Kirk Wolff
2011-Feb-05 02:44 UTC
Suggestion for sticky-compression mount setting (default mount options)
As I''ve been using btrfs with an external USB drive, I wonder how to handle efficiently the compression setting. When I plug a drive in to ubuntu, it is automatically mounted. Its mounted without the compression option as its not in fstab. I don''t see it as desirable to install each usb drive in fstab on each computer that it may be used just so that compression is automatically enabled. In discussion with cjb on irc, I came to realize that the compression setting shouldn''t be filesystem-wide therefore it doesn''t make sense to have default mount options for an entire btrfs filesystem as you may want compression on one subvolume and not on another. Therefore, it seems to me that default mount options should be able to be configured for each subvolume. If you follow this idea through, this means that you would need to be able to both override each of the default mount options from the mount command (or fstab). For example, if a subvolume has its default mount option set to compress, you should be able to disable compression if you manually mount it with "-o nocompress". If mount default mount options were able to be configured through btrfs for each subvolume, then for the case when you have a simple USB drive that you''re using for backups, the default subvolume could have compress automatically set when its plugged into a PC. Then you can use snapshots alongside the default subvolume to perform a type of differential backups (similar to rsnapshot, but using COW instead of hard links). I can guess there are people out there that may want other mount options to be carried around with the subvolume such as disabling COW or whatever. What are your thoughts on the above? Please advise. - Kirk
Felix Blanke
2011-Feb-05 12:18 UTC
Re: Suggestion for sticky-compression mount setting (default mount options)
Hi, I don''t think that the fs is a good place to store default mountoptions. If you want to auto mount usb devices with compression, just write a udev rule or whatever ubuntu uses to mount usb devices. Regards, Felix Am Fri, 04 Feb 2011 20:44:03 -0600 schrieb Kirk Wolff <kirk@wolffelectronicdesign.com>:> As I''ve been using btrfs with an external USB drive, I wonder how to > handle efficiently the compression setting. When I plug a drive in to > ubuntu, it is automatically mounted. Its mounted without the > compression option as its not in fstab. I don''t see it as desirable > to install each usb drive in fstab on each computer that it may be > used just so that compression is automatically enabled. In > discussion with cjb on irc, I came to realize that the compression > setting shouldn''t be filesystem-wide therefore it doesn''t make sense > to have default mount options for an entire btrfs filesystem as you > may want compression on one subvolume and not on another. Therefore, > it seems to me that default mount options should be able to be > configured for each subvolume. If you follow this idea through, this > means that you would need to be able to both override each of the > default mount options from the mount command (or fstab). For > example, if a subvolume has its default mount option set to compress, > you should be able to disable compression if you manually mount it > with "-o nocompress". If mount default mount options were able to be > configured through btrfs for each subvolume, then for the case when > you have a simple USB drive that you''re using for backups, the > default subvolume could have compress automatically set when its > plugged into a PC. Then you can use snapshots alongside the default > subvolume to perform a type of differential backups (similar to > rsnapshot, but using COW instead of hard links). I can guess there > are people out there that may want other mount options to be carried > around with the subvolume such as disabling COW or whatever. What > are your thoughts on the above? Please advise. > > - Kirk >-- 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
Olaf van der Spek
2011-Feb-05 13:19 UTC
Re: Suggestion for sticky-compression mount setting (default mount options)
On Sat, Feb 5, 2011 at 3:44 AM, Kirk Wolff <kirk@wolffelectronicdesign.com> wrote:> one subvolume and not on another. Therefore, it seems to me that > default mount options should be able to be configured for each > subvolume. If you follow this idea through, this means that you wouldIs compression a per-file option or a per-subvolume option? Seems a bit inflexible if it''s per-subvolume. -- Olaf -- 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
cwillu
2011-Feb-05 15:31 UTC
Re: Suggestion for sticky-compression mount setting (default mount options)
On Sat, Feb 5, 2011 at 6:18 AM, Felix Blanke <felixblanke@gmail.com> wrote:> Hi, > > I don''t think that the fs is a good place to store default mountoptions. > > If you want to auto mount usb devices with compression, just write a > udev rule or whatever ubuntu uses to mount usb devices.I believe the point was to avoid configuring each system he might use it with; otherwise a simple fstab entry would have sufficed. -- 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
Reasonably Related Threads
- R: Re: [PATCH 5/5] btrfs: Add ioctl to set snapshot readonly/writable
- [PATCH V2] Btrfs: fix subvolume mount by name problem when default mount subvolume is set
- [PATCH] BTRFS-PROG: recursively subvolume snapshot and delete
- R: default subvolume abilities/restrictions
- [PATCH 1/3] Btrfs-progs: add support to set subvolume/snapshot readonly