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Thick-provisioning was introduced to make accounting of assigned space for volumes easier. When thick-provisioned volumes are the only consumer of the Ceph cluster, this works fine. However, it is unlikely that this is the case. Instead, accounting of the requested (thin-provisioned) size of volumes is much more practical as different types of volumes can be tracked. OpenShift already provides cluster-wide quotas, which can combine accounting of requested volumes by grouping different StorageClasses. In addition to the difficult practise of allowing only thick-provisioned RBD backed volumes, the performance makes thick-provisioning troublesome. As volumes need to be completely allocated, data needs to be written to the volume. This can take a long time, depending on the size of the volume. Provisioning, cloning and snapshotting becomes very much noticeable, and because of the additional time consumption, more prone to failures. Signed-off-by: Niels de Vos <ndevos@redhat.com> |
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.. | ||
block-pod-clone.yaml | ||
exec-bash.sh | ||
logs.sh | ||
plugin-deploy.sh | ||
plugin-teardown.sh | ||
pod-clone.yaml | ||
pod-restore.yaml | ||
pod.yaml | ||
pvc-block-clone.yaml | ||
pvc-clone.yaml | ||
pvc-restore.yaml | ||
pvc.yaml | ||
raw-block-pod.yaml | ||
raw-block-pvc.yaml | ||
secret.yaml | ||
snapshot.yaml | ||
snapshotclass.yaml | ||
storageclass.yaml |