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Manual page and help for the btrfs-convert linux command. The command converts ext2 / 3/4 or reiserfs filesystems to btrfs locally. The command in Debian 9 (Stretch) is a Btrfs-progs package included.
Man page output
man btrfs-convert
BTRFS-CONVERT(8) Btrfs Manual BTRFS-CONVERT(8)
NAME
btrfs-convert - convert from ext2/3/4 or reiserfs filesystem to btrfs in-place
SYNOPSIS
btrfs-convert [options] <device>
DESCRIPTION
btrfs-convert is used to convert existing source filesystem image to a btrfs
filesystem in-place. The original filesystem image is accessible in subvolume named
like ext2_saved as file image.
Supported filesystems:
• ext2, ext3, ext4 — original feature, always built in
• reiserfs — since version 4.13, optionally built, requires libreiserfscore 3.6.27
The list of supported source filesystem by a given binary is listed at the end of
help (option --help).
Warning
If you are going to perform rollback to the original filesystem, you should not
execute btrfs balance command on the converted filesystem. This will change the
extent layout and make btrfs-convert unable to rollback.
The conversion utilizes free space of the original filesystem. The exact estimate of
the required space cannot be foretold. The final btrfs metadata might occupy several
gigabytes on a hundreds-gigabyte filesystem.
If the ability to rollback is no longer important, the it is recommended to perform a
few more steps to transition the btrfs filesystem to a more compact layout. This is
because the conversion inherits the original data blocks' fragmentation, and also
because the metadata blocks are bound to the original free space layout.
Due to different constraints, it is only possible to convert filesystems that have a
supported data block size (ie. the same that would be valid for mkfs.btrfs). This is
typically the system page size (4KiB on x86_64 machines).
Note
The source filesystem should be clean, you are encouraged to run the fsck tool if
you’re not sure.
REMOVE THE ORIGINAL FILESYSTEM METADATA
By removing the subvolume named like ext2_saved or reiserfs_saved, all metadata of
the original filesystem will be removed:
# btrfs subvolume delete /mnt/ext2_saved
At this point it is not possible to do a rollback. The filesystem is usable but may
be impacted by the fragmentation inherited from the original filesystem.
MAKE FILE DATA MORE CONTIGUOUS
An optional but recommended step is to run defragmentation on the entire filesystem.
This will attempt to make file extents more contiguous.
# btrfs filesystem defrag -v -r -f -t 32M /mnt/btrfs
Verbose recursive defragmentation (-v, -r), flush data per-file (-f) with target
extent size 32MiB (-t).
ATTEMPT TO MAKE BTRFS METADATA MORE COMPACT
Optional but recommended step.
The metadata block groups after conversion may be smaller than the default size
(256MiB or 1GiB). Running a balance will attempt to merge the block groups. This
depends on the free space layout (and fragmentation) and may fail due to lack of
enough work space. This is a soft error leaving the filesystem usable but the block
group layout may remain unchanged.
Note that balance operation takes a lot of time, please see also btrfs-balance(8).
# btrfs balance start -m /mnt/btrfs
OPTIONS
-d|--no-datasum
disable data checksum calculations and set the NODATASUM file flag, this can
speed up the conversion
-i|--no-xattr
ignore xattrs and ACLs of files
-n|--no-inline
disable inlining of small files to metadata blocks, this will decrease the
metadata consumption and may help to convert a filesystem with low free space
-N|--nodesize <SIZE>
set filesystem nodesize, the tree block size in which btrfs stores its metadata.
The default value is 16KB (16384) or the page size, whichever is bigger. Must be
a multiple of the sectorsize, but not larger than 65536. See mkfs.btrfs(8) for
more details.
-r|--rollback
rollback to the original ext2/3/4 filesystem if possible
-l|--label <LABEL>
set filesystem label during conversion
-L|--copy-label
use label from the converted filesystem
-O|--features <feature1>[,<feature2>...]
A list of filesystem features enabled the at time of conversion. Not all features
are supported by old kernels. To disable a feature, prefix it with ^. Description
of the features is in section FILESYSTEM FEATURES of mkfs.btrfs(8).
To see all available features that btrfs-convert supports run:
btrfs-convert -O list-all
-p|--progress
show progress of conversion (a heartbeat indicator and number of inodes
processed), on by default
--no-progress
disable progress and show only the main phases of conversion
EXIT STATUS
btrfs-convert will return 0 if no error happened. If any problems happened, 1 will be
returned.
SEE ALSO
mkfs.btrfs(8)
Btrfs v4.20.1 01/23/2019 BTRFS-CONVERT(8)
Help output
btrfs-convert
usage: btrfs-convert [options] device
options:
-d|--no-datasum disable data checksum, sets NODATASUM
-i|--no-xattr ignore xattrs and ACLs
-n|--no-inline disable inlining of small files to metadata
-N|--nodesize SIZE set filesystem metadata nodesize
-r|--rollback roll back to the original filesystem
-l|--label LABEL set filesystem label
-L|--copy-label use label from converted filesystem
-p|--progress show converting progress (default)
-O|--features LIST comma separated list of filesystem features
--no-progress show only overview, not the detailed progress
Suported filesystems:
ext2/3/4: yes
Related Content
- Manual page - btrfs
- Manual page - btrfs-balance
- Manual page - btrfs-check
- Manual page - btrfs-device
- Manual page - btrfs-filesystem
- Manual page - btrfs-find-root
- Manual page - btrfs-image
- Manual page - btrfs-inspect-internal
- Manual page - btrfs-map-logical
- Manual page - btrfs-property
- Manual page - btrfs-qgroup
- Manual page - btrfs-quota
- Manual page - btrfs-receive
- Manual page - btrfs-replace
- Manual page - btrfs-rescue
- Manual page - btrfs-restore
- Manual page - btrfs-scrub
- Manual page - btrfs-select-super
- Manual page - btrfs-send
- Manual page - btrfs-subvolume
- Manual page - btrfstune
- Manual Page - mkfs.btrfs
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