VMware Solutions Discussions

Space guarantee for NFS VM Datastore

acistmedical
5,219 Views

Which Space Guarantee should i use for a vSphere data stores that will be accessible via NFS?

I will be using Thin Disks on a Vms, Dedupe and SMVI.

any benefits on one over another.

Thanks

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radek_kubka
5,219 Views

To both actually, if space guarantee set to none, which is nice.

If guarantee is set to volume, then you need to shrink the volume if you want the savings to be seen in the containing aggregate.

Regards,

Radek

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mheimberg
5,219 Views

We choose guarantee volume, like for any other NAS-volume.

The advantage we see, is, that no other applicatoin can eat away the free storage pool, so your datastore is starving once it needs more space.

But of course you could also go for a thinprovisioning with guarantee file or none (which should not make a difference, AFAIK, not even with thin disks, but correct me...)

Markus

radek_kubka
5,219 Views

Hi,

It is down to a personal preference I think.

If you have a single volume within an aggregate, IMHO it makes no difference at all whether you set guarantee to volume, or to none. With multiple volumes hosted within the same aggregate the story is slightly different. Some people like thin provisioning (like myself) because it moves free space monitoring & management from a volume level to an aggregate level (imagine e.g. 1.2TB aggregate with 10x 1TB thinly provisioned volumes).

One more interesting thing though:

On the VMware side you may see how much space is left within an aggregate with a thinly provisioned NFS datastores. Say containing aggregate has 500GB free space & NFS volume has nominal size of 1TB - you will see only 500GB of free space in this datastore.

Regards,

Radek

acistmedical
5,219 Views

So what about SIS then? Will it return freed space after the dedup to aggregate or volume?

radek_kubka
5,220 Views

To both actually, if space guarantee set to none, which is nice.

If guarantee is set to volume, then you need to shrink the volume if you want the savings to be seen in the containing aggregate.

Regards,

Radek

amiller_1
5,219 Views

I generally do "volume" unless you're doing full on thin provisioning.

Reasons to do volume are....

  • hard reserves space out of the aggregate
  • is the default when using the VMware/NFS wizard in System Manager as well as provisioning via RCU (I highly recommend using one of those options as you get various other best practice options by using them)
  • any space savings due to thin provisioning and deduplication are returned to the volume

If you are doing full-on thin provisioning (which is fine...just make sure absolutely sure you understand it and have VERY good alerting around aggregate free space), you can set to "none" which will return all space savings back to the aggregate.

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