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Figure 1 Configuring disks For details about the disk type performance, see EVS Disk Types and Performance. High I/O disks use serial attached SCSI (SAS) drives to store data. Ultra-high I/O disks use solid state disk (SSD) drives to store data.
EVS Elastic Volume Service (EVS) provides scalable block storage that features high reliability and high performance to meet different service requirements. It provides data storage capabilities for Workspace desktops.
Configuring an ECS Scenarios This section describes how to install application software, configure patch updates, and install system patches on an ECS. Prerequisites You have obtained the username and password for logging in to the ECS. You have created an ECS. For details, see Creating
Public service resources, such as Elastic Cloud Server (ECS), Elastic Volume Service (EVS), Object Storage Service (OBS), Virtual Private Cloud (VPC), Elastic IP (EIP), and Image Management Service (IMS), are shared within the same cloud region.
Creating an ECS Scenario This section describes how to create an ECS for subsequent ECS configuration and image creation. Prerequisites You have obtained the username and password for logging in to the console. You have registered a private image using an ISO file. For details, see
Figure 1 Configuring disks For details about the disk type performance, see EVS Product Introduction. High I/O disks use serial attached SCSI (SAS) drives to store data. Ultra-high I/O disks use solid state disk (SSD) drives to store data.
See EVS disk types and performance. High I/O disks use serial attached SCSI (SAS) drives to store data. Ultra-high I/O disks use solid state disk (SSD) drives to store data. The disk size ranges from 10 GB to 1,020 GB. The value must be an integer multiple of 10.
After the capacity of a Linux EVS disk is expanded, the disk will not be partitioned by default. For details about how to partition the disk, see Extending Disk Partitions and File Systems (Linux).
EVS DSS - System Disk Select a system disk type as required. The capacity of a system disk ranges from 10 GB to 1,020 GB. The value must be an integer multiple of 10. High I/O disk 80 GB Network Select an existing subnet or click click here to create a subnet to create one.
Figure 1 Configuring disks For details about the disk type performance, see Elastic Volume Service Product Introduction. High I/O disks use serial attached SCSI (SAS) drives to store data. Ultra-high I/O disks use solid state disk (SSD) drives to store data.
Associated resources such as EVS disks, EIPs, and bandwidth will continue to be billed. A pay-per-use APS can be stopped without being billed. That is, when the APS is stopped but retained, compute resources (vCPUs and memory) are automatically reclaimed.
Please try again after opening service 500 WKS.0014 Failed to invoke EVS interface. Failed to invoke EVS interface. Please contact your system administrator. 500 WKS.0032 Failed to init the job. Please contact your system administrator. Failed to init the job.
Configuring an ECS Scenario This section describes how to install application software, configure patch update, and install system patches on an ECS. Prerequisites You have obtained the username and password for logging in to the ECS. You have created an ECS. You have obtained the
Public services, such as Elastic Cloud Server (ECS), Elastic Volume Service (EVS), Object Storage Service (OBS), Virtual Private Cloud (VPC), Elastic IP, and Image Management Service (IMS), are shared within the same cloud region.
How Do I Add an ECS to the Domain of an APS? The newly purchased ECS is not added to the domain where the APS resides. Therefore, the sharing configuration cannot be performed. Perform the following operations to add the ECS to the corresponding domain: The Windows Server 2019 server
Its associated resources such as its EVS disks, EIPs, and bandwidth will continue to be billed. Pay-per-use desktops are not billed when they are stopped or hibernating.
Figure 1 Configuring disks For details about the performance of different disk types, see EVS Overview. High I/O disks use serial attached SCSI (SAS) drives to store data. Ultra-high I/O disks use solid state disk (SSD) drives to store data.
Creating an ECS Scenario This section describes how to create an ECS for subsequent ECS configuration and image creation. Prerequisites You have obtained the username and password for logging in to the console. You have registered a private image using an ISO file. See Registering