- Community Home
- >
- Storage
- >
- HPE SimpliVity
- >
- Re: What is SimpliVity File System ( SVTFS ) ?
-
-
Forums
- Products
- Servers and Operating Systems
- Storage
- Software
- Services
- HPE GreenLake
- Company
- Events
- Webinars
- Partner Solutions and Certifications
- Local Language
- China - 简体中文
- Japan - 日本語
- Korea - 한국어
- Taiwan - 繁體中文
-
- Advancing Life & Work
- Advantage EX
- Alliances
- Around the Storage Block
- HPE Ezmeral: Uncut
- OEM Solutions
- Servers & Systems: The Right Compute
- Tech Insights
- The Cloud Experience Everywhere
- HPE Blog, Austria, Germany & Switzerland
- Blog HPE, France
- HPE Blog, Italy
- HPE Blog, Japan
- HPE Blog, Middle East
- HPE Blog, Latin America
- HPE Blog, Russia
- HPE Blog, Saudi Arabia
- HPE Blog, South Africa
- HPE Blog, UK & Ireland
- HPE Blog, Poland
-
Blogs
- Advancing Life & Work
- Advantage EX
- Alliances
- Around the Storage Block
- HPE Blog, Latin America
- HPE Blog, Middle East
- HPE Blog, Saudi Arabia
- HPE Blog, South Africa
- HPE Blog, UK & Ireland
- HPE Ezmeral: Uncut
- OEM Solutions
- Servers & Systems: The Right Compute
- Tech Insights
- The Cloud Experience Everywhere
-
Information
- Community
- Welcome
- Getting Started
- FAQ
- Ranking Overview
- Rules of Participation
- Tips and Tricks
- Resources
- Announcements
- Email us
- Feedback
- Information Libraries
- Integrated Systems
- Networking
- Servers
- Storage
- Other HPE Sites
- Support Center
- Aruba Airheads Community
- Enterprise.nxt
- HPE Dev Community
- Cloud28+ Community
- Marketplace
-
Forums
-
Forums
-
Blogs
-
Information
-
English
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Mark Topic as New
- Mark Topic as Read
- Float this Topic for Current User
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Printer Friendly Page
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
06-05-2019 03:33 AM
06-05-2019 03:33 AM
What is SimpliVity File System ( SVTFS ) ?
Could someone please explain what's SVTFS, where is it applied ( front or the back drives ), and how is it related to NFS?
Thanks in advance.
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
06-05-2019 04:16 AM
06-05-2019 04:16 AM
Re: What is SimpliVity File System ( SVTFS ) ?
SVTFS is applied to the front disks (they are in RAID5 or RAID6 - depends on the size of SImplivity storage) ... Rear are "system disks" - RAID1
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
06-10-2019 06:51 AM
06-10-2019 06:51 AM
Re: What is SimpliVity File System ( SVTFS ) ?
NFS is presented to the ESXi as that is the language it understands,SVTFS is the core process running on the virtual controllers that provides the distributed file system,
The back drives x2 are used for the ESXi and Virtual controller install,
The font drives are under the control of the Omnicube virtual controller OVC and that is where the distributed data resides,
This blogs from one of our senior engineers is a great explanation of how the system stores data.
I am an HPE employee

- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
06-28-2019 07:24 AM
06-28-2019 07:24 AM
Re: What is SimpliVity File System ( SVTFS ) ?
Thanks a lot for the explanation. Now, two questions arise based on your explanation.
1. ) That means, OVC doesn't control the back drives?
2.) ESXi doesn't understand VMFS?
- Mark as New
- Bookmark
- Subscribe
- Mute
- Subscribe to RSS Feed
- Permalink
- Report Inappropriate Content
07-01-2019 01:02 PM
07-01-2019 01:02 PM
Re: What is SimpliVity File System ( SVTFS ) ?
The back drives are the boot drives for ESXi and a local datastore where the OVC VM lives.the front drives are controlled by OVC via pci passthrough.
ESXi understands it but we do not present vmfs.that is a design decision for a hyperconverged system block level such as vmfs would be far more complex with few benefits to make the effort worthwhile.
I am an HPE employee

Hewlett Packard Enterprise International
- Communities
- HPE Blogs and Forum
© Copyright 2022 Hewlett Packard Enterprise Development LP