[vmdk]extend vmdk larger than 2TB
發表於 : 2016-10-26 18:57:07
https://kb.vmware.com/selfservice/micro ... Id=2058287
Virtual machines with large capacity disks have these conditions and limitations:
The guest operating system must support large capacity virtual hard disks.
You can only move or clone disks that are greater than 2 TB to ESXi 5.5 hosts, or to clusters that have such hosts available.
The datastore format must be VMFS-5 or later, or an NFS volume on a Network Attached Storage (NAS) server.
vSphere Flash Read Cache supports a maximum hard disk size of 16 TB.
VMFS-3 volumes are not supported. You cannot move disks greater than 2 TB from a VMFS-5 datastore to a VMFS-3 datastore.
You cannot hot-extend a virtual disk if the capacity after extending the disk is equal to or greater than 2 TB. Only offline extension of GPT-partitioned disks beyond 2 TB is possible.
Fault Tolerance is not supported.
Virtual SAN is not supported.
BusLogic parallel controllers are not supported.
Virtual machines with large capacity virtual hard disks or disks greater than 2 TB must meet resource and configuration requirements for optimal virtual machine performance. The maximum value for large capacity hard disks is 62 TB. When you add or configure virtual disks, always leave a small amount of overhead. Some virtual machine tasks can quickly consume large amounts of disk space, which can prevent successful completion of the task if the maximum disk space is assigned to the disk. Such events might include taking snapshots or using linked clones. These operations cannot finish when the maximum amount of disk space is allocated.
In environments without shared storage, operations such as snapshot quiesce, cloning, Storage vMotion, or vMotion can take significantly longer to finish.
You cannot relocate RDMs larger than 2 TB to datastores other than VMFS-5 or, to hosts older than ESXi 5.5.
To enable the Microsoft Windows operating system to address a maximum storage capacity for a device greater than 2 TB, the disk must be initialized by using the GUID partition Table (GPT) partitioning scheme. For more information, see Windows support for hard disks that are larger than 2 TB.
Note: The preceeding link was correct as of September 8, 2014. If you find the link is broken, please provide feedback and a VMware employee will update the link.
Changes in virtual machine snapshots for VMDKs larger than 2 TB:
Snapshots taken on VMDKs larger than 2 TB are now in Space Efficient Virtual Disk (SESPARSE) format. No user interaction is required. The redo logs are automatically created as SESPARSE instead of VMFSSPARSE (delta) when the base flat VMDK is larger than 2 TB.
Extending a base flat disk on VMFSSPARSE or SESPARSE is not supported.
The VMFSSPARSE format does not have the ability to support 2 TB or more.
VMFSSPARSE and SESPARSE formats cannot co-exist in the same VMDK. In a virtual machine, both types of snapshot can co-exist, but not in the same disk chain. For example, when a snapshot is taken for a virtual machine with two virtual disks attached, one smaller than 2 TB and one larger than 2 TB, the smaller disk snapshot are VMFSSPARSE the larger disk snapshot are SESPARSE.
Linked clones are SESPARSE if the parent disk is larger than 2 TB.
Virtual machines with large capacity disks have these conditions and limitations:
The guest operating system must support large capacity virtual hard disks.
You can only move or clone disks that are greater than 2 TB to ESXi 5.5 hosts, or to clusters that have such hosts available.
The datastore format must be VMFS-5 or later, or an NFS volume on a Network Attached Storage (NAS) server.
vSphere Flash Read Cache supports a maximum hard disk size of 16 TB.
VMFS-3 volumes are not supported. You cannot move disks greater than 2 TB from a VMFS-5 datastore to a VMFS-3 datastore.
You cannot hot-extend a virtual disk if the capacity after extending the disk is equal to or greater than 2 TB. Only offline extension of GPT-partitioned disks beyond 2 TB is possible.
Fault Tolerance is not supported.
Virtual SAN is not supported.
BusLogic parallel controllers are not supported.
Virtual machines with large capacity virtual hard disks or disks greater than 2 TB must meet resource and configuration requirements for optimal virtual machine performance. The maximum value for large capacity hard disks is 62 TB. When you add or configure virtual disks, always leave a small amount of overhead. Some virtual machine tasks can quickly consume large amounts of disk space, which can prevent successful completion of the task if the maximum disk space is assigned to the disk. Such events might include taking snapshots or using linked clones. These operations cannot finish when the maximum amount of disk space is allocated.
In environments without shared storage, operations such as snapshot quiesce, cloning, Storage vMotion, or vMotion can take significantly longer to finish.
You cannot relocate RDMs larger than 2 TB to datastores other than VMFS-5 or, to hosts older than ESXi 5.5.
To enable the Microsoft Windows operating system to address a maximum storage capacity for a device greater than 2 TB, the disk must be initialized by using the GUID partition Table (GPT) partitioning scheme. For more information, see Windows support for hard disks that are larger than 2 TB.
Note: The preceeding link was correct as of September 8, 2014. If you find the link is broken, please provide feedback and a VMware employee will update the link.
Changes in virtual machine snapshots for VMDKs larger than 2 TB:
Snapshots taken on VMDKs larger than 2 TB are now in Space Efficient Virtual Disk (SESPARSE) format. No user interaction is required. The redo logs are automatically created as SESPARSE instead of VMFSSPARSE (delta) when the base flat VMDK is larger than 2 TB.
Extending a base flat disk on VMFSSPARSE or SESPARSE is not supported.
The VMFSSPARSE format does not have the ability to support 2 TB or more.
VMFSSPARSE and SESPARSE formats cannot co-exist in the same VMDK. In a virtual machine, both types of snapshot can co-exist, but not in the same disk chain. For example, when a snapshot is taken for a virtual machine with two virtual disks attached, one smaller than 2 TB and one larger than 2 TB, the smaller disk snapshot are VMFSSPARSE the larger disk snapshot are SESPARSE.
Linked clones are SESPARSE if the parent disk is larger than 2 TB.