Yes, to my shame I have seen it… but I’m quite stupid and thought it complicated…
I also think on reinstalling I should use snapper.
Yes, to my shame I have seen it… but I’m quite stupid and thought it complicated…
I also think on reinstalling I should use snapper.
That is beyond my knowledge. (I do not use Timeshift myself, because i think timeshift is not safe ( because it uses writeable snapshots))
I would do the same in reverse order:
Ok, as a starting point I’ll try that.
At least now you have a complete backup (of one snapshot)
Backsnap would have done backups of all snapshots one after the other
If you have tips to make it more easy to use, you always can contact me.
(for the benefit of others)
(and for the benefit of backsnap
)
P.S.:
Okay.
So it looks good so far, now I’m going to do the install - see you later
And… Thank you!
Ok, fresh install. Opened Dolphin via Timeshift (ROOT) and F4 terminal, F3 dual pane and navigated to the snapshot sent out to the old Western Digital (W2) disk.
btrfs send --compressed-data /run/media/root/W2/SnapshotsBTRFS/@ | pv -pTteabfW -i 0.2 | btrfs receive /run/timeshift/24607/backup/RESTORE/
At subvol /run/media/root/W2/SnapshotsBTRFS/@
Seeing nice progress around 60~80MiB/s (though no eta… but knightrider style progress shuttle).
I’m stoked about sending snapshots out, my son @James2talk (now 12) just installed on his slimline laptop, so he’ll need to get a drive for external backups…
You even can do this over ssh (with backsnap
)
I do backup 5 PCs this way (1 local, 4 per ssh)
Now I sent @
from W2 into the timeshift folder:
/run/timeshift/34080/backup/timeshift-btrfs/snapshots
Now I see the folder of a fresh snapshot next to this @
snapshot.
However, Timeshift only sees the folder.
What’s the next step - to mount/restore this snapshot?
I see it listed:
[SteelLegend snapshots]# btrfs subvolume list /
ID 256 gen 169 top level 5 path @
ID 257 gen 169 top level 5 path @home
ID 258 gen 165 top level 5 path @cache
ID 259 gen 169 top level 5 path @log
ID 260 gen 72 top level 5 path @swap
ID 262 gen 95 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_00-23-05/@
ID 264 gen 160 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/@
So I assume we won’t use Timeshift to restore it…
Now I’m in the Timeshift folder, and I made the @
read only.
So I’m guessing btrfs restore @/
but I can’t figure the <destination>
'cos it’s not simply /
is it?
How i would solve it if it was snapper:
@ is your /
subvolume
@home is your /home
subvolume
With btrfs-root (not “@”, but “/” !) mounted to /mnt/BTRFSROOT
you see:
/mnt/BTRFSROOT/@ (damaged)
/mnt/BTRFSROOT/@home
/mnt/BTRFSROOT/@cache
/mnt/BTRFSROOT/@log
...
I think you are good to boot
if all goes well, in 10 days delete /mnt/BTRFSROOT/@damaged
step by step with explanations:
Haha ok, from a LIVE session.
Apart from being read-only, is there any other actual difference with the snapshots?
Once again, slightly confused - I see the snapshot on the mounted backup BTRFS volume:
btrfs send --compressed-data /mnt/W2/SnapshotsBTRFS/2/@ | pv -pTteabfW -i 0.2 | btrfs receive /run/media/manjaro/9e691e81-7bf8-42e2-a190-bf964d6f4549/snapshotsys
At subvol /mnt/W2/SnapshotsBTRFS/2/@
At subvol @
So my understanding is that now, the snapshot is on the new installed SSD at /snapshotsys/@
Rebooting from the SSD now:
btrfs subvolume list /
ID 256 gen 285 top level 5 path @
ID 257 gen 285 top level 5 path @home
ID 258 gen 271 top level 5 path @cache
ID 259 gen 285 top level 5 path @log
ID 260 gen 72 top level 5 path @swap
ID 262 gen 95 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_00-23-05/@
ID 264 gen 160 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/@
ID 265 gen 254 top level 256 path snapshotsys/@
> btrfs subvolume get-default /
ID 256 gen 284 top level 5 path @
This explanation is for your special use with custom layout of snapper
.
I’m pretty sure this confuses a lot of newbies when using Btrfs with TimeShift or default layout of snapper
.
I think so, any idea about how I could use that snapshot? I have just reinstalled again - and really want to restore that snapshot…
It felt so close.
Sorry, I haven’t read many posts here.
Which snapshot do you want to restore?
Sorry, hold on… I’ll need to come back again - I just reinstalled.
I’ve one snapshot which I exported to my external drive… which has now gone - so I’ll need to bring that in again.
The one I wanted was ID 265 gen 254 … snapshotsys/@
Okay, You want to reduce stress, reinstallation is an easier solution for newbies.
I’m not sure, I’m running into a lot of headaches with reinstalling - I forgot how much there is.
Stupid hiccups - like not now being able to get easystroke to build, and fzf not working right in Fish terminal after importing the configs…
Ok, so now starting again…
Step 1:
❯ btrfs send --compressed-data /mnt/W2/SnapshotsBTRFS/2/@ | pv -pteabfW -i 0.2 | btrfs receive /mnt/sys-back/
So now I see:
@/mnt/sys-back/@
Name: @
UUID: d4cfc081-1a55-994a-997c-c7fea97205ef
Parent UUID: -
Received UUID: 6c1c454b-2964-0543-bc47-87550424d1b8
Creation time: 2024-01-21 15:16:13 +0700
Subvolume ID: 264
Generation: 222
Gen at creation: 190
Parent ID: 256
Top level ID: 256
Flags: readonly
Send transid: 12457
Send time: 2024-01-21 15:16:13 +0700
Receive transid: 219
Receive time: 2024-01-21 15:22:52 +0700
Snapshot(s):
Quota group: n/a
Name: @
UUID: 241faeac-82ec-d243-ae23-0831657ecd49
Parent UUID: -
Received UUID: -
Creation time: 2024-01-21 13:52:22 +0700
Subvolume ID: 256
Generation: 226
Gen at creation: 10
Parent ID: 5
Top level ID: 5
Flags: -
Send transid: 0
Send time: 2024-01-21 13:52:22 +0700
Receive transid: 0
Receive time: -
Snapshot(s):
timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_14-00-05/@
timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_15-00-02/@
timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_15-20-33/@
Quota group: n/a
I wish to mount/restore the snapshot in sys-back…
ID 264 gen 222 top level 256 path mnt/sys-back/@
which also shows as ro=true
.
ID 256 gen 230 top level 5 path @
ID 257 gen 230 top level 5 path @home
ID 258 gen 209 top level 5 path @cache
ID 259 gen 230 top level 5 path @log
ID 260 gen 53 top level 5 path @swap
ID 261 gen 35 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_14-00-05/@
ID 262 gen 158 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_15-00-02/@
ID 263 gen 160 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_15-00-02/@home
ID 264 gen 222 top level 256 path mnt/sys-back/@
ID 265 gen 207 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_15-20-33/@
ID 266 gen 209 top level 5 path timeshift-btrfs/snapshots/2024-01-21_15-20-33/@home
/btrfs
and mount it as a Btrfs root tree.$ sudo mkdir /btrfs
$ sudo mount -t btrfs -o subvol=/ /dev/<Your disk> /btrfs/
Check ls -al /btrfs
to show all subvolumes within your system. If it works, then:
Copy the sys-back/@ from the external disk back to your running system.
# mkdir /btrfs/sys_backup
# btrfs send /mnt/sys-back/@ | btrfs receive /btrfs/sys_backup/
# mv /btrfs/@ /btrfs/@_backup
# mv /btrfs/sys_backup/@ /btrfs/
# btrfs property set -ts /btrfs/@ ro false
Don’t forget to adjust UUID in your old fstab and /etc/default/grub
after re-installation and recovery, then you need to rebuild initramfs (mkinitcpio -P
) and update the bootloader of your choice (For example: update-grub
for Grub)
ERROR: unable to resolve /mnt/sys-back/@
ERROR: realpath(/btrfs/@sys_backup) failed: No such file or directory…
So I’m just doing it /btrfs/@
drwxr-xr-x root root 72 B Sun Jan 21 17:31:50 2024 .
drwxr-xr-x root root 272 B Sun Jan 21 18:42:17 2024 ..
drwxr-xr-x root root 272 B Sun Jan 21 18:42:17 2024 @
drwxr-xr-x root root 104 B Sat Jan 13 09:51:52 2024 @cache
drwxr-xr-x root root 6 B Sun Jan 21 17:22:37 2024 @home
drwxr-xr-x root root 210 B Sun Jan 21 18:29:28 2024 @log
drwxr-xr-x root root 16 B Sun Jan 21 17:22:07 2024 @swap
drwxr-xr-x root root 210 B Sun Jan 21 19:00:02 2024 timeshift-btrfs
But now I notice, you say to ‘recover the backup’ there should already be @, and the added @sysbackup - but there’s no @ in there…
So it’s impossible to mv/btrfs/@ /btrfs/@_backup…
Does this mean the original ‘@’ is actually in root directory /?
Should I do
mv /@ /btrfs/@_backup
mv /btrfs/@ /@
When i look at the conversation in this Topic, i don’t understand why anyone would use BTRFS at all… i restored my EXT4 Partition on my PC and Laptop with Timeshift just for fun… and it was self explanation… how easy it was, to restore my stuff with the help from the Timeshift UI.
Booting into OS or Liveboot and starting timeshift, choosing the snapshot that i want to restore and clicking on the restore button and just follow the steps 1 by1, it was really user friendly.