btrfs-restore

BTRFS-RESTORE(8) BTRFS BTRFS-RESTORE(8)

NAME

   btrfs-restore - try to restore files from a damaged filesystem image

SYNOPSIS

   btrfs restore [options] <device> <path> | -l <device>

DESCRIPTION

   btrfs restore is used to try to salvage files from a damaged filesystem and restore them into path or just list the subvolume tree roots. The filesystem image is not modified.

   If  the  filesystem is damaged and cannot be repaired by the other tools (btrfs-check(8) or btrfs-rescue(8)), btrfs restore could be used to retrieve file data, as far as the metadata
   are readable. The checks done by restore are less strict and the process is usually able to get far enough to retrieve data from the whole filesystem. This comes at a cost  that  some
   data might be incomplete or from older versions if they're available.

   There are several options to attempt restoration of various file metadata type.  You can try a dry run first to see how well the process goes and use further options to extend the set
   of restored metadata.

   For images with damaged tree structures, there are several options to point the process to some spare copy.

OPTIONS

   -s|--snapshots
          get also snapshots that are skipped by default

   -x|--xattr
          get extended attributes

   -m|--metadata
          restore owner, mode and times for files and directories

   -S|--symlinks
          restore symbolic links as well as normal files

   -i|--ignore-errors
          ignore errors during restoration and continue

   -o|--overwrite
          overwrite directories/files in path, e.g. for repeated runs

   -t <bytenr>
          use bytenr to read the root tree

   -f <bytenr>
          only restore files that are under specified subvolume root pointed by bytenr

   -u|--super <mirror>
          use given superblock mirror identified by <mirror>, it can be 0,1 or 2

   -r|--root <rootid>
          only restore files that are under a specified subvolume whose objectid is rootid

   -d     find directory

   -l|--list-roots
          list subvolume tree roots, can be used as argument for -r

   -D|--dry-run
          dry run (only list files that would be recovered)

   --path-regex <regex>
          restore only filenames matching a regular expression (regex(7)) with a mandatory format

          ^/(|home(|/username(|/Desktop(|/.*))))$

          The format is not very comfortable and restores all files in the directories in the whole path, so this is not useful for restoring single file in a deep hierarchy.

   -c     ignore case (--path-regex only)

   -v|--verbose
          (deprecated) alias for global -v option

   Global options

   -v|--verbose
          be verbose and print what is being restored

EXIT STATUS

   btrfs restore returns a zero exit status if it succeeds. Non zero is returned in case of failure.

AVAILABILITY

   btrfs is part of btrfs-progs.  Please refer to the documentation at https://btrfs.readthedocs.io.

SEE ALSO

   btrfs-check(8), btrfs-rescue(8), mkfs.btrfs(8)

6.14 Apr 17, 2025 BTRFS-RESTORE(8)