maximum file name length 255 This limit is imposed by Linux VFS, the structures of BTRFS could store larger file names. maximum symlink target length depends on the *nodesize* value, for 4KiB it's 3949 bytes, for larger nodesize it's 4095 due to the system limit PATH_MAX The symlink target may not be a valid path, i.e. the path name components can exceed the limits (NAME_MAX), there's no content validation at ``symlink(3)`` creation. maximum number of inodes 2\ :sup:`64` but depends on the available metadata space as the inodes are created dynamically Each subvolume is an independent namespace of inodes and thus their numbers, so the limit is per subvolume, not for the whole filesystem. inode numbers minimum number: 256 (for subvolumes), regular files and directories: 257, maximum number: (2\:sup:`64` - 256) The inode numbers that can be assigned to user created files are from the whole 64bit space except first 256 and last 256 in that range that are reserved for internal b-tree identifiers. maximum file length inherent limit of BTRFS is 2\ :sup:`64` (16 EiB) but the practical limit of Linux VFS is 2\ :sup:`63` (8 EiB) maximum number of subvolumes the subvolume ids can go up to 2\ :sup:`48` but the number of actual subvolumes depends on the available metadata space The space consumed by all subvolume metadata includes bookkeeping of shared extents can be large (MiB, GiB). The range is not the full 64bit range because of qgroups that use the upper 16 bits for another purposes. maximum number of hardlinks of a file in a directory 65536 when the *extref* feature is turned on during mkfs (default), roughly 100 otherwise minimum filesystem size the minimal size of each device depends on the *mixed-bg* feature, without that (the default) it's about 109MiB, with mixed-bg it's is 16MiB