On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 11:39:19AM -0700, Chris Murphy wrote: > On Thu, Nov 20, 2014 at 4:14 AM, Goffredo Baroncelli <kreijack@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > Supposing to have the following four subvolumes > > > > /root/ > > /root/etc > > /root/usr > > /root/var > > > > When you need to snapshot, you should: > > > > # btrfs subvolume snapshot /root /backup-root-20141120 > > # btrfs subvolume snapshot /root/etc /backup-root-20141120/etc > > # btrfs subvolume snapshot /root/usr /backup-root-20141120/usr > > # btrfs subvolume snapshot /root/var /backup-root-20141120/var > > > > So in order to remount an "old" filesystem, you need to make only > > 1 mount. > > I like this layout better than either the openSUSE or Fedora layouts. > It's easier to mount and old filesystem, where on Fedora each > subvolume must be explicitly mounted. And it ensures old binaries > aren't in the current mount path – kinda like running in a chroot – > where on openSUSE the snapshots containing old binaries are in the > current mount path. While the old binaries are in the current mount path, they're not generally accessible due to 0750 on the .snapshots directory. The 'single mountpoint for whole root' is not perfect in case there are files that are independent on the system files, like logs or some application data in wellknown paths. The other option is to have separate subvolumes for the selected paths and either mount them in fstab or do more work when the old filesystem has to be rolled back and transformed to the expected layout. Both have their pros and cons so this is a matter of user choice. Eg. if the logs are forwarded and not kept locally, no applications store data on root partition. Going to an older snapshot is trivial and without unexpected consequences. And of course the layouts are both ways convertible. -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
