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SAP HANA Azure virtual machine Premium SSD storage configurations

This document is about HANA storage configurations for Azure premium storage or premium ssd as it was introduced years back as low latency storage for database management systems (DBMS) and other applications that need low latency storage. For general considerations around stripe sizes when using Logical Volume Manager (LVM), HANA data volume partitioning or other considerations that are independent of the particular storage type, check these two documents:

Important

The suggestions for the storage configurations in this document are meant as directions to start with. Running workload and analyzing storage utilization patterns, you might realize that you aren't utilizing all the storage bandwidth or IOPS (I/O operations per second) provided. You might consider downsizing on storage then. Or in contrary, your workload might need more storage throughput than suggested with these configurations. As a result, you might need to deploy more capacity, IOPS or throughput. In the field of tension between storage capacity required, storage latency needed, storage throughput and IOPS required and least expensive configuration, Azure offers enough different storage types with different capabilities and different price points to find and adjust to the right compromise for you and your HANA workload.

Solutions with premium storage and Azure Write Accelerator for Azure M-Series virtual machines

Azure Write Accelerator is a functionality that is available for Azure M-Series Virtual Machines (VM) exclusively in combination with Azure premium storage. As the name states, the purpose of the functionality is to improve I/O latency of writes against the Azure premium storage. For SAP HANA, Write Accelerator is supposed to be used against the /hana/log volume only. Therefore, the /hana/data and /hana/log are separate volumes with Azure Write Accelerator supporting the /hana/log volume only.

Important

When using Azure premium storage, the usage of Azure Write Accelerator for the /hana/log volume is mandatory. Write Accelerator is available for premium storage and M-Series and Mv2-Series VMs only. Write Accelerator is not working in combination with other Azure VM families, like Esv3 or Edsv4.

The caching recommendations for Azure premium disks below are assuming the I/O characteristics for SAP HANA that list like:

  • There hardly is any read workload against the HANA data files. Exceptions are large sized I/Os after restart of the HANA instance or when data is loaded into HANA. Another case of larger read I/Os against data files can be HANA database backups. As a result read caching mostly doesn't make sense since in most of the cases, all data file volumes need to be read completely.
  • Writing against the data files is experienced in bursts based by HANA savepoints and HANA crash recovery. Writing savepoints is asynchronous and aren't holding up any user transactions. Writing data during crash recovery is performance critical in order to get the system responding fast again. However, crash recovery should be rather exceptional situations
  • There are hardly any reads from the HANA redo files. Exceptions are large I/Os when performing transaction log backups, crash recovery, or in the restart phase of a HANA instance.
  • Main load against the SAP HANA redo log file is writes. Dependent on the nature of workload, you can have I/Os as small as 4 KB or in other cases I/O sizes of 1 MB or more. Write latency against the SAP HANA redo log is performance critical.
  • All writes need to be persisted on disk in a reliable fashion

Recommendation: As a result of these observed I/O patterns by SAP HANA, the caching for the different volumes using Azure premium storage should be set like:

  • /hana/data - None or read caching
  • /hana/log - None. Enable Write Accelerator for M- and Mv2-Series VMs, the option in the Azure portal is "None + Write Accelerator."
  • /hana/shared - read caching
  • OS disk - don't change default caching that is set by Azure at creation time of the VM

Note

With some of the new M(b)v3 VM types, the usage of read cached Premium SSD v1 storage could result in lower read and write IOPS rates and throughput than you would get if you don't use read cache.

Azure burst functionality for premium storage

For Azure premium storage disks smaller or equal to 512 GiB in capacity, burst functionality is offered. The exact way how disk bursting works is described in the article Disk bursting. When you read the article, you understand the concept of accruing I/O Operations per second (IOPS) and throughput in the times when your I/O workload is below the nominal IOPS and throughput of the disks (for details on the nominal throughput see Managed Disk pricing). You're going to accrue the delta of IOPS and throughput between your current usage and the nominal values of the disk. The bursts are limited to a maximum of 30 minutes.

The ideal cases where this burst functionality can be planned in is likely going to be the volumes or disks that contain data files for the different DBMS. The I/O workload expected against those volumes, especially with small to mid-ranged systems is expected to look like:

  • Low to moderate read workload since data ideally is cached in memory, or like with SAP HANA should be completely in memory
  • Bursts of write triggered by database checkpoints or savepoints that are issued regularly
  • Backup workload that reads in a continuous stream in cases where backups aren't executed via storage snapshots
  • For SAP HANA, load of the data into memory after an instance restart

Especially on smaller DBMS systems where your workload is handling a few hundred transactions per seconds only, such a burst functionality can make sense as well for the disks or volumes that store the transaction or redo log. Expected workload against such a disk or volumes looks like:

  • Regular writes to the disk that are dependent on the workload and the nature of workload since every commit issued by the application is likely to trigger an I/O operation
  • Higher workload in throughput for cases of operational tasks, like creating or rebuilding indexes
  • Read bursts when performing transaction log or redo log backups

Important

SAP HANA certification for Azure M-Series virtual machines is exclusively with Azure Write Accelerator for the /hana/log volume. As a result, production scenario SAP HANA deployments on Azure M-Series virtual machines are expected to be configured with Azure Write Accelerator for the /hana/log volume.

Note

In scenarios that involve Azure premium storage, we are implementing burst capabilities into the configuration. As you're using storage test tools of whatever shape or form, keep the way Azure premium disk bursting works in mind. Running the storage tests delivered through the SAP HWCCT or HCMT tool, we aren't expecting that all tests will pass the criteria since some of the tests will exceed the bursting credits you can accumulate. Especially when all the tests run sequentially without break.

Note

With M32ts and M32ls VMs it can happen that disk throughput could be lower than expected using HCMT/HWCCT disk tests. Even with disk bursting or with sufficiently provisioned I/O throughput of the underlying disks. Root cause of the observed behavior was that the HCMT/HWCCT storage test files were completely cached in the read cache of the Premium storage data disks. This cache is located on the compute host that hosts the virtual machine and can cache the test files of HCMT/HWCCT completely. In such a case the quotas listed in the column Max cached and temp storage throughput: IOPS/MBps (cache size in GiB) in the article M-series are relevant. Specifically for M32ts and M32ls, the throughput quota against the read cache is only 400MB/sec. As a result of the tests files being completely cached, it is possible that despite disk bursting or higher provisioned I/O throughput, the tests can fall slightly short of 400MB/sec maximum throughput. As an alternative, you can test without read cache enabled on the Azure Premium storage data disks.

Note

For production scenarios, check whether a certain VM type is supported for SAP HANA by SAP in the SAP documentation for IAAS.

Recommendation: The recommended configurations with Azure premium storage for production scenarios look like:

Configuration for SAP /hana/data volume:

VM SKU RAM Max. VM I/O
Throughput
/hana/data Provisioned Throughput Maximum burst throughput IOPS Burst IOPS
M32ts 192 GiB 500 MBps 4 x P6 200 MBps 680 MBps 960 14,000
M32ls 256 GiB 500 MBps 4 x P6 200 MBps 680 MBps 960 14,000
M64ls 512 GiB 1,000 MBps 4 x P10 400 MBps 680 MBps 2,000 14,000
M32(d)ms_v2 875 GiB 500 MBps 4 x P15 500 MBps 680 MBps 4,400 14,000
M48(d)s_1_v3, M96(d)s_1_v3 974 GiB 1,560 MBps 4 x P15 500 MBps 680 MBps 4,400 14,000
M64s, M64(d)s_v2 1,024 GiB 1,000 MBps 4 x P15 500 MBps 680 MBps 4,400 14,000
M64ms, M64(d)ms_v2 1,792 GiB 1,000 MBps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000
M96(d)s_2_v3 1,946 GiB 3,120 MBps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000
M128s, M128(d)s_v2 2,048 GiB 2,000 MBps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000
M192i(d)s_v2 2,048 GiB 2,000 MBps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000
M128ms, M128(d)ms_v2 3,892 GiB 2,000 MBps 4 x P30 800 MBps no bursting 20,000 no bursting
M176(d)s_3_v3 2,794 GiB 4,000 MBps 4 x P30 800 MBps no bursting 20,000 no bursting
M176(d)s_4_v3 3,892 GiB 4,000 MBps 4 x P30 800 MBps no bursting 20,000 no bursting
M192i(d)ms_v2 4,096 GiB 2,000 MBps 4 x P30 800 MBps no bursting 20,000 no bursting
M208s_v2 2,850 GiB 1,000 MBps 4 x P30 800 MBps no bursting 20,000 no bursting
M208ms_v2 5,700 GiB 1,000 MBps 4 x P40 1,000 MBps no bursting 30,000 no bursting
M416(d)s_6_v3 5,696 GiB 4,000 MBps 4 x P40 1,000 MBps no bursting 30,000 no bursting
M416s_v2 5,700 GiB 2,000 MBps 4 x P40 1,000 MBps no bursting 30,000 no bursting
M416(d)s_8_v2 7,600 2,000 MBps 4 x P40 1,000 MBps no bursting 30,000 no bursting
M416(d)s_8_v3 7,600 4,000 MBps 4 x P40 1,000 MBps no bursting 30,000 no bursting
M416ms_v2 11,400 GiB 2,000 MBps 4 x P50 1,000 MBps no bursting 30,000 no bursting
M624(d)s_12_v3, M832(d)s_12_v3 11,400 GiB 4,000 MBps 4 x P50 1,000 MBps no bursting 30,000 no bursting
M832ixs1 14,902 GiB larger than 2,000 Mbps 4 x P602 2,000 MBps no bursting 64,000 no bursting
M832i(d)s_16_v3 15,200 GiB 8,000 Mbps 4 x P602 2,000 MBps no bursting 64,000 no bursting
M832ixs_v21 23,088 GiB larger than 2,000 Mbps 4 x P602 2,000 MBps no bursting 64,000 no bursting
M896ixds_32_v31 30,400 GiB 8,000 Mbps 4 x P602 2,000 MBps no bursting 64,000 no bursting
M1792ixds_32_v31 30,400 GiB 8,000 Mbps 6 x P602 2,000 MBps no bursting 64,000 no bursting

1 VM type not available by default. Contact your Microsoft account team

2 Maximum throughput provided by the VM and throughput requirement by SAP HANA workload, especially savepoint activity, can force you to deploy significant more premium storage v1 capacity.

For the /hana/log volume. the configuration would look like:

VM SKU RAM Max. VM I/O
Throughput
/hana/log volume Provisioned Throughput Maximum burst throughput IOPS Burst IOPS
M32ts 192 GiB 500 MBps 3 x P10 300 MBps 510 MBps 1,500 10,500
M32ls 256 GiB 500 MBps 3 x P10 300 MBps 510 MBps 1,500 10,500
M64ls 512 GiB 1,000 MBps 3 x P10 300 MBps 510 MBps 1,500 10,500
M32(d)ms_v2 875 GiB 500 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M48(d)s_1_v3, M96(d)s_1_v3 974 GiB 1,560 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M64s, M64(d)s_v2 1,024 GiB 1,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M64ms, M64(d)s_v2 1,792 GiB 1,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M96(d)s_2_v3 1,946 GiB 3,120 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M128s, M128(d)s_v2 2,048 GiB 2,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M192i(d)s_v2 2,048 GiB 2,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M176(d)s_3_v3 2,794 GiB 4,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M176(d)s_4_v3 3,892 GiB 4,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M192i(d)ms_v2 4,096 GiB 2,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M208s_v2 2,850 GiB 1,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M208ms_v2 5,700 GiB 1,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M416(d)s_6_v3 5,696 GiB 2,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M416s_v2 5,700 GiB 2,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M416s_8_v2 7,600 GiB 2,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M416(d)s_8_v3 7,600 GiB 4,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M416ms_v2 11,400 GiB 2,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M624(d)s_12_v3, M832(d)s_12_v3 11,400 GiB 4,000 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
M832ixs1 14,902 GiB larger than 2,000 Mbps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000
M832i(d)s_16_v3 15,200 GiB 8,000 Mbps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000
M832ixs_v21 23,088 GiB larger than 2,000 Mbps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000
M896ixds_32_v31 30,400 GiB 8,000 Mbps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000
M1792ixds_32_v31 30,400 GiB 8,000 Mbps 4 x P20 600 MBps 680 MBps 9,200 14,000

1 VM type not available by default. Contact your Microsoft account team

For the other volumes, the configuration would look like:

VM SKU RAM Max. VM I/O
Throughput
/hana/shared2 /root volume /usr/sap
M32ts 192 GiB 500 MBps 1 x P15 1 x P6 1 x P6
M32ls 256 GiB 500 MBps 1 x P15 1 x P6 1 x P6
M64ls 512 GiB 1000 MBps 1 x P20 1 x P6 1 x P6
M32dms_v2, M32ms_v2 875 GiB 500 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P6 1 x P6
M48(d)s_1_v3, M96(d)s_1_v3 974 GiB 1,560 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P6 1 x P6
M64s, M64(d)s_v2 1,024 GiB 1,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P6 1 x P6
M64ms, M64(d)ms_v2 1,792 GiB 1,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P6 1 x P6
M96(d)s_2_v3 1,946 GiB 3,120 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M128s, M128(d)s_v2 2,048 GiB 2,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M192i(d)s_v2 2,048 GiB 2,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M176(d)s_3_v3 2,794 GiB 4,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M176(d)s_4_v3 3,892 GiB 4,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M128ms, M128dms_v2, M128ms_v2 3,892 GiB 2,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M192i(d)ms_v2 4,096 GiB 2,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M208s_v2 2,850 GiB 1,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M208ms_v2 5,700 GiB 1,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M416(d)s_6_v3 5,696 GiB 2,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M416s_v2 5,700 GiB 2,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M416s_8_v2 7,600 GiB 2,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M416(d)s_8_v3 7,600 GiB 4,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M416ms_v2 11,400 GiB 2,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M624(d)s_12_v3, M832(d)s_12_v3 11,400 GiB 4,000 MBps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M832ixs1 14,902 GiB larger than 2,000 Mbps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M832i(d)s_16_v3 15,200 GiB 8,000 Mbps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M832ixs_v21 23,088 GiB larger than 2,000 Mbps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M896ixds_32_v31 30,400 GiB 8,000 Mbps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6
M1792ixds_32_v31 30,400 GiB 8,000 Mbps 1 x P30 1 x P10 1 x P6

1 VM type not available by default. Contact your Microsoft account team
2 Review carefully the considerations for sizing /hana/shared

Check whether the storage throughput for the different suggested volumes meets the workload that you want to run. If the workload requires higher volumes for /hana/data and /hana/log, you need to increase the number of Azure premium storage VHDs. Sizing a volume with more VHDs than listed increases the IOPS and I/O throughput within the limits of the Azure virtual machine type.

Azure Write Accelerator only works with Azure managed disks. So at least the Azure premium storage disks forming the /hana/log volume need to be deployed as managed disks. More detailed instructions and restrictions of Azure Write Accelerator can be found in the article Write Accelerator.

You may want to use Azure Ultra disk storage instead of Azure premium storage only for the /hana/log volume to be compliant with the SAP HANA certification KPIs when using E-series VMs. Though, many customers are using premium storage SSD disks for the /hana/log volume for non-production purposes or even for smaller production workloads since the write latency experienced with premium storage for the critical redo log writes are meeting the workload requirements. The configurations for the /hana/data volume on Azure premium storage could look like:

VM SKU RAM Max. VM I/O
Throughput
/hana/data Provisioned Throughput Maximum burst throughput IOPS Burst IOPS
E20ds_v4 160 GiB 480 MBps 3 x P10 300 MBps 510 MBps 1,500 10,500
E20(d)s_v5 160 GiB 750 MBps 3 x P10 300 MBps 510 MBps 1,500 10,500
E32ds_v4 256 GiB 768 MBps 3 x P10 300 MBps 510 MBps 1,500 10,500
E32ds_v5 256 GiB 865 MBps 3 x P10 300 MBps 510 MBps 1,500 10,500
E48ds_v4 384 GiB 1,152 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
E48ds_v4 384 GiB 1,315 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
E64s_v3 432 GiB 1,200 MB/s 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
E64ds_v4 504 GiB 1,200 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
E64(d)s_v5 512 GiB 1,735 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500
E96(d)s_v5 672 GiB 2,600 MBps 3 x P15 375 MBps 510 MBps 3,300 10,500

For the other volumes, including /hana/log on Ultra disk, the configuration could look like:

VM SKU RAM Max. VM I/O
Throughput
/hana/log volume /hana/log I/O throughput /hana/log IOPS /hana/shared1 /root volume /usr/sap
E20ds_v4 160 GiB 480 MBps 80 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P15 1 x P6 1 x P6
E20(d)s_v5 160 GiB 750 MBps 80 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P15 1 x P6 1 x P6
E32ds_v4 256 GiB 768 MBps 128 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P15 1 x P6 1 x P6
E32(d)s_v5 256 GiB 865 MBps 128 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P15 1 x P6 1 x P6
E48ds_v4 384 GiB 1,152 MBps 192 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P20 1 x P6 1 x P6
E48(d)s_v5 384 GiB 1,315 MBps 192 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P20 1 x P6 1 x P6
E64s_v3 432 GiB 1,200 MBps 220 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P20 1 x P6 1 x P6
E64ds_v4 504 GiB 1,200 MBps 256 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P20 1 x P6 1 x P6
E64(d)s_v5 512 GiB 1,735 MBps 256 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P20 1 x P6 1 x P6
E96(d)s_v5 672 GiB 2,600 MBps 256 GB 250 MBps 1,800 1 x P20 1 x P6 1 x P6

1 Review carefully the considerations for sizing /hana/shared

Cost conscious solution with Azure premium storage

So far, the Azure premium storage solution described in this document in section Solutions with premium storage and Azure Write Accelerator for Azure M-Series virtual machines were meant for SAP HANA production supported scenarios. One of the characteristics of production supportable configurations is the separation of the volumes for SAP HANA data and redo log into two different volumes. Reason for such a separation is that the workload characteristics on the volumes are different. And that with the suggested production configurations, different type of caching or even different types of Azure block storage could be necessary. For non-production scenarios, some of the considerations taken for production systems may not apply to more low end non-production systems. As a result the HANA data and log volume could be combined. Though eventually with some culprits, like eventually not meeting certain throughput or latency KPIs that are required for production systems. Another aspect to reduce costs in such environments can be the usage of Azure Standard SSD storage. Keep in mind that choosing Standard SSD or Standard HDD Azure storage has impact on your single VM SLAs as documented in the article SLA for Virtual Machines.

A less costly alternative for such configurations could look like:

VM SKU RAM Max. VM I/O
Throughput
/hana/data and /hana/log
striped with LVM or MDADM
/hana/shared3 /root volume /usr/sap comments
DS14v2 112 GiB 768 MB/s 4 x P6 1 x E10 1 x E6 1 x E6 won't achieve less than 1ms storage latency1
E16v3 128 GiB 384 MB/s 4 x P6 1 x E10 1 x E6 1 x E6 VM type not HANA certified
won't achieve less than 1ms storage latency1
M32ts 192 GiB 500 MB/s 3 x P10 1 x E15 1 x E6 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 5,0002
E20ds_v4 160 GiB 480 MB/s 4 x P6 1 x E15 1 x E6 1 x E6 won't achieve less than 1ms storage latency1
E32v3 256 GiB 768 MB/s 4 x P10 1 x E15 1 x E6 1 x E6 VM type not HANA certified
won't achieve less than 1ms storage latency1
E32ds_v4 256 GiB 768 MBps 4 x P10 1 x E15 1 x E6 1 x E6 won't achieve less than 1ms storage latency1
M32ls 256 GiB 500 MB/s 4 x P10 1 x E15 1 x E6 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 5,0002
E48ds_v4 384 GiB 1,152 MBps 6 x P10 1 x E20 1 x E6 1 x E6 won't achieve less than 1ms storage latency1
E64v3 432 GiB 1,200 MB/s 6 x P10 1 x E20 1 x E6 1 x E6 won't achieve less than 1ms storage latency1
E64ds_v4 504 GiB 1200 MB/s 7 x P10 1 x E20 1 x E6 1 x E6 won't achieve less than 1ms storage latency1
M64ls 512 GiB 1,000 MB/s 7 x P10 1 x E20 1 x E6 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 10,0002
M32(d)ms_v2 875 GiB 500 MB/s 6 x P15 1 x E30 1 x E6 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 5,0002
M48(d)s_1_v3, M96(d)s_1_v3 974 GiB 1,560 MBps 7 x P15 1 x E30 1 x E6 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 10,0002
M64s, M64(d)s_v2 1,024 GiB 1,000 MB/s 7 x P15 1 x E30 1 x E6 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 10,0002
M64ms, M64(d)ms_v2 1,792 GiB 1,000 MB/s 6 x P20 1 x E30 1 x E6 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 10,0002
M96(d)s_2_v3 1,946 GiB 3,120 MBps 6 x P20 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002
M128s, M128(d)s_v2 2,048 GiB 2,000 MB/s 6 x P20 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002
M192i(d)s_v2 2,048 GiB 2,000 MB/s 6 x P20 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002
M128ms, M128(d)ms_v2 3,892 GiB 2,000 MB/s 5 x P30 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002
M176(d)s_3_v3 2,794 GiB 4,000 MBps 4 x P30 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 10,0002
M176(d)s_4_v3 3,892 GiB 4,000 MBps 5 x P30 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002
M192i(d)ms_v2 4,096 GiB 2,000 MB/s 5 x P30 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002
M208s_v2 2,850 GiB 1,000 MB/s 4 x P30 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 10,0002
M208ms_v2 5,700 GiB 1,000 MB/s 4 x P40 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 10,0002
M416s_v2 5,700 GiB 2,000 MB/s 4 x P40 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002
M416s_8_v2 5,700 GiB 2,000 MB/s 5 x P40 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002
M416ms_v2 11400 GiB 2,000 MB/s 7 x P40 1 x E30 1 x E10 1 x E6 Using Write Accelerator for combined data and log volume will limit IOPS rate to 20,0002

1 Azure Write Accelerator can't be used with the Ev4 and Ev4 VM families. As a result of using Azure premium storage the I/O latency won't be less than 1ms

2 The VM family supports Azure Write Accelerator, but there's a potential that the IOPS limit of Write accelerator could limit the disk configurations IOPS capabilities

3 Review carefully the considerations for sizing /hana/shared

When combining the data and log volume for SAP HANA, the disks building the striped volume shouldn't have read cache or read/write cache enabled.

There are VM types listed that aren't certified with SAP and as such not listed in the so called SAP HANA hardware directory. Feedback of customers was that those non-listed VM types were used successfully for some non-production tasks.

Next steps

For more information, see: