First, apologies if this is "well known", I''m totally new here, and haven''t figured out yet how to search the archives. Also, I''m not a subscriber, so please respond to me as well as the list. I''ve had a number of issues with distribution installations (separate and unrelated issues, but history and context). I had a system set up, with a separate /home (brtfs, sda1), when it crashed (badly) while updating and rebuilding the kernel. I installed again (different window system, same distribution) and to be "completely safe", I left the /home out of the new setup. I want (need) to keep it because it has a very large of digital photos and I''d rather not have to restore them again (between audio, video, the photos, DVD images, about 800GB). So, I now have a volume/subvolume on one disk, where the subvolume is /home (brtfs, sde2), and I want to change fstab to mount sda1 as /home instead. For any other FS I''ve worked with, simple edits of fstab would be enough, but doing so doesn''t appear to be enough for btrfs. Even though things look OK from the command line, logging in through the window system fails (actually, just hangs). I assume this means I should be doing something to "clean up" the subvolume? Or maybe there''s something in the Window system configuration to change? I''m running Linux Mint 14 KDE. My fstab for the parts in question looks like: # / was on /dev/sde2 during installation UUID=1a...9 / btrfs defaults,subvol=@ 0 1 # /home was on /dev/sde2 during installation UUID=1a...9 /home btrfs defaults,subvol=@home 0 2 What I want is something like: # / was on /dev/sde2 during installation UUID=1a...9 / btrfs defaults 0 1 # /home is on /dev/sda1 UUID=7f...3 /home btrfs defaults 0 2 Thanks for bearing with me as I learn this new environment. ;-) Bob -- 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
On Feb 18, 2013, at 12:45 AM, Bob McGowan <ramjr0915@gmail.com> wrote:>> Even though things look OK from the command line, logging in through the > window system fails (actually, just hangs). > > I assume this means I should be doing something to "clean up" the > subvolume? Or maybe there''s something in the Window system > configuration to change? > > I''m running Linux Mint 14 KDE. My fstab for the parts in question looks > like: > > # / was on /dev/sde2 during installation > UUID=1a...9 / btrfs defaults,subvol=@ 0 1 > # /home was on /dev/sde2 during installation > UUID=1a...9 /home btrfs defaults,subvol=@home 0 2 > > What I want is something like: > # / was on /dev/sde2 during installation > UUID=1a...9 / btrfs defaults 0 1 > # /home is on /dev/sda1 > UUID=7f...3 /home btrfs defaults 0 2The 2nd fstab implies a completely different disk, the first partition is btrfs, mounted as /home. So long as the contents are user folders, i.e. the same thing found in sde2 subvol @home, then it''s functionally the same as what you had before. Also, btrfs doesn''t need fs_passno set. Chris Murphy-- 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
On 02/18/2013 09:08 AM, Chris Murphy wrote:> On Feb 18, 2013, at 12:45 AM, Bob McGowan <ramjr0915@gmail.com> wrote: > >> Even though things look OK from the command line, logging in through the >> window system fails (actually, just hangs). >> >> I assume this means I should be doing something to "clean up" the >> subvolume? Or maybe there''s something in the Window system >> configuration to change? >> >> I''m running Linux Mint 14 KDE. My fstab for the parts in question looks >> like: >> >> # / was on /dev/sde2 during installation >> UUID=1a...9 / btrfs defaults,subvol=@ 0 1 >> # /home was on /dev/sde2 during installation >> UUID=1a...9 /home btrfs defaults,subvol=@home 0 2 >> >> What I want is something like: >> # / was on /dev/sde2 during installation >> UUID=1a...9 / btrfs defaults 0 1 >> # /home is on /dev/sda1 >> UUID=7f...3 /home btrfs defaults 0 2 > The 2nd fstab implies a completely different disk, the first partition is btrfs, mounted as /home. So long as the contents are user folders, i.e. the same thing found in sde2 subvol @home, then it''s functionally the same as what you had before. > > Also, btrfs doesn''t need fs_passno set. > > > Chris MurphyHi, Chris, Thanks for the information. As for fs_passno, what you''re seeing is what was put there by the install process. I''m assuming, if it''s not needed, that the proper value would be zero? You have confirmed what I thought was correct. But trying it the first time failed. My login acted as though the user was valid but login didn''t complete, returning to the login screen. Since I was just able to reconfigure fstab, and it worked, I''d say I probably fat fingered something and just didn''t notice. In any case, many thanks, again. ;) Bob -- 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