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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CLOUDSTACK-6181?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14328119#comment-14328119
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Loic Lambiel commented on CLOUDSTACK-6181:
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Hey this is a good news !

However it will not prevent corruption in the 4.4 branch (the one I'm building 
against and I won't upgrade to 4.5+ anytime soon). This was the initial goal of 
my PR, as I also faced corruption during my testings.

Also I agree that my PR was probably a bit too drastic, not taking into account 
enough other KVM environments usage, I'm sorry for that.

> Root resize
> -----------
>
>                 Key: CLOUDSTACK-6181
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/CLOUDSTACK-6181
>             Project: CloudStack
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>      Security Level: Public(Anyone can view this level - this is the 
> default.) 
>          Components: Hypervisor Controller, Storage Controller, UI
>    Affects Versions: 4.4.0
>         Environment: KVM/libvirt/CentOS, Xenserver
>            Reporter: Nux
>              Labels: disk, resize, template
>             Fix For: 4.4.0
>
>
> Rationale:
> Currently the root size of an instance is locked to that of the template. 
> This creates unnecessary template duplicates, prevents the creation of a 
> market place, wastes time and disk space and generally makes work more 
> complicated.
> Real life example - a small VPS provider might want to offer the following 
> sizes (in GB):
> 10,20,40,80,160,240,320,480,620
> That's 9 offerings.
> The template selection could look like this, including real disk space used:
> Windows 2008 ~10GB
> Windows 2008+Plesk ~15GB
> Windows 2008+MSSQL ~15GB
> Windows 2012 ~10GB
> Windows 2012+Plesk ~15GB
> Windows 2012+MSSQL ~15GB
> CentOS ~1GB
> CentOS+CPanel ~3GB
> CentOS+Virtualmin ~3GB
> CentOS+Zimbra ~3GB
> CentOS+Docker ~2GB
> Debian ~1GB
> Ubuntu LTS ~1GB
> In this case the total disk space used by templates will be 828 GB, that's 
> almost 1 TB. If your storage is expensive and limited SSD this can get 
> painful!
> If the root resize feature is enabled we can reduce this to under 100 GB.



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