• @photonic_sorcerer@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    211 days ago

    My filesystem is btrfs and I’ve got timeshift setup, how hard will this fuck me, if at all? Is there anyway I can be fucked harder? (Asking for a friend)

    • @IntergalacticTurtleFucker
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      16 hours ago

      WARNING:

      Don’t ever do this on a current bare metal system!
      Even if you have everything backed up, plan on re-installing anyway, and just want to see what happens.

      On a modern EFI system, recursively deleting everything (including the EFI path) has a chance of permanently hard-bricking your computer!
      https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/2402

    • @Zozano@lemy.lol
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      411 days ago

      Depends, are you backing up to another partition or drive?

      If not, you’re pretty fucked.

      • @Petter1@lemm.ee
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        10 days ago

        Aren’t snapshots in btrfs above root?

        Edit: they are in “subvolumes”

        Source: ChatGPT

        On a Btrfs filesystem, running rm -rf /* will attempt to delete everything in the root directory, which includes all files and directories accessible to your permissions. However, Btrfs snapshots are designed to be resistant to regular file deletion commands. Here’s what happens:

        1. Snapshots remain intact: rm -rf /* doesn’t automatically delete snapshots because snapshots are stored in special subvolumes. By default, this command won’t affect subvolumes that are not mounted within the filesystem you’re deleting from.

        2. You would need specific commands to delete snapshots: To delete snapshots on Btrfs, you would typically use a command like btrfs subvolume delete <snapshot> for each snapshot individually, as snapshots are managed by the filesystem and not treated as standard directories.

        3. The data inside the snapshots is preserved: Even if files in the root filesystem are deleted, any data captured in snapshots remains, as snapshots are essentially read-only copies at a certain point in time.

        Important Note: If the snapshots are mounted and accessible in the directory tree where rm -rf /* is run, you could accidentally delete them if the command traverses into the snapshots’ directories. To protect snapshots, administrators often mount them in isolated directories (e.g., /snapshots) or keep them unmounted until explicitly needed.

        In summary, unless you run specific deletion commands for Btrfs subvolumes, snapshots should remain unaffected by rm -rf /* due to the unique way Btrfs manages snapshots.