I had found that note on the restore but my restore.c does not allow
that flag (it is also missing the "m" flag as well), I used the branch
dangerousdonteveruse on
https://git.kernel.org/?p=linux/kernel/git/mason/btrfs-progs.git I
switched to the master branch to see if there was a difference but it
does not appear to be any different. (I did find a btrfs-progs on
git-hub which appears to have those flags, but i thought the best to
use would be on git.kernel. )

Assuming I can locate the correct restore.c, is there a some other
software to determine the object id of the subvolume ?  the root
object id was 5

thanks
Nz

On Tue, Mar 27, 2012 at 6:02 AM, Hugo Mills <h...@carfax.org.uk> wrote:
> On Tue, Mar 27, 2012 at 05:58:17AM -0700, Not Zippy wrote:
>> One entire subvolume was restored. But there were 4 subvolumes on that
>> partition. Is there a way to specify/force the restore of a different
>> subvolume ?
>>
>> find-root seems to only find a single root.
>
>   There is only a single root tree, so that's understandable. If you
> have a look at the documentation for restore[1], it mentions (right
> near the bottom of the page) that -r will allow you to select an
> alternative subvolume to recover from.
>
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