Mention that a target path argument is mandatory unless
the -l option is supplied. Also mention about the existence
of the -l option, which was previously not announced.
$ btrfs restore -v /dev/sdb3
usage: btrfs restore [options] <device>
Try to restore files from a damaged filesystem (unmounted)
-s get snapshots
-v verbose
-i ignore errors
-o overwrite
-t tree location
-f <offset> filesystem location
-u <block> super mirror
-d find dir
$ echo $?
129
After specifying a target path, the command works as expected:
$ btrfs restore -v /dev/sdb3 files2/
Restoring files2/file1
Done searching
$ echo $?
0
Signed-off-by: Filipe David Borba Manana <fdmanana@xxxxxxxxx>
---
cmds-restore.c | 3 ++-
1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 1 deletion(-)
diff --git a/cmds-restore.c b/cmds-restore.c
index eca528d..70ebb9f 100644
--- a/cmds-restore.c
+++ b/cmds-restore.c
@@ -956,7 +956,7 @@ out:
}
const char * const cmd_restore_usage[] = {
- "btrfs restore [options] <device>",
+ "btrfs restore [options] <device> <path> | btrfs restore -l <device>",
"Try to restore files from a damaged filesystem (unmounted)",
"",
"-s get snapshots",
@@ -967,6 +967,7 @@ const char * const cmd_restore_usage[] = {
"-f <offset> filesystem location",
"-u <block> super mirror",
"-d find dir",
+ "-l list roots",
NULL
};
--
1.7.9.5
--
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