I was Googling around for ways to check fragmentation on Btrfs, and I came across the ''filefrag'' command. Even though it is a ext2/3 command, it seems to work on Btrfs files since it uses the FIEMAP ioctl to determine the number of extents. From a bash prompt, I found I could examine large sections with something like: # for file in $(find <PATH/TO/BTRFS/VOL/> -type f); do filefrag ${file}; done | sort -n -k 2 | less You may want to start with smaller, more discrete portions of a Btrfs volume, since I ran into stalls running on more populated Btrfs volumes. Also, I haven''t tested this on any RAID devices. I was wondering if the people on the M/L could tell if the approach was garbage, or should it work? You can use the results to defrag targeted files. However, I discovered that defraging files on a Volume that has snapshots may be counter-productive. You end up duplicating the files you are defragging, since Btrfs now needs to create different copies for the snapshot and the original (or at least portions of the file). -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-btrfs" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html