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VMware, Inc.'s clustered file system used by the company's server virtualization suite, vSphere From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
VMware VMFS (Virtual Machine File System) is VMware, Inc.'s clustered file system used by the company's flagship server virtualization suite, vSphere. It was developed to store virtual machine disk images, including snapshots. Multiple servers can read/write the same filesystem simultaneously while individual virtual machine files are locked. VMFS volumes can be logically "grown" (non-destructively increased in size) by spanning multiple VMFS volumes together.
Developer(s) | VMware, Inc. |
---|---|
Full name | Virtual Machine File System |
Introduced | with ESX Server v1.x |
Partition IDs | 0xfb (MBR) |
Limits | |
Max volume size | 64 TB (VMFS5) [1] |
Max file size | 62 TB [2][3] |
Max no. of files | ~130,690 (VMFS5) [2] |
Features | |
Transparent compression | No |
Transparent encryption | No |
Data deduplication | No |
Other | |
Supported operating systems | VMware ESX |
There are six (plus one for vSAN) versions of VMFS, corresponding with ESX/ESXi Server product releases.
A Java open source VMFS driver[9] enables read-only access to files and folders on partitions formatted with the Virtual Machine File System (VMFS) is developed and maintained by fluid Operations Archived 2011-08-21 at the Wayback Machine AG. It allows features like offloaded backups of virtual machines hosted on VMware ESXi hosts up to VMFSv3.
vmfs-tools supports more VMFS features and read only VMFS mounts through the standard Linux VFS and the FUSE framework. Developed by Christophe Fillot and Mike Hommey and available as source code download at the glandium.org vmfs-tools page or the Debian vmfs-tools and Ubuntu vmfs-tools packages.
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