fI...\fP]\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBfilesystem resize\fP [\fIdevid\fP:][+/\-]\fI\fP[gkm]|[\fIdevid\fP:]\fImax \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBfilesystem label\fP [\fI\fP|\fI\fP] [\fI\fP] .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fB[filesystem] balance start\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fB[filesystem] balance pause\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fB[filesystem] balance cancel\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fB[filesystem] balance resume\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fB[filesystem] balance status\fP [-v] \fI\fP .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBdevice add\fP [-Kf] \fI\fP [\fI...\fP] \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBdevice delete\fP \fI\fP [\fI...\fP] \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBdevice scan\fP [\fI--all-devices\fP|\fI \P[\fI...\fP] .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBdevice ready\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBdevice stats\fP [-z] {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBscrub start\fP [-BdqrRf] [-c \fIioprio_class\fP -n \fIioprio_classdata\fP] {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBscrub cancel\fP {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBscrub resume\fP [-BdqrR] [-c \fIioprio_class\fP -n \fIioprio_classdata\fP] {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBscrub status\fP [-d] {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBcheck\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBrescue chunk-recover\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBrescue super-recover\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBrestore\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBinspect-internal inode-resolve\fP [-v] \fI\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBinspect-internal logical-resolve\fP [-Pv] [-s \fI\fP] \fI\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBinspect-internal subvolid-resolve\fP \fI\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBinspect-internal rootid\fP \fI\fP .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBsend\fP [-ve] [-p \fI\fP] [-c \fI\fP] [-f \fI\fP] \fI\fP [\fI\fP...] .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBreceive\fP [-ve] [-f \fI\fP] \fI\fP .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBquota enable\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBquota disable\fP\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBquota rescan\fP [-s] \fI\fP .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBqgroup assign\fP \fI\fP \fI\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBqgroup remove\fP \fI\fP \fI\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBqgroup create\fP \fI\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBqgroup destroy\fP \fI\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBqgroup show\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBqgroup limit\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP|\fBnone\fP [\fI\fP] \fI\fP .PP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBreplace start\fP [-Bfr] \fI\fP|\fI \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBreplace status\fP [-1] \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBreplace cancel\fP \fI\fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fBhelp|\-\-help \fP .PP \fBbtrfs\fP \fB \-\-help \fP .PP .SH DESCRIPTION .B btrfs is used to control the filesystem and the files and directories stored. It is the tool to create or destroy a snapshot or a subvolume for the filesystem, to defrag a file or a directory, flush the data to the disk, to resize the filesystem, to scan the device. It is possible to abbreviate the commands unless the commands are ambiguous. For example: it is possible to run .I btrfs sub snaps instead of .I btrfs subvolume snapshot. But .I btrfs file s is not allowed, because .I file s may be interpreted both as .I filesystem show and as .I filesystem sync. In this case .I btrfs returns filesystem sync If a command is terminated by .I --help , the detailed help is showed. If the passed command matches more commands, detailed help of all the matched commands is showed. For example .I btrfs dev --help shows the help of all .I device* commands. .SH COMMANDS .TP \fBsubvolume create\fP [-i \fI\fP] [\fI\fP/]\fI\fP Create a subvolume \fI\fR in \fI\fR. If \fI\fR is not given subvolume \fI\fR will be created in the current directory. .RS \fIOptions\fP .IP "\fB-i\fP \fI\fR" 5 Add the newly created subvolume to a qgroup. This option can be given multiple times. .RE .TP \fBsubvolume delete\fR [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP [\fI...\fP]\fR Delete the subvolume(s) from the filesystem. If \fI\fR is not a subvolume, \fBbtrfs\fR returns an error but continues if there are more arguments to process. The corresponding directory is removed instantly but the data blocks are removed later. The deletion does not involve full commit by default due to performance reasons (as a consequence, the subvolume may appear again after a crash). Use one of the --commit options to wait until the operation is safely stored on the media. .RS \fIOptions\fP .IP "\fB-c|--commit-after\fP" 5 wait for transaction commit at the end of the operation .IP "\fB-C|--commit-each\fP" 5 wait for transaction commit after deleting each subvolume .RE .TP \fBsubvolume list\fR [\fIoptions\fP] [-G [+|-]\fIvalue\fP] [-C [+|-]\fIvalue\fP] [--sort=rootid,gen,ogen,path] \fI\fR List the subvolumes present in the filesystem \fI\fR. For every subvolume the following information is shown by default. ID \fI\fP top level \fI\fP path \fI\fP where path is the relative path of the subvolume to the \fItop level\fR subvolume. The subvolume's ID may be used by the \fBsubvolume set-default\fR command, or at mount time via the \fIsubvolid=\fR option. If \fI-p\fR is given, then \fIparent \fR is added to the output between ID and top level. The parent's ID may be used at mount time via the \fIsubvolrootid=\fR option. .RS \fIOptions\fP .IP "\fB-p\fP" 5 print parent ID. .IP "\fB-a\fP" 5 print all the subvolumes in the filesystem and distinguish between absolute and relative path with respect to the given \fI\fP. .IP "\fB-c\fP" 5 print the ogeneration of the subvolume, aliases: ogen or origin generation. .IP "\fB-g\fP" 5 print the generation of the subvolume. .IP "\fB-o\fP" 5 print only subvolumes bellow specified . .IP "\fB-u\fP" 5 print the UUID of the subvolume. .IP "\fB-q\fP" 5 print the parent uuid of subvolumes (and snapshots). .IP "\fB-t\fP" 5 print the result as a table. .IP "\fB-s\fP" 5 only snapshot subvolumes in the filesystem will be listed. .IP "\fB-r\fP" 5 only readonly subvolumes in the filesystem will be listed. .IP "\fB-G [+|-]\fIvalue\fP\fP" 5 list subvolumes in the filesystem that its generation is >=, <= or = \fIvalue\fP. '+' means >= \fIvalue\fP, '-' means <= \fIvalue\fP, If there is neither '+' nor '-', it means = \fIvalue\fP. .IP "\fB-C [+|-]\fIvalue\fP" 5 list subvolumes in the filesystem that its ogeneration is >=, <= or = \fIvalue\fP. The usage is the same to '-g' option. .IP "\fB--sort=rootid,gen,ogen,path\fP" 5 list subvolumes in order by specified items. you can add '+' or '-' in front of each items, '+' means ascending, '-' means descending. The default is ascending. for \fB--sort\fP you can combine some items together by ',', just like \f--sort=+ogen,-gen,path,rootid\fR. .RE .TP \fBsubvolume snapshot\fP [-r] \fI\fP \fI\fP|[\fI\fP/]\fI\fP Create a writable/readonly snapshot of the subvolume \fI\fR with the name \fI\fR in the \fI\fR directory. If only \fI\fR is given, the subvolume will be named the basename of \fI\fR. If \fI\fR is not a subvolume, \fBbtrfs\fR returns an error. If \fI-r\fR is given, the snapshot will be readonly. .TP \fBsubvolume get-default\fR\fI \fR Get the default subvolume of the filesystem \fI\fR. The output format is similar to \fBsubvolume list\fR command. .TP \fBsubvolume set-default\fR\fI \fR Set the subvolume of the filesystem \fI\fR which is mounted as \fIdefault\fR. The subvolume is identified by \fI\fR, which is returned by the \fBsubvolume list\fR command. .TP \fBsubvolume find-new\fR\fI \fR List the recently modified files in a subvolume, after \fI\fR ID. .TP \fBsubvolume show\fR\fI \fR Show information of a given subvolume in the \fI\fR. .TP \fBfilesystem df\fP\fI \fR Show space usage information for a mount point. .TP \fBfilesystem show\fR [\fI--mounted\fP|\fI--all-devices\fP|\fI\fR]\fR Show the btrfs filesystem with some additional info. If no option or \fIUUID\fP is passed, \fBbtrfs\fR shows information of all the btrfs filesystem both mounted and unmounted. If \fB--mounted\fP is passed, it would probe btrfs kernel to list mounted btrfs filesystem(s); If \fB--all-devices\fP is passed, all the devices under /dev are scanned; otherwise the devices list is extracted from the /proc/partitions file. .TP \fBfilesystem sync\fR\fI \fR Force a sync for the filesystem identified by \fI\fR. .TP \fBfilesystem defragment\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP|\fI\fP [\fI\fP|\fI...\fP]\fP Defragment file data and/or directory metadata. If \fB-r\fP is passed, files in \fIdir\fR will be defragmented recursively. The start position and the number of bytes to defragment can be specified by \fIstart\fR and \fIlen\fR. Any extent bigger than threshold will be considered already defragged. Use 0 to take the kernel default, and use 1 to say every single extent must be rewritten. You can also turn on compression in defragment operations. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 be verbose .IP "\fB-c\fP" 5 compress file contents while defragmenting .IP "\fB-r\fP" 5 defragment files recursively .IP "\fB-f\fP" 5 flush filesystem after defragmenting .IP "\fB-s \fIstart\fP\fP" 5 defragment only from byte \fIstart\fR onward .IP "\fB-l \fIlen\fP\fP" 5 defragment only up to \fIlen\fR bytes .IP "\fB-t \fIsize\fP\fP" 5 defragment only files at least \fIsize\fR bytes big For \fBstart\fP, \fBlen\fP, \fBsize\fP it is possible to append a suffix like \fBk\fP for 1 KBytes, \fBm\fP for 1 MBytes... NOTE: defragmenting with kernels up to 2.6.37 will unlink COW-ed copies of data, don't use it if you use snapshots, have de-duplicated your data or made copies with \fBcp --reflink\fP. .RE .TP .\" .\" Some wording are extracted by the resize2fs man page .\" \fBfilesystem resize\fP [\fIdevid\fP:][+/\-]\fI\fP[gkm]|[\fIdevid\fP:]\fImax \fR Resize a filesystem identified by \fI\fR for the underlying device \fIdevid\fR. The \fIdevid\fR can be found with \fBbtrfs filesystem show\fR and defaults to 1 if not specified. The \fI\fR parameter specifies the new size of the filesystem. If the prefix \fI+\fR or \fI\-\fR is present the size is increased or decreased by the quantity \fI\fR. If no units are specified, the unit of the \fI\fR parameter defaults to bytes. Optionally, the size parameter may be suffixed by one of the following units designators: 'K', 'M', or 'G', kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabytes, respectively. If 'max' is passed, the filesystem will occupy all available space on the device \fIdevid\fR. The \fBresize\fR command \fBdoes not\fR manipulate the size of underlying partition. If you wish to enlarge/reduce a filesystem, you must make sure you can expand the partition before enlarging the filesystem and shrink the partition after reducing the size of the filesystem. This can done using \fBfdisk(8)\fR or \fBparted(8)\fR to delete the existing partition and recreate it with the new desired size. When recreating the partition make sure to use the same starting disk cylinder as before. .TP \fBfilesystem label\fP [\fI\fP|\fI\fP] [\fInewlabel\fP]\fP Show or update the label of a filesystem. \fI[|]\fR is used to identify the filesystem. If a \fInewlabel\fR optional argument is passed, the label is changed. The following constraints exist for a label: .IP - the maximum allowable length shall be less than 256 chars .TP \fB[filesystem] balance start\fR [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fR Balance chunks across the devices Balance and/or convert (change allocation profile of) chunks that passed all \fIfilters\fR in a comma-separated list of filters for a particular chunk type. If filter list is not given balance all chunks of that type. In case none of the \fI-d\fR, \fI-m\fR or \fI-s\fR options is given balance all chunks in a filesystem. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-d[\fIfilters\fP]\fR" 5 act on data chunks .IP "\fB-m[\fIfilters\fP]\fR" 5 act on metadata chunks .IP "\fB-s[\fIfilters\fP]\fR" 5 act on system chunks (only under -f) .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 be verbose .IP "\fB-f\fP" 5 force reducing of metadata integrity .RE .TP \fB[filesystem] balance pause\fR\fI \fR Pause running balance. .TP \fB[filesystem] balance cancel\fR\fI \fR Cancel running or paused balance. .TP \fB[filesystem] balance resume\fR\fI \fR Resume interrupted balance. .TP \fB[filesystem] balance status\fR [-v] \fI\fR Show status of running or paused balance. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 be verbose .RE .TP \fBdevice add\fR\fI [-Kf] \fP[\fI...\fP] \fI\fR Add device(s) to the filesystem identified by \fI\fR. If applicable, a whole device discard (TRIM) operation is performed. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-K|--nodiscard\fP" 5 do not perform discard by default .IP "\fB-f|--force\fP" 5 force overwrite of existing filesystem on the given disk(s) .RE .TP \fBdevice delete\fR\fI \fP[\fI...\fP] \fI\fR Remove device(s) from a filesystem identified by \fI\fR. .TP \fBdevice scan\fR [--all-devices|\fI \fP[\fI...\fP]\fR If one or more devices are passed, these are scanned for a btrfs filesystem. If no devices are passed, \fBbtrfs\fR uses block devices containing btrfs filesystem as listed by blkid. Finally, if \fB--all-devices\fP is passed, all the devices under /dev are scanned. .TP \fBdevice ready\fR \fI\fR Check device to see if it has all of it's devices in cache for mounting. .TP \fBdevice stats\fP [-z] {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} Read and print the device IO stats for all devices of the filesystem identified by \fI\fR or for a single \fI\fR. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-z\fP" 5 Reset stats to zero after reading them. .RE .TP \fBscrub start\fP [-BdqrR] [-c \fIioprio_class\fP -n \fIioprio_classdata\fP] {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} Start a scrub on all devices of the filesystem identified by \fI\fR or on a single \fI\fR. Without options, scrub is started as a background process. Progress can be obtained with the \fBscrub status\fR command. Scrubbing involves reading all data from all disks and verifying checksums. Errors are corrected along the way if possible. .IP The default IO priority of scrub is the idle class. The priority can be configured similar to the .BR ionice (1) syntax. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-B\fP" 5 Do not background and print scrub statistics when finished. .IP "\fB-d\fP" 5 Print separate statistics for each device of the filesystem (-B only). .IP "\fB-q\fP" 5 Quiet. Omit error messages and statistics. .IP "\fB-r\fP" 5 Read only mode. Do not attempt to correct anything. .IP "\fB-R\fP" 5 Raw print mode. Print full data instead of summary. .IP "\fB-c \fIioprio_class\fP" 5 Set IO priority class (see .BR ionice (1) manpage). .IP "\fB-n \fIioprio_classdata\fP" 5 Set IO priority classdata (see .BR ionice (1) manpage). .IP "\fB-f\fP" 5 force to check whether scrub has started or resumed in userspace. this is useful when scrub stat record file is damaged. .RE .TP \fBscrub cancel\fP {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} If a scrub is running on the filesystem identified by \fI\fR, cancel it. Progress is saved in the scrub progress file and scrubbing can be resumed later using the \fBscrub resume\fR command. If a \fI\fR is given, the corresponding filesystem is found and \fBscrub cancel\fP behaves as if it was called on that filesystem. .TP \fBscrub resume\fP [-BdqrR] [-c ioprio_class -n ioprio_classdata] {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} Resume a canceled or interrupted scrub cycle on the filesystem identified by \fI\fR or on a given \fI\fR. Does not start a new scrub if the last scrub finished successfully. .RS \fIOptions\fR .TP see \fBscrub start\fP. .RE .TP \fBscrub status\fP [-d] {\fI\fP|\fI\fP} Show status of a running scrub for the filesystem identified by \fI\fR or for the specified \fI\fR. If no scrub is running, show statistics of the last finished or canceled scrub for that filesystem or device. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-d\fP" 5 Print separate statistics for each device of the filesystem. .RE .TP \fBcheck\fR [\fIoptions\fP] \fR Check an unmounted btrfs filesystem. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-s|--support \fI\fP\fR" 5 use this superblock copy. .IP "\fB--repair\fP" 5 try to repair the filesystem. .IP "\fB--init-csum-tree\fP" 5 create a new CRC tree. .IP "\fB--init-extent-tree\fP" 5 create a new extent tree. .RE .TP \fBrescue chunk-recover\fR [\fIoptions\fP] \fR Recover the chunk tree by scanning the devices one by one. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-y\fP" 5 assume an answer of 'yes' to all questions. .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 verbose mode. .IP "\fB-h\fP" 5 help. .RE .TP \fBrescue super-recover\fR [\fIoptions\fP] \fR Recover bad superblocks from good copies. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-y\fP" 5 assume an answer of 'yes' to all questions. .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 verbose mode. .RE .TP \fBrestore\fR [\fIoptions\fP] \fR Try to restore files from a damaged filesystem(unmounted). .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-s\fP" 5 get snapshots. .IP "\fB-x\fP" 5 get extended attributes. .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 verbose. .IP "\fB-i\fP" 5 ignore errors. .IP "\fB-o\fP" 5 overwrite. .IP "\fB-t \fI\fP\fP" 5 tree location. .IP "\fB-f \fI\fP\fP" 5 filesystem location. .IP "\fB-u \fI\fP\fP" 5 super mirror. .IP "\fB-r \fI\fP\fP" 5 root objectid. .IP "\fB-d\fP" 5 find dir. .IP "\fB-l\fP" 5 list tree roots. .RE .TP \fBinspect-internal inode-resolve\fP [-v] \fI\fP \fI\fP Resolves an in subvolume to all filesystem paths. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 verbose mode. print count of returned paths and ioctl() return value .RE .TP \fBinspect-internal logical-resolve\fP [-Pv] [-s bufsize] \fI\fP \fI\fP Resolves a address in the filesystem mounted at to all inodes. By default, each inode is then resolved to a file system path (similar to the \fBinode-resolve\fP subcommand). .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-P\fP" 5 skip the path resolving and print the inodes instead .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 verbose mode. print count of returned paths and all ioctl() return values .IP "\fB-s \fI\fP" 5 set inode container's size. This is used to increase inode container's size in case it is not enough to read all the resolved results. The max value one can set is 64k. .RE .TP \fBinspect-internal subvolid-resolve\fP \fI \fP Get file system paths for the given subvolume ID. .TP \fBinspect-internal rootid\fP \fI\fP For a given file or directory, return the containing tree root id. For a subvolume return it's own tree id. The result is undefined for the so-called empty subvolumes (identified by inode number 2). .TP \fBsend\fP [-ve] [-p \fI\fP] [-c \fI\fP] [-f \fI\fP] \fI\fP [\fI...\fP] Send the subvolume(s) to stdout. Sends the subvolume(s) specified by \fI\fR to stdout. By default, this will send the whole subvolume. To do an incremental send, use '\fI-p \fR'. If you want to allow btrfs to clone from any additional local snapshots, use '\fI-c \fR' (multiple times where applicable). You must not specify clone sources unless you guarantee that these snapshots are exactly in the same state on both sides, the sender and the receiver. It is allowed to omit the '\fI-p \fR' option when '\fI-c \fR' options are given, in which case '\fBbtrfs send\fP' will determine a suitable parent among the clone sources itself. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 Enable verbose debug output. Each occurrence of this option increases the verbose level more. .IP "\fB-e\fP" 5 If sending multiple subvols at once, use the new format and omit the between the subvols. .IP "\fB-p \fI\fP" 5 Send an incremental stream from \fI\fR to \fI\fR. .IP "\fB-c \fI\fP" 5 Use this snapshot as a clone source for an incremental send (multiple allowed). .IP "\fB-f \fI\fP" 5 Output is normally written to stdout. To write to a file, use this option. An alternative would be to use pipes. .RE .TP \fBreceive\fP [-ve] [-f \fI\fR] \fI\fR Receive subvolumes from stdin. Receives one or more subvolumes that were previously sent with btrfs send. The received subvolumes are stored into \fI\fP. btrfs receive will fail with the following case: 1.a receiving subvolume already exists. 2.a previously received subvolume was changed after it was received. 3.default subvolume is changed or you don't mount btrfs filesystem with fs tree. After receiving a subvolume, it is immediately set to read only. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-v\fP" 5 Enable verbose debug output. Each occurrence of this option increases the verbose level more. .IP "\fB-f \fI\fR" 5 By default, btrfs receive uses stdin to receive the subvolumes. Use this option to specify a file to use instead. .IP "\fB-e\fP" 5 Terminate after receiving an in the data stream. Without this option, the receiver terminates only if an error is recognized or on EOF. .RE .TP \fBquota enable\fR \fI\fR Enable subvolume quota support for a filesystem. .TP \fBquota disable\fR \fI\fR Disable subvolume quota support for a filesystem. .TP \fBquota rescan\fR [-s] \fI\fR Trash all qgroup numbers and scan the metadata again with the current config. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-s\fP" 5 show status of a running rescan operation. .RE .TP \fBqgroup assign\fP \fI \fP Enable subvolume qgroup support for a filesystem. .TP \fBqgroup remove\fP \fI \fP Remove a subvol from a quota group. .TP \fBqgroup create\fP \fI \fP Create a subvolume quota group. .TP \fBqgroup destroy\fP \fI \fP Destroy a subvolume quota group. .TP \fBqgroup show\fP \fI\fP Show all subvolume quota groups. .TP \fBqgroup limit\fP [\fIoptions\fP] \fI\fP|\fBnone\fP [\fI\fP] \fI\fP Limit the size of a subvolume quota group. .TP \fBreplace start\fR [-Bfr] \fI\fP|\fI \fR Replace device of a btrfs filesystem. On a live filesystem, duplicate the data to the target device which is currently stored on the source device. If the source device is not available anymore, or if the \fB-r\fR option is set, the data is built only using the RAID redundancy mechanisms. After completion of the operation, the source device is removed from the filesystem. If the \fI\fR is a numerical value, it is assumed to be the device id of the filesystem which is mounted at mount_point, otherwise is is the path to the source device. If the source device is disconnected, from the system, you have to use the \fIdevid\fR parameter format. The \fI\fP needs to be same size or larger than the \fI\fR. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-r\fP" 5 only read from \fI\fR if no other zero-defect mirror exists (enable this if your drive has lots of read errors, the access would be very slow) .IP "\fB-f\fP" 5 force using and overwriting \fI\fR even if it looks like containing a valid btrfs filesystem. A valid filesystem is assumed if a btrfs superblock is found which contains a correct checksum. Devices which are currently mounted are never allowed to be used as the \fI\fR .IP "\fB-B\fP" 5 do not background .RE .TP \fBreplace status\fR [-1] \fI\fR Print status and progress information of a running device replace operation. .RS \fIOptions\fR .IP "\fB-1\fP" 5 print once instead of print continuously until the replace operation finishes (or is canceled) .RE .TP \fBreplace cancel\fR \fI\fR Cancel a running device replace operation. .RE .SH EXIT STATUS \fBbtrfs\fR returns a zero exist status if it succeeds. Non zero is returned in case of failure. .SH AVAILABILITY .B btrfs is part of btrfs-progs. Btrfs filesystem is currently under heavy development, and not suitable for any uses other than benchmarking and review. Please refer to the btrfs wiki http://btrfs.wiki.kernel.org for further details. .SH SEE ALSO .BR mkfs.btrfs (8), .BR ionice (1)