Or your hypervisor. What hypervisor are you using? KVM does support IOps limits and that is exposed in CloudStack
Casey Boone Systems Engineer Education Networks of America <http://www.ena.com/> 618 Grassmere Park Drive Suite 12 Nashville, TN 37211 Phone: 615-312-6037 CTAC: 888-612-2880 General Office: 615-312-6000 website <http://www.ena.com/> blog <http://www.ena.com/blog> support <http://support.ena.com/> <http://www.facebook.com/ENAConnects> <http://twitter.com/#!/ENAConnects/> <http://www.linkedin.com/company/15330> On 2/27/17, 5:29 PM, "Marty Godsey" <[email protected]> wrote: But your storage device has to support this correct? Regards, Marty Godsey Principal Engineer nSource Solutions, LLC From: Boris Stoyanov [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Monday, February 27, 2017 7:32 AM To: users <[email protected]> Subject: Re: Changing iops limits in existing volumes Hi Syahrul You can create a new disk offering with QoS Type: Storage, and add the min and max IOPS you require. Then you’ll need to Resize and select the New Disk Offering [cid:9C495657-ECCD-4A21-A750-9FA8A3EAB624@openvpn] Thanks, Boris Stoyanov. [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> www.shapeblue.com<http://www.shapeblue.com> @shapeblue On Feb 27, 2017, at 1:26 PM, Syahrul Sazli Shaharir <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Dear Cloudstack users, What is the proper way to change the min/max iops limits in existing volumes? In the UI I can only resize the volume, but not modifying the iops settings. Would modifying the volumes table entry in the database work? Thanks. -- --sazli Syahrul Sazli Shaharir <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
