- Plenty of storage - snapshots will take lot of space
- Latest Arch Linux install iso because those have newer kernels and more bugfixes in btrfs.
- Have previous experience with installing Arch (like you can install arch with a blind fold).
We will need two of them, one for /boot and the other one will be a btrfs partition with subvolumes.
- /dev/sda1 - this will be /boot with vfat filesystem because UEFI or syslinux for legacy BIOS boot
mkfs.fat -F32 /dev/sda1
- /dev/sda2 - btrfs with bunch of subvolumes
mkfs.btrfs /dev/sda2
I would recommend to use GPT partitioning scheme because it is just better, unless you want to do windows dualboot then I'm just sorry for you...
We will create few of them to support easy snapshoting with snapper
-
Mount the root btrfs volume
mount /dev/sda2 /mnt
-
Create subvolume for root, home, var and one for snapshots
btrfs subvolume create /mnt/@root btrfs subvolume create /mnt/@var btrfs subvolume create /mnt/@home btrfs subvolume create /mnt/@snapshots
-
Mount them.
umount /mnt mount -o noatime,compress=lzo,space_cache,subvol=@root /dev/sda2 /mnt mkdir /mnt/{boot,var,home,.snapshots} mount -o noatime,compress=lzo,space_cache,subvol=@var /dev/sda2 /mnt/var mount -o noatime,compress=lzo,space_cache,subvol=@home /dev/sda2 /mnt/home mount -o noatime,compress=lzo,space_cache,subvol=@snapshots /dev/sda2 /mnt/.snapshots
Make sure that fstab is okay after you finish
You can create snapshots like so
btrfs subvolume snapshot -r / /.snapshots/@root-`date +%F-%R`
And to restore from snapshot you just delete the currently used @root and replace it with a earlier snapshot
mount /dev/sda2 /mnt
btrfs subvolume delete /mnt/@root`
brtfs subvolume snapshot /mnt/@snapshots/@root-2015-08-10-20:19 /mnt/@root
and then just reboot :)
you will probably want to use Snapper or something like that to manage your snapshots.
- syslinux sould be capable of booting a btrfs volume but afaik it is just talk, I havent found anyone in the internet who has a working syslinux btrfs boot without seperate /boot parition. Only GRUB is capable of booting from bare btrfs file system.
- /boot is not snapshottable with this setup, someone somewhere sugested to create a systemd service to copy files from btrfs /boot to your seperate FAT32 ESP partition when files change in /boot folder. I havent tried that yet.