Hi everyone, I was reading about Proxmox Storages and what each one supports to understand the tool more deeply and found the following content https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Storage#_storage_types:
"A number of storages, and the Qemu image format qcow2, support thin provisioning. With thin provisioning activated, only the blocks that the guest system actually use will be written to the storage."
As I always use RAW type disks due to performance gain, in a client that had installed Proxmox in the cloud and had only "local" storage that is dir type, I went to check the used disk and it seemed to support the option of thin provisioning.
I thought something was strange and confirmed it locally with an NFS type storage and the same happened, even using 500GB RAW virtual disks, in the storage the file created was 0k and then it grew as I was installing the system.
I would like to ask administrators if possible to correct the documentation and update which disks support thin provisioning or not, or whether they all support them today.
Also, I would like to know if there is any way to do static provisioning for the disks avoiding risks of storage stuffing.
Thanks in advance to all.
"A number of storages, and the Qemu image format qcow2, support thin provisioning. With thin provisioning activated, only the blocks that the guest system actually use will be written to the storage."
As I always use RAW type disks due to performance gain, in a client that had installed Proxmox in the cloud and had only "local" storage that is dir type, I went to check the used disk and it seemed to support the option of thin provisioning.
I thought something was strange and confirmed it locally with an NFS type storage and the same happened, even using 500GB RAW virtual disks, in the storage the file created was 0k and then it grew as I was installing the system.
I would like to ask administrators if possible to correct the documentation and update which disks support thin provisioning or not, or whether they all support them today.
Also, I would like to know if there is any way to do static provisioning for the disks avoiding risks of storage stuffing.
Thanks in advance to all.