I’m using EndeavourOS with ext4 file system for daily usage and a dual bootable Windows for gaming. What I want to have right now is getting rid of Windows completely.
When I tried it before, I had to try multiple tweaks for a game and find which one worked on Linux. Therefore, I want to take a snapshot with BTRFS and try it until I find the right configuration.
While I have quite a bit of experience with Linux, I’ve never used BTRFS. Do you think it’s worth it?
I thought about keeping the games on the ext4 system, but I hate splitting the disk. I’m thinking of keeping the games in a non-snapshot volume.
UPDATE: I just re-installed EndeavourOS with BTRFS + snapper + BTRFS Assistant :)
It is only for new data.
For example, you would have to defragment your filesystem again with
btrfs filesystem defragment -r -v -czstd /
. Wherezstd
is an algorithm and/
, a root path. With this command, the default compression level will be used, which is level 3.Be careful, defragmenting the btrfs file system will/can duplicate the data.
As for a mount point, if you decided to use zstd algorithm with level 1 compression, just add the
compress=zstd:1
orcompress-force=zstd:1
to the mount options (fstab or while mounting manually)So I set up my system with btrfs in the last days and I converted two external drives (from ext4) (mainly game) and run defrag and balance, because it was mentioned in a guide to compress the existing files. Was that a bad idea? Didn’t read anything about duplicates.
Reading the manpage (btrfs-filesystem), duplication can happen on some odd kernel versions, so no danger.
Edit: that was my interpretation of breaking up reflinks of cow data anyway. Seems there’s more.
If I know correctly, defrag will always duplicate the reflink files.
https://btrfs.readthedocs.io/en/latest/Defragmentation.html
Well, compression doubled my available space. ;-)