That actually worked like a charm. But I had to use three of the data partitions of the ADP drives for a regular aggregate in order to make the SVM root. 

On Wed, Aug 22, 2018 at 7:44 AM Alexander Griesser <AGriesser@anexia-it.com> wrote:

Hey,

 

thanks for the heads-up – what about ADP? Would that work in this combination or are ADP and snaplock mutually exclusive?

 

Best,

 

Alexander Griesser

Head of Systems Operations

 

ANEXIA Internetdienstleistungs GmbH

 

E-Mail: AGriesser@anexia-it.com

Web: http://www.anexia-it.com

 

Anschrift Hauptsitz Klagenfurt: Feldkirchnerstraße 140, 9020 Klagenfurt

Geschäftsführer: Alexander Windbichler

Firmenbuch: FN 289918a | Gerichtsstand: Klagenfurt | UID-Nummer: AT U63216601

 

Von: toasters-bounces@teaparty.net <toasters-bounces@teaparty.net> Im Auftrag von Basil
Gesendet: Mittwoch, 22. August 2018 13:39
An: toasters@teaparty.net
Betreff: Be careful about snaplock

 

Just going through an experience I figured I would share with the list: we ordered a small Snaplock cluster, sized so that all disks would be used for the Snaplock aggregate. Well, as it turns out, you must always size enough disk for one regular aggregate: SVM root volumes are not supported on root aggregates nor on Snaplock aggregates.