I'll be filling that space with VMs and backups. Mostly VMs. I'm not using NAS for my live VMs but I do store a backup taken a few times a day on the same drive as the VM. In the evening I'm storing backups on the NAS drives. So to answer your question, I want to use the 25GB for the live VMs.There are many possibilities, do you have any thoughts on what You want to do with the space?
Blockbridge : Ultra low latency all-NVME shared storage for Proxmox - https://www.blockbridge.com/proxmox
The list of supported storage options is located here https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/StorageI'll be filling that space with VMs and backups. Mostly VMs. I'm not using NAS for my live VMs but I do store a backup taken a few times a day on the same drive as the VM. In the evening I'm storing backups on the NAS drives. So to answer your question, I want to use the 25GB for the live VMs.
there is a very loose, if any, relationship between the two technologies, so the conclusion is not valid.I use QEMU so I don't think the ZFS is an issue for me
my 25TB Raid drive
https://serverfault.com/questions/545252/zfs-best-practices-with-hardware-raidI don't think the ZFS is an issue
You have a root disk, that root disk is SDA and is 380G. As you can see in the screenshot the helpful ASCII tree shows you the branches coming from SDA - those all belong to SDA. The 264G partition is part of SDA, ie a slice of 380GWhat I don't understand is why the 25TB drive only shows up as 264GB of space in Proxmox. The local-lvm-Thin reports only 264 GB in size. How can I access the rest of that drive space?
You can use that space by : creating and LVM type storage, creating directory type storage which requires partitioning and formatting, or BTRFS.How can I access the rest of that drive space?
On the page you sent me to it says "We highly recommend to use a hardware RAID controller (with BBU) for such setups. This increases performance, provides redundancy, and make disk replacements easier (hot-pluggable)." so I'm not sure why you said earlier that it's discouraged. It looks like it's encouraged.You can use that space by : creating and LVM type storage, creating directory type storage which requires partitioning and formatting, or BTRFS.
Thanks. Working my way through that now having already done some of those steps from the earlier page reference.here is a guide that provides the simplest way for you to move forward:
https://www.diytechguru.com/2020/12/12/create-lvm-storage-in-proxmox/
Blockbridge : Ultra low latency all-NVME shared storage for Proxmox - https://www.blockbridge.com/proxmox
No, the page you are referring to is about LVM. Your initial question that involved RAID was about ZFS.On the page you sent me to it says "We highly recommend to use a hardware RAID controller (with BBU) for such setups. This increases performance, provides redundancy, and make disk replacements easier (hot-pluggable)." so I'm not sure why you said earlier that it's discouraged. It looks like it's encouraged.
If you treasure it - move it aside, then move it back. If you dont care about it - trash it.So if it's not empty by default what am I supposed to do with the contents?
Its really up to you. Whatever you want.How exact should the size be in the command?
The article is discussing creating a thin LVM pool that you may use for VM image storage that is BLOCK based, as opposed to qcow FILE based.But later they list size 80G. Is that just an example size or does it need to be hard set to that size for a reason
If you want to use LVM you need a physical volume with volume group with logical volumes.Question: in step 4 it has me creating a volume group.
Success! I I added the physical drive to the Datacenter Storage and set it as an LVM. It now shows up with the other drives.No, the page you are referring to is about LVM. Your initial question that involved RAID was about ZFS.
If you treasure it - move it aside, then move it back. If you dont care about it - trash it.
Its really up to you. Whatever you want.
The article is discussing creating a thin LVM pool that you may use for VM image storage that is BLOCK based, as opposed to qcow FILE based.
If you want to use LVM you need a physical volume with volume group with logical volumes.
My recommendation to you - read the guides carefully, try to understand them. Search internet for "lvm for beginners". Dont be afraid to experiment.
good luck
Blockbridge : Ultra low latency all-NVME shared storage for Proxmox - https://www.blockbridge.com/proxmox