IBM Support

V8.5.1.x Configuration Limits and Restrictions for IBM FlashSystem 9100 and 9200

Preventive Service Planning


Abstract

This document lists the configuration limits and restrictions specific to IBM FlashSystem 9100 and 9200 software version 8.5.1.x

Content

The use of WAN optimization devices such as Riverbed are not supported in native Ethernet IP partnership configurations containing FlashSystem 9100 or 9200 enclosures.

Safeguarded Copy

The following restrictions apply for Safeguarded Copy:

  1. Mirrored volumes cannot be safeguarded. Stretched cluster is not supported
  2. Mirroring of existing safeguarded source volumes is supported for migration purposes only
  3. HyperSwap volumes are supported. However, recovery requires that they be converted to regular volumes before use
  4. Pre-defined schedules are designed to avoid running out of FlashCopy maps in a single graph and keep within the supported volumes count. It is possible to create policies (that use the CLI only) that can, potentially, breach those limits. Caution must be exercised
  5. The GUI does not support creating user-defined policies but can display any created that use the CLI.
  6. The source volume cannot be in an ownership group
  7. The source volume cannot be used with Transparent Cloud Tiering (TCT).

Volume Mobility

The following restrictions apply for Volume Mobility (nondisruptive volume move between systems):

  1. No 3-site support
  2. Not intended to be a DR or HA solution
  3. No support for consistency groups, change volumes, or expanding volumes
  4. Reduced host interoperability support. Only the following host operating systems are supported
    • RHEL
    • SLES
    • ESXi
    • Solaris
    • HP-UX.
  5. SCSI only. Fibre Channel and iSCSI supported. NVMe not supported
  6. No SCSI persistent reservations or Offloaded Data Transfer (ODX).

Data Reduction Pools

The following restrictions apply for Data Reduction Pools (DRP):

  1. VMware vSphere Virtual Volumes (vVols) are not supported in a DRP
  2. A volume in a DRP cannot be shrunk
  3. No volume can move between I/O groups when the volume is a DRP (use FlashCopy or Metro Mirror / Global Mirror instead).
  4. No split of a volume mirror to copy in a different I/O group
  5. Real/used/free/free/tier capacities are not reported per volume - only per pool.

Distributed RAID

FlashSystem 9100 and 9200 systems cannot create new DRAID5 arrays with more than 8 member drives (existing DRAID5 arrays with more than 8 members are supported). Expansion beyond 8 member drives is also supported for new or existing DRAID5 arrays.


DRAID Strip Size

For candidate drives, with a capacity greater than 4 TB, a strip size of 128 cannot be specified for either RAID-5 or RAID-6 DRAID arrays. Use a strip size of 256 instead.


Non-Disruptive Volume Move (NDVM)

The following Fibre Channel attached host types are supported for nondisruptively moving a volume between I/O groups (control enclosures):

Host Operating System Host Multipathing Host Clustering Notes
AIX 7.2 AIXPCM
Nondisruptive volume move can result in the same volume being mapped to different hosts in the same host cluster that uses different SCSI ID. If the host cluster cannot tolerate this configuration, then nondisruptive volume move cannot be used.
SAN boot is supported
NPIV is supported
Microsoft Windows 2019 MSDSM
Hyper-V Failover Cluster
SAN boot is supported
Microsoft Windows 2016 MSDSM
Hyper-V Failover Cluster
SAN Boot is supported
Red Hat 8 Native
The original paths might need to be manually removed on the host before removing access to the old I/O group
SLES 15 Native The original paths might need to be manually removed on the host before removing access to the old I/O group
VMware 6.7 Native VAAI is supported
VMware 6.5 Native VAAI is supported
Solaris 11.3 SPARC MPXIO SAN boot is supported

Note: For all other host types, I/O needs to be quiesced before moving a volume.

When moving a volume that is mapped to a host cluster, it is required to rescan disk paths on all host cluster nodes to ensure the new paths are detected before removing access from the original I/O group.


Clustered Systems

A FlashSystem 9100 or 9200 system requires native Fibre Channel SAN or alternatively 16 Gbps/32 Gbps Direct Attach Fibre Channel connectivity for communication between all nodes in the local cluster. Support for 32 Gbps direct attachment requires an RPQ. Clustering can also be accomplished with 25 Gbps Ethernet, for standard topologies.

Partnerships between systems for Metro Mirror or Global Mirror replication can be used with both Fibre Channel and native Ethernet connectivity. Distances greater than 300 meters are supported by using an FCIP link or Fibre Channel between source and target.

Clustering over Fibre Channel Clustering over 25Gb Ethernet HyperSwap over Fibre Channel HyperSwap over Ethernet (25Gb only) Metro / Global Mirror replication over Fibre Channel Metro / Global Mirror replication over Ethernet (10Gb or 25Gb)
Yes up to 4 I/O groups Yes up to 4 I/O groups Yes up to 4 I/O groups Yes up to 4 I/O groups Yes Yes

Transparent Cloud Tiering

Transparent cloud tiering on the system is defined by configuration limitations and rules. Refer to the IBM Documentation maximum limits page for details.

The following restrictions apply for Transparent Cloud Tiering:

  1. When a cloud account is created, it must continue to use the same encryption type, throughout the life of the data in that cloud account. Even if the cloud account object is removed and remade on the system, the encryption type for that cloud account cannot be changed while back up data for that system exists in the cloud provider.
  2. Performing rekey operations on a system with an encryption enabled cloud account, perform the commit operation immediately after the prepare operation. Remember to retain the previous system master key (on USB or in Key server) as this key can still be needed to retrieve your cloud backup data when performing a T4 recovery or an import.
  3. Avoid the use of the 'Restore_uid' option when backup is imported to a new cluster.
  4. Import of TCT data is only supported from systems whose backup data was created at v7.8.0.1 or later

The following AWS regions are supported by this code-level:

  • us-east-1
  • us-west-1
  • us-west-2
  • ca-central-1
  • eu-west-1
  • eu-west-2
  • eu-west-3
  • eu-central-1
  • sa-east-1
  • ap-southeast-1
  • ap-southeast-2
  • ap-south-1
  • ap-northeast-1
  • ap-northeast-2

Encryption and TCT

There is a small possibility that, on a system that uses both Encryption and Transparent Cloud Tiering, the system can enter a state where an encryption rekey operation is stuck in 'prepared' or 'prepare_failed' state, and a cloud account is stuck in 'offline' state.
The user is unable to cancel or commit the encryption rekey because the cloud account is offline. The user is unable to remove the cloud account because an encryption rekey is in progress.
The system can be recovered from this state by using a T4 Recovery procedure.
It is also possible that SAS-attached storage arrays go offline.

The 2 scenarios identify where this might happen:

Scenario A

  1. Using USB encryption and Cloud.
  2. A new USB key is prepared by using 'chencryption -usb newkey -key prepare'.
  3. The new presumptive key is deleted from all USB sticks before the new key is committed.
  4. All nodes in the system are rebooted.
  5. The cloud account is offline as it cannot get the presumptive key. The cloud account cannot be removed, and the encryption rekey cannot be completed or cancelled. The system remains stuck in these cloud and encryption states.
  6. Any SAS-attached arrays are offline and locked.
  7. The system can be restored by T4 to a previous config backup.

Scenario B

  1. Using key server encryption and Cloud.
  2. A new key server key is prepared by using 'chencryption -keyserver newkey -key prepare'.
  3. The new presumptive key is deleted from the key server before the new key is committed.
  4. All nodes in the system are rebooted.
  5. The cloud account is offline as it cannot get the presumptive key. The cloud account cannot be removed, and the encryption rekey cannot be completed or cancelled. The system remains stuck in these cloud and encryption states.
  6. SAS-attached arrays are not affected.
  7. The system can be restored by T4 to a previous config backup.


NPIV (N_Port ID Virtualization)

The following recommendations and restrictions can be followed when implementing NPIV:

FCoE is not supported by NPIV.

Operating systems not currently supported for use with NPIV:

  • HPUX 11iV2
  • Veritas DMP multipathing on Windows with RAID-5 volumes in VxVM
  • IBMi in Direct attach

Other Operating Systems

Other operating Systems might also experience the same issue when modifying the NPIV state from "Transitional" to "Disabled", in which case the operating system-specific rescan command can be used.

Fabric Attachment
NPIV mode on SVC or Storwize is only supported when used with Brocade or Cisco Fibre Channel SAN switches that are NPIV capable.


Node Memory

Nodes in an I/O group cannot be replaced by nodes with less memory when compressed volumes are present.

If a customer must migrate from 64GB to 32GB memory node canisters in an I/O group, they have to remove all compressed volume copies in that I/O group. This restriction applies to 7.7.0.0 and newer software.

A customer must not:

  1. Create an I/O group with node canisters with 64GB of memory.
  2. Create compressed volumes in that I/O group.
  3. Delete both node canisters from the system with CLI or GUI.
  4. Install new node canisters with 32GB of memory and add them to the configuration in the original I/O group with CLI or GUI.

HyperSwap

Configure your host multipath driver to use an ALUA-based path policy.

Due to the requirement for multiple access I/O groups, SAS attached host types are not supported by HyperSwap volumes.

A volume configured with multiple access I/O groups, on a system in the storage layer, cannot be virtualized by a system in the replication layer. This restriction prevents a HyperSwap volume on one system being virtualized by another.

AIX Live Partition Mobility (LPM)
AIX LPM is supported by the HyperSwap function and AIX 7.


Direct Attachment

IBM System Storage DS8000 series is not supported by direct-attached systems.

SAN boot on Windows 2019 (Qlogic HBA) is not supported by 32GB direct-attached systems.


16 Gbps Fibre Channel Node Connection

Refer to the IBM System Storage Inter-operation Center (SSIC) for supported 16 Gbps Fibre Channel configurations supported by 16 Gbps node hardware.

Note 16 Gbps Node hardware is supported when connected to Brocade and Cisco 8 Gbps or 16 Gbps fabrics only.

Direct connections to 2 Gbps or 4 Gbps SAN or direct host attachment to 2 Gbps or 4 Gbps ports is not supported.

Other configured switches that are not directly connected to the 16 Gbps Node hardware can be any supported fabric switch as currently listed in the SSIC.


25 Gbps Ethernet Canister Connection

Two optional 2-port 25 Gbps Ethernet adapters are supported in each node canister for iSCSI communication with iSCSI capable Ethernet ports in hosts by using Ethernet switches. These 2-port 25 Gbps Ethernet adapters do not support FCoE.

There are two types of 25 Gbps Ethernet adapter feature supported:

  1. RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE)
  2. Internet Wide-area RDMA Protocol(iWARP)

Either works for standard iSCSI communications with hosts, for example, by not using Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA). A future software release will add (RDMA) links by using new protocols that support RDMA such as NVMe over Ethernet.

Use of RDMA with a 25 Gbps Ethernet adapter becomes possible then RDMA links work between RoCE ports or between iWARP ports (that is, from a RoCE node canister port to a RoCE port on a host or from an iWARP node canister port to an iWARP port on a host).

For Ethernet switches and adapters supported in hosts, visit the SSIC.

Example of a RoCE adapter for use in a host

Example of an iWARP adapter for use in a host


IP Partnership

IP partnerships are supported on any of the available Ethernet ports. Using an Ethernet switch to convert a 25Gb to a 1Gb IP partnership, or a 10Gb to a 1Gb IP partnership is not supported. Therefore, the IP infrastructure on both partnership sites must match. Bandwidth limiting on IP partnerships between both sites is supported.


VMware vSphere Virtual Volumes (vVols)

The maximum number of virtual machines on a single VMware ESXi host in a FlashSystem 9100/9200 / vVol storage configuration is limited to 680.

The use of VMware vSphere Virtual Volumes (vVols) on a system that is configured for HyperSwap is not currently supported by FlashSystem 9100 or 9200.


Host Limitations

SAN BOOT function on AIX 7.2 TL5
SAN BOOT is not supported for AIX 7.2 TL5 when connected by using the NVME/FC protocol.

RDM Volumes attached to guests in VMware 7.0
Using RDM (raw device mapping) volumes attached to any guests, with the RoCE iSER protocol, results in pathing issues or inability to boot the guest.

N2225/N2226 SAS HBA
VMware 6.7 (Guest O/S SLES12SP4) connected by SAS N2225/N2226 host adapters are not supported.

Lenovo 430-16e/8e SAS HBA
VMware 6.7 and 6.5 (Guest O/S SLES12SP4) connected by SAS Lenovo 430-16e/8e host adapters are not supported.
Windows 2019 and 2016 connected by SAS Lenovo 430-16e/8e host adapters are not supported.

Windows 2016 HyperV
RHEL v7.1 guests on Windows 2016 HyperV, with Virtual Fibre Channel, are not supported.

iSER
Operating systems not currently supported for use with iSER:

  • Windows 2012 R2 by using Mellanox ConnectX-4 Lx EN
  • Windows 2016 using Mellanox ConnectX-4 Lx EN

Windows NTP server 
The Linux NTP client used by SAN Volume Controller may not always function correctly with Windows W32Time NTP Server


Fabric Limitations

Only one FCF (Fibre Channel Forwarder) switch per fabric is supported.

Storage connected directly to a Cisco Fabric Extender (FEX) is not supported.


Priority Flow Control for iSCSI / iSER

Priority Flow Control for iSCSI / iSER is supported on Emulex & Chelsio adapters (SVC supported) with all DCBX enabled switches.


Maximum Configurations

Configuration limits for FlashSystem 9100 and 9200:

Property
Hardware Type
Maximum Number
Comments
System (Cluster) Properties
Control enclosures per system (cluster)
4
Each control enclosure contains two node canisters
Nodes per system
8
Arranged as four I/O groups
Nodes per fabric
64
Maximum number of FS9100 and FS9200 system nodes that can be present on the same Fibre Channel fabric, with visibility of each other
Fabrics per system
8
The number of counterpart SANs, which are supported
Inter-cluster partnerships per system
3
A system can be partnered with up to three remote systems. No more than four systems can be in the same connected set
IP Quorum devices per system
5
Data encryption keys per system
1024
Key servers per system 4
Node Properties 
Logins per node Fibre Channel WWPN
512
Includes logins from server HBAs, disk controller ports, node ports within the same system and node ports from remote systems
Fibre Channel buffer credits per port 8 Gbps FC adapter
255
The number of credits granted by the switch to the node
16 Gbps FC adapter
4095
Portset objects per system 72 FC + Ethernet
IP address objects per system 2048 Includes duplicated IP addresses
IP address objects per node 256
IP addresses per port 64
When a node fails over, Ethernet ports with the same ID will be configured with all the IP addresses of the partner. Hence there can be a maximum of 128 IP addresses configured per Ethernet port during failover.
For Emulex ports, there can be a maximum of 3 unique VLANs per port and a maximum of 32 IP addresses per port.
For Mellanox iSER connectivity, there can be a maximum of 31 VLANs per port and a maximum of 31 IP addresses per port with VLAN.
Routable IP addresses per port 1
iSCSI sessions per node
1024
2048 in IP failover mode (when partner node is unavailable).
This limit includes both iSCSI Host Attach AND iSCSI Initiator sessions
iSER sessions per node
256
iSCSI + iSER sessions per node 1088
Managed Disk Properties 
Managed disks (MDisks) per system
4096
The maximum number of logical units that, can be managed by a system, including internal arrays.

Internal distributed arrays consume 16 logical units.

This number also includes external MDisks that, have not been configured into storage pools (managed disk groups)
Managed disks per storage pool (managed disk group)
128
Storage pools per system
1024
Parent pools per system
128
Child pools per system
1023
Managed disk extent size
8192 MB
Capacity for an individual internal managed disk (array)
-
No limit is imposed beyond the maximum number of drives per array limits.
Maximum size depends on the extent size of the Storage Pool.
Comparison Table: Maximum Volume, MDisk, and System capacity for each extent size.
Capacity for an individual external managed disk
1 PB
Note: External managed disks larger than 2 TB are only supported for certain types of storage systems. Refer to the supported hardware matrix for further details.
Maximum size depends on the extent size of the Storage Pool.
Comparison Table: Maximum Volume, MDisk, and System capacity for each extent size.
Total storage capacity manageable per system
32 PB
Maximum requires an extent size of 8192 MB to be used

This limit represents the per system maximum of 2^22 extents.

Comparison Table: Maximum Volume, MDisk, and System capacity for each extent size.
Data Reduction Pool Properties
Data Reduction Pools per system
4
MDisks per Data Reduction Pool
128
Volumes per Data Reduction Pool
15864
Extents per I/O group per Data Reduction Pool
524288
Volume (Virtual Disk) Properties
Basic Volumes (VDisks) per system
15864
Each Basic Volume uses one VDisk, each with one copy.

If a Remote Copy partnership exists to a system that supports a lower number of volumes, the maximum number of volumes is reduced to the lower limit, or 8192 if that is greater.

For example, if one system has a limit of 15864 volumes and the other has a limit of 8192 volumes, both systems are limited to 8192 volumes.
HyperSwap volumes per system
2000
Each HyperSwap volume uses 4 VDisks, each with one copy, 1 active-active remote copy relationship, and 4 FlashCopy mappings.
Volumes per I/O group (volumes per caching I/O group)
-
No limit is imposed here beyond the volumes per system limit.
Thin-provisioned (space-efficient) volume copies in regular pools per system
-
No limit is imposed here beyond the volume copies per system limit.
Compressed volume copies in data reduction pools per system
-
No limit is imposed here beyond the volume copy limit per data reduction pool
Compressed volume copies in data reduction pools per I/O group
-
No limit is imposed here beyond the volume copy limit per data reduction pool
Deduplicated volume copies in data reduction pools per system
-
No limit is imposed here beyond the volume copy limit per data reduction pool
Deduplicated volume copies in data reduction pools per I/O group
-
No limit is imposed here beyond the volume copy limit per data reduction pool
Volumes per storage pool
-
No limit is imposed beyond the volumes per system limit
Fully allocated volume capacity
256 TB
Maximum size for an individual fully allocated volume.

Maximum size depends on the extent size of the Storage Pool.
Comparison Table: Maximum Volume, MDisk, and System capacity for each extent size.
Thin-provisioned (space-efficient) per-volume capacity for volumes copies in regular and data reduction pools
256 TB
Maximum size for an individual thin-provisioned volume.

Maximum size depends on the extent size of the Storage Pool.
Comparison Table: Maximum Volume, MDisk, and System capacity for each extent size.
HyperSwap volume capacity in a single I/O group by using RAID
2 PiB
This limit depends on the bitmap allocation for mirroring and replication in each I/O group.
See the IBM Documentation for details.
Host mappings per system 64000
Mirrored Volume (Virtual Disk) Properties 
Copies per volume
2
Volume copies per system
15864
Total mirrored volume capacity per I/O group
1 PB
Host Properties 
Host objects (IDs) per system
2048
A host object can contain both Fibre Channel ports and iSCSI names
Host objects (IDs) per I/O group
512
Refer to the additional Fibre Channel and iSCSI host limits
Volume mappings per host object
2048
Although IBM FlashSystem 9100 and 9200 allows the mapping of up to 2048 volumes per host object, not all hosts are capable of accessing or managing this number of volumes. The practical mapping limit is restricted by the host OS, not IBM FlashSystem 9100 or 9200.
Note: this limit does not apply to hosts of type adminlun (used to support VMware vVols).
Host Cluster Properties 
Host clusters per system
512
Hosts in a host cluster
128
Fibre Channel Host Properties 
Fibre Channel hosts per system
2048
Fibre Channel host ports per system
8192
Fibre Channel hosts per I/O group
512
Fibre Channel host ports per I/O group
2048
NPIV Direct Attach Logins per Fibre Channel WWPN 128
Fibre Channel host ports per host object (ID)
32
iSCSI Host Properties 
iSCSI hosts per system
2048
iSCSI hosts per I/O group
512
iSCSI names per host object (ID)
4
iSCSI names per I/O group
512
iSCSI Hardware Properties 
10 Gbps Ethernet ports per system
4
Onboard ports
iSER Host Properties 
iSER hosts per system
2048
iSER hosts per I/O group
512
iSER names per host object (ID)
4
iSER Hardware Properties 
25 Gbps iWARP adapters per canister
3
25 Gbps ROCE adapters per canister
3
25 Gbps iWARP ports per canister
6
25 Gbps ROCE ports per canister
6
NVMe over Fibre Channel Host Properties
FC-NVMe hosts per system
64
This limit is not policed by the Spectrum Virtualize software. Any configurations that exceed this limit can experience significant adverse performance impact.
FC-NVMe hosts per I/O group
16
This limit is not policed by the Spectrum Virtualize software. Any configurations that exceed this limit can experience significant adverse performance impact.
Fibre Channel Logins per FC-NVMe WWPN 16 This limit is the number of FC2 logins supported.
NVMe Qualified Names (NQNs) per host object (ID)
2
NVMe over RDMA hosts per system 768
NVMe over RDMA hosts per I/O group 512
Primary RDMA connections per port 256
Copy Services Properties
Remote Copy (Metro Mirror and Global
Mirror) relationships per system
10000
This can be any mix of Metro Mirror and Global Mirror relationships.
Active-Active Relationships (HyperSwap) per system
2000
Remote Copy relationships per consistency group (<=256 GMCV relationships are configured)
-
No limit is imposed beyond the Remote Copy relationships per system limit.

Refer to the Changes to support for Global Mirror with Change Volumes page for information relating to GMCV performance considerations and best practice.
Remote Copy relationships per consistency group (>256 GMCV relationships are configured)
200
Remote Copy consistency groups per system
256
Total Metro Mirror, Global Mirror, and HyperSwap capacity per I/O group
2 PiB
This limit is the total capacity for all master and auxiliary volumes in the I/O group.
Total number of Global Mirror with Change Volumes relationships per system
256
60s cycle time (Change volumes used for active-active relationships do not count toward this limit).
2500
300s cycle time (Change volumes used for active-active relationships do not count toward this limit).
FlashCopy mappings per system
15864
FlashCopy targets per source
256
FlashCopy mappings per consistency group
512
FlashCopy consistency groups per system
500
Total FlashCopy volume capacity per I/O group
4 PB
Snapshots per system 15863
Snapshots per volume copy 15863
Thin-Clone, Clone Volumes per system 15862
Thin-Clone Volumes per source volume 15862
Clone Volumes per source volume 15862
FlashCopy bitmap space allowance for Snapshots, Volumes, (Thin-Clone, Clone) and legacy FlashCopy 2 GiB
FlashCopy bitmap space allowance for Snapshots only 2 GiB
FlashCopy mappings per graph 256
3-site Remote Copy (Metro Mirror) relationships per consistency group
256
3-site Remote Copy (Metro Mirror) consistency groups per system
16
3-site Remote Copy (Metro Mirror) relationships per system
1250
Safeguarded volumes per system
15864
Safeguarded volume groups per system
256
Safeguarded volumes per volume group
512
Safeguarded policies per system
32
Includes 3 predefined and 29 user-defined policies
Snapshot policies per system
32
IP Partnership Properties 
Inter-cluster IP partnerships per system
3
A system can be partnered with up to three remote systems.
Inter-site links per IP partnership
2
A maximum of two inter-site links can be used between two IP partnership sites.
Ports per node
1
A maximum of one port per node can be used for IP partnership.
Internal Storage Properties
SAS chains per control enclosure
2
Expansion enclosures per SAS chain
10
Expansion enclosures per control enclosure
20
Drives per I/O group
760
Drives per system
3040
SCM drives per I/O group 12
Non-Distributed RAID Array Properties
Arrays per system
128
Encrypted arrays per system
128
Drives per array
16
Min-Max member drives per RAID-0 array
1-8
Min-Max member drives per RAID-1 array
2-2
Min-Max member drives per RAID-5 array
3-16
Min-Max member drives per RAID-6 array
5-16
Min-Max member drives per RAID-10 array
2-16
Min-Max member drives per RAID-10 array (tier SCM)
2-2
Hot spare drives
-
No limit is imposed
Distributed RAID Array Properties 
Arrays per system
32
The presence of non-DRAID arrays can reduce this limit
Encrypted arrays per system
32
The presence of non-DRAID arrays can reduce this limit
Arrays per I/O group
10
The presence of non-DRAID arrays can reduce this limit
Drives per array
128
Drives per array (RAID-1) 16
FCM3 XL drives per array (RAID-6) 24
Min-Max member drives per RAID-5 array
4-128
Min-Max member drives per RAID-5 array (tier SCM)
4-4
Min-Max member drives per RAID-5 array (NVMe drives) 4-24
Min-Max member drives per RAID-6 array
6-128
Min-Max member drives per RAID-6 array (NVMe drives) 6-24
Rebuild areas per non-FCM array
1-4
Rebuild areas per FCM array
1
Min-Max stripe width for RAID-5 array
3-16
Min-Max stripe width for RAID-6 array
5-16
Max drive capacity for RAID-5 array
8 TB
Drives added to an array in a single DRAID expansion
12
Concurrent DRAID expansions per system
4
Concurrent DRAID expansions per parent storage pool
1
Compressed DRAID arrays per storage pool 1
External Storage System Properties
Storage system WWNNs per system (cluster)
1024
Storage system WWPNs per system (cluster)
1024
WWNNs per storage system
16
WWPNs per WWNN
16
WWPNs per Mdisk 16 WWPNs per Mdisk means the limit of Storage System WWPNs that can have LUN mappings for a specific Storage System Logical Unit (LU)
LUNs (managed disks) per storage system
-
No limit is imposed beyond the managed disks per system limit
System and User Management Properties 
User accounts per system
400
Includes the default user accounts
User groups per system
256
Includes the default user groups
Authentication servers per system
1
NTP servers per system
1
iSNS servers per system
1
Concurrent OpenSSH sessions per system
32
Event notification Properties
SNMP servers per system
6
Syslog servers per system
6
Email (SMTP) servers per system
6
Email servers are used in turn until the email is successfully sent
Email users (recipients) per system
12
LDAP servers per system
6
REST API Properties
Threads per session
64
HTTP header size
16 KB
 
 

Extents

The following table compares the maximum volume, MDisk, and system capacity for each extent size.

Extent size (MB) 
Maximum non thin-provisioned volume capacity in GB
Maximum thin-provisioned volume capacity in GB (for regular pools) 
Maximum thin-provisioned and compressed volume size in data reduction pools in GB
Maximum total thin-provisioned and compressed capacity for all volumes in a single data reduction pool per IOgroup in GB
Maximum MDisk capacity in GB 
Maximum DRAID MDisk capacity in TB 
Total storage capacity manageable per system * 
16
2,048
(2 TB)
2,000
2,048
(2 TB)
8,192
(8 TB)
2,048
(2 TB)
32
64 TB
32
4,096
(4 TB)
4,000
4,096
(4 TB)
16,384
(16 TB)
4,096
(4 TB)
64
128 TB
64
8,192
(8 TB)
8,000
8,192
(8 TB)
32,768
(32 TB)
8,192
(8 TB)
128
256 TB
128
16,384
(16 TB)
16,000
16,384
(16 TB)
65,536
(64 TB)
16,384
(16 TB)
256
512 TB
256
32,768
(32 TB)
32,000
32,768
(32 TB)
131,072
(128 TB)
32,768
(32 TB)
512
1 PB
512
65,536
(64 TB)
65,000
65,536
(64 TB)
262,144
(256 TB)
65,536
(64 TB)
1,024
(1 PB)
2 PB
1,024
131,072
(128 TB)
130,000
131,072
(128 TB)
524,288
(512 TB)
131,072
(128 TB)
2,048
(2 PB)
4 PB
2,048
262,144
(256 TB)
260,000
262,144
(256 TB)
1,048,576
(1 PB)
262,144
(256 TB)
4,096
(4 PB)
8 PB
4,096
262,144
(256 TB)
260,000
262,144
(256 TB)
2,097,152
(2 PB)
524,288
(512 TB)
8,192
(8 PB)
16 PB
8,192
262,144
(256 TB)
260,000
262,144
(256 TB)
4,194,304
(4 PB)
1,048,576
(1 PB)
16384
(16 PB)
32 PB


* The total capacity values assume that all of the storage pools in the system use the same extent size.
 

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Document Information

Modified date:
08 May 2024

UID

ibm16557230