NAME
bectl
—
Utility to manage boot environments on
ZFS
SYNOPSIS
bectl |
[-h ] |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
activate [-t |
-T ] beName |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
check |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
create [-r ]
[-e {nonActiveBe |
beName@ snapshot}]
newBeName |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
create [-r ]
beName@snapshot |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
destroy [-Fo ]
beName[@ snapshot] |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
export sourceBe |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
import targetBe |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
jail [-bU ]
[{-o
key= value
| -u key}]...
beName [utility
[argument ...]] |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
list [-aDHs ]
[-c property]
[-C property]
[{-c property |
-C property}] |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
mount beName
[mountpoint] |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
rename origBeName
newBeName |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
{ujail | unjail }
{jailId | jailName |
beName} |
bectl |
[-r beroot]
{umount | unmount }
[-f ] beName |
DESCRIPTION
The bectl
command is used to setup and
interact with ZFS boot environments, which are bootable clones of
datasets.
A boot environment allows the system to be upgraded, while preserving the pre-upgrade system environment.
bectl
itself accepts an
-r
flag specified before the command to indicate the
beroot that should be used as the boot environment
root, or the dataset whose children are all boot environments. Normally this
information is derived from the bootfs property of the pool that is mounted
at /, but it is useful when the system has not been
booted into a ZFS root or a different pool should be operated on. For
instance, booting into the recovery media and manually importing a pool from
one of the system's resident disks will require the
-r
flag to work.
Supported Subcommands and Flags
-h
- Print usage information and exit.
activate
[-t
|-T
] beName- Activate the given beName as the default boot
filesystem. If the
-t
flag is given, this takes effect only for the next boot. Flag-T
removes temporary boot once configuration. Without temporary configuration, the next boot will use zfs dataset specified in boot pool bootfs property. check
- Performs a silent sanity check on the current system. If boot environments
are supported and used,
bectl
will exit with a status code of 0. Any other status code is not currently defined and may, in the future, grow special meaning for different degrees of sanity check failures. create
[-r
] [-e
{nonActiveBe | beName@
snapshot}] newBeName- Create a new boot environment named newBeName.
If the
-r
flag is given, a recursive boot environment will be made. See Boot Environment Structures for a discussion on different layouts.If the
-e
flag is specified, the new environment will be cloned from the given nonActiveBe or beName@
snapshot. Otherwise, the new environment will be created from the currently booted environment.If
bectl
is creating from another boot environment, a snapshot of that boot environment will be created to clone from. create
[-r
] beName@snapshot- Create a snapshot of the boot environment named
beName.
If the
-r
flag is given, a recursive snapshot of the boot environment will be created. A snapshot is created for each descendant dataset of the boot environment. See Boot Environment Structures for a discussion on different layouts.No new boot environment is created with this subcommand.
destroy
[-Fo
] beName[@
snapshot]- Destroy the given beName boot environment or
beName
@
snapshot snapshot without confirmation, unlike in beadm(8). Specifying-F
will automatically unmount without confirmation.By default,
bectl
will warn that it is not destroying the origin of beName. The-o
flag may be specified to destroy the origin as well. export
sourceBe- Export sourceBe to stdout(4). stdout(4) must be piped or redirected to a file.
import
targetBe- Import targetBe from stdin(4).
jail
[-bU
] [{-o
key=
value |-u
key}]... beName [utility [argument ...]]- Create a jail of the given boot environment. Multiple
-o
and-u
arguments may be specified.-o
will set a jail parameter, and-u
will unset a jail parameter.By default, jails are created in interactive mode and /bin/sh is executed within the jail. If utility is specified, it will be executed instead of /bin/sh. The jail will be destroyed and the boot environment unmounted when the command finishes executing, unless the
-U
argument is specified.The
-b
argument enables batch mode, thereby disabling interactive mode. The-U
argument will be ignored in batch mode.The name, host.hostname, and path must be set, the default values are specified below.
All key
=
value pairs are interpreted as jail parameters as described in jail(8). The following default parameters are provided:allow.mount true
allow.mount.devfs true
enforce_statfs 1
name Set to jail ID. host.hostname bootenv path Set to a path in /tmp generated by libbe(3). All default parameters may be overwritten.
list
[-aDHs
] [{-c
property |-C
property}]-
Display all boot environments. The Active field indicates whether the boot environment is active now (N); active on reboot (R); is used on next boot once (T); or combination of (NRT).
-a
- Display all datasets.
-D
- Display the full space usage for each boot environment, assuming all other boot environments were destroyed.
-H
- Used for scripting. Do not print headers and separate fields by a single tab instead of arbitrary white space.
-s
- Display all snapshots as well.
-c
property- Sort boot environments by the given ZFS dataset property. The
following properties are supported:
- name (the default)
- creation
- origin
- used
- usedbydataset
- usedbyrefreservation
- usedbysnapshots
Short forms usedds, usedrefreserv and usedsnap are also supported.
-C
property- Same as the
-c
option, but displays in descending order.
The
-D
option is ignored when either the-s
or-a
option is used. mount
beName [mountpoint]- Mount the given boot environment.
If a nonexistent mountpoint is given:
bectl
will make the directory, including intermediate directories as required.If no mountpoint is given:
bectl
will make a directory such as be_mount.c6Sf in /tmp. Randomness in the last four characters of the directory name will prevent mount point conflicts. Unmount of an environment, followed by mount of the same environment without giving a mountpoint, will result in a different randomly-named mountpoint. rename
origBeName newBeName- Rename the given origBeName to the given newBeName. The boot environment will not be unmounted in order for this rename to occur.
ujail
{jailId | jailName | beName}unjail
{jailId | jailName | beName}- Destroy the jail created from the given boot environment.
umount
[-f
] beNameunmount
[-f
] beName- Unmount the given boot environment, if it is mounted. Specifying
-f
will force the unmount if busy.Unmount will not remove the mount point.
Boot Environment Structures
The traditional FreeBSD boot environment
layout, as created by the Auto ZFS option to
bsdinstall(8), is a “shallow” boot environment
structure, where boot environment datasets do not have any directly
subordinate datasets. Instead, they're organized off in
zroot/ROOT, and they rely on datasets elsewhere in
the pool having canmount
set to
off
. For instance, a simplified pool may be laid out
as such:
% zfs list -o name,canmount,mountpoint NAME CANMOUNT MOUNTPOINT zroot zroot/ROOT noauto none zroot/ROOT/default noauto none zroot/home on /home zroot/usr off /usr zroot/usr/src on /usr/src zroot/var off /var
In that example, zroot/usr has
canmount
set to off
, thus
files in /usr typically fall into the boot
environment because this dataset is not mounted.
zroot/usr/src is mounted, thus files in
/usr/src are not in the boot environment.
The other style of boot environments in use, frequently called “deep boot environments”, organizes some or all of the boot environment as subordinate to the boot environment dataset. For example:
% zfs list -o name,canmount,mountpoint NAME CANMOUNT MOUNTPOINT zroot zroot/ROOT noauto none zroot/ROOT/default noauto none zroot/ROOT/default/usr noauto /usr zroot/ROOT/default/usr/local noauto /usr/local zroot/var on /var
Note that the subordinate datasets now have
canmount
set to noauto
.
These are more obviously a part of the boot environment, as indicated by
their positioning in the layout. These subordinate datasets will be mounted
by the zfsbe
rc(8) script at boot time. In this example,
/var is excluded from the boot environment.
bectl
subcommands that have their own
-r
operate on this second, “deep”
style of boot environment, when the -r
flag is set.
A future version of bectl
may default to handling
both styles and deprecate the various -r
flags.
SEE ALSO
libbe(3), zfsprops(7), beinstall.sh(8), jail(8), zfs(8), zpool(8)
HISTORY
bectl
and
libbe(3) were written by Kyle Kneitinger
(kneitinger)
<kyle@kneit.in> as a
2017 Google Summer of Code project, with Allan Jude
(allanjude)
<allanjude@freebsd.org>
as mentor.
bectl
and this manual page were derived
from beadm(8).
AUTHORS
Slawomir Wojciech Wojtczak (vermaden)
<vermaden@interia.pl>
is the creator and maintainer of
beadm(8).
Bryan Drewery (bdrewery)
<bryan@shatow.net>
contributed child dataset fixes, and wrote the
beadm(8) manual page.
Most later changes to bectl
, and to this
page, were written by
Kyle Evans (kevans)
<kevans@freebsd.org>.