Btrfs
I tried to have a root filesystem into btrfs for a Gandi server, and succeed after a number of trial-error. Here are my steps if it can be useful to others.
WARNING: this is EXPERIMENTAL and could cause DATA LOSS.
This was updated on 2020-09-24 for Debian 10 buster + GandiV5, and on 2022-02-02 for Debian 11 bullseye + GandiV5. An older version was for Debian 9 jessie or Ubuntu 18.04 LTS + GandiV4.
Create the server
On GandiV5, create a new server with e.g. 1 proc, 256 Mio RAM, 1 system disk, Debian 10 buster or Debian 11 bullseye.
Update the packages:
apt update && apt upgrade -y
For Debian 10 buster (only), define backports (btrfs-progs must contain btrfs-convert, see this Debian bug) (this is not needed for Debian 11):
echo 'deb https://deb.debian.org/debian buster-backports main' > /etc/apt/sources.list.d/debian-backports.list
Install btrfs-progs:
apt update && apt install -t buster-backports btrfs-progs # Debian 10 buster apt update && apt install btrfs-progs # Debian 11 bullseye
On GandiV5, stop the server, open the page about the system disk, clone the system disk with another (definitive) name, and attach this cloned disk to the server, start the server.
Convert to btrfs
- Mostly from [1]
Display the active root filesystem, and you will be able to deduce what is the cloned filesystem: (beware: given the two filesystems have the same UUID, the mounted root filesystem could be /dev/xvdb1 – it happened once)
ls /dev/xvd* mount|grep xvd blkid
Let’s say /dev/xvdb1 is the clone filesystem, we convert it to btrfs: (man 8 btrfs-convert)
fsck.ext4 -f /dev/xvdb1 # optional btrfs-convert -p /dev/xvdb1
Here, I obtained the following error:
root@test:~# btrfs-convert -p /dev/xvdb1 create btrfs filesystem: blocksize: 4096 nodesize: 16384 features: extref, skinny-metadata (default) creating ext2 image file creating btrfs metadata Unable to find block group for 0 27081] Unable to find block group for 0 Unable to find block group for 0 ctree.c:2245: split_leaf: BUG_ON `1` triggered, value 1 btrfs-convert(+0x11b5a)[0x559c159c1b5a] btrfs-convert(+0x1589b)[0x559c159c589b] btrfs-convert(btrfs_search_slot+0x269)[0x559c159c6401] btrfs-convert(btrfs_insert_empty_items+0x92)[0x559c159c7b3c] btrfs-convert(btrfs_record_file_extent+0x1bc)[0x559c159d46b4] btrfs-convert(record_file_blocks+0x14a)[0x559c159bfe92] btrfs-convert(+0x10349)[0x559c159c0349] btrfs-convert(+0x1135f)[0x559c159c135f] btrfs-convert(main+0x1f59)[0x559c159bdefb] /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6(__libc_start_main+0xe7)[0x7f4c11c3bb97] btrfs-convert(_start+0x2a)[0x559c159bb5ca] Aborted
According to [2] and [3], it can be worked around: (this command could take some hours, depending on disk size and number of files)
btrfs-convert -d -p /dev/xvdb1
or even:
btrfs-convert -n -d -p /dev/xvdb1
Or, if still unsuccessful, try to add free space, or if still unsuccessfull, re-compile btrfs-progs in version 4.17.1 (this last try worked for me for 50 Gio disk with 24 Gio free space on Debian 9 jessie, expanded after its original size was 30 Gio (=4 Gio free space)).
Then, mount the filesystem and delete the old ext4 snapshot:
mount /dev/xvdb1 /mnt btrfs subvolume delete /mnt/ext2_saved btrfs filesystem defrag -r /mnt # could take dozen of minuts btrfs balance start /mnt # could take hours
Promote as root filesystem
- Mostly from [4]
Enter the chrooted system:
for i in dev dev/pts proc sys; do mount --bind /$i /mnt/$i; done chroot /mnt blkid|grep xvdb1 vi /etc/fstab
Edit the root filesystem with: (the UUID is from the command blkid)
UUID=a74f5787-aee1-4981-b7e6-fbd3cb6ac919 / btrfs defaults 0 1
There are 3 things to change on this line: UUID, ext4 → btrfs, and the options now to "defaults".
(in vi, type "dd" to remove a line, "i" to enter in edit mode, Esc to quit edit mode, ":x" to save and quit.)
Update grub:
update-grub
Change the reference of the root device (will be xvda1 when it will be the root device):
sed -i s/xvdb1/xvda1/g /boot/grub/grub.cfg
Quit:
exit for i in dev/pts dev proc sys; do umount /mnt/$i; done umount /mnt exit
Define the cooked disk as boot disk
In Gandi V5 interface, stop the server, detach the old root disk and define the cooked disk as "Use to start".
Launch the server (it should correctly start, even if the /boot directory is on the main partition / (some old documents said it didn’t work because grub didn’t know the btrfs filesystem, but it is fixed now)).
df -hT
It should show something like:
/dev/xvda1 btrfs 50G 32G 19G 63% /
Delete the old root disk.
You can delete the packages grub-efi-amd64, grub-efi-amd64-bin, grub-pc, grub-pc-bin since they are not used, but keep /etc/default/grub with Gandi customisations:
cp -a /etc/default/grub /root/grub apt-get purge -y grub-efi-amd64 grub-efi-amd64-bin grub-pc grub-pc-bin mv /root/grub /etc/default/grub apt-mark manual grub-common grub2-common update-grub # to check it still work and you should reboot now to be sure it reboots correctly
Troubleshootings
- During a conversion, the root filesystem was mounted read-only in btrfs; it was probably because I didn’t change the options "rw,noatime,errors=remount-ro" to "defaults"