Thank you both for the answer. This is the way I read it, and thought it worked but wanted to be sure.
Because of how we are structured, I may make the projects have a much larger limit set globally, and then let the individual MSP, if they want to change it, change it themselves. Regards, Marty -----Original Message----- From: Rohit Yadav <rohit.ya...@shapeblue.com> Sent: Saturday, September 30, 2023 7:53 AM To: users@cloudstack.apache.org Subject: Re: Project Limits Hi Marty, In addition to what Pearl has advised, the limits are defined in global settings (search for max.project or max.account) which can be overriden on per domain/account/project levels. Regards. ________________________________ From: Pearl d'Silva <pearl.dsi...@shapeblue.com> Sent: Saturday, September 30, 2023 03:49 To: users@cloudstack.apache.org <users@cloudstack.apache.org> Subject: Re: Project Limits Hi Marty, If you have a project in a domain with resource limit set greater that what the domain offers, then the resource limits of the domain apply within a project; i.e., taking your example, since the domain has a CPU limit of 20, despite the project having 40 CPUs as the upper limit, it will prevent creation of compute nodes once the 20 CPU mark (of the domain) is exceeded. Regards, Pearl ________________________________ From: ma...@gonsource.com <ma...@gonsource.com> Sent: September 29, 2023 4:40 PM To: users@cloudstack.apache.org <users@cloudstack.apache.org> Subject: Project Limits Hello, community, Quick question and clarification on my side. For projects, I know they have their own resource limit settings. But is this limit technically set by the domain? So, for example, if the domain has a limit of 20 CPUs, and the project, in that domain, has 40 CPUs as a limit, will it stop the creation of a compute node in the project if they hit the 20 limit or the 40 limit? Thank you for the help. Marty