Re: Spurious mount point

2018-10-18 Thread Andrei Borzenkov
16.10.2018 0:33, Chris Murphy пишет: > On Mon, Oct 15, 2018 at 3:26 PM, Anton Shepelev wrote: >> Chris Murphy to Anton Shepelev: >> How can I track down the origin of this mount point: /dev/sda2 on /home/hana type btrfs (rw,relatime,space_cache,subvolid=259,subvol=/@/.snapshot

Re: Spurious mount point

2018-10-15 Thread Anton Shepelev
Chris Murphy: > I wasn't aware that SUSE was now using the @ location for > snapshots, or that it was using Btrfs for /home. For a > while it's been XFS with a Btrfs sysroot. Ours does use btrfs for `/' and xfs for `/home' *except* `/home/hana', which is strange and wonderful, because the standar

Re: Spurious mount point

2018-10-15 Thread Chris Murphy
On Mon, Oct 15, 2018 at 3:26 PM, Anton Shepelev wrote: > Chris Murphy to Anton Shepelev: > >> > How can I track down the origin of this mount point: >> > >> > /dev/sda2 on /home/hana type btrfs >> > (rw,relatime,space_cache,subvolid=259,subvol=/@/.snapshots/1/snapshot/hana) >> > >> > if it is not

Re: Spurious mount point

2018-10-15 Thread Anton Shepelev
Chris Murphy to Anton Shepelev: > > How can I track down the origin of this mount point: > > > > /dev/sda2 on /home/hana type btrfs > > (rw,relatime,space_cache,subvolid=259,subvol=/@/.snapshots/1/snapshot/hana) > > > > if it is not present in /etc/fstab? I shouldn't like to > > find/grep though

Re: Spurious mount point

2018-10-15 Thread Chris Murphy
On Mon, Oct 15, 2018 at 9:05 AM, Anton Shepelev wrote: > Hello, all > > How can I track down the origin of this mount point: > >/dev/sda2 on /home/hana type btrfs > (rw,relatime,space_cache,subvolid=259,subvol=/@/.snapshots/1/snapshot/hana) > > if it is not present in /etc/fstab? I shouldn't

Spurious mount point

2018-10-15 Thread Anton Shepelev
Hello, all How can I track down the origin of this mount point: /dev/sda2 on /home/hana type btrfs (rw,relatime,space_cache,subvolid=259,subvol=/@/.snapshots/1/snapshot/hana) if it is not present in /etc/fstab? I shouldn't like to find/grep thoughout the whole filesystem. -- () ascii rib