I''ve been creating some time-based snapshots, e.g. # btrfs subvolume snapshot @root 2012-01-09-@root After some changes, I wanted to see what had changed, so I tried: # btrfs subvolume find-new @root 2012-01-09-@root transid marker was 37 which doesn''t print anything out. Curiously, if I make a snapshot of the snapshot, then I get output from the delta: # btrfs subvolume snapshot 2012-01-09-@root tmp # btrfs subvolume find-new @root tmp ..... lots of output ..... I haven''t seen this behavior on other filesystems or subvolumes. My intent was to filter through the small script below to compute the size of the delta. Thanks, David #! /usr/bin/perl # Process the output of btrfs subvolume find-new and print out the # size used by the new data. Doesn''t show delta in metadata, only the # data itself. use strict; my $bytes = 0; while (<>) { if (/ len (\d+) /) { $bytes += $1; } } printf "%d bytes\n", $bytes; printf "%.1f MByte\n", $bytes / 1024.0 / 1024.0; printf "%.1f GByte\n", $bytes / 1024.0 / 1024.0 / 1024.0; -- 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