Preventive Service Planning
Abstract
This document lists the configuration limits and restrictions specific to IBM FlashSystem 9100 family software version 8.2.1.x
Content
V8.2.1 does not support Transparent Cloud Tiering.
V8.2.1.0 introduces support for NVMe over Fibre Chanel (FC-NVMe) host attachment. Refer to the 'NVMe over Fibre Channel host properties' in the Maximum Configurations table below before attaching FC-NVMe hosts: the configuration limits for FC-NVMe are lower than for SCSI (FC/iSCSI/SAS) hosts and FC-NVMe host attachment reduces the maximum supported number of SCSI hosts.
The use of WAN optimisation devices such as Riverbed are not supported in native Ethernet IP partnership configurations containing FlashSystem 9100 enclosures.
Data Reduction Pools
- Child pools are not supported in a DRP;
- VVOL is not supported in a DRP (because child pool is not supported);
- A volume in a DRP cannot be shrunk;
- No volume move between I/O groups if volume in a DRP (use FlashCopy or Metro Mirror/Global Mirror instead);
- No split of a volume mirror to copy in a different I/O group;
- Real/used/free/free/tier capacity are not reported per volume - only per pool.
Note: These restrictions are applicable to all the versions of IBM Spectrum Virtualize v8.1.2 and later
REST API
Customers using the REST API to list more than 2000 objects may experience a loss of service, from the API, as it restarts due to memory constraints.
It is not possible to access the REST API using a cluster's IPv6 address.
NVMe over Fibre Chanel
Hosts using the NVMe protocol cannot be mapped to HyperSwap or stretched volumes.
Volumes accessed by hosts using the NVMe protocol cannot be configured with multiple access I/O groups due to a limitation of the NVMe protocol.
DRAID Strip Size
For candidate drives, with a capacity greater than 4TB, a strip size of 128 cannot be specified for either RAID-5 or RAID-6 DRAID arrays. For these drives a strip size of 256 should be used.
Non-Disruptive Volume Move (NDVM)
The following Fibre Channel attached host types are supported for non-disruptively moving a volume between I/O groups:
Host Operating System | Host Multipathing | Host Clustering | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
AIX 7.2 | AIXPCM |
Non-disruptive volume move may result in the same volume being mapped to different hosts in the same host cluster using different SCSI IDs. If the host cluster cannot tolerate this configuration then non-disruptive 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
|
RedHat 8 | Native |
The original paths may need to be manually removed on the host after removing access to the old I/O group
|
|
SLES 15 | Native | The original paths may need to be manually removed on the host after 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 should be quiesced when moving a volume.
When moving a volume that is mapped to a host cluster then you must rescan disk paths on all host cluster nodes to ensure the new paths have been detected before removing access from the original I/O group.
NPIV ( N_Port ID Virtualization )
Spectrum Virtualize family of products version 7.7 introduced support for NPIV ( N_Port ID Virtualization ) for Fibre Channel fabric attachment. The following recommendations and restrictions should be followed when implementing the NPIV feature.
Operating systems not currently supported for use with NPIV:
- RHEL6 and earlier on IBM Power
- HPUX 11iV2
- Veritas DMP multipathing on Windows with RAID-5 volumes in VxVM
General requirements
Required SDD versions for IBM AIX and Microsoft Windows Environments:
- IBM AIX Operating Systems require a minimum SDDPCM version of 2.6.8.0 or AIXPCM;
- Microsoft Windows requires a minimum SDDDSM version 2.4.7.0. The latest recommended level which resolves issues listed below is 2.4.7.1.
Path Optimization
User intervention may be required when changing NPIV states from "Transitional" to "Disabled". All Paths to a LUN with SDDDSM or SDDPCM may remain "Non-Optimized" when NPIV is "Disabled" from "Transitional" state.
To resolve this issue please use the following instructions:
IBM AIX
For SDDPCM:
Run "pcmpath chgprefercntl device <device number>/<device number range>" on AIX. This will restore both Optimized and Non-Optimized paths for all the LUNs correctly.
Windows 2008 and 2012
For SDDDSM:
Run "datapath rescanhw" on Windows. This will restore both Optimized and Non-Optimized paths for all the LUN's correctly.
This issue is resolved with SDDDSM version 2.4.7.1
Windows 2008 and 2012 Non-Preferred Paths with SDDDSM
When NPIV enters into Transitional state from Disabled, with all the SDDDSM paths in Non-Preferred state, the paths to the Virtual ports also become Non-Preferred. This path configuration might cause IO failures as soon as NPIV moves into "Enabled" state.
As a work around user should configure "at least one preferred path" to each LUN, when in NPIV "Disabled" state.
This issue is resolved with SDDDSM version 2.4.7.1
Solaris
Emulex HBA Settings:
1. When implementing NPIV on Solaris 11 the default disk IO timeout needs to be changed to 120s by adding "set sd:sd_io_time=120" in /etc/system file, A system reboot is required for the change to be implemented.
2. When ports on host HBA are connected to 16GB SAN, NPIV is not supported.
Other Operating Systems
Other operating Systems may also experience the same issue when changing the NPIV state from "Transitional" to "Disabled" in which case the operating system specific rescan command should be used.
Fabric Attachment
NPIV mode on the FlashSystem 9100 family is only supported when used with Brocade or Cisco fibre channel SAN switches which are NPIV capable.
Nodes in an IO group cannot be replaced by nodes with less memory when compressed volumes are present
If a customer must migrate from 64GB to 32GB memory nodecanisters in an IO group, they will have to remove all compressed volume copies in that IO group.
A customer must not:
- Create an IO group with node canisters with 64GB of memory.
- Create compressed volumes in that IO group.
- Delete both node canisters from the system with CLI or GUI.
- Install new node canisters with 32GB of memory and add them to the configuration in the original IO group with CLI or GUI.
HyperSwap
When using the HyperSwap function please configure your host multipath driver to use an ALUA-based path policy.
Due to the requirement for multiple access IO groups, SAS attached host types are not supported with 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 with the HyperSwap function and AIX 7.
Clustered Systems
A FlashSystem 9100 system requires native Fibre Channel SAN or, alternatively, 8Gbps/16Gbps Direct Attach Fibre Channel connectivity for communication between all nodes in the local cluster. Clustering can also be accomplished with 25Gbps Ethernet, for standard topologies. For HyperSwap topologies a SCORE request will be required. Please contact your IBM representative to raise a SCORE request.
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 metres are only supported when using an FCIP link or Fibre Channel between source and target.
Direct Attachment
SAN boot is not supported on host Fibre Channel direct attach systems running v8.2.1.0 - v8.2.1.2. This configuration is supported with v8.2.1.3 or later.
16Gbps Fibre Channel Canister Connection
Please visit the IBM System Storage Inter-operation Center (SSIC) for supported 16Gbps Fibre Channel configurations supported with 16Gbps node hardware. Note 16Gbps Node hardware is supported when connected to Brocade and Cisco 8Gbps or 16Gbps fabrics only. Direct connections to 2Gbps or 4Gbps SAN or direct host attachment to 2Gbps or 4Gbps ports is not supported. Other configured switches which are not directly connected to the 16Gbps Node hardware can be any supported fabric switch as currently listed in SSIC.
25Gbps Ethernet Canister Connection
Two optional 2-port 25Gbps Ethernet adapter is supported in each node canister for iSCSI communication with iSCSI capable Ethernet ports in hosts via Ethernet switches. These 2-port 25Gbps Ethernet adapters do not support FCoE.
There are two types of 25Gbps Ethernet adapter feature supported:
- RDMA over Converged Ethernet (RoCE)
- Internet Wide-area RDMA Protocol(iWARP)
Either will work for standard iSCSI communications, i.e. not using Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA). A future software release will add (RDMA) links using new protocols that support RDMA such as NVMe over Ethernet.
When use of RDMA with a 25Gbps Ethernet adapter becomes possible then RDMA links will only work between RoCE ports or between iWARP ports.
i.e. 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.
The 25Gbps adapters come with SFP28 fitted, which can be used to connect to switches using OM3 optical cables.
For Ethernet switches and adapters supported in hosts please visit the SSIC .
This is an example of a RoCE adapter for use in a host.
https://docs.nvidia.com/networking/display/cx4lxen
This is an example of a iWARP adapter for use in a host.
https://www.chelsio.com/nic/unified-wire-adapters/t6225-cr/
Customers who wish to connect a 10Gb switch to a 25Gb HBA should be aware that this is only supported via a SCORE request. Please contact your IBM representative to raise a SCORE request.
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.
Fabric Limitations
Only one FCF ( Fibre Channel Forwarder ) switch per fabric is supported.
VMware vSphere Virtual Volumes (VVols)
The maximum number of Virtual Machines on a single VMware ESXi host in a FlashSystem 9100 / 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 with the FlashSystem 9100 family.
Host Limitations
UCS firmware code level: 4.0(4)
UCS Platforms M3, M4 and M5
Protocol: FC (EHM)
- UEFI SAN boot Is not supported with VIC13XX adapters
- Path recovery via unified FC uplink port fails when the attached switch rebooted
Protocol: ISCSI
- Connecting the Storwize Storage Array (either of the 25Gb HICs) to a UCS system must be done via breakout cables.
iSER
Operating systems not currently supported for use with iSER:
- VMware ESXi 6.7 using Mellanox ConnectX-4 Lx EN
- Windows 2012 R2 using Mellanox ConnectX-4 Lx EN
- Windows 2016 using Mellanox ConnectX-4 Lx EN
FCoE
Operating systems not currently supported for use with FCoE:
- RedHat 6.x
- VMware 6.0
- Windows 2012 Hyper-V Cluster
Microsoft Offload Data Transfer ( ODX ) and SDDDSM Requirements
From version 7.5.0 the Spectrum Virtualize family of products introduced support for Microsoft ODX. In order to utilise this function all windows hosts accessing a FlashSystem 9100 are required to be at a minimum SDDDSM version of 2.4.5.0. Earlier versions of SDDDSM are not supported when the ODX function is activated.
Windows NTP server
The Linux NTP client used by the FlashSystem 9100 family may not always function correctly with Windows W32Time NTP Server.
Oracle
Oracle Version and OS
|
Restrictions that apply:
|
Oracle Release 11.2 any platform |
1
|
Oracle Release 12.1 any platform |
Restriction 1:
Oracle ASM disk groups may dismount with the following error:
"Waited 15 secs for write IO to PST"
Recommendation
Increase the asm_hbeatiowait to 120 seconds to prevent this issue occurring.
Applies to Oracle Database - Enterprise Edition - Version 11.2.0.3 to 12.1.0.1 [Release 11.2 to 12.1] on any platform.
Priority Flow Control for iSCSI
Priority Flow Control for iSCSI is supported on Brocade VDX 10-gigabit Ethernet switches only.
Maximum Configurations
Configuration limits for FlashSystem 9100 family:
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 maximum number of FS9100 family 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 may be partnered with up to three remote systems. No more than four systems may be in the same connected set | |
IP Quorum devices per system |
5
|
||
Data encryption keys per system |
1024
|
||
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 - 8Gbps FC Adapter |
255
|
The number of credits granted by the switch to the node | |
Fibre Channel buffer credits per port - 16Gbps FC Adapter |
4095
|
The number of credits granted by the switch to the node | |
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
|
||
Managed Disk Properties
|
|||
Managed disks (MDisks) per system |
4096
|
The maximum number of logical units which can be managed by a system, including internal arrays. Internal distributed arrays consume 16 logical units. This number also includes external MDisks which 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
|
Not supported in a Data Reduction Pool | |
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 is dependent 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 is dependent 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 |
10000 - (Number of Data Reduction Pools x 12)
|
||
Extents per I/O group per Data Reduction Pool |
128000
|
||
Volume (Virtual Disk) Properties
|
|||
Basic Volumes (VDisks) per system |
10000
|
Each Basic Volume uses 1 VDisk, each with one copy. | |
HyperSwap volumes per system |
1250
|
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) |
10000
|
||
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 is dependent 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 is dependent 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 using RAID |
850 TiB
|
This is due to the limit on bitmap space for mirroring and replication in each I/O group. See the Knowledge Center for details. |
|
Host mappings per system |
64000
|
See also - volume mappings per host object below | |
Mirrored Volume (Virtual Disk) Properties
|
|||
Copies per volume |
2
|
||
Volume copies per system |
10000
|
||
Total mirrored volume capacity per I/O group |
1024 TB
|
||
Generic Host Properties
|
|||
Host objects (IDs) per system |
2048
|
A host object may 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 below | |
Volume mappings per host object |
2048
|
Although IBM FlashSystem 9100 allows the mapping of up to 2048 volumes per host object, not all hosts are capable of accessing/managing this number of volumes. The practical mapping limit is restricted by the host OS, not IBM FlashSystem 9100. Note: this limit does not apply to hosts of type adminlun (used to support VMware vvols). |
|
Total Fibre Channel ports and iSCSI names per system |
8192
|
||
Total Fibre Channel ports and iSCSI names per I/O group |
2048
|
||
Total Fibre Channel ports and iSCSI names per host object |
32
|
||
iSCSI names per host object (ID) |
8
|
||
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
|
||
Fibre Channel host ports per host object (ID) |
32
|
||
Simultaneous I/Os per node FC port |
8Gbps FC Adapter
|
2048
|
|
16Gbps FC Adapter
|
4096
|
||
iSCSI Host Properties
|
|||
iSCSI hosts per system |
2048
|
||
iSCSI hosts per I/O group |
512
|
||
iSCSI names per host object (ID) |
8
|
||
iSCSI names per I/O group |
512
|
||
iSCSI Hardware Properties
|
|||
10Gbps Ethernet adapters per canister |
2
|
||
10Gbps Ethernet ports per canister |
8
|
FC0E is supported on the first four 10GbE ports in the system | |
iSER Host Properties
|
|||
iSER hosts per system |
2048
|
||
iSER hosts per I/O group |
512
|
||
iSER names per host object (ID) |
8
|
||
iSER Hardware Properties
|
|||
25Gbps iWARP adapters per canister |
3
|
||
25Gbps ROCE adapters per canister |
3
|
||
25Gbps iWARP ports per canister |
6
|
||
25Gbps ROCE ports per canister |
6
|
||
NVMe over Fibre Channel Host Properties
|
|||
FC-NVMe hosts per system |
6
|
Up to 6 FC-NVMe hosts are supported per system when no SCSI (FC/iSCSI/SAS) hosts are attached. These limits are not policed by the Spectrum Virtualize software. Any configurations that exceed these limits may experience significant adverse performance impact. |
|
FC-NVMe hosts per I/O group |
-
|
No limit is imposed beyond the per system limit when no SCSI (FC/iSCSI/SAS) hosts are attached. | |
FC-NVMe and SCSI host intermix |
See notes
|
When FC-NVMe and SCSI hosts are attached to the same I/O group, the following restrictions apply:
|
|
NVMe Qualified Names (NQNs) per host object (ID) |
2
|
||
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 |
1250
|
||
Remote Copy relationships per consistency group (<=256 GMCV relationships 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 configured) |
200
|
||
Remote Copy consistency groups per system |
256
|
||
Total Metro Mirror and Global Mirror volume capacity per I/O group |
1024 TB
|
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 towards this limit). | |
2500
|
300s cycle time (Change volumes used for active-active relationships do not count towards this limit). | ||
FlashCopy mappings per system |
5000
|
||
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 |
4096 TB
|
||
IP Partnership Properties
|
|||
Inter-cluster IP partnerships per system |
1
|
A system may be partnered with up to three remote systems. A maximum of one of those can be IP and the other two FC. | |
I/O groups per system |
2
|
The nodes from a maximum of two I/O groups per system can be used for IP partnership. | |
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
|
||
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
|
||
Hot spare drives |
-
|
No limit is imposed | |
Distributed RAID Array Properties
|
|||
Arrays per system |
32
|
The presence of non-DRAID arrays will reduce this limit | |
Encrypted arrays per system |
32
|
The presence of non-DRAID arrays will reduce this limit | |
Arrays per I/O group |
10
|
The presence of non-DRAID arrays will reduce this limit | |
Drives per array |
128
|
||
Min-Max member drives per RAID-5 array |
4-128
|
||
Min-Max member drives per RAID-6 array |
6-128
|
||
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
|
||
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
|
||
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 open SSH 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
|
||
Objects per response |
2000
|
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
|
2048 (2 TB)
|
2000
|
2048 (2 TB)
|
2048 (2 TB)
|
2048 (2 TB)
|
32
|
64 TB
|
32
|
4096 (4 TB)
|
4000
|
4096 (4 TB)
|
4096 (4 TB)
|
4096 (4 TB)
|
64
|
128 TB
|
64
|
8192 (8 TB)
|
8000
|
8192 (8 TB)
|
8192 (8 TB)
|
8192 (8 TB)
|
128
|
256 TB
|
128
|
16,384 (16 TB)
|
16,000
|
16,384 (16 TB)
|
16,384 (16 TB)
|
16,384 (16 TB)
|
256
|
512 TB
|
256
|
32,768 (32 TB)
|
32,000
|
32,768 (32 TB)
|
32,768 (32 TB)
|
32,768 (32 TB)
|
512
|
1 PB
|
512
|
65,536 (64 TB)
|
65,000
|
65,536 (64 TB)
|
65,536 (64 TB)
|
65,536 (64 TB)
|
1024 (1 PB)
|
2 PB
|
1024
|
131,072 (128 TB)
|
130,000
|
131,072 (128 TB)
|
131,072 (128 TB)
|
131,072 (128 TB)
|
2048 (2 PB)
|
4 PB
|
2048
|
262,144 (256 TB)
|
260,000
|
262,144 (256 TB)
|
262,144 (256 TB)
|
262,144 (256 TB)
|
4096 (4 PB)
|
8 PB
|
4096
|
262,144 (256 TB)
|
262,144
|
262,144 (256 TB)
|
524,288 (512 TB)
|
524,288 (512 TB)
|
8192 (8 PB)
|
16 PB
|
8192
|
262,144 (256 TB)
|
262,144
|
262,144 (256 TB)
|
1,048,576 (1024 TB)
|
1,048,576 (1024 TB)
|
16384 (16 PB)
|
32 PB
|
* The total capacity values assumes that all of the storage pools in the system use the same extent size.
Was this topic helpful?
Document Information
Modified date:
17 February 2023
UID
ibm10744453