On 08/09/2013 02:42 PM, Tomasz Chmielewski wrote: > On Fri, 09 Aug 2013 14:08:48 +0800 > Wang Shilong <wangsl.f...@cn.fujitsu.com> wrote: > >>> 0/4494 839516160 18446744073709481984 --- <------ want to remove >>> only this one >>> >>> 13/1 2142674944 2142674944 >>> 0/3973,0/3974,0/3978,0/3981,0/4355,0/4373,0/4398,0/4400,0/4401,0/4427,0/4448,0/4449,0/4457,0/4458,0/4475,0/4476,0/4487,0/4488,0/4489,0/4490,0/4491,0/4492,0/4493,0/4494,0/4495,0/4496,0/4497,0/4498,0/4499,0/4506,0/4507,0/4518 >>> >>> >>> Parent qgroup 13/1 makes accounting for other qgroups - therefore, >>> I don't want to remove it. >> >> Sorry, you must destroy relation between 13/1 and 4494. then you can >> remove it. > > So how exactly should I do it? A bit confused on how to proceed.
btrfs qgroup remove 4494 13/1 <mnt> will destroy relation between 4494 and 13/1 Then you can try: btrfs qgroup destroy 4494 <mnt> Thanks, Wang > > - remove 13/1, remove 4494 > > - add 13/1, and add all previous qgroups to it? > 0/3973,0/3974,0/3978,0/3981,0/4355,0/4373,0/4398,0/4400,0/4401,.... > > - run quota scan? > > > It can't be right, can it? > > -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html