seon Posted November 16, 2020 Share Posted November 16, 2020 I purchased the basic version of unraid (6 hard drives), but I passed the two SATA controllers (9 hard drives) to VMS, but I can’t recognize all hard drives in VMS, only 6 hard drives, so this is the same as Does unraid matter? Quote Link to comment
itimpi Posted November 16, 2020 Share Posted November 16, 2020 The licence limit applies to all attached drives, not just those in Use by Unraid, including any that VMs might be using or any that are not currently being used for anything. There should be no limit on the number of drives that can be passed to VMs. Quote Link to comment
seon Posted November 16, 2020 Author Share Posted November 16, 2020 1 minute ago, itimpi said: The licence limit applies to all attached drives, not just those in Use by Unraid, including any that VMs might be using or any that are not currently being used for anything. There should be no limit on the number of drives that can be passed to VMs. I am currently installing debian to see if all the hard disks have been read. Thank you for your answers. Quote Link to comment
seon Posted November 16, 2020 Author Share Posted November 16, 2020 24 minutes ago, itimpi said: The licence limit applies to all attached drives, not just those in Use by Unraid, including any that VMs might be using or any that are not currently being used for anything. There should be no limit on the number of drives that can be passed to VMs. After the test, there were still only 6 hard drives, so I upgraded the Plus version, and then successfully recognized all hard drives. (The original limit on the number of hard drives in unraid also limits the SATA controller, even if the pass-through is given to the VM). Quote Link to comment
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