"btrfs scrub is used to scrub a btrfs filesystem, which will read all data and metadata blocks from all devices and verify checksums, and automatically repair corrupted blocks if there’s a correct copy available. (That assumes you are using RAID1 --GG)
Scrub also tells me how many GB of data I have on my filesystem. The btrfs usage command gives the same results:
Here is the man page for btrfs-scrub:
EDIT:
I forgot to add that if your btrfs root_fs fails to mount you can still run scrub on the device it is on by using:
sudo btrfs scrub start /dev/sda1
Note: Scrub is not a filesystem checker (fsck) and does not verify nor repair structural damage in the filesystem."
Code:
:~$ [B][FONT=courier new]sudo -i[/FONT][/B] :~# [B][FONT=courier new]mount /dev/disk/by-uuid/47a4794f-b168-4c61-9d0c-cc22f4880116 /mnt (Note: I did not have to mount the <ROOT_FS> as a scrub target. I could have pointed scrub to / I mount <ROOT_FS> for all my btrfs work as a matter of habit. -GG) [/FONT][/B] :~# [COLOR=#ff0000][FONT=courier new][B]btrfs scrub start /mnt[/B][/FONT][/COLOR] scrub started on /mnt, fsid 47a4794f-b168-4c61-9d0c-cc22f4880116 (pid=28079) :~#[B] [FONT=courier new]btrfs scrub status /mnt[/FONT][/B] scrub status for 47a4794f-b168-4c61-9d0c-cc22f4880116 scrub started at Sun Jul 15 20:16:45 2018, running for 00:00:20 total bytes scrubbed: 1.31GiB with 0 errors ... :~# [FONT=courier new][B]btrfs scrub status /mnt[/B][/FONT] scrub status for 47a4794f-b168-4c61-9d0c-cc22f4880116 scrub started at Sun Jul 15 20:16:45 2018, running for 00:10:15 total bytes scrubbed: 70.60GiB with 0 errors :~#[FONT=courier new][B] btrfs scrub status /mnt[/B][/FONT] scrub status for 47a4794f-b168-4c61-9d0c-cc22f4880116 scrub started at Sun Jul 15 20:16:45 2018 and [B]finished[/B] after 00:16:17 total bytes scrubbed: [B]108.00GiB[/B] with 0 errors
Code:
:~# btrfs fi usage /mnt Overall: Device size: 698.64GiB Device allocated: 128.07GiB Device unallocated: 570.57GiB Device missing: 0.00B [B]Used: 108.00GiB[/B] Free (estimated): 587.97GiB (min: 302.69GiB) Data ratio: 1.00 Metadata ratio: 2.00 Global reserve: 159.78MiB (used: 0.00B) Data,single: Size:124.01GiB, Used:106.60GiB /dev/sda1 124.01GiB Metadata,DUP: Size:2.00GiB, Used:719.48MiB /dev/sda1 4.00GiB System,DUP: Size:32.00MiB, Used:16.00KiB /dev/sda1 64.00MiB Unallocated: /dev/sda1 570.57GiB
Code:
BTRFS-SCRUB(8) Btrfs Manual BTRFS-SCRUB(8) NAME btrfs-scrub - scrub btrfs filesystem SYNOPSIS btrfs scrub <subcommand> <args> DESCRIPTION btrfs scrub is used to scrub a btrfs filesystem, [COLOR=#ff0000][B]which will read all data from all disks and verify checksums. [I](Note: that's "read all the data". Scrub will replace a bad file with a good copy IF you are using RAID1, but it will not fix structual damage. Aslo, the defrag command WILL force snapshot population due to COW. - GG)[/I][/B][/COLOR] SUBCOMMAND cancel <path>|<device> If a scrub is running on the filesystem identified by <path>, cancel it. Progress is saved in the scrub progress file and scrubbing can be resumed later using the scrub resume command. If a <device> is given, the corresponding filesystem is found and scrub cancel behaves as if it was called on that filesystem. resume [-BdqrR] [-c <ioprio_class> -n <ioprio_classdata>] <path>|<device> Resume a canceled or interrupted scrub cycle on the filesystem identified by <path> or on a given <device>. Does not start a new scrub if the last scrub finished successfully. Options see scrub start. start [-BdqrRf] [-c <ioprio_class> -n <ioprio_classdata>] <path>|<device> Start a scrub on all devices of the filesystem identified by <path> or on a single <device>. If a scrub is already running, the new one fails. Without options, scrub is started as a background process. Progress can be obtained with the scrub status command. Scrubbing involves reading all data from all disks and verifying checksums. Errors are corrected along the way if possible. The default IO priority of scrub is the idle class. The priority can be configured similar to the ionice(1) syntax using -c and -n options. Options -B Do not background and print scrub statistics when finished. -d Print separate statistics for each device of the filesystem (-B only). -q Quiet. Omit error messages and statistics. -r Read only mode. Do not attempt to correct anything. -R Raw print mode. Print full data instead of summary. -c <ioprio_class> Set IO priority class (see ionice(1) manpage). -n <ioprio_classdata> Set IO priority classdata (see ionice(1) manpage). -f Force starting new scrub even if a scrub is already running. This is useful when scrub stat record file is damaged. status [-d] <path>|<device> Show status of a running scrub for the filesystem identified by <path> or for the specified <device>. If no scrub is running, show statistics of the last finished or canceled scrub for that filesystem or device. Options -d Print separate statistics for each device of the filesystem. EXIT STATUS btrfs scrub 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 btrfs wiki http://btrfs.wiki.kernel.org for further details. SEE ALSO mkfs.btrfs(8), Btrfs [B][COLOR=#ff0000]v4.4 [/COLOR][/B] [COLOR=#ff0000][B] 06/15/2017 [/B][/COLOR] BTRFS-SCRUB(8)
I forgot to add that if your btrfs root_fs fails to mount you can still run scrub on the device it is on by using:
sudo btrfs scrub start /dev/sda1