Reviewed-by: Pristromskaia, Margarita <margarita.pristromskaia@t-systems.com> Co-authored-by: wanghuijuan738 <wanghuijuan738@huawei.com> Co-committed-by: wanghuijuan738 <wanghuijuan738@huawei.com>
35 KiB
Disk-intensive ECSs
Overview
D2 ECSs are developed based on KVM virtualization. They use local storage and provide high storage performance and intranet bandwidth for distributed Hadoop computing, large data warehouse, distributed file system, and log/data processing.
Specifications
Flavor |
vCPUs |
Memory (GiB) |
Max./Assured Network Bandwidth (Gbit/s) |
Max. Network PPS (10,000) |
Max. NIC Queues |
Virtualization |
Local Disks (GiB) |
Hardware |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
d2.xlarge.8 |
4 |
32 |
4/1.4 |
40 |
2 |
KVM |
2 × 1675 |
CPU: Intel® Xeon® Gold 6151 |
d2.2xlarge.8 |
8 |
64 |
6/2.8 |
80 |
4 |
KVM |
4 × 1675 |
|
d2.4xlarge.8 |
16 |
128 |
10/5.6 |
160 |
6 |
KVM |
8 × 1675 |
|
d2.6xlarge.8 |
24 |
192 |
15/8.5 |
250 |
8 |
KVM |
12 × 1675 |
|
d2.8xlarge.8 |
32 |
256 |
17/11 |
320 |
8 |
KVM |
16 × 1675 |
|
d2.15xlarge.9 |
60 |
540 |
17/17 |
500 |
16 |
KVM |
24 × 1675 |
Scenarios
- Applications
Disk-intensive ECSs are suitable for applications that require large volumes of data to process, high I/O performance, and rapid data switching and processing, such as MapReduce, Hadoop, and data-intensive computing.
- Application scenarios
Big data computing, network file systems, data processing, MapReduce, Hadoop, and data-intensive computing
D2 ECS Features
- D2 ECSs use local disks to provide high sequential read/write performance and low latency, improving file read/write performance.
- D2 ECSs provide powerful and stable computing capabilities, ensuring efficient data processing.
- D2 ECSs with a vCPU/memory ratio of 1:8 process large volumes of data.
- D2 ECSs provide high intranet performance, including high intranet bandwidth and packets per second (PPS), meeting requirements for data exchange between ECSs during peak hours.
- Each D2 ECS supports a maximum configuration of 24 local disks, 60 vCPUs, and 540 GiB memory.
Metric |
Performance |
|---|---|
Disk capacity |
1,675 GiB |
Maximum throughput |
230 MB/s |
Access latency |
Within milliseconds |
Notes
- Table 3 lists the OSs supported by disk-intensive ECSs.
Table 3 Supported OS versions OS
Version
Alma
Alma 8 64bit
CentOS
- CentOS Stream 9.6 64bit
- CentOS Stream 8.6 64bit
- CentOS 8.5 64bit
- CentOS 8.4 64bit
- CentOS 8.3 64bit
- CentOS 8.2 64bit
- CentOS 8.1 64bit
- CentOS 7.9 64bit
- CentOS 7.7 64bit
Debian
- Debian GNU/Linux 12.0.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 11.7.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 11.6.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 11.5.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 11.4.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 11.3.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 11.2.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 11.1.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 11.0.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.13.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.12.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.11.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.10.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.9.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.8.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.7.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.6.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.5.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.4.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.3.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.2.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10.1.0 64bit
- Debian GNU/Linux 10 64bit
EulerOS
- EulerOS 2.12 64bit
- EulerOS 2.11 64bit
- EulerOS 2.10 64bit
- EulerOS 2.8 64bit
- EulerOS 2.7 64bit
- EulerOS 2.5 64bit
Fedora
- Fedora 39 64bit
- Fedora 38 64bit
- Fedora 37 64bit
- Fedora 36 64bit
- Fedora 35 64bit
- Fedora 34 64bit
- Fedora 33 64bit
- Fedora 32 64bit
- Fedora 31 64bit
OpenSUSE
- OpenSUSE 15.5 64bit
- OpenSUSE 15.4 64bit
- OpenSUSE 15.3 64bit
- OpenSUSE 15.2 64bit
Oracle Linux
- Oracle Linux Server release 8.4 64bit
- Oracle Linux Server release 7.6 64bit
Red Hat
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.1 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 9.0 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.7 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.6 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.5 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.4 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.3 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.2 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.1 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7.9 64bit
- Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.10 64bit
Rocky
- 9.2 64bit
- 9.1 64bit
- 9.0 64bit
- 8.8 64bit
- 8.7 64bit
- 8.6 64bit
- 8.5 64bit
- 8.4 64bit
- 8.3 64bit
- 8 64bit
SUSE
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP5 64bit
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP4 64bit
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP3 64bit
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP2 64bit
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP1 64bit
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 64bit
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 SP5 64bit
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 SP4 64bit
- Novell SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 12 SP3 64bit
Ubuntu
- Ubuntu 24.04 server 64bit
- Ubuntu 22.04 Server 64bit
- Ubuntu 20.04 server 64bit
- Ubuntu 18.04 server 64bit
Windows
- Windows Server 2025 Standard 64bit
- Windows Server 2022 Standard 64bit
- Windows Server 2022 Datacenter 64bit
- Windows Server 2019 Datacenter 64bit
- Windows Server 2019 Standard 64bit
- Windows Server 2016 Standard 64bit
- Windows Server 2012 R2 Standard 64bit
openEuler
- openEuler 22.03 SP1 64bit
- openEuler 22.03 64bit
- openEuler 20.03 SP3 64bit
- openEuler 20.03 SP2 64bit
- openEuler 20.03 SP1 64bit
- openEuler 20.03 64bit
- If the host where a D2 ECS is deployed becomes faulty, the ECS cannot be migrated.
- To improve network performance, you can set the NIC MTU of a D2 ECS to 8888.
- D2 ECSs do not support specification modification.
- D2 ECSs do not support local disk snapshots or backups.
- D2 ECSs do not support OS reinstallation or change.
- D2 ECSs can use both local disks and EVS disks to store data. In addition, they can have EVS disks attached to provide a larger storage size. Note the following when using the two types of storage media:
- Only an EVS disk, not a local disk, can be used as the system disk of a D2 ECS.
- Both EVS disks and local disks can be used as data disks of a D2 ECS.
- A maximum of 60 disks (including VBD, SCSI, and local disks) can be attached to a D2 ECS. Among the 60 disks, the maximum number of SCSI disks is 30, and the VBD disks (including the system disk) is 24. For details, see Can I Attach Multiple Disks to an ECS?
- You are advised to use World Wide Names (WWNs), but not drive letters, in applications to perform operations on local disks to prevent drive letter drift (low probability) on Linux. Take local disk attachment as an example:
If the local disk WWN is wwn-0x50014ee2b14249f6, run the mount /dev/disk/by-id/wwn-0x50014ee2b14249f6 command.
- The local disk data of a D2 ECS may be lost if an exception occurs, such as physical server breakdown or local disk damage. If your application does not use the data reliability architecture, it is a good practice to use EVS disks to build your ECS.
- When a D2 ECS is deleted, its local disk data will also be automatically deleted. Back up data in advance. Deleting local disk data will increase the time needed to release resources compared with ECSs without local disks.
- Do not store service data in local disks for a long time. Instead, store it in EVS disks. To improve data security, use a high availability architecture and back up data in a timely manner.
- Local disks can only be purchased during D2 ECS creation. The quantity and capacity of your local disks are determined according to the specifications of your ECS.
