NETGEAR is aware of a growing number of phone and online scams. To learn how to stay safe click here.
Forum Discussion
vandermerwe
Sep 10, 2015Master
Defrag, snapshots, volume usage
In this thread,
https://community.netgear.com/t5/Using-your-ReadyNAS/Performance-Admin-Page-Access-Does-available-disk-space-affect/m-p/980153#M93263
one of the posts mentions that performing de...
StephenB
Sep 10, 2015Guru - Experienced User
vandermerwe wrote:
In this thread,
one of the posts mentions that performing defrags in the setting of snapshots leads to an increase in volume usage.
I suppose if the snapshot space indicator in 6.4.x works properly in the final release we will be able to see just how much more space is used.
I currently I have 4 defrags scheduled each year and I use daily snapshots on 4 shares, data in these shares doesn't change much.
Questions:
How much more space will be used up - depends on how much data changes I suppose?
It's a combination of how much data churn there is, and how much fragmentation that churn creates. The link is only broken when the main file (a) is fragmented and (b) has older versions stored in the snapshots.
For instance, in my own case the OS6 systems are used to back up my Pro using rsync. When files change on the pro, rsync copies the full files to the OS6 shares. Churn might be high on some shares, but fragmentation won't occur as long as I keep reasonable free space on volume. So defrags don't increase my snapshot space usage (and in fact aren't needed much, though I do them anyway).
If on the other hand, you had an SQL database that you are frequently making small changes to... CoW might be quite efficient, keeping the snapshot usage low. That database would also become very fragmented. In that scenario, a defrag would result in a pretty big increase in the snapshot size.
Related Content
NETGEAR Academy
Boost your skills with the Netgear Academy - Get trained, certified and stay ahead with the latest Netgear technology!
Join Us!