btrfs-replace(8) ================ SYNOPSIS -------- **btrfs replace** DESCRIPTION ----------- **btrfs replace** is used to replace btrfs managed devices with other device. SUBCOMMAND ---------- cancel Cancel a running device replace operation. start [options] | 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 -r 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 *srcdev* is a numerical value, it is assumed to be the device id of the filesystem which is mounted at *path*, otherwise it is the path to the source device. If the source device is disconnected, from the system, you have to use the devid parameter format. The *targetdev* needs to be same size or larger than the *srcdev*. .. note:: The filesystem has to be resized to fully take advantage of a larger target device; this can be achieved with ``btrfs filesystem resize :max /path`` ``Options`` -r only read from *srcdev* if no other zero-defect mirror exists. (enable this if your drive has lots of read errors, the access would be very slow) -f force using and overwriting *targetdev* even if it looks like it contains a valid btrfs filesystem. A valid filesystem is assumed if a btrfs superblock is found which contains a correct checksum. Devices that are currently mounted are never allowed to be used as the *targetdev*. -B no background replace. --enqueue wait if there's another exclusive operation running, otherwise continue -K|--nodiscard Do not perform whole device TRIM operation on devices that are capable of that. This does not affect discard/trim operation when the filesystem is mounted. Please see the mount option *discard* for that in ``btrfs(5)``. status [-1] Print status and progress information of a running device replace operation. ``Options`` -1 print once instead of print continuously until the replace operation finishes (or is cancelled) EXAMPLES -------- Replacing an online drive with a bigger one ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Given the following filesystem mounted at `/mnt/my-vault` .. code-block:: none Label: 'MyVault' uuid: ae20903e-b72d-49ba-b944-901fc6d888a1 Total devices 2 FS bytes used 1TiB devid 1 size 1TiB used 500.00GiB path /dev/sda devid 2 size 1TiB used 500.00GiB path /dev/sdb In order to replace */dev/sda* (*devid 1*) with a bigger drive located at */dev/sdc* you would run the following: .. code-block:: bash btrfs replace start 1 /dev/sdc /mnt/my-vault/ You can monitor progress via: .. code-block:: bash btrfs replace status /mnt/my-vault/ After the replacement is complete, as per the docs at ``btrfs-filesystem(8)`` in order to use the entire storage space of the new drive you need to run: .. code-block:: bash btrfs filesystem resize 1:max /mnt/my-vault/ EXIT STATUS ----------- **btrfs replace** returns a zero exit status if it succeeds. Non zero is returned in case of failure. AVAILABILITY ------------ **btrfs** is part of btrfs-progs. Please refer to the btrfs wiki http://btrfs.wiki.kernel.org for further details. SEE ALSO -------- ``mkfs.btrfs(8)``, ``btrfs-device(8)``, ``btrfs-filesystem(8)``,