Hi Lennart, thanks for the information. I finally found out the true cause, however, and it's just stupidity on my part. While Debian (my mkosi base) does ship systemd-growfs and the man pages for all the services, it does not ship the services themselves. So I guess that the auto-grow functionality can never be activated. Do you happen to know if it just starts to work magically if I add those service files to the filesystem on my own? Or is this something which can be compiled out? King regards, Nils On Wed, Oct 25, 2023 at 9:57 AM Lennart Poettering <lennart@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Di, 24.10.23 23:48, Nils Kattenbeck (nilskemail@xxxxxxxxx) wrote: > > > > On Mo, 23.10.23 02:00, Nils Kattenbeck (nilskemail@xxxxxxxxx) wrote: > > > > > > > Hello, > > > > > > > > I am not sure how to get systemd-growfs-root.service to work with > > > > automount. The partitions are configured via systemd-repart (and the > > > > image created using mkosi). While the partitions are correctly grown > > > > upon boot, the contained filesystem is not grown to match the > > > > partition even though GrowFileSystem defaults to true. Is there > > > > anything I am missing or an easy way to troubleshoot this and get more > > > > information? > > > > > > > > One thing I notice is that the generator.late/-.mount unit has a > > > > Options=ro which as per documentation prevents growing the filesystem. > > > > However, the filesystem is actually mounted read-write so I assume > > > > this is just an artifact of the initrd. Is it not possible to grow the > > > > filesystem from which the initrd starts? > > > > > > Do you have "ro" or "rw" on the kernel cmdline? > > > > I have neither set on the cmdline. > > if you add it, does it work? > > ro/rw is a bit weird. Usually in our configuration model the settings > on the kernel cmdline args take precedence over config in > /etc/. But ro/rw is different for historical reasons: it only > specifies the initial ro/rw state of the disks, expecting that > /etc/fstab later changes things to the final setting. And if neither > are specified we imply "ro". > > Hence, you have two choices: define an /etc/fstab (which of course is > not what you want with gpt-auto) or just add "rw" to the kernel cmdline. > > Lennart > > -- > Lennart Poettering, Berlin