The underlying design of BTRFS data structures allows a lot of flexibility and making changes after filesystem creation, like resizing, adding/removing space or enabling some features on-the-fly. * **dynamic inode creation** -- there's no fixed space or tables for tracking inodes so the number of inodes that can be created is bounded by the metadata space and its utilization * **block group profile change on-the-fly** -- the block group profiles can be changed on a mounted filesystem by running the balance operation and specifying the conversion filters (see :doc:`balance`) * **resize** -- the space occupied by the filesystem on each device can be resized up (grow) or down (shrink) as long as the amount of data can be still contained on the device * **device management** -- devices can be added, removed or replaced without requiring recreating the filesystem (mkfs), new redundancy options available on more devices can be also utilized by rebalancing