98 lines
3.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
98 lines
3.3 KiB
ReStructuredText
The **btrfs-convert** tool can be used to convert existing source filesystem
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image to a btrfs filesystem in-place. The original filesystem image is
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accessible in subvolume named like *ext2_saved* as file *image*.
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Supported filesystems:
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* ext2, ext3, ext4 -- original feature, always built in
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* reiserfs -- since version 4.13, optionally built, requires libreiserfscore 3.6.27
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* ntfs -- external tool https://github.com/maharmstone/ntfs2btrfs
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The list of supported source filesystem by a given binary is listed at the end
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of help (option *--help*).
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.. warning::
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If you are going to perform rollback to the original filesystem, you
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should not execute **btrfs balance** command on the converted filesystem. This
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will change the extent layout and make **btrfs-convert** unable to rollback.
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The conversion utilizes free space of the original filesystem. The exact
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estimate of the required space cannot be foretold. The final btrfs metadata
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might occupy several gigabytes on a hundreds-gigabyte filesystem.
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If the ability to rollback is no longer important, the it is recommended to
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perform a few more steps to transition the btrfs filesystem to a more compact
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layout. This is because the conversion inherits the original data blocks'
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fragmentation, and also because the metadata blocks are bound to the original
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free space layout.
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Due to different constraints, it is only possible to convert filesystems that
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have a supported data block size (ie. the same that would be valid for
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**mkfs.btrfs**). This is typically the system page size (4KiB on x86_64
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machines).
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**BEFORE YOU START**
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The source filesystem must be clean, eg. no journal to replay or no repairs
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needed. The respective **fsck** utility must be run on the source filesytem prior
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to conversion. Please refer to the manual pages in case you encounter problems.
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For ext2/3/4:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# e2fsck -fvy /dev/sdx
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For reiserfs:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# reiserfsck -fy /dev/sdx
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Skipping that step could lead to incorrect results on the target filesystem,
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but it may work.
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**REMOVE THE ORIGINAL FILESYSTEM METADATA**
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By removing the subvolume named like *ext2_saved* or *reiserfs_saved*, all
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metadata of the original filesystem will be removed:
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.. code-block:: bash
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# btrfs subvolume delete /mnt/ext2_saved
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At this point it is not possible to do a rollback. The filesystem is usable but
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may be impacted by the fragmentation inherited from the original filesystem.
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**MAKE FILE DATA MORE CONTIGUOUS**
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An optional but recommended step is to run defragmentation on the entire
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filesystem. This will attempt to make file extents more contiguous.
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.. code-block:: bash
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# btrfs filesystem defrag -v -r -f -t 32M /mnt/btrfs
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Verbose recursive defragmentation (*-v*, *-r*), flush data per-file (*-f*) with
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target extent size 32MiB (*-t*).
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**ATTEMPT TO MAKE BTRFS METADATA MORE COMPACT**
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Optional but recommended step.
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The metadata block groups after conversion may be smaller than the default size
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(256MiB or 1GiB). Running a balance will attempt to merge the block groups.
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This depends on the free space layout (and fragmentation) and may fail due to
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lack of enough work space. This is a soft error leaving the filesystem usable
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but the block group layout may remain unchanged.
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Note that balance operation takes a lot of time, please see also
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``btrfs-balance(8)``.
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.. code-block:: bash
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# btrfs balance start -m /mnt/btrfs
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