Operation Manual

228 Copyright © Acronis International GmbH, 2002-2015
Registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Acronis\ASN\Configuration\StorageNode\PreferedDedupInd
ex
Default value: 0
The parameter applies to the deduplication databases that are created after the parameter has been
changed. For existing databases, the corresponding algorithm is selected automatically.
Memory allocation settings
When the Acronis Storage Node Service is started, it allocates a certain amount of memory for itself
to keep the index and other data. By default, the storage node is configured to consume 80 percent
of RAM, but leave at least 2 GB of RAM for the operating system and other applications. You can
change this behavior by using the DatastoreIndexCacheMemoryPercent and
DatastoreIndexReservedMemory parameters.
The amount of allocated memory is calculated based on the following rule:
Allocated memory = DatastoreIndexCacheMemoryPercent percents, but not more than total
available RAM minus DatastoreIndexReservedMemory
This rule ensures a balance between the storage node performance and the operating system
memory requirements, for systems with RAM ranging from 8 to 64 and more gigabytes. If the server
has plenty of RAM, the storage node takes most of the memory for better performance. If the server
lacks RAM (less than 10 GB with the default parameter values), the storage node reserves the fixed
amount of memory for the operating system.
DatastoreIndexCacheMemoryPercent
Possible values: Any integer number between 0 and 100, in percents
Registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Acronis\ASN\Configuration\StorageNode\DatastoreIndexCac
heMemoryPercent
Default value: 80%
To apply the change, restart the Acronis Storage Node Service.
DatastoreIndexReservedMemory
Possible values: 0 up to RAM size, in megabytes
Registry key:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Acronis\ASN\Configuration\StorageNode\DatastoreIndexRes
ervedMemory
Default value: 2048 MB
To apply the change, restart the Acronis Storage Node Service.
Parameters for writing to tapes (p. 196)