Microsoft Virtualization Discussions

DF -g & getnasnapshot differences

PALEXOPOULOS
7,881 Views

Hi all,

I am currently in the process of automating some capacity reporting but I have come across a discrepancy I can't work out why,.

When I run a df -g on a volume I can see the snap reserve is close to 4.5TB

/vol/*********/ 7700GB 5061GB 2638GB  66%  /**********/
/vol/***********/.snapshot 3300GB 4643GB    0GB 141%  /vol/*********/.snapshot

When I run the following command in powershell

get-nasnapshot $vol.Name | foreach-object{$VolumeSnapSize += $_.Total }

$snapsize =  [Math]::Round(($VolumeSnapSize/(1024*1024*1024)),0)

It gives me at total of 7604GB.

Is this because of dedupe on the snapshots? I am stumped and it really throws my reporting out!

Appreciate any help

1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

PALEXOPOULOS
7,175 Views

The new Toolkit seems to have fixed the error. It is also reporting correctly on system manager now as well!

View solution in original post

12 REPLIES 12

ashleycook
7,787 Views

Sorry, this probably isn't going be much help but I've tried your code against one of our volumes which has dedupe enabled and the output looks to be correct and consistent with ontap. This was against 8.0.3.

/vol/*******/ 

5120GB 2882GB 2237GB  56%  /vol/*******/
/vol/*******/.snapshot    0GB  985GB    0GB ---%  /vol/*******/.snapshot

 

Powershell output: 985

I've tried setting the snapshot reserve to various amounts to see if that was somehow throwing the output, it didn't make any difference, but then I wasn't really expecting it to.

Have you tried breaking down the output a little and checking the output on a per snapshot basis? Something like:

get-nasnapshot $vol.Name |

    foreach-object{

        $CurrentSnapSize = [Math]::Round(($_.Total /(1024*1024*1024)),0)

        Write-Host $_.Name " " $CurrentSnapSize

        $VolumeSnapSize += $_.Total

    }

Maybe a more verbose output will give you a pointer as to where it is going wrong.

timothyn
7,786 Views

Hi Paul,

You definitely understand the problem correctly.  Summing the snapshot sizes won't take into account clones or dedupe, so you are likely to get a bad result.

Fortunately, you can use the "Cumulative" property to get the same output as the df command:

(Get-NaSnapshot myvolume | measure -Maximum Cumulative).Maximum

Or if you like formatted data sizes:

(Get-NaSnapshot myvolume | measure -Maximum Cumulative).Maximum | ConvertTo-FormattedNumber -Type datasize

That should get you within rounding error of the df command. 

Cheers!

PALEXOPOULOS
7,786 Views

Thanks Eric, unfortunately still getting a completely different number!

ashley cook, I outputted the size of each snapshot which gives me the 7TB:

(0151748487)_prd_std_T3_b28_01_r.26705   13

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120609222000   219

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120610222000   223

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120611222000   476

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120613222000   256

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120614222000   296

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120615222000   491

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120616222000   394

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120617222000   249

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120618222000   275

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120619222000   234

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120620222006   337

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120622222000   403

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120623222000   224

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120624222001   226

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120625222000   343

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120627222000   258

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120628222000   256

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120629222000   365

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120630222000   265

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120701222000   136

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120702222000   143

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120703222000   137

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120704222000   139

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120705222000   151

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120706222001   242

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120707222000   153

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_20120708222000   139

smvi_Clayton-std-daily-01_novmsnap_recent   84

PALEXOPOULOS
7,786 Views

Erick using this line: (Get-NaSnapshot myvolume | measure -Maximum Cumulative).Maximum I get the below:

prd_std_T3_b28_01:  7654244847616

ashleycook
7,787 Views

Very odd, I can't think of a reason for this.

What I was going to suggest was check the verbose output against System Manager, so you get a view of each snapshot and the cumulative total. I was hoping that might give you an indication of where the output was differing from ontap.

I don't think dedupe should be skewing the output. Certainly when I ran that code the figures returned reflected the dedupe savings.  What version of ontap are you running? Just thinking something in the API may have changed between versions.

PALEXOPOULOS
7,787 Views

Hi Ashley, 7.3.6.

It's very weird as System Manager is reporting the 7TB as well...

Data Space:

1.98 TB

Snapshot Copies Space:

7.04 TB

Snapshot Overflow Space:

1.67 TB

Total:

9.02 TB

Kind of throws out my capacity reporting completely...

ashleycook
7,787 Views

I'm stumped sorry. Maybe someone else running 7.3.x could take a look at their system to see if the results are consistent with what you are seeing?

I've seen disparity between what ontap and operations manager report previously, this has been where seemingly different calculations were used for the dedupe savings. Nothing quite like this though.

Sorry I can't be of more help.

PALEXOPOULOS
7,787 Views

Yep it's got me completely stumped as well... Need to start again with my reporting and have a think how I can get around it.

PALEXOPOULOS
7,787 Views

Just to throw another curve ball get-nasnapshotreclaimable (unfortunately this method is too slow if I was to use it across all filers) displays a different snapshot size (more consistent with df -g) than what is displayed in the get-nasnapshot and system manager!!

Very weird!

ashleycook
7,081 Views

I see what you mean, I also got a slightly result with get-nasnapshot, it is not out by a lot though.

Here is the code I ran, which also incorporates the suggestion which Eric made earlier.

get-nasnapshot $vol.Name | foreach-object{$VolumeSnapSize += $_.Total }

Write-Host "Snapsize 1:" $VolumeSnapSize " = " ($VolumeSnapSize | ConvertTo-FormattedNumber -Type datasize)

$VolumeSnapSize = (Get-NaSnapshot $vol.Name | measure -Maximum Cumulative).Maximum

Write-Host "Snapsize 2:" $VolumeSnapSize  " = " ($VolumeSnapSize | ConvertTo-FormattedNumber -Type datasize)

$VolumeSnapSize = Get-NaSnapshotReclaimable $vol.Name -Snapshots ( Get-NaSnapshot $vol.Name * )

Write-Host "Snapsize 3:" $VolumeSnapSize " = " ($VolumeSnapSize | ConvertTo-FormattedNumber -Type datasize)

The ouptut for me was:

Snapsize 1: 48218980352  =  45 GB

Snapsize 2: 48218980352  =  45 GB

Snapsize 3: 48098308096  =  45 GB

timothyn
7,081 Views

If you are getting substantially different usage numbers from df and System Manager, you may be better off raising a NetApp support ticket.  This doesn't seem like a PowerShell issue.

Cheers,

Eric

PALEXOPOULOS
7,176 Views

The new Toolkit seems to have fixed the error. It is also reporting correctly on system manager now as well!

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