Hello.
I'm trying to increase the Storage allocated for a VDC.
PS C:\Users\\Documents\WindowsPowerShell> get-orgvdc LON-TEST-VDC1 | ft name,storagelimitGB
Name StorageLimitGB
---- --------------
LON-TEST-VDC1 3607
PS C:\Users\\Documents\WindowsPowerShell> set-orgvdc LON-TEST-VDC1 -StorageLimitGB 3608 -whatif
Set-OrgVdc : A parameter cannot be found that matches parameter name 'StorageLimitGB'.
At line:1 char:28
+ set-orgvdc LON-TEST-VDC1 -StorageLimitGB 3608 -whatif
+ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+ CategoryInfo : InvalidArgument: (:) [Set-OrgVdc], ParameterBindingException
+ FullyQualifiedErrorId : NamedParameterNotFound,VMware.VimAutomation.Cloud.Commands.Cmdlets.SetOrgVdc
I may not be using the right cmdlet obviously.
thanks
Regards
Gaetan
Isn't that the StorageAllocationGB parameter on the Set-OrgVdc cmdlet?
Blog: lucd.info Twitter: @LucD22 Co-author PowerCLI Reference
Hi LucD,
in my case StorageAllocationGB is showing -1
When you use the Set-OrgVdc with the StorageAllocationGB parameter?
Blog: lucd.info Twitter: @LucD22 Co-author PowerCLI Reference
When I do a get-orgvdc and select name,StorageLimitGB, StorageAllocationGB
StorageLimitGB is showing 3607 but StorageAllocationGB is showing -1
In vCloud Director, the storage policy is showing 3607. I have a few org vdc to change and it takes too many clicks to get there.
It looks like changing the Limit on a Storage Profile is currently only possible through the API, not through a cmdlet.
See Update Organization vDC Storage Profiles.
You might want to have a look at vCloud Director Provider and OrgV DC Storage Profile PowerCLI Module.
But note that this is not an official PowerCLI module!
Blog: lucd.info Twitter: @LucD22 Co-author PowerCLI Reference
set-OrgVdcStorageProfile -OrgName TEST | Set-OrgVdcStorageProfile -Limit 3694592
PS C:\Users\\Documents\WindowsPowerShell> get-orgvdc LON-TEST-VDC1 | ft name,storagelimitGB
Name StorageLimitGB
---- --------------
LON-TEST-VDC1 3608
I assume that 1st cmdlet was Get-OrgVdcStorageProfile?
Since the value on the Limit parameter is in MB it seems to have worked (3694592 MB = 3608 GB).
While you had 3607 GB at the start.
Blog: lucd.info Twitter: @LucD22 Co-author PowerCLI Reference
Correct. Thank you so much. We have 5 sites with many customers to update and that made my life much easier. Changes are properly reflected now