This is a duplicate post; more answers here.
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Herman Robers
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If you have urgent issues, always contact your Aruba partner, distributor, or Aruba TAC Support. Check
https://www.arubanetworks.com/support-services/contact-support/ for how to contact Aruba TAC. Any opinions expressed here are solely my own and not necessarily that of Hewlett Packard Enterprise or Aruba Networks.
In case your problem is solved, please invest the time to post a follow-up with the information on how you solved it. Others can benefit from that.
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Original Message:
Sent: Feb 29, 2024 10:38 AM
From: su_A_ve
Subject: Why Clearpass only supports thick provisioned disks
I always thought the requirements are based on what the physical appliances have, hence the high storage and CPUs. The think provisioning is probably due to the appliances having spindle disks instead of SSDs.
With regards to VMs, I would check with what options the storage has. Many have their own method of deduplication and thin provisioning, letting you create VMs with thick disks.
My .02..
Original Message:
Sent: 2/29/2024 9:57:00 AM
From: ahollifield
Subject: RE: Why Clearpass only supports thick provisioned disks
My understand is so it's never oversubscribed. A Network Access Control system is a critical piece of hardware/software and I wouldn't want to go down because of oversubscribed storage.
Original Message:
Sent: Feb 28, 2024 11:10 PM
From: crafdesu
Subject: Why Clearpass only supports thick provisioned disks
Hi
were in the midst of upgrading our clearpass server, it seems the requirement for the disk is Thick Provisioning, is this still compulsary? If anyone knows the logic behind why the disk type needs to be Thick instead of thin, would appreciate and feedback.
I can understand it if the underlying storage has limited space but what if the underlying storage has more than enough free space? cant we set the disk type to thin provisioning in that case?
TIA