systemd-gpt-auto-generator is a unit generator that automatically
discovers the root partition, /home/, /srv/, /var/, /var/tmp/, the EFI
System Partition (ESP), the Extended Boot Loader Partition (XBOOTLDR), and
swap partitions and creates mount and swap units for them, based on the
partition type GUIDs of GUID partition tables (GPT). See UEFI
Specification[1], chapter 5 for more details. It implements the
UAPI.2 Discoverable Partitions Specification[2].
Note that this generator has no effect on non-GPT systems. It will
also not create mount point configuration for directories which already
contain files or if the mount point is explicitly configured in
fstab(5). Additionally no unit will be created for the ESP or the
XBOOTLDR partition if mount entries are found in the /boot/ or /efi/
hierarchies in fstab(5).
If the units this generator creates are overridden, for example by
units in directories with higher precedence, drop-ins and additional
dependencies created by this generator might still be used.
When run in the initial RAM disk (initrd) this generator can
automatically search for the root file system. Specifically:
•It will look for the root partition on the same
physical disk where the EFI System Partition (ESP) is located. Note that
support from the boot loader is required for this to work: the EFI variable
LoaderDevicePartUUID of the 4a67b082-0a4c-41cf-b6c7-440b29bb8c4f
vendor UUID is used to determine from which partition (and hence disk) the
system was booted. If the boot loader does not set this variable, this
generator will not be able to detect the root partition. See the Boot
Loader Interface[3] for details.
•Alternatively, it will look for the root file
system on a loopback block device whose ".lo_name" field is set to
one of the literal strings "rootdisk" or "rootdisk.raw".
This field can be set via
losetup's
--loop-ref= string. For
images downloaded via
systemd-import-generator(8) make sure to set the
"blockdev" option and set the local name string to
"rootdisk" to achieve this effect. Note that discovery of the root
file system on loopback block devices like this is only done if
"root=gpt-auto" or "root=dissect" is specified explicitly
on the kernel command line, unlike the discovery based on the boot loader
reported ESP which is also enabled if no "root=" parameter is
specified at all. (The latter relies on
systemd-udevd.service's
/dev/gpt-auto-root block device symlink generation).
When run on the host system (i.e. after successfully transitioning
out of the initrd into the root filesystem) this generator will look for all
other partitions on the same physical disk as the root partition. For this
discovery, boot loader support is not required. Moreover, it is not required
that the root partition was automatically discovered by the initrd (as
described above) for the discovery of the non-root file partitions to take
place. Or in other words: automatic discovery of the root file system and of
the non-root file systems are independent operations, that do not rely on
each other, and are done during two distinct phases of the boot process (one
in the initrd, the other after). These partitions will not be searched for
on systems where the root file system is distributed on multiple disks, for
example via btrfs RAID.
The root partition can be configured explicitly by symlinking
/run/systemd/volatile-root to /dev/block/$major:$minor. This is especially
useful if the root mount has been replaced by some form of volatile file
system (overlayfs).
systemd-gpt-auto-generator is useful for centralizing file system
configuration in the partition table and making configuration in /etc/fstab
or on the kernel command line unnecessary.
This generator looks for the partitions based on their partition
type GUID. The following partition type GUIDs are identified:
Table 1. Partition Type GUIDs
| Partition Type |
GUID |
Name |
Mount Point |
Explanation |
| SD_GPT_ROOT_X86_64 |
4f68bce3-e8cd-4db1-96e7-fbcaf984b709 |
Root Partition (x86-64) |
/ |
The first partition with this type UUID, located on the same disk as the
ESP used for booting, is used as the root file system / on AMD64 / 64-bit
x86 systems. |
| SD_GPT_ROOT_ARM64 |
b921b045-1df0-41c3-af44-4c6f280d3fae |
Root Partition (64-bit ARM) |
/ |
The first partition with this type UUID, located on the same disk as the
ESP used for booting, is used as the root file system / on AArch64 /
64-bit ARM systems. |
| SD_GPT_ROOT_ALPHA SD_GPT_ROOT_ARC SD_GPT_ROOT_ARM
SD_GPT_ROOT_ARM64 SD_GPT_ROOT_IA64
SD_GPT_ROOT_LOONGARCH64 SD_GPT_ROOT_MIPS
SD_GPT_ROOT_MIPS64 SD_GPT_ROOT_MIPS_LE
SD_GPT_ROOT_MIPS64_LE SD_GPT_ROOT_PARISC
SD_GPT_ROOT_PPC SD_GPT_ROOT_PPC64
SD_GPT_ROOT_PPC64_LE SD_GPT_ROOT_RISCV32
SD_GPT_ROOT_RISCV64 SD_GPT_ROOT_S390
SD_GPT_ROOT_S390X SD_GPT_ROOT_TILEGX SD_GPT_ROOT_X86
SD_GPT_ROOT_X86_64 SD_GPT_USR_ALPHA SD_GPT_USR_ARC
SD_GPT_USR_ARM SD_GPT_USR_IA64 SD_GPT_USR_LOONGARCH64
SD_GPT_USR_MIPS_LE SD_GPT_USR_MIPS64_LE
SD_GPT_USR_PARISC SD_GPT_USR_PPC SD_GPT_USR_PPC64
SD_GPT_USR_PPC64_LE SD_GPT_USR_RISCV32
SD_GPT_USR_RISCV64 SD_GPT_USR_S390 SD_GPT_USR_S390X
SD_GPT_USR_TILEGX SD_GPT_USR_X86 |
... |
Root partitions for other architectures |
/ |
The first partition with the type UUID matching the architecture,
located on the same disk as the ESP used for booting, is used as the root
file system /. For the full list and constant values, see UAPI.2
Discoverable Partitions Specification[2]. |
| SD_GPT_HOME |
933ac7e1-2eb4-4f13-b844-0e14e2aef915 |
Home Partition |
/home/ |
The first partition with this type UUID on the same disk as the root
partition is mounted to /home/. |
| SD_GPT_SRV |
3b8f8425-20e0-4f3b-907f-1a25a76f98e8 |
Server Data Partition |
/srv/ |
The first partition with this type UUID on the same disk as the root
partition is mounted to /srv/. |
| SD_GPT_VAR |
4d21b016-b534-45c2-a9fb-5c16e091fd2d |
Variable Data Partition |
/var/ |
The first partition with this type UUID on the same disk as the root
partition is mounted to /var/ — under the condition its partition
UUID matches the first 128 bit of the HMAC-SHA256 of the GPT type uuid of
this partition keyed by the machine ID of the installation stored in
machine-id(5). This can be generated using
systemd-id128(1). |
| SD_GPT_TMP |
7ec6f557-3bc5-4aca-b293-16ef5df639d1 |
Temporary Data Partition |
/var/tmp/ |
The first partition with this type UUID on the same disk as the root
partition is mounted to /var/tmp/. |
| SD_GPT_SWAP |
0657fd6d-a4ab-43c4-84e5-0933c84b4f4f |
Swap |
n/a |
All partitions with this type UUID on the same disk as the root
partition are used as swap. |
| SD_GPT_ESP |
c12a7328-f81f-11d2-ba4b-00a0c93ec93b |
EFI System Partition (ESP) |
/efi/ or /boot/ |
The first partition with this type UUID located on the same disk as the
root partition is mounted to /boot/ or /efi/, see below. |
| SD_GPT_XBOOTLDR |
bc13c2ff-59e6-4262-a352-b275fd6f7172 |
Extended Boot Loader Partition |
/boot/ |
The first partition with this type UUID located on the same disk as the
root partition is mounted to /boot/, see below. |
This generator understands the following attribute flags for
partitions:
Table 2. Partition Attribute Flags
| Flag |
Value |
Applicable to |
Explanation |
| SD_GPT_FLAG_READ_ONLY |
0x1000000000000000 |
/, /home/, /srv/, /var/, /var/tmp/, Extended Boot Loader Partition |
Partition is mounted read-only |
| SD_GPT_FLAG_NO_AUTO |
0x8000000000000000 |
/, /home/, /srv/, /var/, /var/tmp/, Extended Boot Loader Partition |
Partition is not mounted automatically |
| SD_GPT_FLAG_NO_BLOCK_IO_PROTOCOL |
0x0000000000000002 |
EFI System Partition (ESP) |
Partition is not mounted automatically |
The
/home/, /srv/, /var/, /var/tmp/ and swap partitions may be encrypted in LUKS
format. In this case, a device mapper device is set up under the names
/dev/mapper/home, /dev/mapper/srv, /dev/mapper/var, /dev/mapper/tmp or
/dev/mapper/swap. Note that this might create conflicts if the same
partition is listed in /etc/crypttab with a different device mapper device
name.
When systemd is running in the initrd the / partition may be
encrypted with LUKS as well. In this case, a device mapper device is set up
under the name /dev/mapper/root, and a sysroot.mount is set up that mounts
the device under /sysroot. For more information, see bootup(7).
Mount and automount units for the EFI System Partition (ESP) and
Extended Boot Loader Partition (XBOOTLDR) are generated on EFI systems. If
the disk contains an XBOOTLDR partition, as defined in the UAPI.1 Boot
Loader Specification[4], it is made available at /boot/. This generator
creates an automount unit; the mount will only be activated on-demand when
accessed. The mount point will be created if necessary.
The ESP is mounted to /boot/ if that directory exists and is not
used for XBOOTLDR, and otherwise to /efi/. Same as for /boot/, an automount
unit is used. The mount point will be created if necessary.
No configuration is created for mount points that are configured
in fstab(5) or when the target directory contains files.
When using this generator in conjunction with btrfs file systems,
make sure to set the correct default subvolumes on them, using btrfs
subvolume set-default.
If the system was booted via systemd-stub(7) and the stub
reported to userspace that the kernel image was measured to a TPM2 PCR, then
any discovered root and /var/ volume identifiers (and volume encryption key
in case it is encrypted) will be automatically measured into PCR 15 on
activation, via systemd-pcrfs@.service(8).
Mount constraint metadata contained in the file systems is
validated by pulling in systemd-validatefs@.service(8) for generated
mounts.
systemd-gpt-auto-generator implements
systemd.generator(7).
systemd-gpt-auto-generator understands the following kernel
command line parameters:
systemd.gpt_auto, rd.systemd.gpt_auto
Those options take an optional boolean argument, and
default to yes. The generator is enabled by default, and a false value may be
used to disable it (e.g. "systemd.gpt_auto=0").
Added in version 242.
systemd.image_policy=
Takes an image dissection policy string as argument (as
per
systemd.image-policy(7)), and allows enforcing a policy on
dissection and use of the automatically discovered GPT partition table
entries.
Note that the specified image policy is not taken into account for
automatic root or /usr/ file system discovery unless
root=dissect/mount.usr=dissect (or root=dissect-force)
are specified. (The policy will always be applied to the other
auto-discoverable partition types.)
Added in version 254.
systemd.image_filter=
Takes an image dissection filter string as argument (as
per
systemd.image-filter(7)), and allows enforcing a set of globbing
patterns on the partition matching of the automatically discovered GPT
partition table entries.
Note that the specified image filter is not taken into account for
automatic root or /usr/ file system discovery unless
root=dissect/mount.usr=dissect (or root=dissect-force)
are specified. (The filter will always be applied to the other
auto-discoverable partition types.)
Added in version 258.
root=, rootfstype=, rootflags=
When
root= is used with the special value
"gpt-auto", basic automatic discovery of the root partition based on
the GPT partition type is enabled. Use of the root partition is delayed until
factory reset mode is left, in case it is enabled during the current boot. See
Factory Reset[5] for more information on that. If
"gpt-auto-force" is specified automatic discovery of the root
partition is enabled, ignoring any factory reset mode.
If root= is set to the special value "dissect"
full automatic discovery of the root partition based on GPT partition
information is enabled. This is a superset of root=gpt-auto, as it
automatically configures Verity partitions (including signature-based setup)
following the logic defined for that in the UAPI.2 Discoverable
Partitions Specification[6]. Moreover it takes the configured image
policy and image filter into account for all partition types, including the
root file system. "root=dissect" will wait for the factory reset
phase to be completed if it is in effect before activating the root file
system. Use "root=dissect-force" to ignore the factory reset phase
and activate the root file system immediately.
Any other value (i.e. besides "gpt-auto",
"gpt-auto-force", "dissect", "dissect-force")
disables automatic root file system discovery.
If root= is not specified at all on the kernel command line
automatic discovery of the root partition via the ESP reported by the boot
loader is also enabled (taking factory reset state into account, i.e.
equivalent to "root=gpt-auto"), however in this case discovery
based on the loopback block device ".lo_name" field is not
enabled.
The rootfstype= and rootflags= options are used to
select the file system type and options when the root file system is
automatically discovered.
Added in version 242.
mount.usr=, mount.usrfstype=,
mount.usrflags=
Similar to
root=,
rootfstype=,
rootflags= (see above), but applies to the /usr/ partition instead.
Note that the "gpt-auto", "gpt-auto-force",
"dissect-force" settings that root= understands are not supported by
mount.usr= (however "dissect" is).
Also note that automatic partition discovery for /usr/ must be
enabled explicitly, unlike the discovery for the root file system, which is
enabled if no root= parameter is passed at all.
Added in version 258.
rw, ro
Mount the root partition read-write or read-only
initially.
Note that unlike most kernel command line options these settings
do not override configuration in the file system, and the file system may be
remounted later. See systemd-remount-fs.service(8).
Added in version 242.
systemd.swap=
Takes a boolean argument or enables the option if
specified without an argument. If disabled, automatic discovery of swap
partition(s) based on GPT partition type is disabled. Defaults to enabled.
Added in version 254.