A user has provisioned 2000 IOPS to the EBS volume. The application hosted on that EBS is experiencing less IOPS than provisioned. Which of the below mentioned options does not affect the IOPS of the volume?
A.
The application does not have enough IO for the volume
B.
The instance is EBS optimized
C.
The EC2 instance has 10 Gigabit Network connectivity
Suggested Answer:D🗳️
When the application does not experience the expected IOPS or throughput of the PIOPS EBS volume that was provisioned, the possible root cause could be that the EC2 bandwidth is the limiting factor and the instance might not be either EBS-optimized or might not have 10 Gigabit network connectivity. Another possible cause for not experiencing the expected IOPS could also be that the user is not driving enough I/O to the EBS volumes. The size of the volume may not affect IOPS.
The volume size itself doesn't directly affect the IOPS performance of an Amazon EBS volume. The IOPS performance of an EBS volume is determined primarily by the volume type (e.g., General Purpose, Provisioned IOPS, Throughput Optimized, Cold HDD, etc.), the provisioned IOPS for the volume, and the characteristics of the workload running on the instance.
A voting comment increases the vote count for the chosen answer by one.
Upvoting a comment with a selected answer will also increase the vote count towards that answer by one.
So if you see a comment that you already agree with, you can upvote it instead of posting a new comment.
albert_kuo
8 months, 3 weeks agoawscertified
2 years, 6 months agokarmaah
2 years, 7 months agokarmaah
2 years, 6 months ago