Deprovision an Azure disk pool (preview)
This article covers the deletion process for an Azure disk pool (preview) and how to disable iSCSI support.
Stop a disk pool
You can stop a disk pool to save costs and preserve all configurations. When a disk pool is stopped, you can no longer connect to it over iSCSI. The managed resources deployed to support the disk pool will not be deleted. You must disconnect all clients with iSCSI connections to the disk pool first before stopping a disk pool. You can start a disk pool at any time. This will reactivate the iSCSI target exposed on this disk pool.
- Sign in to the Azure portal.
- Navigate to your disk pool, and select Stop.
Disable iSCSI support
If you disable iSCSI support on a disk pool, you can no longer connect to a disk pool.
When you first enable iSCSI support on a disk pool, an iSCSI target is created as the endpoint for the iSCSI connection. You can disable iSCSI support on the disk pool by deleting the iSCSI target. Each disk pool can only have one iSCSI target configured.
You can re-enable iSCSI support on an existing disk pool. iSCSI support cannot be disabled on the disk pool if there are outstanding iSCSI connections to the disk pool.
- Search for Disk pool and select your disk pool.
- Select iSCSI under Settings.
- Clear the Enable iSCSI checkbox and select Save.
Delete a disk pool
When you delete a disk pool, all the resources in the managed resource group are also deleted. If there are outstanding iSCSI connections to the disk pool, you cannot delete the disk pool. You must disconnect all clients with iSCSI connections to the disk pool first. Disks that have been added to the disk pool will not be deleted.
- Sign in to the Azure portal.
- Search for Disk pool and select it, then select the disk pool you want to delete.
- Select Delete at the top of the pane.
Next steps
Learn about Azure managed disks.
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