Re: lvm limitations

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

 



Il 2020-09-15 23:47 Zdenek Kabelac ha scritto:
You likely don't need such amount of 'snapshots' and you will need to
implement something to remove snapshot without need, so i.e. after a
day you will keep maybe 'every-4-hour' and after couple days maybe
only a day-level snapshot. After a month per-week and so one.

Agree. "Snapshot-thinning" is an essential part of snapshot management.

Speaking of thin volumes - there can be at most 2^24 thin devices
(this is hard limit you've ask for ;)) - but you have only  ~16GiB of
metadata to store all of them - which gives you ~1KiB of data per such
volume -
quite frankly this is not too much  - unless as said - your volumes
are not changed at all - but then why you would be building all this...

That all said - if you really need that intensive amount of snapshoting, lvm2 is likely not for you - and you will need to build something on your own, as you will need way more efficient and 'targeted' solution for your purpose.

Thinvols are not activated by default - this means it should be not a big problem managing some hundreds of them, as the OP ask. Or am I missing something?

Regards.

--
Danti Gionatan
Supporto Tecnico
Assyoma S.r.l. - www.assyoma.it
email: g.danti@xxxxxxxxxx - info@xxxxxxxxxx
GPG public key ID: FF5F32A8

_______________________________________________
linux-lvm mailing list
linux-lvm@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/linux-lvm
read the LVM HOW-TO at http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/




[Index of Archives]     [Gluster Users]     [Kernel Development]     [Linux Clusters]     [Device Mapper]     [Security]     [Bugtraq]     [MIPS Linux]     [ARM Linux]     [Linux Security]     [Linux RAID]

  Powered by Linux