- Notes, cautions, and warnings
- Additional Resources
- Overview
- Create NAS servers
- Configure NFS Exports
- Additional NAS Server Features
- More file system features
- NAS Server replication
- Using CEPA with PowerStore
You can track and limit drive space consumption by configuring quotas for file systems at the file system or directory level. You can enable or disable quotas at any time, but it is recommended that you enable or disable them during non-peak production hours to avoid impacting file system operations.
There are three types of quotas that you can put on a file system.
Type | Description |
---|---|
User Quotas | Limits the amount of storage that an individual user consumes by storing data on the file system. |
Tree Quota | Tree quotas limit the total amount of storage that is consumed on a specific directory tree. You can use tree quotas to:
NOTE:If you change the limits for a tree quota, the changes take effect immediately without disrupting file system operations.
|
User quota on a quota tree | Limits the amount of storage that an individual user consumes by storing data on the quota tree. |
Type | Descriptions |
---|---|
Hard | A hard limit is an absolute limit on storage usage.
If a hard limit is reached for a user quota on a file system or quota tree, the user cannot write data to the file system or tree until more space becomes available. If a hard limit is reached for a quota tree, no user can write data to the tree until more space becomes available. |
Soft limit | A soft limit is a preferred limit on storage usage.
The user is allowed to use space until a grace period has been reached. The user is alerted when the soft limit is reached, until the grace period is over. After that, an out of space condition is reached until the user gets back under the soft limit. |
The Quota Grace Period enables you to set a specific grace period to each tree quota on a file system. The grace period counts down the time between the soft and hard limit, and alerts the user about the time remaining before the hard limit is met. If the grace period expires you cannot write to the file system until more space has been added, even if the hard limit has not been met.
You can set an expiration date for the Grace Period. The default is 7 days, alternatively you can set the Grace Period expiration date to an infinite amount of time (the Grace Period never expires), or for a specified number of days, hours or minutes. Once the Grace Period expiration date is met, the Grace Period no longer applies to the File System directory.
For more information about quotas, see the Dell PowerStore File Capabilities White Paper.