Storage Spaces is a technology in Windows 8, 8.1 and 10 and Windows Server that allow combining multiple hard disk drives (HDD) or solid state drives (SSD) into one storage pool. It is actually a virtual disk that offers cost-effective, highly available, scalable, and flexible storage solutions.
Why Do You Need to Resize/Expand Storage Space of Virtual Disk
But sometimes, you may find that Storage Space running out because there are so many data stored on it. At this moment, you need to extend and resize virtual disk and storage pool. However, there is little partition software that supports to manage storage spaces and storage pools in Windows. So, to do this, you have to migrate your data to a larger volume and then extend the file system on the volume to recognize the newly-available space. After you verify that your new volume is working properly, you can delete the old volume. It's really complex and tedious!
What Is the Best and Easiest Way to Manage Storage Pools
So, is there any easy way to resize or extend storage space virtual disk? Of course yes, here, we will introduce you the best virtual disk storage space management solution - EaseUS partition tool, a powerful and easy-to-use third-party disk management tool that allows you to increase the storage space without losing the data. Requiring none of the complex operations mentioned above, it can help you resize or expand storage space and storage pools in Windows 10/8.1/8 within 2 simple steps.
How to Resize or Expand Storage Pools on Virtual Disk
Azure Vm Increase Disk Size Portal
Step 1: Launch EaseUS Partition Master
Step 2: Free up space to extend partition
If the hard drive has enough unallocated space to extend the target partition, jump to Step 3 and continue.
If not, free up space first:
1. Right-click on a partition next to the target partition and select 'Resize/Move'.
2. Drag the partition ends to free up space, leaving enough unallocated space behind the target partition, click 'OK'.
1. Right-click on a partition next to the target partition and select 'Resize/Move'.
2. Drag the partition ends to free up space, leaving enough unallocated space behind the target partition, click 'OK'.
Step 3: Extend partition
1. Right-click on the target partition and select 'Resize/Move'.
2. Drag the target partition handle into the unallocated space to extend partition.
Step 4: Keep all changes
Click the 'Execute Operation' button and click 'Apply' to keep all changes.
We are looking into moving a number of websites to Microsoft Azure. We believe the App Service standard tier S1 service will meet most of our needs.
Unfortunately, it offers a maximum of 50Gb of storage. Is it possible to add storage to the service plan overall? (e.g. the storage will be available to all of the apps on the app service).
I know you can add blob storage to each app individually, but we would prefer to increase the available storage on the service plan as a whole.
KaiserKaiser
1 Answer
It seems to me that 50GB is the limit on a standard plan.
![Data Data](/uploads/1/2/3/7/123706420/857142631.png)
App Service limits Crusader kings 2 cheat table tutorial.
Standard; 50GB.
Premium; 500GB.
I suppose this leaves you with (at least) the following options.
- Upgrade your plan to Premium.
- See if Microsoft will raise your limit.
Azure subscription and service limits, quotas, and constraints
If you want to raise the limit or quota above the Default Limit, open an online customer support request at no charge. The limits can't be raised above the Maximum Limit..If there is no Maximum Limit column, then the resource doesn't have adjustable limits.
- Find some other solution which removes the need to place data on your App Service. Such as a dedicated Azure storage mechanism, e.g. blobs, CDNs, Redis Cache, SQL, etc.
- Look into App Service Environment.
App Service limits
The storage limit [of an App Service] is the total content size across all apps in the same App Service plan. More storage options are available in App Service Environment.
App Service Environment Storage
Each ASE is configured with 500 GB of storage. This space is used across all the apps in the ASE.
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Comments
commented Aug 17, 2018
When an AKS cluster is provisioned there are options to scale the number of nodes but not the underlying storage space allocated to the agent nodes. Is there a means of increasing the storage space allocated to agents by cycling in new agents with increased quotas or is the only option to delete the cluster and start over? If the latter I think it would be useful to consider the storage space flag as a target for new nodes being provisioned rather than a deploy-time parameter which is honoured through the life of the cluster; this would allow the cycling in of new agent nodes with increased/decreased storage space without having to destroy everything and start from scratch. |
commented Jan 14, 2019
Please advise If we have any update or work around, facing similar issue. |
commented Jan 28, 2019 • edited
edited
If i understand the question properly, you want to extend the size of the underlying node OS primary disk size and not mounting disks through PV and PVC. If that's the case there is an easy way to extend the disk size (depending on what the VM_TYPE is you have chosen). You can do the following steps: Free vin check canada. after that is done, shut down the virtual machine in the Azure Portal. After the machine has been shut down. Go to its disk properties and go to the Disk resource item and its 'configuration' properties. There you can resize the disk to what you want (Each VM Type has restrictions on the size and type of storage (HDD, SSD, and size). After the portal has successfully applied the changes, start the VM back up, wait for the node to be in Ready State and type the following command to make the node back back in scheduling rotation. that should to the trick. |
commented Jan 28, 2019
There are a few more steps for this tricky way, user could follow this guide: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machines/linux/expand-disks |
commented Apr 4, 2019
Closing this issue as old/stale. If this issue still comes up, please confirm you are running the latest AKS release. If you are on the latest release and the issue can be re-created outside of your specific cluster please open a new github issue. If you are only seeing this behavior on clusters with a unique configuration (such as custom DNS/VNet/etc) please open an Azure technical support ticket. |
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