![]() ![]() As described in the original post,when using qcow2 format you are basically using thing provisioning technology. Let’s have a look to the qcow2 format first. The screenshot above shows you that the VM101 has a disk of 20 GB and that the VM107 is using a disk that can have a maximum size of 25 GB. Within my Proxmox VE lab infrastructure, I have some virtual machines using the qcow2 format (the VM 101) and others are using raw format (Vm 107) The “Strange” Case of Raw format disk size In this post, I was writing down that the raw format was “similar” to Thick disk provisioning, Well, not quite (or to be more specific – not always) ! Let me explain. If you have some experience with Proxmox VE, you know that you can create virtual disk using one of the following format In this post, we were describing and explaining some of the settings that could be set when creating virtual machines and which disk fomart could be used. The question was really interesting so I decided to make it a post. Recently, I’ve received a question/comment about the Raw format disk used with Proxmox VE. ![]()
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