Skip to main content
  • Place orders quickly and easily
  • View orders and track your shipping status
  • Enjoy members-only rewards and discounts
  • Create and access a list of your products
  • Manage your Dell EMC sites, products, and product-level contacts using Company Administration.

PowerVault ME4: What is Overcommitment and how does it work?

Summary: This article details the basic tenets of overcommitment on the PowerVault ME4 series and how to calculate the same.

This article may have been automatically translated. If you have any feedback regarding its quality, please let us know using the form at the bottom of this page.

Article Content


Resolution

Table of Contents

  1. What is Overcommitment and how does it work?
  2. Where to see Overcommitment information or issues in the logs?
  3. What is the Metadata Index size?
  4. What is the 16GiB address table?
  5. What is the maximum overcommitment limit?
  6. What is the difference between Shared Data, Unique Data, and Snap Data?
  7. Should the Unique Data (show snapshots type all) and Allocated Size (show snapshot-space) values match?
  8. How to calculate how much space is committed, and where it is committed to?


 


Question: What is Overcommitment and how does it work?

Answer:

Overcommitted means that the total committed size of all virtual volumes, including snapshots, exceeds the physical space in the virtual pool.

This feature is specific to Virtual Storage. NOT applicable for Linear.

This feature allows overcommitting physical storage resources enabling the operating system to operate as though it has more storage space than is physically allocated.

Every Volume, including snapshots, created in the Array consumes Metadata Indexes from the Virtual Pool storage space.

In general, the FW supports a maximum of 1 PiB of Metadata per Virtual Pool.

 

For example, consider a storage array with 100 TB of usable pool space on Pool A.

With "Overcommitment" Disabled, its ONLY possible create Volumes (including Snapshots) to a max of 100 TB, the configuration cannot go beyond 100 TB of Metadata Index.

With "Overcommitment" Enabled, the FW allows the creation of Volumes (including Snapshots) beyond the 100 TB Physical Limit, as the FW supports a max of 1 PiB of Metadata Index.

Thus, the system can create Volumes (including Snapshots) to a max of 1 PiB per Pool. This is described in further detail in the question, "What is the metadata index size?"

However, the administrator must monitor Pool Allocation Details and add Physical Disks/Storage as and when necessary to allow continued usage of the Volumes.


Question: Where to see Overcommitment information/issues in the logs?

Answer:

When overcommitment information is seen in the GUI, event IDs show in the event logs. Below are some example event codes.

Event ID 473 - The indicated volume is using more than its threshold percentage of its virtual pool. This is an indication that the storage usage crossed the user-specified threshold for this volume.

Event ID 573 - Warning Allocated snapshot space for a virtual pool cannot be reduced because no snapshots are deletable.

Event ID 571 - Error Allocated snapshot space exceeded the configured percentage limit of the virtual pool.

 

QNA44746_en_US__1icon Note: More event codes and their explanations can be found in the Owner’s Guide.

 

 


Question: What is the Metadata Index size? What is the 16GiB address table?

Answer:

The maximum supported number of metadata index entries is 65312. When calculating physically addressable space, multiply the Metadata Index entries by the address table.

65312 Metadata Index entries * 16 GiB address table = 1044992 GiB

This equates to approx. 1 PiB, which is 1,048,576 GiB.


 


Question: What is the maximum overcommitment limit?

Answer:

In general, the FW supports a maximum of 1 PiB of Metadata per Virtual Pool.

With the "Overcommitment" feature Disabled, the Pool ONLY allows using Metadata to a max of the storage space available.

With the "Overcommitment" feature Enabled, the Pool allows using Metadata to a max of 1 PiB per Pool which is the FW limit.


 


Question: What is the difference between Shared Data, Unique Data, and Snap Data?

Answer:

Snap Data: The total amount of write data associated with the snapshot.

In other words: the Volume Allocation Information for the parent Volume of the Snapshot when the snapshot was originally taken. That is the committed size of the volume when the snapshot was taken.

Unique Data: The amount of write data that is unique to the snapshot.

In other words: this is the data that is changed or modified from the original volume

Shared Data: The amount of write data that is shared between this snapshot and other snapshots.

In other words: This is the data that is not changed or modified from the original volume when the snapshot is taken.

Also, "Shared Data + Unique Data" is approximately equal to the "Snap Data."


 


Question: Should the Unique Data (show snapshots type all) and Allocated Size (show snapshot-space) values match?

Answer:

As per the design, Unique Data (modified data) should match the Allocated Size value. The unique data is the snapshot’s physical data size, this unique data uses the snapshot space.

For Configurations with ONLY snapshots configured, the Sum of the Unique Data of all snapshots equals the Total Snapshot allocated size that is reported.

For Configurations with Replication configured, the Sum of the Unique Data of all Snapshots associated with standard snapshots plus the Unique Data of the snapshots associated with Replication tasks.

However, in general, the show snapshot output does not report the "Snap Data" or "Shared Data" or "Unique Data". This is why "show snapshots type all" command is used.

Example:

For configurations with Replication setup, the FW maintains three snapshots for each Replication Task (S1, S2, and S3).

The value for the snapshot "S3" is what is replicated after the initial replication.

On the subsequent Replication schedule, when S3 becomes S2 the "show snapshots" data reports all the associated data information in the Table.

While replication is occurring, the values of each "S3" are not reported in the logs. Also, there are no CLI commands to report this information.  This means that when replication is occurring, a discrepancy between Unique Data and Allocated Size, may be viewed.

This is the expected behavior.

 
# show snapshots type all.
Pool Name           URL Creation Date/Time  Status    Status-Reason Parent Volume Base Vol Base Vol Snaps TreeSnaps Snap-Pool Snap Data  Unique Data  Shared Data  Retention Priority

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A    ESXI.S1            2020-02-03 19:48:09 Available N/A           ESXI          ESXI              0     8         N/A       7580.4GB   0B           7580.4GB     never-delete      
A    ESXI.S2            2020-02-03 19:48:09 Available N/A           ESXI          ESXI              0     8         N/A       7580.4GB   7767.8MB     7572.6GB     never-delete      
A    ESXI.S3            2020-02-03 19:48:10 Available N/A           ESXI          ESXI              0     8         N/A       0B         0B           0B           never-delete       
A    ESXIs01_S0003      2020-03-02 05:01:10 Available N/A           ESXI          ESXI              0     8         N/A       6988.9GB   344.6GB      6644.2GB     never-delete      
A    ESXIs01_S0004      2020-03-03 05:01:08 Available N/A           ESXI          ESXI              0     8         N/A       7042.6GB   22.2GB       7020.3GB     never-delete      
A    ESXIs01_S0005      2020-03-04 05:01:08 Available N/A           ESXI          ESXI              0     8         N/A       7045.4GB   49.8GB       6995.5GB     never-delete      
A    ESXIs01_S0006      2020-03-05 05:01:15 Available N/A           ESXI          ESXI              0     8         N/A       7580.0GB   19.3GB       7560.6GB     never-delete      
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------



 


Question: How to calculate how much space is committed, and where it is committed to?

Answer:

Committed space is the size of all virtual volumes + snapshot metadata size.

The GUI does not show where all the space is committed per volumes or snapshots. This must be calculated from logs and/or CLI commands.

The output from "show pools" and "show volumes" is needed.

 

Example:

Screenshot from GUI information showing overcommitment on Pool A but none on Pool B

QNA44746_en_US__2B

 

Screenshot of more detail on Pool A

 

QNA44746_en_US__3A(1)


Example output from "show pools".

# show pools
Name Serial Number                    Class    Blocksize Total Size Avail  Snap Size OverCommit  Disk Groups Volumes  Low Thresh  Mid Thresh  High Thresh  Sec Fmt   Health     Reason Action
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A    00c0ff50ae66000081562a5e01000000 Virtual  512       35.2TB     29.5TB 1437.9GB  Enabled     2           105      50.00 %     75.00 %     99.39 %      512e      OK                      
B    00c0ff50ae0600009f562a5e01000000 Virtual  512       35.2TB     23.9TB 1305.3GB  Enabled     2           108      50.00 %     75.00 %     99.39 %      512e      OK

 

Example output from "show volumes" – truncated or modified to show where data comes from for following tables and calculations

# show volumes
Pool Name                            Total Size Alloc Size Class    Type     Large Virtual Extents  Health Reason Action
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
B    D-ADPSVR2                       XXX.XGB    XXX.XGB    Virtual  base     Disabled               OK                  
B    D-ADPSVR2s01_S0011              XXX.XGB    XXX.XGB    Virtual  snapshot Disabled               OK                  

 


Steps to calculate Overcommitment

Use the following values from the commands, setting up in a table or excel is suggested.

                show pools = Total Size, Avail, Snap Size

                show volumes = Total Size, Alloc Size

 

To break down the data into usable form to show where data is committed.  Below is a table of what fields to look at and where to pull the data from.

Name

CLI command

Column/Field

Modifier 1

Modifier 2

Calculation

Total Size

show pools

Total Size

 

Convert to a common denominator (MB/GB/TB)

N/A

Avail / Free

show pools

Avail

 

Convert to a common denominator (MB/GB/TB)

N/A

Snapshot Used

show pools

Snap Size

 

Convert to a common denominator (MB/GB/TB)

N/A

Volume Total Size

show volumes

Total Size

"base" items in Type Column

Convert to a common denominator (MB/GB/TB)

Add all tems together

Volume Allocated Size

show volumes

Alloc Size

"base" items in Type Column

Convert to a common denominator (MB/GB/TB)

Add all tems together

Total Snapshot Size

show volumes

Total Size

"snapshot" items in Type Column

Convert to a common denominator (MB/GB/TB)

Add all tems together

Snapshot Allocated

show volumes

Alloc Size

"snapshot" items in Type Column

Convert to a common denominator (MB/GB/TB)

Add all tems together

 

 

QNA44746_en_US__1icon Note: Allocated values can be used to see how much space is in use on the system.

 

Example from the customer system

Title

Pool A

(in GB)

Pool B

(in GB)

Total Size

35200

35200

Avail / Free

29500

23900

Snapshot Used

1437.9

1305.3

Volume Total Size

12246.2

12578.4

Volume Allocated Size

4231.0952

9910.8845

Total Snapshot Size

29979.3

16762.9

Snapshot Allocated

16922.1

10974.2117

 

Now calculate the committed and/or overcommitted information per pool.

Committed:        Volume Total Size + Total Snapshot Size

 Pool 

 Volume Total Size 

 Total Snapshot Size 

 Committed 

A

12246.2

29979.3

42225.5

B

12578.4

16762.9

29341.3

 

Overcommitted:      Committed - Total Size

Pool

Committed

Total Size

Overcommitted

A

42225.5

35200

7025.5

B

29341.3

35200

-5858.7

 

 

QNA44746_en_US__1icon Note: On the subject of overcommitted values. Positive values mean the pool is overcommitted. Negative values mean that the pool is not overcommitted.

 

From the example:

A is overcommitted by 7025.5 GB

B is not overcommitted as the number is negative.

 

Article Properties


Affected Product

OEMR ME40XX and ME4XX, Dell EMC PowerVault ME4012, Dell EMC PowerVault ME4024, Dell EMC PowerVault ME4084

Last Published Date

21 Feb 2021

Version

3

Article Type

Solution