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The following is a code example for copying data to a notebook instance in a development environment running on an EVS: import moxing as mox mox.file.make_dirs('/home/ma-user/work/data') mox.file.copy_parallel('obs://bucket-name/data', '/home/ma-user/work/data') On the Files tab page
Run the following commands to check the storage space used by the VM again: cd /home/ma-user/work du -h --max-depth 0 If the notebook instance uses an EVS disk for storage, expand the storage capacity on the notebook instance details page.
ECS An Elastic Cloud Server (ECS) is a basic computing unit that consists of vCPUs, memory, OS, and Elastic Volume Service (EVS) disks. After an ECS is created, you can use it similarly to how you would use your local PC or physical server.
This mode is supported only when the instance category is EFS. status String EVS disk capacity expansion status, which is RESIZING during capacity expansion and does not affect the instance.
This mode is supported only when the instance category is EFS. status String EVS disk capacity expansion status, which is RESIZING during capacity expansion and does not affect the instance.
This mode is supported only when the instance category is EFS. status String EVS disk capacity expansion status, which is RESIZING during capacity expansion and does not affect the instance.
However, if the instance is attached with an EVS disk, the storage space will still be billed. Deleting an Instance Delete the notebook instances that are not needed. Log in to the ModelArts management console.
Applicable Billing Item Compute resources Compute resources and EVS disks Applicable Resource Pool Dedicated resource pools Public resource pools and dedicated resource pools Applicable Function Standard ExeML, workflow, notebook, model training, and model deployment Lite Cluster
If type is set to evs, this parameter does not need to be set. volume_size No Integer EVS disk size. The minimum size is 5 GB and the maximum size is 4,096 GB. The default value is 5 GB.
Therefore, mount an EVS disk or an SFS disk to expand the storage capacity after changing or resetting the OS.
ECS An Elastic Cloud Server (ECS) is a basic computing unit that consists of vCPUs, memory, OS, and Elastic Volume Service (EVS) disks. After an ECS is created, you can use it as your local PC or physical server. You can create a custom image on premises or on an ECS.
If type is set to evs, this parameter does not need to be set. volume_size Integer EVS disk size. The minimum size is 5 GB and the maximum size is 4096 GB. The default value is 5 GB.
If type is set to evs, this parameter does not need to be set. volume_size No Integer EVS disk size. The minimum size is 5 GB and the maximum size is 4096 GB. The default value is 5 GB.
Request the required number of ECS instances, CPU cores, RAM capacity (memory size), and EVS disk capacity. Contact your customer manager for quota details.
EVS evs:types:get evs:quotas:get Query EVS disk types and quotas. BMS bms:serverFlavors:get Query BMS specifications. Dependent permissions must be configured in the IAM project view. DEW kps:domainKeypairs:list Configure a key pair.
This mode is supported only when the instance category is EFS. status String EVS disk capacity expansion status, which is RESIZING during capacity expansion and does not affect the instance.
This mode is supported only when the instance category is EFS. status String EVS disk capacity expansion status, which is RESIZING during capacity expansion and does not affect the instance.
This mode is supported only when the instance category is EFS. status String EVS disk capacity expansion status, which is RESIZING during capacity expansion and does not affect the instance.
This mode is supported only when the instance category is EFS. status String EVS disk capacity expansion status, which is RESIZING during capacity expansion and does not affect the instance.
After the notebook instance is created, scale out EVS as needed and use dynamic mounting to simulate OBS objects as a local file system. You can also view events to locate faults when a notebook instance is faulty. For details, see Managing Notebook Instances.