Hi all,
after the Chirs (Ball) email, I thought about a possible btrfs file-system
layout, which may permit to snapshot the root and mount (if required) an old
snapshot of the root.
A btrfs file-system has the capability to be partitioned in subvolumes. Every
subvolume has a name. The root of the btrfs file-system is itself a volume,
called "." (dot).
At the mount time using the option subvol= it is possible to mount a specific
subvolume. If nothing is specified the subvol "." (dot) is mounted.
My idea is that the root of the file-system has to be a subvolume of a btrfs
file-system. Then the subvolume "." is mounted under a subdirectory and is
used only for managing the snapshot of the root file-system.
In order to be more clear I will use the following nomenclature:
- root of the file-system (or fs root):
the root of system. This directory contains /bin, /sbin, /usr...
- root of a btrfs files-system (or btrfs root):
the root of a btrfs file-system which contains the subvolumes. This is
still a subvolume called "." (dot)
Under the btrfs root a subvolume named "rootfs" is created, this will contain
the fs root. Also the fs root snapshots are created under the btrfs root.
In order to access the btrfs root and handle the fs root subvolume and its
snapshots, the btrfs root is mounted under /var/run/btrfs.
To mount the fs root, the option "subvol=rootfs" has to be used used (for
example in the initramfs).
# mount -t btrfs -o subvol=rootfs /dev/sdxx /
To mount the btrfs root, the option "subvol=." has to be used .
# mount -t btrfs -o subvol=. /dev/sdxx /var/run/btrfs
Note 1) the "rootfs" volume is a portion of the real btrfs.
Note 2) if only the "rootfs" volume is mounted is impossible to access to all
data contained in the btrfs file-system. In order to access to the btrfs root,
this has to be mounted under a sub-directory of the "rootfs" volume
Note 3) the files contained in the "rootfs" volume appear two times:
- under / (where the "rootfs" volume is mounted)
- under /var/run/btrfs/rootfs (if the "." volume is mounted under
/var/run/btrfs)
Note 4) snapshotting a volume doesn't affect the other volumes, even though
these volumes are mounted or located under the volume snapshotted.
This is a time for the ascii art:
*Real* btrfs filesystem layout (or the volume called ".")
/ \ <--- "." volume
rootfs \ <--- "rootfs" volume
!- bin
!- sbin
!- etc
!- usr
!- [...]
snap1 \ <---- 1st snapshot of the rootfs volume
!- bin
!- sbin
!- etc
!- usr
!- [...]
snap1 \ <---- 2st snapshot of the rootfs volume
!- bin
!- sbin
!- etc
!- usr
!- [...]
*Effective* file-system layout:
/ \ <--- "rootfs" volume
!- bin
!- sbin
!- etc
!- usr
[...]
!- var \
!- run \
! - btrfs \ <--- "." volume
! - rootfs \ <--- "rootfs" volume(2nd time)
!- bin
!- sbin
[...]
! - snap1 \ <--- 1st snapshot
[...]
! - snap2 \ <--- 1st snapshot
[...]
Below I will show some use cases:
1) system install
2) fs root snapshotting
3) exchange the root with a old snapshot (a reboot is required)
** 1) System install
root@host:/> mkfs.btrfs /dev/sdxx
root@host:/> mount -t btrfs /dev/sdxx /media/btrfs-test
root@host:/ cd /media/btrfs-test
root@host:/media/btrfs-test> btrfsctl -S rootfs .
root@host:/media/btrfs-test> ls -l
drwx------ 1 root root 160 2009-11-20 17:22 rootfs
root@host:/media/btrfs-test> cd rootfs
root@host:/media/btrfs-test/rootfs> debootstrap sid . # install packages
# under the rootfs volume
[... config the system ...]
root@host:/media/btrfs-test/rootfs> ls
bin dev home lib64 media opt root selinux sys usr
boot etc lib lost+found mnt proc sbin srv tmp var
root@host:/media/btrfs-test/rootfs> mkdir /var/run/btrfs
root@host:/media/btrfs-test/rootfs> cd /
root@host:/> umount /media/btrfs.test
root@host:/> mount -t btrfs -o subvol=rootfs /dev/sdxx /media/btrfs-test
root@host:/> chroot /media/btrfs-test
root@guest:/> ls /
bin dev home lib64 media opt root selinux sys usr
boot etc lib lost+found mnt proc sbin srv tmp var
root@guest:/> mount -t btrfs -o subvol=. /dev/sdxx /var/run/btrfs
root@guest:/> ls /var/run/btrfs
rootfs
root@guest:/> # to mount automatically the btrfs root under /var/run/btrfs
root@guest:/> echo "/dev/sdxx /var/run/btrfs btrfs subvol=. 0 0" >>/etc/fstab
** 2) system snapshot
root@guest:/> cd /var/run/btrfs
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> ls
rootfs
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> btrfsctl -s snap-of-root /.
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> ls
rootfs snap-of-root
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> ls snap-of-root
bin dev home lib64 media opt root selinux sys usr
boot etc lib lost+found mnt proc sbin srv tmp var
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> touch /root/old-root-witness
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> ls rootfs/root
old-root-witness
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> ls snap-of-root/root
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs>
** 3) exchange the fs root with an its (older) snapshot
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> ls /root
old-root-witness
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> ls
rootfs snap-of-root
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> mv rootfs rootfs-old
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> mv snap-of-root rootfs
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> ls
rootfs rootfs-old
root@guest:/var/run/btrfs> reboot
[...]
root@guest:/> ls root
root@guest:/> ls /var/run/btrfs
rootfs rootfs-old
Any comments ?
BR
G.Baroncelli
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