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    Migrate ~2TB of data to new storage drive within windows server

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    • coliverC
      coliver @ntoxicator
      last edited by

      @ntoxicator Perfect. You can use storage xenmotion to move that file around!

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      • ntoxicatorN
        ntoxicator
        last edited by

        @coliver said:

        Move that file around!

        Right, I can have xenmotion move the disk to another Storage repository attached to hypervisor. But 2TB of data over 1Gbe network between server & NAS will take some time. I'm worried about the transfer/migration failing and then data being lost.

        coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • coliverC
          coliver @ntoxicator
          last edited by

          @ntoxicator said:

          @coliver said:

          Move that file around!

          Right, I can have xenmotion move the disk to another Storage repository attached to hypervisor. But 2TB of data over 1Gbe network between server & NAS will take some time. I'm worried about the transfer/migration failing and then data being lost.

          Data being lost? That's what backups are for.

          Yes... this is going to take a very long time over a 1Gb network. Not sure how else you would do it if you are using iSCSI. Plan a long weekend.

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          • ntoxicatorN
            ntoxicator
            last edited by

            My concern was the entire volume assigned to the Windows 2008 Server VM (within Xen Server). Be lost or corrupted entirely.

            I would like to just move this one attached disk to a entirely new NFS Volume on the newer Synology NAS

            Then I could have seperate NFS Volume that only stores the virtual machine disk images. From there, migrate the OS Disk

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            • ntoxicatorN
              ntoxicator
              last edited by

              Further complicate the issue and to understand

              the disk I want to migrate to another storage repo (NFS share instead of iSCSI). This is the "DATA" drive attached to the primary domain controller. Which again has all the shares. Also all the user profiles and folder redirect

              Without this being back-online. Users cannot login to the domain.

              Uncertain if the transfer would completely in a timely manner over a Friday evening to Sunday evening.

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              • ntoxicatorN
                ntoxicator
                last edited by

                NOTE:

                When I drill into the ISCSI LUN on Xen Server

                I select the DISK and click "MOVE"

                "Upgrade XenServer to enable VDI Live migration. This feature enables you to migrate multiple running VDI's on shared storage between SR's"

                I will try again when I power down this virtual machine and see if it gives me a disk move options. That way could move the entire disk to a different storage repository (NFS Share this time). Then from there, expand that disk size.

                But in the past. When I expand the disk seize of the volume attached. Windows does not see it as a larger disk... Windows see's the additional storage space as a seperate drive. I've had to merge these drives together.

                J coliverC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  @Dashrender said:

                  When you look at the ISCSI LUN in XenServer, can you drill down and actually see what is on the storage?

                  Yes, because the hypervisor is what attaches to the storage. So he can see the file that holds the VM. All SAN works the same in this way.

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                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                    last edited by

                    @Dashrender said:

                    But if I pass the ISCSI through ESXi, ESXi can't see what's on the disk at all, and instead Windows handles everything. In this case Windows formats the drive directly and places files directly on the drive.

                    While this might be a bit faster, you loose the features of virtualization. Though Scott or coliver will need to explain why.

                    It should never be done (never being a strong word, but effectively never to the point that it shouldn't be discussed and definitely not considered in a realistic way) and is unlikely to be faster but probably slower as it moves the networking to where it is less efficient. It's not one of those "the world will end" just one of those "this never makes sense and is something SMBs do to be weird about tuning things that don't matter while missing the big picture."

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                    • J
                      Jason Banned @ntoxicator
                      last edited by

                      @ntoxicator said:

                      But in the past. When I expand the disk seize of the volume attached. Windows does not see it as a larger disk... Windows see's the additional storage space as a seperate drive. I've had to merge these drives together.

                      With windows 2008 and newer this isn't the case. We expand VMDKs on the fly on a daily basis. Without any interruptions.

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                      • coliverC
                        coliver @ntoxicator
                        last edited by coliver

                        @ntoxicator said:

                        NOTE:

                        When I drill into the ISCSI LUN on Xen Server

                        I select the DISK and click "MOVE"

                        "Upgrade XenServer to enable VDI Live migration. This feature enables you to migrate multiple running VDI's on shared storage between SR's"

                        I will try again when I power down this virtual machine and see if it gives me a disk move options. That way could move the entire disk to a different storage repository (NFS Share this time). Then from there, expand that disk size.

                        But in the past. When I expand the disk seize of the volume attached. Windows does not see it as a larger disk... Windows see's the additional storage space as a seperate drive. I've had to merge these drives together.

                        So do you have the ability to backup this virtual hard disk at the hypervisor level? Then restore it to the NFS volume. Schedule some down time and detach the one connected to the iSCSI storage and attached the NFS one. That should maintain the drive letter and all the configs...

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