Hi! I’m learning how to use btrfs and I need some advice.
One one of my desktop, I made the mistake of creating 2 partitions, one for /
(root) and one for home
. Both are btrfs. I didn’t know that I could use subvolumes so that they could share the same physical space.
My question: How can I merge the root and home btrfs partitions into only 1 partition that would use btrfs subvolumes?
I’m looking for something like that:
- Partition1 (btrfs)
- subvolume 1:
@root
(mounted to/
) - subvolume 2:
@home
(mounted to/home
)
- subvolume 1:
- Partition 2, 3, 4…
My current setup:
- 1 physical hard drive (1 TB), shown as
sda
below - The partitions I want to merge are
sda7
andsda8
- That computer is an iMac also running MacOS so it has a few other partitions that I should not touch
$ lsblk
NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINTS
sda 8:0 0 931,5G 0 disk
├─sda1 8:1 0 200M 0 part /boot/efi
├─sda2 8:2 0 371,1G 0 part
├─sda3 8:3 0 619,9M 0 part
├─sda4 8:4 0 600M 0 part
├─sda5 8:5 0 1023M 0 part
├─sda7 8:7 0 422,9G 0 part /home
└─sda8 8:8 0 135,1G 0 part /
sdb 8:16 1 0B 0 disk
sr0 11:0 1 1024M 0 rom
$ blkid
/dev/sda4: UUID="d970eea2-142b-3f1c-9650-5e496d1e9b4b" BLOCK_SIZE="4096" LABEL="Linux HFS+ ESP" TYPE="hfsplus" PARTLABEL="Linux HFS+ ESP" PARTUUID="eab00592-b96d-4ecb-b2e9-816c95eaf860"
/dev/sda2: UUID="6a26963c-eabb-3e42-9e8d-8677a8282b61" BLOCK_SIZE="4096" LABEL="DD Macintosh" TYPE="hfsplus" PARTLABEL="DD Mac" PARTUUID="8257316c-1fd7-4885-bf2b-7e99557acd85"
/dev/sda7: UUID="22f5e59e-8509-484a-92d5-e7dc03bb70cd" UUID_SUB="78a998f5-db55-4a31-9506-afe548ec8d5e" BLOCK_SIZE="4096" TYPE="btrfs" PARTLABEL="Mint Home" PARTUUID="20b6c31d-5e2d-416f-beb3-faa295af67df"
/dev/sda5: UUID="587b0093-4b64-468a-9a01-b933630d184b" BLOCK_SIZE="4096" TYPE="ext4" PARTUUID="a47a3fbf-534a-435d-8916-0f83edebf296"
/dev/sda3: UUID="d0c171e8-572d-39f9-8bdc-38f33744a19a" BLOCK_SIZE="4096" LABEL="Recovery HD" TYPE="hfsplus" PARTLABEL="Recovery HD" PARTUUID="c9d0673b-bb2e-4322-9bf9-c661f7de6856"
/dev/sda1: LABEL_FATBOOT="EFI" LABEL="EFI" UUID="67E3-17ED" BLOCK_SIZE="512" TYPE="vfat" PARTLABEL="EFI System Partition" PARTUUID="d30954cb-b9b6-40fa-9202-a18cf146f7df"
/dev/sda8: UUID="7027382a-4369-4276-b916-9997c1007e5b" UUID_SUB="3e516464-dee1-4bda-9621-29591d54dc2d" BLOCK_SIZE="4096" TYPE="btrfs" PARTLABEL="Mint root" PARTUUID="f2fdb8cc-54fd-46c8-bf1f-85954c1dc363"
You can generally do almost anything to a btrfs while the system is running with the filesystem mounted. In fact, most operations require the btrfs to be mounted.
You should keep a live USB handy though in case you mess up. Oh and also verify that you have a sufficient amount of backups of your important data. 1 copy can turn into 0 copies quite quickly. Rule of thumb places the minimum at 3 copies.
Yes, for modifications to the root mount, you must rebuild the initrd for those changes to actually be applied where it matters.
How this is done fully depends on the distribution and is one of the more significant technical details that differ between just about every distro family. Consult your distro’s documentation on that.