Directory Item Limits | max_items_per_container



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Overview

While all platforms do not impose limits on the number of items that can be stored in a single directory, their API may limit the number of items that can be downloaded/uploaded. This means that when DryvIQ attempts to download content from the source that exceeds the platform API limit, errors may start to occur. The DryvIQ Platform engine also has a limit of how many items it can crawl and download from a single directory based on the environment setup such as memory allocation

  • A job in DryvIQ does not use a fixed amount of memory.

  • Memory usage for individual jobs will vary based on a number of factors, the most significant one is the number of files and how those files are distributed (all in one folder, throughout sub-folders, etc.).

  • The main factors for memory usage for a DryvIQ node will be number of concurrent jobs + Parallel Writes Per Job for each job and the memory impact of the specific jobs.

Based on source/destination platform limits and potential excessive memory usage, DryvIQ system configuration is defaulted to maximum 10,000 items per container to ensure a successful transfer.

Recommendations

To avoid these errors, it is recommended to configure the directory item limit policy for your job. This option is configurable with a default system maximum of 10,000 for a single directory, corresponding with most platforms recommendations. While some platforms such as Box may allow upwards of 15,000 items in a single directory, changing this configuration limit may result in reduced performance and potentially unexpected errors. To improve the performance of your transfer, it is recommended to use the DryvIQ system configuration of maximum 10,000 items per container. DryvIQ will identify the directories that exceed this limit and flag these items.  

  • When viewing the Log page for the job in the user interface, these items will be flagged, “Maximum number of items exceeded.” 

     

  • In the log files, these items will be flagged with
    "Level": "Error",
    "Name": "TransferExecutor",
    "Message": "The path exceeds the maximum number of 10,000 children: /path", (Note that the number of children will reflect the maximum number set if you edited the default limit.)

During remediation, evaluate the source content and move items into sub-folders until each directory contains 10,000 items or less. 

Increasing the Directory Limit | What can happen?

DryvIQ strongly recommends using the default directory limit of 10,000. Increasing this value can have the following impacts:

  • Performance issues with excessive memory usage

  • Limit errors from the source and destination platforms causing failures in your DryvIQ job. (See Platform Limit documentation references below.)

Addressing Memory Issues

If memory issues occur due to increasing the Directory Item Limit or Parallel Writes Per Job, there is no other mitigation other than reducing the number of current jobs or breaking up the source content in to multiple jobs. DryvIQ will keep using memory until it runs out (it will not self-limit) and it will eventually reach the environment max. Reaching an environment max may result in a non-graceful termination of DryvIQ that could result in jobs re-transferring files, permissions or metadata.  In the case of larger jobs being stopped in this manner, they will enter recovery mode, continue to use all the memory, then get stopped again, in a loop causing a loss of throughput.

Expected Behavior

The parent folder will transfer to the destination. Permissions will be applied, and the job will have failures with the following log:

Other activity | Error activity

The path exceeds the maximum number of 10,000 children: /path

Default Behavior

If "max_items_per_container" is not configured in the job JSON, the default 10,000 limit will still apply.

Change Limit When Creating a Job

See Advanced Scripting | Additional Configuration Options.

Configuration Options | appSettings.json

See Configuration Options. The default value can also be changed using "transfers:max_items_per_container" config key.

Reporting in The User Interface

Limit Transfer error will be presented on the overview.



Platform Limitation 

If you configure DryvIQ above 10,000 please reference your source and destination platforms documentation for potential restrictions on that platform.

 

Platform

Notes

Platform

Notes

Box

Preparing Content for Migration

Dropbox

HTTP - Developers - Dropbox

How many files can I store in my Dropbox account?

Dropbox - Developers

Google Team  Drives

A single Team Drive can nest up to 20 subfolders, but we don’t recommend creating Team Drives with a folder structure that complex.| Shared drive limits in Google Drive - Google Workspace Learning Center

Google Workspace

https://support.google.com/a/answer/177064?hl=en , other limitations: https://developers.google.com/admin-sdk/directory/v1/limits

OneDrive for Business

https://ci.appveyor.com/project/OneDrive/onedrive-api-docs

Access OneDrive and SharePoint via Microsoft Graph API - OneDrive dev center

Service protection API limits (Microsoft Dataverse) - Power Apps

SharePoint

If you have a folder that contains more than 10,000 items, you may want to contact SharePoint Support for your tenant. 

Syncplicity

Syncplicity API Portal

Sharefile

https://api.sharefile.com/rest/doc.aspx

Egnyte

https://developers.egnyte.com/docs/read/Best_Practices


Job Configuration | Rest API

{ "name":"Example Job Configuration - Max Items Per Container", "kind": "transfer", "transfer": { "transfer_type": "copy", "audit_level": "trace", "batch_mode": "always", "conflict_resolution": "latest", "delete_propagation": "ignore_both", "failure_policy": "continue", "large_item": "skip", "lock_propagation": "ignore", "max_items_per_container": 10000, "performance": { "parallel_writes": { "requested": 4 } }, "permissions": { "policy": "add", "links": true, "failures": "exceptions" }, "preserve_owners": true, "timestamps": true, "empty_containers": "create", "duplicate_names": "rename", "item_overwrite": "overwrite", "restricted_content": "convert", "segment_transform": true, "versioning": { "preserve": "native", "select": "all" }, "group_map": { "id": "{{group_map_id}}", "type": "group_map" }, "account_map": { "id": "{{account_map_id}}", "type": "account_map" }, "filter":{ "source":[ { "action":"exclude", "rules":[ { "type":"filter_shared" } ], "type":"filter_rule" } ], "destination":[ { "action":"exclude", "rules":[ { "type":"filter_shared" } ], "type":"filter_rule" } ] }, "source": { "connection": { "id": "{{cloud_connection_source}}" }, "impersonate_as": { "email": "jsmith@yourdomain.com" }, "target": { "path": "/SourcePath" } }, "destination": { "connection": { "id": "{{cloud_connection_destination}}" }, "impersonate_as": { "email": "jsmith@mydomain.onmicrosoft.com" }, "target": { "path": "/DestinationPath" } }, "simulation_mode": false }, "schedule": { "mode": "manual" }, "stop_policy": { "on_success": 5, "on_failure": 5, "on_execute": 25 }, "category": { "name": "Category 1" } }

 

 

DryvIQ Migrate Version: 5.9.2
Release Date: December 17, 2024