I have an ext3 filesystem that will not mount under newer versions of the kernel and I hope someone here can help. Obviously, one solution is "backup and re-create from scratch". I have the backups, but I hope that there may be a quicker method to fix the issues. The root issue is that the filesystem is very slightly smaller than the allocated space. The filesystem exists on a MDRAID device and I think that when I converted the MDRAID to a newer metadata version, it truncated the available size, slightly. However, how I got here isn't really important, fixing it now is. With an slightly older kernel (4.0.5), the filesystem can be mounted. With 4.4.26, the ext3 support is provided by the ext4 subsystem and it appears that it will not accept the size issues. dmesg showed this from the mount attempt: md5: detected capacity change from 0 to 2839999799296 [ 1162.508338] EXT4-fs (md5): mounting ext3 file system using the ext4 subsystem [ 1162.508560] EXT4-fs (md5): bad geometry: block count 693359344 exceeds size of device (693359326 blocks) As I stated, the difference is very small, so it was working OK for a long time. My attempts to re-size the filesystem did not work. I don't have the error messages available. Getting the system up and running was more important at the time. Apart from "backup and re-create", how can I fix this? What would be the correct options to use with resize2fs (if that is the correct approach)? fsck gave me some serious warnings about possibly destroying the filesystem, so I did not want to do this without advice. Simon -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-admin" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html