Provided by: btrfs-progs_6.12-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       btrfs-scrub - scrub btrfs filesystem, verify block checksums

SYNOPSIS

       btrfs scrub <subcommand> <args>

DESCRIPTION

       Scrub is a validation pass over all filesystem data and metadata that detects data checksum errors, basic
       super block errors, basic metadata block header errors, and disk read errors.

       Scrub  is done on a per-device base, if a device is specified to btrfs scrub start, then only that device
       will be scrubbed. Although btrfs will also try to read other device to find a good copy, if the mirror on
       that specified device failed to be read or pass verification.

       If a path of btrfs is specified to btrfs scrub start, btrfs will scrub all devices in parallel.

       On filesystems that use replicated  block  group  profiles  (e.g.  RAID1),  read-write  scrub  will  also
       automatically repair any damage by copying verified good data from one of the other replicas.

       Such  automatic  repair  is  also  carried  out  when  reading metadata or data from a read-write mounted
       filesystem.

       WARNING:
          As currently implemented, setting the NOCOW file attribute (by chattr +C) on a file implicitly enables
          NODATASUM. This means that while metadata for these files continues to be validated and  corrected  by
          scrub, the actual file data is not.

          Furthermore,  btrfs does not currently mark missing or failed disks as unreliable, so will continue to
          load-balance reads to potentially damaged replicas. This is not a problem normally because  damage  is
          detected  by checksum validation, but because NOCOW files are not protected by checksums, btrfs has no
          idea which mirror is good thus it can return the bad contents to the user space tool.

          Detecting and recovering from such failure requires manual intervention.

          Notably, systemd sets +C on journals by default, and libvirt  6.6 sets +C on storage pool directories
          by default.  Other applications or distributions may also set +C to try to improve performance.

       NOTE:
          Scrub is not a filesystem checker (fsck, btrfs-check(8)). It can only detect filesystem  damage  using
          the  checksum  validation,  and  it can only repair filesystem damage by copying from other known good
          replicas.

          btrfs-check(8) performs more exhaustive checking and can sometimes be used, with expert  guidance,  to
          rebuild certain corrupted filesystem structures in the absence of any good replica.

       The  user  is  supposed  to run it manually or via a periodic system service. The recommended period is a
       month but it could be less.  The  estimated  device  bandwidth  utilization  is  about  80%  on  an  idle
       filesystem.

       The  scrubbing  status  is  recorded  in  /var/lib/btrfs/  in textual files named scrub.status.UUID for a
       filesystem identified by the given UUID. (Progress state is communicated through a  named  pipe  in  file
       scrub.progress.UUID  in  the same directory.) The status file is updated every 5 seconds. A resumed scrub
       will continue from the last saved position.

       Scrub can be started only on a mounted filesystem, though it's possible to scrub only a selected  device.
       See btrfs scrub start for more.

   Bandwidth and IO limiting
       NOTE:
          The ionice(1) may not be generally supported by all IO schedulers and the options to btrfs scrub start
          may not work as expected.

       In  the past when the CFQ IO scheduler was generally used the ionice(1) syscalls set the priority to idle
       so the IO would not interfere with regular IO. Since the kernel 5.0 the CFQ is not available.

       The IO scheduler known to support that is BFQ, but first read the documentation before using it!

       For other commonly used schedulers like mq-deadline it's recommended to use cgroup2 IO  controller  which
       could  be  managed by e.g. systemd (documented in systemd.resource-control). However, starting scrub like
       that is not yet completely straightforward. The IO controller  must  know  the  physical  device  of  the
       filesystem and create a slice so all processes started from that belong to the same accounting group.

          $ systemd-run -p "IOReadBandwidthMax=/dev/sdx 10M" btrfs scrub start -B /

       Since linux 5.14 it's possible to set the per-device bandwidth limits in a BTRFS-specific way using files
       /sys/fs/btrfs/FSID/devinfo/DEVID/scrub_speed_max.   This  setting  is  not  persistent,  lasts  until the
       filesystem is unmounted.  Currently set limits can be displayed by command btrfs scrub limit.

          $ echo 100m > /sys/fs/btrfs/9b5fd16e-1b64-4f9b-904a-74e74c0bbadc/devinfo/1/scrub_speed_max
          $ btrfs scrub limit /
          UUID: 9b5fd16e-1b64-4f9b-904a-74e74c0bbadc
          Id      Limit      Path
          --  ---------  --------
           1  100.00MiB  /dev/sdx

SUBCOMMAND

       cancel <path>|<device>
              If a scrub is running on the filesystem identified by path or device, cancel it.

              If a device is specified, the corresponding filesystem is found and btrfs scrub cancel behaves  as
              if  it  was  called  on  that filesystem.  The progress is saved in the status file so btrfs scrub
              resume can continue from the last position.

       limit [options] <path>
              Show or set scrub limits on devices of the given filesystem.

              Options

              -d|--devid DEVID
                     select the device by DEVID to apply the limit

              -l|--limit SIZE
                     set the limit of the device to SIZE (size units with suffix), or 0 to reset to unlimited

              -a|--all
                     apply the limit to all devices

              --raw  print all numbers raw values in bytes without the B suffix

              --human-readable
                     print human friendly numbers, base 1024, this is the default

              --iec  select the 1024 base for the following options, according to the IEC standard

              --si   select the 1000 base for the following options, according to the SI standard

              --kbytes
                     show sizes in KiB, or kB with --si

              --mbytes
                     show sizes in MiB, or MB with --si

              --gbytes
                     show sizes in GiB, or GB with --si

              --tbytes
                     show sizes in TiB, or TB with --si

       resume [-BdqrR] <path>|<device>
              Resume a cancelled or interrupted scrub on the filesystem identified by path or on a given device.
              The starting point is read from the status file if it exists.

              This does not start a new scrub if the last scrub finished successfully.

              Options

              see scrub start.

       start [-BdrRf] <path>|<device>
              Start a scrub on all devices of the mounted filesystem identified by path or on a  single  device.
              If  a  scrub  is  already running, the new one will not start. A device of an unmounted filesystem
              cannot be scrubbed this way.

              Without options, scrub is started as a background process. The automatic repairs of damaged copies
              are performed by default for block group profiles with redundancy. No-repair  can  be  enabled  by
              option -r.

              Options

              -B     do not background and print scrub statistics when finished

              -d     print separate statistics for each device of the filesystem (-B only) at the end

              -r     run  in  read-only  mode,  do  not  attempt  to correct anything, can be run on a read-only
                     filesystem

              -R     raw print mode, print full data instead of summary

              -f     force starting new scrub even if a scrub is already running, this  can  useful  when  scrub
                     status  file  is  damaged  and  reports  a running scrub although it is not, but should not
                     normally be necessary

              Deprecated options

              -c <ioprio_class>
                     set IO priority class (see ionice(1) manual page) if the IO scheduler  configured  for  the
                     device  supports  ionice.  This  is  only supported by BFQ or Kyber but is not supported by
                     mq-deadline. Please read the section about IO limiting.

              -n <ioprio_classdata>
                     set IO priority classdata (see ionice(1) manpage)

              -q     (deprecated) alias for global -q option

       status [options] <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  cancelled  scrub  for  that
              filesystem or device.

              Options

              -d     print separate statistics for each device of the filesystem

              -R     print all raw statistics without postprocessing as returned by the status ioctl

              --raw  print all numbers raw values in bytes without the B suffix

              --human-readable
                     print human friendly numbers, base 1024, this is the default

              --iec  select the 1024 base for the following options, according to the IEC standard

              --si   select the 1000 base for the following options, according to the SI standard

              --kbytes
                     show sizes in KiB, or kB with --si

              --mbytes
                     show sizes in MiB, or MB with --si

              --gbytes
                     show sizes in GiB, or GB with --si

              --tbytes
                     show sizes in TiB, or TB with --si

              A status on a filesystem without any error looks like the following:

                 # btrfs scrub start /
                 # btrfs scrub status /
                 UUID:             76fac721-2294-4f89-a1af-620cde7a1980
                 Scrub started:    Wed Apr 10 12:34:56 2023
                 Status:           running
                 Duration:         0:00:05
                 Time left:        0:00:05
                 ETA:              Wed Apr 10 12:35:01 2023
                 Total to scrub:   28.32GiB
                 Bytes scrubbed:   13.76GiB  (48.59%)
                 Rate:             2.75GiB/s
                 Error summary:    no errors found

              With some errors found:

                 Error summary:    csum=72
                   Corrected:      2
                   Uncorrectable:  72
                   Unverified:     0

              • Corrected -- number of bad blocks that were repaired from another copy

              • Uncorrectable -- errors detected at read time but not possible to repair from other copy

              • Unverified  --  transient  errors,  first  read failed but a retry succeeded, may be affected by
                lower layers that group or split IO requests

              • Error summary -- followed by a more detailed list of errors found

                • csum -- checksum mismatch

                • super -- super block errors, unless the error is  fixed  immediately,  the  next  commit  will
                  overwrite superblock

                • verify -- metadata block header errors

                • read -- blocks can't be read due to IO errors

              It's  possible  to set a per-device limit via file sysfs/fs/btrfs/FSID/devinfo/scrub_speed_max. In
              that case the limit is printed on the Rate: line if option -d is specified, or  without  it  on  a
              single-device filesystem.  Read more about tat in section about scrub IO limiting.

                 Rate:             989.0MiB/s (limit 1.0G/s)

              On  a  multi-device  filesystem  with at least one device limit the overall stats cannot print the
              limit without -d so there's a not that some limits are set:

                 Rate:             36.37MiB/s (some device limits set)

EXIT STATUS

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

       1      scrub couldn't be performed

       2      there is nothing to resume

       3      scrub found uncorrectable errors

AVAILABILITY

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

SEE ALSO

       mkfs.btrfs(8)

6.12                                              Jan 03, 2025                                    BTRFS-SCRUB(8)