-
- Enthusiast
- Posts: 94
- Liked: 1 time
- Joined: Dec 06, 2010 10:41 pm
- Full Name: CARLO
- Contact:
Source NFS datastore destination iSCSi datastore
Hi,
Are there some problem for a replication job of a VM from a NFS datastore to an iSCSI datastore?
Source NetApp NFS datastore
Destination MD3000i iSCSI datastore
VeeamB&R Hot add mode
Thanks
Are there some problem for a replication job of a VM from a NFS datastore to an iSCSI datastore?
Source NetApp NFS datastore
Destination MD3000i iSCSI datastore
VeeamB&R Hot add mode
Thanks
-
- Chief Product Officer
- Posts: 31816
- Liked: 7302 times
- Joined: Jan 01, 2006 1:01 am
- Location: Baar, Switzerland
- Contact:
Re: Source NFS datastore destination iSCSi datastore
Hi, there are no known issues with such configurations. Thanks!
-
- Enthusiast
- Posts: 94
- Liked: 1 time
- Joined: Dec 06, 2010 10:41 pm
- Full Name: CARLO
- Contact:
Re: Source NFS datastore destination iSCSi datastore
Hi,
First onsite replica
Processing rate 20 MB/s
Bottleneck target 77%
Seems slower than before.
Thanks
First onsite replica
Processing rate 20 MB/s
Bottleneck target 77%
Seems slower than before.
Thanks
-
- VP, Product Management
- Posts: 27377
- Liked: 2802 times
- Joined: Mar 30, 2009 9:13 am
- Full Name: Vitaliy Safarov
- Contact:
Re: Source NFS datastore destination iSCSi datastore
Do you have parallel disk and VM processing option enabled? This should make your job run faster.
-
- Enthusiast
- Posts: 94
- Liked: 1 time
- Joined: Dec 06, 2010 10:41 pm
- Full Name: CARLO
- Contact:
Re: Source NFS datastore destination iSCSi datastore
Hi,
No i haven't it enabled. Are 4 vCPU and 2 concurrent tasks enought?
Thanks
No i haven't it enabled. Are 4 vCPU and 2 concurrent tasks enought?
Thanks
-
- VP, Product Management
- Posts: 27377
- Liked: 2802 times
- Joined: Mar 30, 2009 9:13 am
- Full Name: Vitaliy Safarov
- Contact:
Re: Source NFS datastore destination iSCSi datastore
It depends on how many VMs/disks you have in the job and how many jobs you're running at the same time. The more concurrent tasks you have, the more amount of disks you can process. Start with the number you have now, and check what load on target storage you have.
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 34 guests