Monitoring size limits for compressed volumes

During a software upgrade, a system that has volumes near 128 TB of used physical space alerts you to take certain measures to prevent them from becoming read only.

Compressed volumes near their size limits are monitored at specified thresholds to preserve data integrity. If a volume can be shrunk to fit below the recommended new limit, you are advised to do so. If volume capacity cannot be reduced to meet the recommended limit, you are advised to create a non-compressed mirror of the data (if one does not exist) and delete the primary copy.

Size limits

Compressed volumes have the following size limits. If a new or existing compressed volume approaches the maximum size, the system issues an alert.

96 TB
Maximum virtual size of a new, individual compressed volume. You cannot create a new compressed volume that exceeds this size. In addition, you cannot increase the size of an existing compressed volume beyond this value. If one or more compressed volumes in a cluster exceed this limit, you receive an alert. To reduce the risk of losing or corrupting data, you must take action soon to remove data from the compressed volume.
120 TB
Maximum virtual size of an existing compressed volume in a cluster. If any compressed volumes in the cluster approach or exceed this value, the system issues an alert.
Important: Immediate action is required to remove all data from the compressed volume and prevent the loss of data.
128 TB
Maximum physical size of a compressed volume.

For information about how to move data off a compressed volume, see the Flashes, alerts and bulletins website.