+EXAMPLES
+--------
+
+*$ btrfs filesystem defrag -v -r dir/*
+
+Recursively defragment files under 'dir/', print files as they are processed.
+The file names will be printed in batches, similarly the amount of data triggered
+by defragmentation will be proportional to last N printed files. The system dirty
+memory throttling will slow down the defragmentation but there can still be a lot
+of IO load and the system may stall for a moment.
+
+*$ btrfs filesystem defrag -v -r -f dir/*
+
+Recursively defragment files under 'dir/', be verbose and wait until all blocks
+are flushed before processing next file. You can note slower progress of the
+output and lower IO load (proportional to currently defragmented file).
+
+*$ btrfs filesystem defrag -v -r -f -clzo dir/*
+
+Recursively defragment files under 'dir/', be verbose, wait until all blocks are
+flushed and force file compression.
+
+*$ btrfs filesystem defrag -v -r -t 64M dir/*
+
+Recursively defragment files under 'dir/', be verbose and try to merge extents
+to be about 64MiB. As stated above, the success rate depends on actual free
+space fragmentation and the final result is not guaranteed to meet the target
+even if run repeatedly.
+
+*$ btrfs filesystem resize -1G /path*
+
+*$ btrfs filesystem resize 1:-1G /path*
+
+Shrink size of the filesystem's device id 1 by 1GiB. The first syntax expects a
+device with id 1 to exist, otherwise fails. The second is equivalent and more
+explicit. For a single-device filesystem it's typically not necessary to
+specify the devid though.
+
+*$ btrfs filesystem resize max /path*
+
+*$ btrfs filesystem resize 1:max /path*
+
+Let's assume that devid 1 exists and the filesystem does not occupy the whole
+block device, eg. it has been enlarged and we want to grow the filesystem. By
+simply using 'max' as size we will achieve that.
+
+NOTE: There are two ways to minimize the filesystem on a given device. The
+*btrfs inspect-internal min-dev-size* command, or iteratively shrink in steps.
+