btrfs-progs/Documentation/btrfs-receive.asciidoc

74 lines
1.8 KiB
Plaintext

btrfs-receive(8)
================
NAME
----
btrfs-receive - receive subvolumes from send stream
SYNOPSIS
--------
*btrfs receive* [options] <path>
DESCRIPTION
-----------
Receive a stream of changes and replicate one or more subvolumes that were
previously used with *btrfs send* The received subvolumes are stored to
'path'.
*btrfs receive* will fail int the following cases:
1. receiving subvolume already exists
2. previously received subvolume was changed after it was received
3. default subvolume has changed or you didn't mount BTRFS filesystem at the toplevel subvolume
A subvolume is made read-only after the receiving process finishes succesfully.
`Options`
-v::
enable verbose debug output, print each operation (each occurrence of this
option increases the verbosity level)
-f <infile>::
by default, btrfs receive uses standard input to receive the stream,
use this option to read from a file instead
-C|--chroot::
confine the process to 'path' using `chroot`(1)
-e::
terminate after receiving an 'end cmd' marker in the stream.
+
Without this option, the receiver terminates only if an error is encountered
or at end of file
--max-errors <N>::
terminate as soon as N errors happened while processing commands from the send
stream, default value is 1, 0 means no limit
-m <mountpoint>::
the root mount point of the destination filesystem
+
By default the mountpoint is searched in '/proc/self/mounts'.
If you do not have '/proc', eg. in a chroot environment, use this option to tell
us where this filesystem is mounted.
EXIT STATUS
-----------
*btrfs receive* 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-send`(8)