btrfs-restore

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A btrfs-restore linux parancs manual oldala és súgója. A btrfs restore parancs segítségével megkísérelhető fájlok lementése egy sérült btrfs fájlrendszerről, és visszaállíthatók a paraméterben megadott útvonalra, vagy csak simán kilistázható az alkötet gyökérkönyvtára. A fájlrendszer képfájl nem módosul.

 

 

Man oldal kimenet

man btrfs-restore
BTRFS-RESTORE(8)                        Btrfs Manual                        BTRFS-RESTORE(8)

NAME
       btrfs-restore - try to restore files from a damaged btrfs filesystem image

SYNOPSIS
       btrfs restore [options] <device> <path> | -l <device>

DESCRIPTION
       btrfs restore is used to try to salvage files from a damaged filesystem and restore
       them into <path> or just list the subvolume tree roots. The filesystem image is not
       modified.

       If the filesystem is damaged and cannot be repaired by the other tools
       (btrfs-check(8) or btrfs-rescue(8)), btrfs restore could be used to retrieve file
       data, as far as the metadata are readable. The checks done by restore are less strict
       and the process is usually able to get far enough to retrieve data from the whole
       filesystem. This comes at a cost that some data might be incomplete or from older
       versions if they’re available.

       There are several options to attempt restoration of various file metadata type. You
       can try a dry run first to see how well the process goes and use further options to
       extend the set of restored metadata.

       For images with damaged tree structures, there are several options to point the
       process to some spare copy.

           Note
           It is recommended to read the following btrfs wiki page if your data is not
           salvaged with default option: https://btrfs.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/Restore

OPTIONS
       -s|--snapshots
           get also snapshots that are skipped by default

       -x|--xattr
           get extended attributes

       -m|--metadata
           restore owner, mode and times for files and directories

       -S|--symlinks
           restore symbolic links as well as normal files

       -v|--verbose
           be verbose and print what is being restored

       -i|--ignore-errors
           ignore errors during restoration and continue

       -o|--overwrite
           overwrite directories/files in <path>, eg. for repeated runs

       -t <bytenr>
           use <bytenr> to read the root tree

       -f <bytenr>
           only restore files that are under specified subvolume root pointed by <bytenr>

       -u|--super <mirror>
           use given superblock mirror identified by <mirror>, it can be 0,1 or 2

       -r|--root <rootid>
           only restore files that are under a specified subvolume whose objectid is
           <rootid>

       -d
           find directory

       -l|--list-roots
           list subvolume tree roots, can be used as argument for -r

       -D|--dry-run
           dry run (only list files that would be recovered)

       --path-regex <regex>
           restore only filenames matching a regular expression (regex(7)) with a mandatory
           format

           ^/(|home(|/username(|/Desktop(|/.*))))$

           The format is not very comfortable and restores all files in the directories in
           the whole path, so this is not useful for restoring single file in a deep
           hierarchy.

       -c
           ignore case (--path-regex only)

EXIT STATUS
       btrfs restore returns a zero exit status if it succeeds. Non zero is returned in case
       of failure.

AVAILABILITY
       btrfs is part of btrfs-progs. Please refer to the btrfs wiki
       http://btrfs.wiki.kernel.org for further details.

SEE ALSO
       mkfs.btrfs(8), btrfs-rescue(8), btrfs-check(8)

Btrfs v4.20.1                            01/23/2019                         BTRFS-RESTORE(8)

 

 

Súgó kimenet

sudo btrfs restore
usage: btrfs restore [options] <device> <path> | -l <device>

    Try to restore files from a damaged filesystem (unmounted)

    -s|--snapshots       get snapshots
    -x|--xattr           restore extended attributes
    -m|--metadata        restore owner, mode and times
    -S|--symlink         restore symbolic links
    -v|--verbose         verbose
    -i|--ignore-errors   ignore errors
    -o|--overwrite       overwrite
    -t <bytenr>          tree location
    -f <bytenr>          filesystem location
    -u|--super <mirror>  super mirror
    -r|--root <rootid>   root objectid
    -d                   find dir
    -l|--list-roots      list tree roots
    -D|--dry-run         dry run (only list files that would be recovered)
    --path-regex <regex>
                         restore only filenames matching regex,
                         you have to use following syntax (possibly quoted):
                         ^/(|home(|/username(|/Desktop(|/.*))))$
    -c                   ignore case (--path-regex only)

 

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