ONTAP Discussions
ONTAP Discussions
Hi we have the following storage model and I have checked the threshold limit for the model FAS2050 for a deduplicated volume is 2TB.
I want to increase the space of the volume beyond the threshold limit.
storage model
FAS2050 : with ontap 7.3.3
message while adding more space to the volume
vol size: Selected SIS volume size is too large; maximum is 2048g
df -s output of the volume
Filesystem used saved %saved
/vol/vol1/ 2094239660 0 0%
If you want to increase a volume size beyond the dedupe limit then you have to first disable the dedupe then try increasing it
0% savings seems a bit low for any kind of volume. Did you run SIS on the volume at all? "sis start -s /vol/<volumename>" ?
As soon as you get more free space by deduplication, you can increase the volume size again. The number of physically allocated blocks cannot exceed 2TB. So if you save, say, 50g by deduplication you can increase the size of the volume by 50g afterwards
-Michael
Hi ,
Since the space saving was almost nill , we disabled the de-dupe volume using "sis undo"
then we increased the space for the volume.
Hi,
I have the same issue, need to increase a dedupe volume over the limit.
/vol/vol1/ 1066374992 201679956 16%
Can I stop sis when the volume is 99% full, then increase the volume?
Can anyone update me on the procedure for this action?
-Pål-André
You can stop SIS anytime on the volume.
Then increase the size and run the "sis undo" command to make it a "normal" volume again.
Peter
PS "sis undo" is an "advanced" command (priv set advanced)
vol size gives me this error:
vol size: Selected SIS volume size is too large; maximum is 1024g.
Even after I disabeled sis the error appears. So can I do a "sis undo" before sizing the volume? Or will that trash data?
-Pål-André
Yes, just sis undo and then grow the vol. WAFL N-E-V-E-R thrashes any data... I think
Peter
Well, it *thrashes* data from time to time, but it NEVER *trashes* data 😉
-Michael
OK OK... English 4 Beginners... I got it
If we meet, I can thrash you and then throw you in the trash, correct?
Peter
Forget about the comments Peter, you got my point
The 16% (200GB) of dedupe data on the volume, that was what worried me since we're going to do a sis undo.
-Pål-André
What if "sis undo" errors out that you don't have enough space to convert the volume to normal.