Storage options


Compute Engine offers several storage options for your VMs. Each of the following storage options has unique price and performance characteristics:

  • Google Cloud Hyperdisk volumes are network storage for Compute Engine, with configurable performance and volumes that can be dynamically resized. They offer substantially higher performance, flexibility and efficiency compared to Persistent Disk.
  • Persistent Disk volumes provide high-performance and redundant network storage. Each Persistent Disk volume is striped across hundreds of physical disks.
    • By default, VMs use zonal Persistent Disk, and store your data on volumes located within a single zone, such as us-west1-c.
    • You can also create regional Persistent Disk volumes, which synchronously replicate data between disks located in two zones and provide protection if a zone becomes unavailable.
  • Local SSD disks are physical drives attached directly to the same server as your VM. They can offer better performance, but are ephemeral.
  • Cloud Storage buckets provide affordable object storage.
  • You can also use Filestore with your VMs for high performance file storage.

Each storage option has unique price and performance characteristics. For cost comparisons, see disk pricing. If you are not sure which option to use, the most common solution is to add a Persistent Disk volume to your VM.

Introduction

By default, each Compute Engine VM has a single boot disk that contains the operating system. The boot disk data is typically stored on a Persistent Disk volume. When your applications require additional storage space, you can provision one or more of the following storage volumes to your VM.

To learn more about each storage option, review the following table:

Balanced
Persistent Disk
SSD
Persistent Disk
Standard
Persistent Disk
Extreme
Persistent Disk
Hyperdisk Balanced Hyperdisk Extreme Hyperdisk Throughput Local SSDs Cloud Storage buckets
Storage type Cost-effective and reliable block storage Fast and reliable block storage Efficient and reliable block storage Highest performance Persistent Disk block storage option with customizable IOPS High performance for demanding workloads with a friendly budget Fastest block storage option with customizable IOPS Cost-effective and throughput-oriented block storage with customizable throughput High performance local block storage Affordable object storage
Minimum capacity per disk Zonal: 10 GiB
Regional: 10 GiB
Zonal: 10 GiB
Regional: 10 GiB
Zonal: 10 GiB
Regional: 200 GiB
500 GiB 4 GiB 64 GiB 2 TiB 375 GiB, 3 TiB with Z3 n/a
Maximum capacity per disk 64 TiB 64 TiB 64 TiB 64 TiB 64 TiB 64 TiB 32 TiB 375 GiB,
3 TiB with Z3
n/a
Capacity increment 1 GiB 1 GiB 1 GiB 1 GiB 1 GiB 1 GiB 1 GiB Depends on the machine type n/a
Maximum capacity per VM 257 TiB* 257 TiB* 257 TiB* 257 TiB* 512 TiB* 512 TiB* 512 TiB* 36 TiB Almost infinite
Scope of access Zone Zone Zone Zone Zone Zone Zone Instance Global
Data redundancy Zonal and multi-zonal Zonal and multi-zonal Zonal and multi-zonal Zonal Zonal Zonal Zonal None Regional, dual-regional or multi-regional
Encryption at rest Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
Custom encryption keys Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes No Yes
How-to Add an extreme Persistent Disk Add a Hyperdisk Add a Local SSD Connect a bucket

* If you are considering creating a logical volume larger than the maximum size of a single disk, review how the logical volume size impacts performance.

The capacity increment for Local SSDs depends on the number of SSD disks (partitions) allowed per VM, which varies for each machine type. For more information, see Choosing a valid number of Local SSDs.

In addition to the storage options that Google Cloud provides, you can deploy alternative storage solutions on your VMs.

Block storage resources have different performance characteristics. Consider your storage size and performance requirements when determining the correct block storage type for your VMs.

For information about performance limits for each disk type, see:

Persistent Disk volumes created in multi-writer mode have specific IOPS and throughput limits. For details, see performance of Persistent Disk in multi-writer mode.

Persistent Disk

Persistent Disk volumes are durable network storage devices that your virtual machine (VM) instances can access like physical disks in a desktop or a server. The data on each Persistent Disk volume is distributed across several physical disks. Compute Engine manages the physical disks and the data distribution for you to ensure redundancy and optimal performance.

Persistent Disk volumes are located independently from your VM, so you can detach or move Persistent Disk volumes to keep your data even after you delete your VMs. Persistent Disk performance scales automatically with size, so you can resize your existing Persistent Disk volumes or add more Persistent Disk volumes to a VM to meet your performance and storage space requirements.

Persistent Disk types

When you configure a persistent disk, you can select one of the following disk types:

  • Balanced persistent disks (pd-balanced)
    • An alternative to performance (pd-ssd) persistent disks
    • Balance of performance and cost. For most VM shapes, except very large ones, these disks have the same maximum IOPS as SSD persistent disks and lower IOPS per GiB. This disk type offers performance levels suitable for most general-purpose applications at a price point between that of standard and performance (pd-ssd) persistent disks.
    • Backed by solid-state drives (SSD).
  • Performance (SSD) persistent disks (pd-ssd)
    • Suitable for enterprise applications and high-performance databases that require lower latency and more IOPS than standard persistent disks provide.
    • Designed for single-digit millisecond latencies; the observed latency is application specific.
    • Backed by solid-state drives (SSD).
  • Standard persistent disks (pd-standard)
    • Suitable for large data processing workloads that primarily use sequential I/Os.
    • Backed by standard hard disk drives (HDD).
  • Extreme persistent disks (pd-extreme)
    • Offer consistently high performance for both random access workloads and bulk throughput.
    • Designed for high-end database workloads.
    • Allow you to provision the target IOPS.
    • Backed by solid-state drives (SSD).
    • Available with a limited number of machine types.

If you create a disk in the Google Cloud console, the default disk type is pd-balanced. If you create a disk using the gcloud CLI or the Compute Engine API, the default disk type is pd-standard.

For information about machine type support, refer to the following:

Durability of Persistent Disk

Disk durability represents the probability of data loss, by design, for a typical disk in a typical year, using a set of assumptions about hardware failures, the likelihood of catastrophic events, isolation practices and engineering processes in Google data centers, and the internal encodings used by each disk type. Persistent Disk data loss events are extremely rare and have historically been the result of coordinated hardware failures, software bugs, or a combination of the two. Google also takes many steps to mitigate the industry-wide risk of silent data corruption. Human error by a Google Cloud customer, such as when a customer accidentally deletes a disk, is outside the scope of Persistent Disk durability.

There is a very small risk of data loss occurring with a regional persistent disk due to its internal data encodings and replication. Regional persistent disks provide twice as many replicas as zonal Persistent Disk, with their replicas distributed between two zones in the same region, so they provide high availability and can be used for disaster recovery if an entire data center is lost and cannot be recovered (although that has never happened). The additional replicas in a second zone can be accessed immediately if a primary zone becomes unavailable during a long outage.

Note that durability is in the aggregate for each disk type, and does not represent a financially-backed service level agreement (SLA).

The table below shows durability for each disk type's design. 99.999% durability means that with 1,000 disks, you would likely go a hundred years without losing a single one.

Zonal standard Persistent Disk Zonal balanced Persistent Disk Zonal SSD Persistent Disk Zonal extreme Persistent Disk Regional standard Persistent Disk Regional balanced Persistent Disk Regional SSD Persistent Disk
Better than 99.99% Better than 99.999% Better than 99.999% Better than 99.9999% Better than 99.999% Better than 99.9999% Better than 99.9999%

Zonal Persistent Disk

Ease of use

Compute Engine handles most disk management tasks for you so that you do not need to deal with partitioning, redundant disk arrays, or subvolume management. Generally, you don't need to create larger logical volumes, but you can extend your secondary attached Persistent Disk capacity to 257 TiB per VM and apply these practices to your Persistent Disk volumes if you want. You can save time and get the best performance if you format your Persistent Disk volumes with a single file system and no partition tables.

If you need to separate your data into multiple unique volumes, create additional disks rather than dividing your existing disks into multiple partitions.

When you require additional space on your Persistent Disk volumes, resize your disks rather than repartitioning and formatting.

Performance

Persistent Disk performance is predictable and scales linearly with provisioned capacity until the limits for an VM's provisioned vCPUs are reached. For more information about performance scaling limits and optimization, see Configure disks to meet performance requirements.

Standard Persistent Disk volumes are efficient and economical for handling sequential read/write operations, but they aren't optimized to handle high rates of random input/output operations per second (IOPS). If your apps require high rates of random IOPS, use SSD or extreme Persistent Disk. SSD Persistent Disk is designed for single-digit millisecond latencies. Observed latency is application specific.

Compute Engine optimizes performance and scaling on Persistent Disk volumes automatically. You don't need to stripe multiple disks together or pre-warm disks to get the best performance. When you need more disk space or better performance, resize your disks and possibly add more vCPUs to add more storage space, throughput, and IOPS. Persistent Disk performance is based on the total Persistent Disk capacity attached to a VM and the number of vCPUs that the VM has.

For boot devices, you can reduce costs by using a standard Persistent Disk. Small, 10 GiB Persistent Disk volumes can work for basic boot and package management use cases. However, to ensure consistent performance for more general use of the boot device, use a balanced Persistent Disk as your boot disk.

Each Persistent Disk write operation contributes to the cumulative network egress traffic for your VM. This means that Persistent Disk write operations are capped by the network egress cap for your VM.

Reliability

Persistent Disk has built-in redundancy to protect your data against equipment failure and to ensure data availability through datacenter maintenance events. Checksums are calculated for all Persistent Disk operations, so we can ensure that what you read is what you wrote.

Additionally, you can create snapshots of Persistent Disk to protect against data loss due to user error. Snapshots are incremental, and take only minutes to create even if you snapshot disks that are attached to running VMs.

Multi-writer mode

You can attach an SSD Persistent Disk in multi-writer mode to up to two N2 VMs simultaneously so that both VMs can read and write to the disk.

Persistent Disk in multi-writer mode provides a shared block storage capability and presents an infrastructural foundation for building highly-available shared file systems and databases. These specialized file systems and databases should be designed to work with shared block storage and handle cache coherence between VMs by using tools such as SCSI Persistent Reservations.

However, Persistent Disk with multi-writer mode should generally not be used directly and you should be aware that many file systems such as EXT4, XFS, and NTFS are not designed to be used with shared block storage. For more information about the best practices when sharing Persistent Disk between VMs, see Best practices.

If you require a fully managed file storage, you can mount a Filestore file share on your Compute Engine VMs.

To enable multi-writer mode for new Persistent Disk volumes, create a new Persistent Disk and specify the --multi-writer flag in the gcloud CLI or the multiWriter property in the Compute Engine API. For more information, see Share Persistent Disk volumes between VMs.

Persistent Disk encryption

Compute Engine automatically encrypts your data before it travels outside of your VM to the Persistent Disk storage space. Each Persistent Disk remains encrypted either with system-defined keys or with customer-supplied keys. Google distributes Persistent Disk data across multiple physical disks in a manner that users do not control.

When you delete a Persistent Disk volume, Google discards the cipher keys, rendering the data irretrievable. This process is irreversible.

If you want to control the encryption keys that are used to encrypt your data, create your disks with your own encryption keys.

Restrictions

  • You cannot attach a Persistent Disk volume to an VM in another project.

  • You can attach a balanced Persistent Disk to a maximum of 10 VMs in read-only mode.

  • For custom machine types or predefined machine types with a minimum of 1 vCPU, you can attach up to 128 Persistent Disk volumes.

  • Each Persistent Disk volume can be up to 64 TiB in size, so there is no need to manage arrays of disks to create large logical volumes. Each VM can attach only a limited amount of total Persistent Disk space and a limited number of individual Persistent Disk volumes. Predefined machine types and custom machine types have the same Persistent Disk limits.

  • Most VMs can have up to 128 Persistent Disk volumes and up to 257 TiB of total disk space attached. Total disk space for a VM includes the size of the boot disk.

  • Shared-core machine types are limited to 16 Persistent Disk volumes and 3 TiB of total Persistent Disk space.

  • Creating logical volumes larger than 64 TiB might require special consideration. For more information about larger logical volume performance see logical volume size.

Regional Persistent Disk

Regional Persistent Disk volumes have storage qualities that are similar to zonal Persistent Disk. However, regional Persistent Disk volumes provide durable storage and replication of data between two zones in the same region.

If you are designing robust systems or high availability services on Compute Engine, use regional Persistent Disk combined with other best practices such as backing up your data using snapshots. Regional Persistent Disk volumes are also designed to work with regional managed instance groups.

In the unlikely event of a zonal outage, you can usually failover your workload running on regional Persistent Disk to another zone by using the --force-attach flag. The --force-attach flag lets you attach the regional Persistent Disk to a standby VM even if the disk can't be detached from the original VM due to its unavailability. To learn more, see Regional Persistent Disk failover. You can't force attach a zonal Persistent Disk to a VM.

Performance

Regional Persistent Disk volumes are designed for workloads that require a lower Recovery Point Objective (RPO) and Recovery Time Objective (RTO) compared to using Persistent Disk snapshots.

Regional Persistent Disk are an option when write performance is less critical than data redundancy across multiple zones.

Like zonal Persistent Disk, regional Persistent Disk can achieve greater IOPS and throughput performance on VMs with a greater number of vCPUs. For more information about this and other limitations, see Configure disks to meet performance requirements.

When you need more disk space or better performance, you can resize your regional disks to add more storage space, throughput, and IOPS.

Reliability

Compute Engine replicates data of your regional Persistent Disk to the zones you selected when you created your disks. The data of each replica is spread across multiple physical machines within the zone to ensure redundancy.

Similar to zonal Persistent Disk, you can create snapshots of Persistent Disk to protect against data loss due to user error. Snapshots are incremental, and take only minutes to create even if you snapshot disks that are attached to running VMs.

Limitations

  • You can attach regional Persistent Disk only to VMs that use E2, N1, N2, and N2D machine types.
  • You cannot create a regional Persistent Disk from an image.
  • When using read-only mode, you can attach a regional balanced Persistent Disk to a maximum of 10 VM instances.
  • The minimum size of a regional standard Persistent Disk is 200 GiB.
  • You can only increase the size of a regional Persistent Disk volume; you can't decrease its size.
  • Regional Persistent Disk volumes have different performance characteristics than zonal Persistent Disk volumes. For more information, see Block storage performance.
  • If you create a regional Persistent Disk by cloning a zonal disk, then the two zonal replicas aren't fully in sync at the time of creation. After creation, you can use the regional disk clone within 3 minutes, on average. However, you might need to wait for tens of minutes before the disk reaches a fully replicated state and the recovery point objective (RPO) is close to zero. Learn how to check if your regional Persistent Disk is fully replicated.

Google Cloud Hyperdisk

Google Cloud Hyperdisk is Google's next generation block storage. By offloading and dynamically scaling out storage processing, it decouples storage performance from the VM type and size. Hyperdisk offers substantially higher performance, flexibility and efficiency.

  • Hyperdisk Balanced

    Hyperdisk Balanced for Compute Engine is a good fit for a wide range of use cases such as line of business (LOB) applications, web applications, and medium-tier databases not requiring the performance of Hyperdisk Extreme.

    Hyperdisk Balanced volumes let you dynamically tune the capacity, IOPS, and throughput for your workloads.

  • Hyperdisk Extreme

    Hyperdisk Extreme offers the fastest block storage available. It is suitable for high-end workloads that need the highest throughput and IOPS.

    Hyperdisk Extreme volumes let you dynamically tune the capacity and IOPS for your workloads.

  • Hyperdisk Throughput

    Hyperdisk Throughput is a good fit for scale-out analytics including Hadoop and Kafka, data drives for cost sensitive apps, and cold storage.

    Hyperdisk Throughput volumes let you dynamically tune the capacity and throughput for your workloads. You can change the provisioned throughput level without downtime or interruption to your workloads.

Hyperdisk volumes are created and managed like Persistent Disk, with the additional ability to set the provisioned IOPS or throughput level and change that value at any time. There is no direct migration path from Persistent Disk to Hyperdisk. Instead, you can create a snapshot and restore the snapshot to a new Hyperdisk volume.

For more information about Hyperdisk, see About Hyperdisk.

Durability of Hyperdisk

Disk durability represents the probability of data loss, by design, for a typical disk in a typical year. Durability is calculated using a set of assumptions about hardware failures, such as:

  • The likelihood of catastrophic events
  • Isolation practices
  • Engineering processes in Google data centers
  • The internal encodings used by each disk type

Hyperdisk data loss events are extremely rare. Google also takes many steps to mitigate the industry-wide risk of silent data corruption.

Human error by a Google Cloud customer, such as when a customer accidentally deletes a disk, is outside the scope of Hyperdisk durability.

The table below shows durability for each disk type's design. 99.999% durability means that with 1,000 disks, you would likely go a hundred years without losing a single one.

Hyperdisk Balanced Hyperdisk Extreme Hyperdisk Throughput
Better than 99.999% Better than 99.9999% Better than 99.999%

Hyperdisk encryption

Compute Engine automatically encrypts your data upon writing to a Hyperdisk volume.

Local SSD disks

Local SSD disks are physically attached to the server that hosts your VM. Local SSD disks have higher throughput and lower latency than standard Persistent Disk or SSD Persistent Disk. The data that you store on a Local SSD disk persists only until the VM is stopped or deleted. You can attach multiple Local SSD disks to your VM, depending on the number of vCPUs.

The size of each Local SSD disk is fixed at 375 GiB. For more storage, add multiple Local SSD disks to your VM when creating the VM. The maximum number of Local SSD disks you can attach to a VM depends on the machine type and the number of vCPUs in use.

Data persistence on Local SSD disks

Review Local SSD data persistence to learn what events preserve your Local SSD data and what events can cause your Local SSD data to be unrecoverable.

Limitations of Local SSD disks

Local SSD has the following limitations:

  • You can create a VM with a maximum of 32 Local SSD disks for 12 TiB of Local SSD disk space using the c3d-standard-360-lssd machine type.
  • You can create a VM with a maximum of 32 Local SSD disks for 12 TiB of Local SSD disk space using the c3-standard-176-lssd machine type.
  • You can create a VM with a maximum of 16 or 24 Local SSD disks for 6 TiB or 9 TiB of Local SSD space, respectively, using N1, N2, and N2D machine types.
  • For Z3, (Preview), you can create a VM with 176 vCPUs and a maximum of 12 Local SSD disks for 36 TiB of Local SSD disk space.
  • For C2, C2D, A2 standard, M1, and M3 machine types, you can create a VM with a maximum of 8 Local SSD disks, for a total of 3 TiB Local SSD space.
  • For A2 ultra machine types, up to 3 TiB of Local SSD is bundled with the machine type. You can create a VM with a maximum of 8 Local SSD disks of 375 GiB each.
  • For A3 machine types, 6 TiB of Local SSD is bundled with the machine type. You can create a VM with 16 Local SSD disks of 375 GiB each.
  • To reach the maximum IOPS limits, use a VM with 32 or more vCPUs.
  • VMs with shared-core machine types can't attach Local SSD disks.
  • You can't attach Local SSD disks to E2, Tau T2D, Tau T2A, H3, and M2 machine types.
  • You can't use customer-supplied encryption keys with Local SSD disks. Compute Engine automatically encrypts your data when it is written to Local SSD storage space.

Local SSDs and machine types

You can attach Local SSD disks to most machine types available on Compute Engine, as shown in the Machine series comparison table. However, there are constraints around how many Local SSD disks you can attach based on each machine type. For more information, see Choose a valid number of Local SSD disks.

Performance

Local SSD disks offer very high IOPS and low latency. Unlike Persistent Disk, you must manage the striping on Local SSD disks yourself.

Local SSD performance depends on several factors. For more information, see Local SSD performance and Optimizing Local SSD performance.

Cloud Storage buckets

Cloud Storage buckets are the most flexible, scalable, and durable storage option for your VMs. If your apps don't require the lower latency of Persistent Disks and Local SSDs, you can store your data in a Cloud Storage bucket.

Connect your VM to a Cloud Storage bucket when latency and throughput aren't a priority and when you must share data easily between multiple VMs or zones.

Properties of Cloud Storage buckets

Review the following sections to understand the behavior and characteristics of Cloud Storage buckets.

Performance

The performance of Cloud Storage buckets depends on the storage class that you select and the location of the bucket relative to your VM.

Using the Cloud Storage Standard storage class in the same location as your VM gives performance that is comparable to Persistent Disk but with higher latency and less consistent throughput characteristics. Using the Standard storage class in a dual-region stores your data redundantly across two regions. For optimal performance when using a dual-region, your VMs should be located in one of the regions that is part of the dual-region.

Nearline storage, Coldline storage, and Archive storage classes are primarily for long-term data archival. Unlike the Standard storage class, these classes have minimum storage durations and incur data retrieval costs. Consequently, they are best for long-term storage of data that is accessed infrequently.

Reliability

All Cloud Storage buckets have built-in redundancy to protect your data against equipment failure and to ensure data availability through datacenter maintenance events. Checksums are calculated for all Cloud Storage operations to help ensure that what you read is what you wrote.

Flexibility

Unlike Persistent Disk, Cloud Storage buckets aren't restricted to the zone where your VM is located. Additionally, you can read and write data to a bucket from multiple VMs simultaneously. For example, you can configure VMs in multiple zones to read and write data in the same bucket rather than replicate the data to Persistent Disk in multiple zones.

Cloud Storage encryption

Compute Engine automatically encrypts your data before it travels outside of your VM to Cloud Storage buckets. You don't need to encrypt files on your VMs before you write them to a bucket.

Just like Persistent Disk volumes, you can encrypt buckets with your own encryption keys.

Writing and reading data from Cloud Storage buckets

Write and read files from Cloud Storage buckets by using the gcloud storage command-line tool or a Cloud Storage client library.

gcloud storage

By default, the gcloud storage command-line tool is installed on most VMs that use public images. If your VM doesn't have the gcloud storage command-line tool, you can install it.

  1. Connect to your Linux VMs or Connect to your Windows VMs using SSH or another connection method.

    1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the VM instances page.

      Go to VM instances

    2. In the list of virtual machine instances, click SSH in the row of the instance that you want to connect to.

      SSH button next to instance name.

  2. If you have never used gcloud storage on this VM before, use the gcloud CLI to set up credentials.

    gcloud init

    Alternatively, if your VM is configured to use a service account with a Cloud Storage scope, you can skip this step.

  3. Use the gcloud storage tool to create a bucket, write data to buckets, and read data from those buckets. To write or read data from a specific bucket, you must have access to the bucket. You can read data from any bucket that is publicly accessible.

    Optionally, you can also stream data to Cloud Storage.

Client library

If you configured your VM to use a service account with a Cloud Storage scope, you can use the Cloud Storage API to write and read data from Cloud Storage buckets.

  1. Connect to a VM.

    1. In the Google Cloud console, go to the VM instances page.

      Go to VM instances

    2. In the list of virtual machine instances, click SSH in the row of the instance that you want to connect to.

      SSH button next to instance name.

  2. Install and configure a client library for your preferred language.

  3. If necessary, follow the insert code samples to create a Cloud Storage bucket on the VM.

  4. Follow the insert code samples to write data and read data, and include code in your app that writes or reads a file from a Cloud Storage bucket.

What's next