How to mount disk in GCP to CoreOS without errors?

Hi all
I am trying to mount partittion to coreos instance, use this ignition config

     disks:
     - device: /dev/disk/by-id/google-prom
       wipe_table: false
       partitions:
       - number: 1
         size_mib: 0
         start_mib: 0
         label: data

And ignition failed

eM
e[K[ e[0;31me[0m] (1 of 2) A start job is running for…tion (disks) (1min 34s / no limit)
eM
e[K[ e[0;31m
e[0;1;31me[0m] (1 of 2) A start job is running for…tion (disks) (1min 35s / no limit)
eM
e[K[ e[0;31m
e[0;1;31me[0me[0;31me[0m] (2 of 2) A start job is running for…/google-prom (1min 26s / 1min 30s)
eM
e[K[ e[0;31me[0;1;31me[0me[0;31m* e[0m] (2 of 2) A start job is running for…/google-prom (1min 27s / 1min 30s)
eM
e[K[ e[0;31me[0;1;31me[0me[0;31m* e[0m] (2 of 2) A start job is running for…/google-prom (1min 27s / 1min 30s)
eM
e[K[e[0;31me[0;1;31me[0me[0;31m* e[0m] (1 of 2) A start job is running for…tion (disks) (1min 37s / no limit)
eM
e[K[e[0;1;31me[0me[0;31m e[0m] (1 of 2) A start job is running for…tion (disks) (1min 37s / no limit)
eM
e[K[e[0me[0;31m* e[0m] (1 of 2) A start job is running for…tion (disks) (1min 38s / no limit)
eM
e[K[e[0;1;31me[0me[0;31m e[0m] (2 of 2) A start job is running for…/google-prom (1min 29s / 1min 30s)
eM
e[K[e[0;31me[0;1;31me[0me[0;31m* e[0m] (2 of 2) A start job is running for…/google-prom (1min 30s / 1min 30s)
[ 101.437825] systemd[1]: dev-disk-by\x2did-google\x2dprom.device: Job dev-disk-by\x2did-google\x2dprom.device/start timed out.
eM
e[K[e[0;1;31m[ 101.453885] systemd[1]: Timed out waiting for device /dev/disk/by-id/google-prom.
TIME e[0m] Timed out waiting for device e[0;1;39m/dev/disk/by-id/google-prome[0m.
e[K[e[0;1;31mFAILED[ 101.475868] systemd[1]: dev-disk-by\x2did-google\x2dprom.device: Job dev-disk-by\x2did-google\x2dprom.device/start failed with result ‘timeout’.
e[0m] Failed to [ 101.491246] ignition[500]: disks failedFull config:

How can I increase timeout on partition?

image version: fedora-coreos-33-20210117-3-2-gcp-x86-64

You can increase systemd timeout via options passed as kernel arguments.