grub-btrfs improves the grub bootloader by adding a btrfs snapshots sub-menu, allowing the user to boot into snapshots.
grub-btrfs supports manual snapshots as well as snapper, timeshift, and yabsnap created snapshots.
If you wish to use read-only snapshots, /var/log
or even /var
must be on a separate subvolume.
Otherwise, make sure your snapshots are writable.
See this ticket for more info.
This project includes its own solution. Refer to the documentation.
- Automatically lists snapshots existing on the btrfs root partition.
- Automatically detect if
/boot
is in a separate partition. - Automatically detect kernel, initramfs and Intel/AMD microcode in
/boot
directory within snapshots. - Automatically create corresponding menu entries in
grub.cfg
- Automatically detect the type/tags/triggers and descriptions/comments of Snapper/Timeshift/Yabsnap snapshots.
- Automatically generate
grub.cfg
if you use the provided Systemd/ OpenRC service.
The package is available in the extra repository grub-btrfs
pacman -S grub-btrfs
grub-btrfs is only available in the Gentoo User Repository (GURU) and not in the official Gentoo repository.
If you have not activated the GURU yet, do so by running:
emerge -av app-eselect/eselect-repository
eselect repository enable guru
emaint sync -r guru
If you are using Systemd on Gentoo, make sure the USE-Flag systemd
is set. (Either globally in make.conf or in package.use for the package app-backup/grub-btrfs)
Without Systemd USE-Flag the OpenRC-daemon of grub-btrfs will be installed.
Emerge grub-btrfs via
emerge app-backup/grub-btrfs
grub-btrfs is available in the Kali Linux repository and can be installed with:
apt install grub-btrfs
Booting into read-only snapshots is fully supported when choosing btrfs as the file system during a standard Kali Linux installation following this walk-through.
- Run
make install
- Run
make help
to check what options are available. - Dependencies:
- btrfs-progs
- grub
- bash >4
- gawk
- (only when using the grub-btrfsd daemon)inotify-tools
To manually generate grub snapshot entries you can run sudo /etc/grub.d/41_snapshots-btrfs
which updates grub-btrfs.cfg
. You then need to regenerate the GRUB configuration by running one of the following commands:
- On Arch Linux or Gentoo use
grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg
. - On Fedora use
grub2-mkconfig -o /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
- On Debian and Ubuntu based distributions
update-grub
is a script that runsgrub-mkconfig ...
This process can be automated to occur whenever you create or delete snapshots but this process is slightly different depending upon your distributions choice on init system. See the relevant instructions for your init system below.
You have the possibility to modify many parameters in /etc/default/grub-btrfs/config
.
For further information see config file or man grub-btrfs
Some file locations and command names differ from distribution to distribution. Initially the configuration is set up to work with Arch and Gentoo (and many other distributions) out of the box, which are using the grub-mkconfig
command.
However Fedora, for example, uses a different command, grub2-mkconfig
.
Edit the GRUB_BTRFS_MKCONFIG
variable in /etc/default/grub-btrfs/config
file to reflect this. (e.g. GRUB_BTRFS_MKCONFIG=/sbin/grub2-mkconfig
for Fedora)
On most distributions, the grub installation resides in /boot/grub
. If grub is installed in a different place, change the variable GRUB_BTRFS_MKCONFIG
in the config file accordingly. For Fedora this is GRUB_BTRFS_GRUB_DIRNAME="/boot/grub2"
. The command to check the grub scripts is different on some system, for Fedora it is GRUB_BTRFS_SCRIPT_CHECK=grub2-script-check
Grub-btrfs comes with a daemon script that automatically updates the grub menu when it sees a snapshot being created or deleted in a directory it is given via command line. You must install inotify-tools
before you can use grub-btrfsd.
The daemon can be configured by passing different command line arguments to it. The available arguments are:
SNAPSHOTS_DIRS
This argument specifies the (space separated) paths where grub-btrfsd looks for newly created snapshots and snapshot deletions. It is usually defined by the program used to make snapshots. E.g. for Snapper or Yabsnap this would be/.snapshots
. It is possible to define more than one directory here, all directories will inherit the same settings (recursive etc.). This argument is not necessary to provide if--timeshift-auto
is set.-c / --no-color
Disable colors in output.-l / --log-file
This arguments specifies a file where grub-btrfsd should write log messages.-r / --recursive
Watch the snapshots directory recursively-s / --syslog
-o / --timeshift-old
Look for snapshots in/run/timeshift/backup/timeshift-btrfs
instead of/run/timeshift/$PID/backup/timeshift-btrfs.
This is to be used for Timeshift versions <22.06. You must also use--timeshift-auto
if using this option.-t / --timeshift-auto
This is a flag to activate the auto-detection of the path where Timeshift stores snapshots. Newer versions (>=22.06) of Timeshift mount their snapshots to/run/timeshift/$PID/backup/timeshift-btrfs
. Where$PID
is the process ID of the currently running Timeshift session. The PID changes every time Timeshift is opened. grub-btrfsd can automatically take care of the detection of the correct PID and directory if this flag is set. In this case the argumentSNAPSHOTS_DIRS
has no effect.-v / --verbose
Let the log of the daemon be more verbose-h / --help
Displays a short help message.
Grub-btrfsd is a daemon that watches the snapshot directory for you and updates the grub menu automatically every time a snapshot is created or deleted.
By default this daemon watches the directory /.snapshots
for changes (creation or deletion of snapshots) and triggers the grub menu creation and re-installation of grub if any changes are noticed.
Therefore, if Snapper or Yabsnap is used with its default directory, the daemon can just be started and nothing needs to be configured. See the instructions below to configure grub-btrfsd for use with Timeshift or when using an alternative snapshots directory with Snapper/Yabsnap.
To start the daemon run:
sudo systemctl start grub-btrfsd
To activate it during system startup, run:
sudo systemctl enable grub-btrfsd
By default the daemon is watching the directory /.snapshots
. If the daemon should watch a different directory, it can be edited with:
sudo systemctl edit --full grub-btrfsd
You need to edit the /.snapshots
part in the line that says ExecStart=/usr/bin/grub-btrfsd --syslog /.snapshots
.
This is what the file should look like afterwards:
[Unit]
Description=Regenerate grub-btrfs.cfg
[Service]
Type=simple
LogLevelMax=notice
# Set the possible paths for `grub-mkconfig`
Environment="PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin"
# Load environment variables from the configuration
EnvironmentFile=/etc/default/grub-btrfs/config
# Start the daemon, usage of it is:
# grub-btrfsd [-h, --help] [-t, --timeshift-auto] [-l, --log-file LOG_FILE] SNAPSHOTS_DIRS
# SNAPSHOTS_DIRS Snapshot directories to watch, without effect when --timeshift-auto
# Optional arguments:
# -t, --timeshift-auto Automatically detect Timeshifts snapshot directory
# -o, --timeshift-old Activate for timeshift versions <22.06
# -l, --log-file Specify a logfile to write to
# -v, --verbose Let the log of the daemon be more verbose
# -s, --syslog Write to syslog
ExecStart=/usr/bin/grub-btrfsd --syslog /.snapshots
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
When done, the service should be restarted with:
sudo systemctl restart grub-btrfsd
Newer Timeshift versions (>= 22.06) create a new directory named after their process ID in /run/timeshift
every time they are started. The PID will be different every time.
Therefore the daemon cannot simply watch a directory. It monitors /run/timeshift
and if a directory is created it gets Timeshifts current PID then watches a directory in that newly created directory from Timeshift.
To activate this mode of the daemon, --timeshift-auto
must be passed to the daemon as a command line argument.
To pass --timeshift-auto
to grub-btrfsd, the .service file of grub-btrfsd can be edited with
sudo systemctl edit --full grub-btrfsd
The line that contains:
ExecStart=/usr/bin/grub-btrfsd /.snapshots --syslog
Should be modified to read:
ExecStart=/usr/bin/grub-btrfsd --syslog --timeshift-auto
The modified file should look like this:
[Unit]
Description=Regenerate grub-btrfs.cfg
[Service]
Type=simple
LogLevelMax=notice
# Set the possible paths for `grub-mkconfig`
Environment="PATH=/sbin:/bin:/usr/sbin:/usr/bin"
# Load environment variables from the configuration
EnvironmentFile=/etc/default/grub-btrfs/config
# Start the daemon, usage of it is:
# grub-btrfsd [-h, --help] [-t, --timeshift-auto] [-l, --log-file LOG_FILE] SNAPSHOTS_DIRS
# SNAPSHOTS_DIRS Snapshot directories to watch, without effect when --timeshift-auto
# Optional arguments:
# -t, --timeshift-auto Automatically detect Timeshifts snapshot directory
# -l, --log-file Specify a logfile to write to
# -v, --verbose Let the log of the daemon be more verbose
# -s, --syslog Write to syslog
ExecStart=/usr/bin/grub-btrfsd --syslog --timeshift-auto
[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target
If you are using an older release of Timeshift (before 22.06), you also need to add --timeshift-old
so that your ExecStart line would look like:
ExecStart=/usr/bin/grub-btrfsd --syslog --timeshift-auto --timeshift-old
When done, the service must be restarted with:
sudo systemctl restart grub-btrfsd
Note:
You can view your change with systemctl cat grub-btrfsd
.
To revert all the changes use systemctl revert grub-btrfsd
.
To start the daemon run:
sudo rc-service grub-btrfsd start
To activate it during system startup, run:
sudo rc-config add grub-btrfsd default
By default the daemon is watching the directory /.snapshots
. If the daemon should watch a different directory, it can be edited by passing different arguments to it.
Arguments are passed to grub-btrfsd via the file /etc/conf.d/grub-btrfsd
.
The variable snapshots
defines the path the daemon will monitor for snapshots.
After editing, the file should look like this:
# Copyright 2022 Pascal Jaeger
# Distributed under the terms of the GNU General Public License v3
## Where to locate the root snapshots
snapshots="/.snapshots" # Snapper in the root directory
#snapshots="/run/timeshift/backup/timeshift-btrfs/snapshots" # Timeshift < v22.06
## Optional arguments to run with the daemon
# Append options to this like this:
# optional_args="--syslog --timeshift-auto --verbose"
# Possible options are:
# -t, --timeshift-auto Automatically detect Timeshifts snapshot directory for timeshift >= 22.06
# -o, --timeshift-old Look for snapshots in directory of Timeshift <v22.06 (requires --timeshift-auto)
# -l, --log-file Specify a logfile to write to
# -v, --verbose Let the log of the daemon be more verbose
# -s, --syslog Write to syslog
optional_args="--syslog"
After that, the daemon should be restarted with:
sudo rc-service grub-btrfsd restart
By default, grub-btrfs generates entries that does not load modules for dealing with encrypted devices.
Enable the GRUB_BTRFS_ENABLE_CRYPTODISK
variable in /etc/default/grub-btrfs/config
to load said modules and then execute the steps to mount encrypted root after selecting the snapshot.
If you experience problems with grub-btrfs don't hesitate to file an issue.
When requesting help or reporting bugs in grub-btrfs, please run:
sudo /etc/grub.d/41_snapshots-btrfs --version
or
sudo /usr/bin/grub-btrfsd --help
to get the currently running version of grub-btrfs and include this information in your ticket.
If you have problems with the daemon, you can run it with the --verbose
-flag. To do so you can run:
sudo /usr/bin/grub-btrfsd --verbose --timeshift-auto` (for timeshift)
# or
sudo /usr/bin/grub-btrfsd /.snapshots --verbose` (for snapper/yabsnap)
Or pass --verbose
to the daemon using the Systemd .service file or the OpenRC conf.d file respectively.
For additional information on the daemon and its arguments, run grub-btrfsd -h
or man grub-btrfsd
Grub-btrfs uses a rudimentary system of automatic versioning to tell apart different commits. This is helpful when users report problems and it is not immediately clear what version they are using.
We therefore have the following script in .git/hooks/pre-commit
:
#!/bin/sh
echo "Doing pre commit hook with version bump"
version="$(git describe --tags --abbrev=0)-$(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)-$(date -u -Iseconds)"
echo "New version is ${version}"
sed -i "s/GRUB_BTRFS_VERSION=.*/GRUB_BTRFS_VERSION=${version}/" config
git add config
This automatically sets the version in the config
-file to [lasttag]-[branch-name]-[current-date-in-UTC]
.
In order to create a Tag we don't want to have this long version. In this case we set the version manually in config
and commit with git commit --no-verify
. This avoids running the hook.