Skip to content

Commit eba9c37

Browse files
authored
Update storage-files-scale-targets.md
1 parent c9b739c commit eba9c37

File tree

1 file changed

+5
-5
lines changed

1 file changed

+5
-5
lines changed

articles/storage/files/storage-files-scale-targets.md

Lines changed: 5 additions & 5 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -100,7 +100,7 @@ Azure file share scale targets apply at the file share level.
100100
| Maximum storage size | 100 TiB | 256 TiB | 100 TiB |
101101
| Maximum number of files | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
102102
| Maximum IOPS (Data) | 102,400 IOPS (dependent on provisioning) | 50,000 IOPS (dependent on provisioning) | 20,000 IOPS |
103-
| Maximum IOPS (Metadata<sup>1</sup>) | Up to 12,000 IOPS | Up to 12,000 IOPS | Up to 12,000 IOPS |
103+
| Maximum IOPS (Metadata<sup>1</sup>) | Up to 35,000 IOPS | Up to 12,000 IOPS | Up to 12,000 IOPS |
104104
| Maximum throughput | 10,340 MiB / sec (dependent on provisioning) | 5,120 MiB / sec (dependent on provisioning) | Up to storage account limits |
105105
| Maximum number of share snapshots | 200 snapshots | 200 snapshots | 200 snapshots |
106106
| Maximum filename length<sup>2</sup> (full pathname including all directories, file names, and backslash characters) | 2,048 characters | 2,048 characters | 2,048 characters |
@@ -184,10 +184,10 @@ The following table indicates which targets are soft, representing the Microsoft
184184
Since the Azure File Sync agent runs on a Windows Server machine that connects to the Azure file shares, the effective sync performance depends upon many factors in your infrastructure, including:
185185

186186
- Windows Server and the underlying disk configuration
187-
- Network bandwidth between the server and the Azure storage
188-
- File size
189-
- Total dataset size
190-
- Activity on the dataset
187+
- Network bandwidth between the server and Azure storage
188+
- File size
189+
- Total dataset size
190+
- Activity on the dataset
191191

192192
Because Azure File Sync works on the file level, you should measure the performance characteristics of an Azure File Sync-based solution by the number of objects (files and directories) processed per second.
193193

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)