Adding disk, memory, and CPU
For new hosting models, scaling is available through the CLI, API, and Terraform.
To scale an Isolated Compute host flavor instance, set the relevant hostflavor
parameter to the Isolated Compute
size you're targeting, such as "b3c.4x16.encrypted". As this includes CPU and RAM allocation selections, do not separately select CPU and RAM.
To scale a Shared Compute host flavor instance between the minimum CPU value and 2 CPU, set the CPU to 0 and scale the
RAM allocation using the following commands. The CPU value will scale as a ratio of 1 CPU : 8 GB RAM, up to 2 CPU. To scale above 2 CPU, set the CPU and RAM allocations to your target allocation. For both, make sure to include the relevant hostflavor
parameter.
You can manually adjust the resources available to your IBM Cloud® Databases for Elasticsearch deployment to suit your workload and the size of your data.
To scale an Isolated Compute host flavor instance, set the relevant host_flavor
parameter to the Isolated Compute
size you're targeting, such as "b3c.4x16.encrypted". As this includes CPU and RAM allocation selections, do not separately select CPU and RAM.
To scale a Shared Compute host flavor instance between the minimum CPU value and 2 CPU, set the CPU to 0 and scale the
RAM allocation using the following commands. The CPU value will scale as a ratio of 1 CPU : 8 GB RAM, up to 2 CPU. To scale above 2 CPU, set the CPU and RAM allocations to your target allocation. For both, make sure to include the relevant host_flavor
parameter.
You can manually adjust the resources available to your IBM Cloud® Databases for Elasticsearch deployment to suit your workload and the size of your data.
To scale an Isolated Compute host flavor instance, set the relevant host_flavor
parameter to
the Isolated Compute size you're targeting, such as "b3c.4x16.encrypted". As this includes CPU and RAM allocation selections, do not separately select CPU and RAM.
To scale a Shared Compute host flavor instance between the minimum CPU value and 2 CPU, set the CPU to 0 and
scale the RAM allocation using the following commands. The CPU value will scale as a ratio of 1 CPU : 8 GB RAM, up to 2 CPU. To scale above 2 CPU, set the CPU and RAM allocations to your target allocation. For both, make sure to include the
relevant host_flavor
parameter.
You can manually adjust the resources available to your IBM Cloud® Databases for Elasticsearch deployment to suit your workload and the size of your data.
Resource breakdown
A default Databases for Elasticsearch deployment runs with three data members in a cluster and resources are allocated to all three members equally. For example, the minimum storage of an Elasticsearch deployment is 15360 MB, which equates to an initial size of 5120 MB per member. The minimum RAM for an Elasticsearch deployment is 3072 MB, which equates to an initial allocation of 1028 MB per member.
Billing is based on the total resources that are allocated to the deployment.
Disk usage
Storage shows the amount of disk space that is allocated to your service. Each member gets an equal share of the allocated space. Your data is replicated across all the data members in the Elasticsearch cluster.
Disk allocation also affects the performance of the disk, with larger disks having higher performance. Baseline input/output operations per second (IOPS) performance for disk is 10 IOPS for each GB. Scale disk to increase the IOPS that your deployment can handle.
You cannot scale down storage. If your data set size has decreased, you can recover space by backing up and restoring to a new deployment.
RAM
If you find that your queries and database activity suffer from performance issues due to a lack of memory, you can scale the amount of RAM allocated to your service. If your database instance is on an Isolated Compute hosting model, select the CPU x RAM configuration that matches your resource needs. If your database instance is on a Shared Compute or Dedicated Core hosting model, select the RAM allocation that you want for your database. Note that Dedicated Core is deprecated, and will be removed in May 2025.
Adding memory to the total allocation adds memory to the members equally. Databases for Elasticsearch deployments have their memory allocation policy set at 50% heap and 50% system memory, so increasing the amount of RAM increases both heap and system memory. RAM can be scaled up or down.
vCPU
If you find that your database workloads need more CPU resources, you can scale the amount of CPU allocated to your service. If your database instance is on an Isolated Compute hosting model, select the CPU x RAM configuration that matches your resource needs. If your database instance is on a Shared Compute or Dedicated Core hosting model, select the CPU allocation that you want for your database. Note that Dedicated Core is deprecated, and will be removed in May 2025.
The default of 0 cores uses compute resources on multi-tenanted hosts. This style of multi-tenant is deprecated, and will be removed in September 2025 in favor of Shared Compute. CPU can be scaled up or down.
Scaling considerations
- Scaling up might cause your deployment to restart. If your deployment needs to be moved to a host with more capacity, the deployment is restarted as part of the move.
- Scaling down RAM or CPU does not trigger restarts.
- Disk cannot be scaled down.
- Scaling between hosting models (Shared Compute, Isolated Compute, and Dedicated Cores) moves your deployment to new hosts. Your databases are restarted as part of that move. As your deployment is moved to a new host, this can also take longer than just adding more resources. For more information, see Shared Compute and Isolated Compute.
- Similarly, drastically scaling up CPU, RAM, or disk can take longer to run than small resource increases to account for provisioning more underlying hardware resources.
- Scaling operations are logged in IBM Cloud® Activity Tracker.
- If you find consistent trends in resource usage or want to scale when certain resource thresholds are reached, enable autoscaling on your deployment.
- Databases for Elasticsearch is designed to balance work load across a cluster and can benefit from being horizontally scaled. If you are concerned about performance, check out Adding Elasticsearch nodes.
Scaling in the UI
For new hosting models, scaling is currently available through the CLI, API, and Terraform.
A visual representation of your data members and their resource allocation is available on the Resources tab of your deployment's Manage page.
Adjust the slider to increase or decrease the resources that are allocated to your service. The slider controls how much memory or disk is allocated per member. The UI currently uses a coarser-grained resolution of 8 GB increments for disk and 1 GB increments for memory. The UI shows the total allocated memory or disk for the position of the slider. Click Scale to trigger the scaling operations and return to the dashboard overview.
Review current resources and hosting model
IBM Cloud CLI cloud databases plug-in supports viewing and scaling the resources on your deployment. Use the command cdb deployment-groups
to see
current resource information for your service, including which resource groups are adjustable. To scale any of the available resource groups, use cdb deployment-groups-set
command.
For example, with the following command you can view the resource groups for a deployment named "example-deployment". Note that this command will also reveal if your database is a Shared Compute or Isolated Compute instance through the hostflavor
attribute. If the hostflavor
is null, it
is on an old style hosting model.
ibmcloud cdb deployment-groups example-deployment
This produces the output:
Group member
Count 3
|
+ Memory
| Allocation 3072mb
| Allocation per member 1024mb
| Minimum 3072mb
| Step Size 384mb
| Adjustable true
|
+ CPU
| Allocation 0
| Allocation per member 0
| Minimum 9
| Step Size 3
| Adjustable true
|
+ Disk
| Allocation 15360mb
| Allocation per member 5120mb
| Minimum 15360mb
| Step Size 3072mb
| Adjustable true
The deployment has three members, with 3072 MB of RAM and 15360 MB of disk allocated in total. The "per member" allocation is 1024 MB of RAM and 5120 MB of disk. The minimum value is the lowest the total allocation can be set. The step size is the smallest amount by which the total allocation can be adjusted.
Resources and scaling in the CLI
The cdb deployment-groups-set
command allows either the total RAM or total disk allocation to be set in MB. For example, to scale the memory of the "example-deployment" to 4096 MB of RAM for each memory member (for a total
memory of 12288 MB), you use the command:
ibmcloud cdb deployment-groups-set example-deployment member --memory 12288
Determine the hosting model of your database in the CLI
Use the following command to review the value of the hostflavor
attribute. This will be null if the database is on a deprecated hosting model (not Shared or Isolated Compute).
ibmcloud cdb groups <deployment_id> --json
Switching to and between Hosting Models in the CLI
If your database is a Shared Compute instance, you can adjust the memory, CPU, and disk options with the following command. If your database is not on Shared Compute, this command will also move a database from a different hosting model to the Shared Compute hosting model.
ibmcloud cdb deployment-groups-set <deploymentid> <groupid> [--memory <val>] [--cpu <val>] [--disk <val>] [--hostflavor multitenant]
For example, use the following to scale to a Shared Compute instance or scale up your Shared Compute instance:
ibmcloud cdb deployment-groups-set crn:abc ... xyz:: member --memory 24576 --cpu 6 --hostflavor multitenant
If your database is an Isolated Compute instance, memory and CPU are adjusted together by selecting the Isolated Compute size (see all sizes in Table 1). Disk is scaled separately. If your database is not on Isolated Compute, this command will also move a database from a different hosting model to the Isolated Compute hosting model.
Note that since the host flavor selection includes CPU and RAM sizes (b3c.4x16.encrypted
is 4 CPU and 16 RAM), this request does not accept both an Isolated size selection and separate CPU and RAM allocation selections.
ibmcloud cdb deployment-groups-set <deploymentid> <groupid> [--disk <val>] [--hostflavor <hostflavor>]
For example, use the following to scale to an Isolated Compute instance or scale up your Isolated Compute instance:
ibmcloud cdb deployment-groups-set crn:abc ... xyz:: member --hostflavor b3c.8x32.encrypted
The hostflavor
parameter
The hostflavor
parameter defines your compute sizing. To provision a Shared Compute instance, specify multitenant
. To provision an Isolated Compute instance, input the appropriate value for your desired CPU and RAM
configuration.
Host flavor | hostflavor value |
---|---|
Shared Compute | multitenant |
4 CPU x 16 RAM | b3c.4x16.encrypted |
8 CPU x 32 RAM | b3c.8x32.encrypted |
8 CPU x 64 RAM | m3c.8x64.encrypted |
16 CPU x 64 RAM | b3c.16x64.encrypted |
32 CPU x 128 RAM | b3c.32x128.encrypted |
30 CPU x 240 RAM | m3c.30x240.encrypted |
Review current resources and hosting model
The Foundation Endpoint that is shown on the Overview panel of your service provides the base URL to access this deployment through the API. Use it with the /groups
endpoint if you need to manage or automate scaling
programmatically.
To view the current and scalable resources on a deployment, use the /deployments/{id}/groups endpoint. Note that this command
will also reveal if your database is a Shared Compute or Isolated Compute instance through the host_flavor
attribute. If the host_flavor
is null, it is on an old style hosting model.
curl -X GET -H "Authorization: Bearer $APIKEY" 'https://api.{region}.databases.cloud.ibm.com/v5/ibm/deployments/{id}/groups'
Scaling with the API
To scale the memory of a deployment to 4096 MB of RAM for each member (there are 3 so a total memory of 12288 MB), use the /deployments/{id}/groups/{group_id} API endpoint.
curl -X PATCH 'https://api.{region}.databases.cloud.ibm.com/v5/ibm/deployments/{id}/groups/member' \
-H "Authorization: Bearer $APIKEY" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"memory": {
"allocation_mb": 12288
}
}'
Determine the hosting model of your database in the API
Use the following command to review the value of the host_flavor
attribute. This will be null if the database is on a deprecated hosting model (not Shared or Isolated Compute).
curl -X GET https://api.{region}.databases.cloud.ibm.com/v5/ibm/deployments/{id}/groups -H 'Authorization: Bearer <>' \
Switching to and between Hosting Models in the API
To scale any Cloud Databases Shared Compute instance, use the the following command, setting host_flavor
to multitenant
. If your database is not on Shared Compute, this command will also move a database from a different
hosting model to the Shared Compute hosting model.
curl -X PATCH https://api.{region}.databases.cloud.ibm.com/v5/ibm/deployments/{id}/groups/member
-H 'Authorization: Bearer <>'
-H 'Content-Type: application/json'
-d '{"host_flavor":
{"id": "multitenant"},
"cpu":
{"allocation_count": 3},
"memory":
{"allocation_mb": 12288}
}' \
To scale any instance into a Cloud Databases Isolated Compute instance or to scale to a different Isolated Compute size, use the host_flavor
parameter, this time set to the desired Isolated Compute size. Available hosting sizes
and their host_flavor
value parameters are listed in Table 1. For example, {"host_flavor": "b3c.4x16.encrypted"}
. Note that since the host flavor selection
includes CPU and RAM sizes (b3c.4x16.encrypted
is 4 CPU and 16 RAM), this request does not accept both an Isolated size selection and separate CPU and RAM allocation selections. Scale with the Cloud Databases API Scaling endpoint, with a command like:
curl -X PATCH https://api.{region}.databases.cloud.ibm.com/v5/ibm/deployments/{id}/groups/member
-H 'Authorization: Bearer <>'
-H 'Content-Type: application/json'
-d '{"host_flavor": {"id": "b3c.4x16.encrypted"}}' \
CPU and RAM autoscaling is not supported on Cloud Databases Isolated Compute. Disk autoscaling is available. If you have provisioned an Isolated instance or switched over from a deployment with autoscaling, keep an eye on your resources using IBM Cloud® Monitoring integration, which provides metrics for memory, disk space, and disk I/O utilization. To add resources to your instance, manually scale your deployment.
The host flavor
parameter
The host_flavor
parameter defines your compute sizing. To provision a Shared Compute instance, specify multitenant
. To provision an Isolated Compute instance, input the appropriate value for your desired CPU and RAM
configuration.
Host flavor | host_flavor value |
---|---|
Shared Compute | multitenant |
4 CPU x 16 RAM | b3c.4x16.encrypted |
8 CPU x 32 RAM | b3c.8x32.encrypted |
8 CPU x 64 RAM | m3c.8x64.encrypted |
16 CPU x 64 RAM | b3c.16x64.encrypted |
32 CPU x 128 RAM | b3c.32x128.encrypted |
30 CPU x 240 RAM | m3c.30x240.encrypted |
Review current resources and hosting model
Review resource allocations to your database by checking your terraform scripts for cpu { allocation_count = }
, memory {allocation_mb = }
, and disk { allocation_mb = }
. Review the host_flavor
setting to determine if your database is a Shared Compute or Isolated Compute style hosting model. If host_flavor
does not exist, your database is on an old style hosting model.
Scaling with Terraform
Before executing a Terraform script on an existing instance, use the terraform plan
command to compare the current infrastructure state with the desired state defined in your Terraform files. Any alteration to the resource_group_id
,
service plan
, version
, key_protect_instance
, key_protect_key
, backup_encryption_key_crn
attributes recreates your instance. For a list of current argument references with the
Forces new resource
specification, see the ibm_database Terraform Registry.
Scale your instance by adjusting your Terraform script for the resource you're interested in. In the following example, cpu
, memory
, and disk
allocations are specified. Note that if you have a host flavor
selected (Isolated Compute or Shared Compute Multitenant), keep the host flavor selection in your script.
To implement your change, run terraform apply
.
data "ibm_resource_group" "group" {
name = "<your_group>"
}
resource "ibm_database" "<your_database>" {
name = "<your_database_name>"
plan = "standard"
location = "eu-gb"
service = "databases-for-elasticsearch"
resource_group_id = data.ibm_resource_group.group.id
tags = ["tag1", "tag2"]
adminpassword = "password12"
group {
group_id = "member"
cpu {
allocation_count = 6
}
memory {
allocation_mb = 24576
}
disk {
allocation_mb = 256000
}
}
users {
name = "user123"
password = "password12"
}
allowlist {
address = "172.168.1.1/32"
description = "desc"
}
}
output "ICD Elasticsearch database connection string" {
value = "http://${ibm_database.test_acc.ibm_database_connection.icd_conn}"
}
Switching to and Scaling Hosting Models in Terraform
Select the hosting model you want your database to be scaled to. You can change this later.
To scale your Databases for Elasticsearch instance to the Shared Compute hosting flavor, set the "host_flavor"
parameter to multitenant
. This works if you want to scale to the Shared Compute hosting flavor,
or if you want to keep the host flavor and scale your resources. To implement your change, run terraform apply
. See the following example:
data "ibm_resource_group" "group" {
name = "<your_group>"
}
resource "ibm_database" "<your_database>" {
name = "<your_database_name>"
plan = "standard"
location = "eu-gb"
service = "databases-for-elasticsearch"
resource_group_id = data.ibm_resource_group.group.id
tags = ["tag1", "tag2"]
adminpassword = "password12"
group {
group_id = "member"
host_flavor {
id = "multitenant"
},
cpu {
allocation_count = 6
}
memory {
allocation_mb = 24576
}
disk {
allocation_mb = 256000
}
}
users {
name = "user123"
password = "password12"
}
allowlist {
address = "172.168.1.1/32"
description = "desc"
}
}
output "ICD Elasticsearch database connection string" {
value = "http://${ibm_database.test_acc.ibm_database_connection.icd_conn}"
}
Scale your Databases for Elasticsearch instance to Isolated Compute with the same "host_flavor"
parameter, set to the desired Isolated size. This command works to scale your database instance to a different Isolated Compute
size, as well as to move from another host flavor to the Isolated Compute host flavor. Available hosting sizes and their host_flavor value
parameters are listed in Table 1. For example,
{"host_flavor": "b3c.4x16.encrypted"}
. Note that since the host flavor selection includes CPU and RAM sizes (b3c.4x16.encrypted
is 4 CPU and 16 RAM), this request does not accept both an Isolated
size selection and separate CPU and RAM allocation selections.
To implement your change, run terraform apply
.
data "ibm_resource_group" "group" {
name = "<your_group>"
}
resource "ibm_database" "<your_database>" {
name = "<your_database_name>"
plan = "standard"
location = "eu-gb"
service = "databases-for-elasticsearch"
resource_group_id = data.ibm_resource_group.group.id
tags = ["tag1", "tag2"]
adminpassword = "password12"
group {
group_id = "member"
host_flavor {
id = "b3c.8x32.encrypted"
}
disk {
allocation_mb = 256000
}
}
users {
name = "user123"
password = "password12"
}
allowlist {
address = "172.168.1.1/32"
description = "desc"
}
}
output "ICD Elasticsearch database connection string" {
value = "http://${ibm_database.test_acc.ibm_database_connection.icd_conn}"
}
The host flavor
parameter
The host_flavor
parameter defines your compute sizing. To provision a Shared Compute instance, specify multitenant
. To provision an Isolated Compute instance, input the appropriate value for your desired CPU and RAM
configuration.
Host flavor | host_flavor value |
---|---|
Shared Compute | multitenant |
4 CPU x 16 RAM | b3c.4x16.encrypted |
8 CPU x 32 RAM | b3c.8x32.encrypted |
8 CPU x 64 RAM | m3c.8x64.encrypted |
16 CPU x 64 RAM | b3c.16x64.encrypted |
32 CPU x 128 RAM | b3c.32x128.encrypted |
30 CPU x 240 RAM | m3c.30x240.encrypted |
CPU and RAM autoscaling is not supported on Cloud Databases Isolated Compute. Disk autoscaling is available. If you have provisioned an Isolated instance or switched over from a deployment with autoscaling, keep an eye on your resources using IBM Cloud® Monitoring integration, which provides metrics for memory, disk space, and disk I/O utilization. To add resources to your instance, manually scale your deployment.