Windows 10 Storage Spaces: "storage space cannot be extended because the number of clusters will exceed the maximum number of clusters supported by the file system" : DataHoarder
Press J to jump to the feed. Press question mark to learn the rest of the keyboard shortcuts
Found the internet!
4

Windows 10 Storage Spaces: "storage space cannot be extended because the number of clusters will exceed the maximum number of clusters supported by the file system"

4

Windows 10 Storage Spaces: "storage space cannot be extended because the number of clusters will exceed the maximum number of clusters supported by the file system"

Have all WD drives. All NTFS, 5x4TB blues and 2x8TB reds (from shucking easy stores). I added the 2 new drives to the pool, but for some reason it's still limiting the size of my pool to 14.5 TB. When I click to increase the size, it gives me the error in the title. Any solutions? I searched on google and on reddit and this subreddit but couldn't find anything useful. Thank you in advance for your help!

My motherboard is this: X9DRL-IF-O if that helps in recommending I do something other than windows storage spaces.

27 comments
70% Upvoted
Log in or sign up to leave a comment
User avatar
level 1

I’m guessing the volume you are trying to extend uses 4K clusters. The max volume size for 4K is 16 TB. The easiest way around this is to create a second volume with your two reds at a larger cluster size, move your data to the new volume, then add the old disks to the new volume.

6
level 2
[deleted]
· 4 yr. ago

This is the answer. I had the same problem as op. It has been 2 weeks, and I'm still moving shit over.

For some stupid reason, windows assigns 4k clusters to any pool smaller than 16tb. However, windows let's you create a 63tb pool, even if you don't have the drives. That was what I did in the second pool. That way, I won't have to increase the pool size in the future. All I would have to do is add more drives to the array.

2
User avatar
level 1
· 4 yr. ago · edited 4 yr. ago
28TB

Use whatever disk-management you prefer. Your error is because the filesystem has maximum size based on the cluster size you define when the drive is formatted. I have been caught by this a few times, and requires a little bit of planning.

Here is a reference

Cluster SizeMax Volume Size
4kb16TB
8kb32TB
16kb64TB
32kb128TB
64kb256TB

So looking at your drives (5x4 = 20, 2x8 = 16) your max size is 36tb. So you need 16kb clusters, or split the pool into 2 volumes.

Why is cluster size important? Its the 'smallest' size any file will take on the volume. So if you have a bunch of 1kb files, on a cluster with 64kb each file takes 64kb of space. If you have large linux ISOs, this is less of an issue because each file will span multiple clusters.

Personally, i look at the 'largest' I will let a volume get, and set the cluster size accordingly. My plex server is a single volume with a cluster size of 16kb running RAID 6 in hardware. I have been expanding it for years, and ran into this problem. I like having my entire plex library in one location. I accept all the risks for catastrophic data loss (even had to use it once).

I hope this helps.

5
User avatar
level 1

Stop using storage spaces, and start using something like stablebit drivepool. Now you have to opportunity to switch over.

2
User avatar
level 2

Ok. Thank you! You recommend this over going with a hardware raid card?

1
More posts from the DataHoarder community
511
View Comments
Play
0:00
0:00
Settings
Fullscreen
511
62 comments
219

I have over 500 sound kits but a majority of them are full of recycled sounds. Is there any free program that can find similar or exact matches of sounds in subfolders?

219
56 comments
114

https://www.newegg.com/seagate-expansion-14tb-black/p/N82E16822184958?Item=N82E16822184958

There's a $50 promo code bringing the price down to $219.99 per drive.

The last time I bought Seagate's external drives and shucked them they were Exos drives. I've been very happy with them.

This is actually very fortuitous for me. I originally purchased 4 18TB drives from Amazon and then had to send them back because there was no warranty on them. Those drives were costing me +$17 per TB. So this is a nice savings plus a 1 year warranty. With the overall savings from the cost of a bare drive I can lose 1 drive and purchase a new one and still come out a few bucks ahead.

I'll be shucking next week boys!

114
18 comments
110

4 or 5 years back, I built my current NAS file server setup using a guide from Serverguide/JDM_waat for the purposes of backup and PLEX storage. In all, I was operating (8) 8TB HGST drives individually as the onboard RAID just wouldn't work with the larger drives and I got impatient trying to troubleshoot. I set up a secondary cloud backup of all the data just in case and for the whole time, it has operated fairly seamlessly. But after a few freak power outages in a series of 15 minutes, things went kaput. So it's time to rebuild with more patience and deliberate intentions, this time going for a RAID 5 setup paired with the cloud backup. BUT I cannot find a card that can handle the larger HDDs I will be using (8TB or 10TB depending on the deal I go with) and could use some help. This is a bit outside my wheelhouse so figured I would ask the experts.


Secondary question - Can I run two RAID cards so I can maximize the HDDs loaded up and maintain my 60+ TB of data capabilities?

Current baseline server equipment:

  • Rosewill 4U Server Chassis with 15 bays

  • GA-7TESM-F8

  • (2) Intel Xeon L5640 @ 2.27 GHz

  • 16 GB RAM (will be upgrading)

  • OS HDD - Kingston SSD 480GB A400 SATA 3

110
75 comments
50

I'm revamping my home lab and I'm looking to upgrade my Automatic Ripping Machine system.

The problem is that my ARM machine never worked right. I spent hours troubleshooting, asking on forums, etc. but it just kept popping up the weirdest errors and I think it's the age of the Asus z8na-d6c motherboard. They're good for their age, but definitely aged. Drivers seem to be an issue for most OSs, even Linux where "legacy" drivers are usually archived SOMEWHERE on the web. They also won't boot reliably from USB so OSs have to be loaded from the optical drive. The BIOS is also limited and they're just a bit past their prime. It's just time to move on from this hardware.

I'd like to rebuild this system with some newer hardware. I have a large collection of optical media I'm trying to get through so I would like to get to the point where it can run from multiple drives simultaneously (I was never able to get this system to even do one drive)

What is a good motherboard/CPU combo for this purpose that could be reasonably acquired second-hand that would fit in a standard ATX case? I have a ton of 8gb DDR3 registered memory laying around (from a project where I dcomm'd about 200 servers and was allowed to keep the RAM), so a server board would be best. But I am not locked into that. Just something that would be reasonably quick and reliable.

50
8 comments
40

As there's a war going on in Europe, I'm interested in preparing and protecting my data from a potential EMP. How would you go about doing it?

40
71 comments
25

So I just have a question as to how the wayback machine saved data back in the day (2011 to be exact) This website https://www.mamm.com.au/

Had a profile of me with some photos on it during the year 2011, how ever this profile was deleted by the owners of the site along with a request to Google to delete the images. These photos dont show up on Google images anymore.

Upon revisiting this website with the wayback machine during it's 2011-2012 Snapshots, a few profiles along with their pictures were saved, however there is nothing with my profile.

Just wondering if it's even possible to recover these photos? If the host deleted them off their site is there any chance the internet archive would have saved them? Or is this just not how it works?

I would really appreciate it if anyone could provide some clarity, I know it sounds weird but this is very important to me, Cheers

25
10 comments
19

What is your opinion, are refurbished drives fine to use? Is there brands of refurbished drives that are better than others?

19
28 comments
21

Hey fellow hoarders,

I've been fighting with a big collection of video files, which do not have any uniform default track selection, and I was sick of always changing tracks in the beginning of a movie or episode. Updating them manually was never an option. So I developed a tool changing default audio and subtitle tracks of matroska (.mkv) files.
Since I have different needs for different available tracks, it handles multiple combinations of audio & subtitle tracks.

I hope some of you folks benefit of it.

Project: https://github.com/RatzzFatzz/MKVAudioSubtitleChanger

21
7 comments
17

If the serial number of a drive were to end up posted online, would it present any disadvantage to the owner? Particularly with regards to warranty coverage.

Or am I being extra paranoid tonight?

EDIT: Thank ya all, you've confirmed my suspicions. I was working with the assumption that someone could do something hinky with the warranty and u/thedaveCA's suggestions match my own thoughts. Will be keeping the serial numbers encrypted on my home's repo: https://github.com/whalecoiner/home

17
15 comments
16

I have a few rare rare hard to find TV series on my hdd which I'd like to backup to disc to store away. Would burning the iso or folder be fine being burned as data? I'm also looking into the idea of creating mkv files of the TV series and burning them single episodes to disc. Any answers or recommendations welcome.

16
9 comments
16

Since my grandmother passed, a group chat was created to share all the photos we had of her. I have them backed up in a physical hard drive, however I don't know about any services online that can keep it on the web, so that I can privately share the album with the family. Google photos does the job for now, but it will soon run out of storage.

Do you know about any other options? Hopely free but I don't mind one-time payments

16
17 comments
Continue browsing in r/DataHoarder
This is a sub that aims at bringing data hoarders together to share their passion with like minded people.
611k

Members

703

Online


Created May 10, 2013