X-Git-Url: http://git.annexia.org/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=src%2Fguestfs.pod;h=81449d3bc8b32d1b9ab69ef474b4786e69271af2;hb=d0c7e1d994f1b6ee64cc131d87cd652a2afba0d6;hp=c19c9b67c3117c8782f214b20b3b44b59eac055d;hpb=20100e23bcdbf744b2e0e3c6c6f4a041e5daa73c;p=libguestfs.git diff --git a/src/guestfs.pod b/src/guestfs.pod index c19c9b6..81449d3 100644 --- a/src/guestfs.pod +++ b/src/guestfs.pod @@ -2818,6 +2818,15 @@ We have tested block devices up to 1 exabyte (2**60 or 1,152,921,504,606,846,976 bytes) using sparse files backed by an XFS host filesystem. +Although libguestfs probably does not impose any limit, the underlying +host storage will. If you store disk images on a host ext4 +filesystem, then the maximum size will be limited by the maximum ext4 +file size (currently 16 TB). If you store disk images as host logical +volumes then you are limited by the maximum size of an LV. + +For the hugest disk image files, we recommend using XFS on the host +for storage. + =head2 MAXIMUM SIZE OF A PARTITION The MBR (ie. classic MS-DOS) partitioning scheme uses 32 bit sector