Storage limits in Google Cloud
Cloud Volumes ONTAP has storage configuration limits to provide reliable operations. For best performance, do not configure your system at the maximum values.
Maximum system capacity by license
The maximum system capacity for a Cloud Volumes ONTAP system is determined by its license. The maximum system capacity includes disk-based storage plus object storage used for data tiering.
NetApp doesn't support exceeding the system capacity limit. If you reach the licensed capacity limit, BlueXP displays an action required message and no longer allows you to add additional disks.
For some configurations, disk limits prevent you from reaching the capacity limit by using disks alone. You can reach the capacity limit by tiering inactive data to object storage. Refer to the disk limits below for more details.
License | Maximum system capacity (disks + object storage) |
---|---|
Freemium |
500 GB |
PAYGO Explore |
2 TB (data tiering is not supported with Explore) |
PAYGO Standard |
10 TB |
PAYGO Premium |
368 TB |
Node-based license |
2 PiB (requires multiple licenses) |
Capacity-based license |
2 PiB |
The capacity limit is for the entire HA pair. It is not per node. For example, if you use the Premium license, you can have up to 368 TB of capacity between both nodes.
No, it doesn't. Data in an HA pair is synchronously mirrored between the nodes so that the data is available in the event of failure in Google Cloud. For example, if you purchase an 8 TB disk on node A, BlueXP also allocates an 8 TB disk on node B that is used for mirrored data. While 16 TB of capacity was provisioned, only 8 TB counts against the license limit.
Aggregate limits
Cloud Volumes ONTAP groups Google Cloud Platform disks into aggregates. Aggregates provide storage to volumes.
Parameter | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum number of data aggregates 1 |
|
Maximum aggregate size |
256 TB of raw capacity 2 |
Disks per aggregate |
1-6 3 |
Maximum number of RAID groups per aggregate |
1 |
Notes:
-
The maximum number of data aggregates doesn't include the root aggregate.
-
The aggregate capacity limit is based on the disks that comprise the aggregate. The limit does not include object storage used for data tiering.
-
All disks in an aggregate must be the same size.
Disk and tiering limits
The table below shows the maximum system capacity with disks alone, and with disks and cold data tiering to object storage. The disk limits are specific to disks that contain user data. The limits do not include the boot disk, root disk, or NVRAM.
Parameter | Limit |
---|---|
Maximum data disks |
|
Maximum disk size |
64 TB |
Maximum system capacity with disks alone |
256 TB 1 |
Maximum system capacity with disks and cold data tiering to a Google Cloud Storage bucket |
Depends on the license. Refer to the maximum system capacity limits above. |
1 This limit is defined by virtual machine limits in Google Cloud Platform.
Storage VM limits
Some configurations enable you to create additional storage VMs (SVMs) for Cloud Volumes ONTAP.
These are the tested limits. While it is theoretically possible to configure additional storage VMs, it's not supported.
License type | Storage VM limit |
---|---|
Freemium |
24 storage VMs total 1 |
Capacity-based PAYGO or BYOL 2 |
24 storage VMs total 1 |
Node-based BYOL 3 |
24 storage VMs total 1 |
Node-based PAYGO |
|
-
These 24 storage VMs can serve data or be configured for disaster recovery (DR).
-
For capacity-based licensing, there are no extra licensing costs for additional storage VMs, but there is a 4 TiB minimum capacity charge per storage VM. For example, if you create two storage VMs and each has 2 TiB of provisioned capacity, you'll be charged a total of 8 TiB.
-
For node-based BYOL, an add-on license is required for each additional data-serving storage VM beyond the first storage VM that comes with Cloud Volumes ONTAP by default. Contact your account team to obtain a storage VM add-on license.
Storage VMs that you configure for disaster recovery (DR) don't require an add-on license (they are free of charge), but they do count against the storage VM limit. For example, if you have 12 data-serving storage VMs and 12 storage VMs configured for disaster recovery, then you've reached the limit and can't create any additional storage VMs.
Logical storage limits
Logical storage | Parameter | Limit |
---|---|---|
Files |
Maximum size |
16 TB |
Maximum per volume |
Volume size dependent, up to 2 billion |
|
FlexClone volumes |
Hierarchical clone depth 12 |
499 |
FlexVol volumes |
Maximum per node |
500 |
Minimum size |
20 MB |
|
Maximum size |
100 TB |
|
Qtrees |
Maximum per FlexVol volume |
4,995 |
Snapshot copies |
Maximum per FlexVol volume |
1,023 |
-
Hierarchical clone depth is the maximum depth of a nested hierarchy of FlexClone volumes that can be created from a single FlexVol volume.
iSCSI storage limits
iSCSI storage | Parameter | Limit |
---|---|---|
LUNs |
Maximum per node |
1,024 |
Maximum number of LUN maps |
1,024 |
|
Maximum size |
16 TB |
|
Maximum per volume |
512 |
|
igroups |
Maximum per node |
256 |
Initiators |
Maximum per node |
512 |
Maximum per igroup |
128 |
|
iSCSI sessions |
Maximum per node |
1,024 |
LIFs |
Maximum per port |
1 |
Maximum per portset |
32 |
|
Portsets |
Maximum per node |
256 |