On 09/30/2017 04:53 PM, Peter Grandi wrote:
>> My Hypothesis, it should be the ID of the root subvolume ( or
>> 5 if it is not mounted). [ ... ]
> Well, a POSIX filesystem typically has a root directory, and it
> can be mounted as the system root or any other point. A Btrfs
> filesystem has multipl
30.09.2017 14:57, Goffredo Baroncelli пишет:
> (please ignore my previous email, because I wrote somewhere "top id" instead
> of "top level")
> Hi All,
>
> I am trying to figure out which means "top level" in the output of "btrfs sub
> list"
>
>
Digging in git history - "top level" originally
30.09.2017 17:53, Peter Grandi пишет:
>> I am trying to figure out which means "top level" in the
>> output of "btrfs sub list"
>
> The terminology (and sometimes the detailed behaviour) of Btrfs
> is not extremely consistent, I guess because of permissive
> editorship of the design, in a "let 100
> I am trying to figure out which means "top level" in the
> output of "btrfs sub list"
The terminology (and sometimes the detailed behaviour) of Btrfs
is not extremely consistent, I guess because of permissive
editorship of the design, in a "let 1000 flowers bloom" sort
of fashion so that does no
(please ignore my previous email, because I wrote somewhere "top id" instead of
"top level")
Hi All,
I am trying to figure out which means "top level" in the output of "btrfs sub
list"
ghigo@venice:~$ sudo btrfs sub list /
[sudo] password for ghigo:
ID 257 gen 548185 top level 5 path debian
I