8

In bash scripting, how could I check elegantly if a specific location is a btrfs subvolume?

I do NOT want to know if the given location is in a btrfs file system (or subvolume). I want to know if the given location is the head of a subvolume.

Ideally, the solution could be written in a bash function so I could write:

if is_btrfs_subvolume $LOCATION; then
    # ... stuff ...
fi 

An 'elegant' solution would be readable, small in code, small in resource consumption.

2 Answers 2

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The subvolume is identified by inode number 256, so you can check it simply by

if [ `stat --format=%i /path` -eq 256 ]; then ...; fi

There's also a so called empty-subvolume, ie. if a nested subvolume is snapshotted, this entity will exist in place of the original subvolume. Its inode number is 2.

For a generally reliable check wheter any directory is a subvolume, the filesystem type should be verified as well

stat -f --format=%T /path
5
  • All this seems overly complicated compared to the current provided solution, and brittle if any new inode number gets used, isn't it ?. Anyway, I like the additional peripheral information you provided, there might be actually a good solution hidding not so far.
    – vaab
    Oct 2, 2015 at 7:30
  • 2
    The command "btrfs subvolume list" requires root privileges because it uses a privileged ioctl to read the information about subvolumes, this was not menionted in the original answer. The inode number based test does not have such limitation. Next, I don't understand what do you mean by "brittle if any new inode number gets used". Each subvolume has inode number 256, this will not change. Regular files and directories in a subvolume have inode number 257 and higher.
    – kdave
    Oct 3, 2015 at 13:27
  • You are right. Your answer is nice and misses only the bash function implementation (that was originally asked) and it would also be a nice TLDR summary of the test.
    – vaab
    Mar 17, 2016 at 11:51
  • Looking at the inode number does not allow you to distinguish a subvolume of the same btrfs filesystem from a different btrfs filesystem mounted in a directory. Both appear with inode 256. Mar 25, 2023 at 6:30
  • Can a file or directory in other filesystems have inode 256? And if so, I suppose we will need to perform an additional check. (Perhaps to confirm from /etc/mtab that the path is btrfs mounted, which also doesn't need root access.)
    – KalEl
    Apr 13, 2023 at 16:04
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Solution1: Using @kdave suggestions:

is_btrfs_subvolume() {
    local dir=$1
    [ "$(stat -f --format="%T" "$dir")" == "btrfs" ] || return 1
    inode="$(stat --format="%i" "$dir")"
    case "$inode" in
        2|256)
            return 0;;
        *)
            return 1;;
    esac
}

Solution2: What I used before (only one call, but probably brittle):

is_btrfs_subvolume() {
    btrfs subvolume show "$1" >/dev/null 2>&1
}

EDIT: Corrected and replaced list by show as the behavior of list would not answer correctly on any normal btrfs directory.

EDIT2: as @kdave didn't post a full version of his superior answer, I added it to my answer.

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  • 1
    This function is not worked. For my case, $1 is any directory exist in a btrfs partition, will always return all subvolume list in this partition, altough, $1 is just a normal directory. if current directory is a subvolume, this directory will list as the last line of list, otherwise, not. I don't know how to down the answer ...
    – zw963
    Aug 2, 2016 at 7:48
  • Oh, yes, good catch. Sorry, I replaced 'list' by 'show'. Is it working as it should now ?
    – vaab
    Aug 2, 2016 at 8:26
  • You should run your script as root.
    – ceremcem
    May 14, 2017 at 10:53
  • Is this still working for you? The command correctly identifies subvolumes but is always returning 0 for me meaning I can't use it programatically.
    – Tom Wadley
    Jun 25, 2017 at 19:05
  • @TomWadley still working here. What version of btrfs-tools are you using ? (btrfs --version... I'm on v4.10.1.)
    – vaab
    Jun 26, 2017 at 8:35

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