Microsoft Fabric Updates Blog

Getting the size of OneLake data items or folders

Understanding the size of your OneLake data can be important to manage and plan storage costs, especially if you have large amounts of data.  Today, capacity admins can use the Microsoft Fabric Capacity Metrics app to find the total size of OneLake data stored in a given capacity or workspace but you may also want to understand the size of data in a specific item or folder.  In this blog, we’ll walk through a couple Azure PowerShell commands that enable you to get size information of any item or folders in OneLake.  As described in this blog post, with OneLake’s compatibility with ADLS tools, it’s as simple as replacing the ADLS Gen2 URL with a OneLake URL. 

To get started, there are three simple steps to set up:

Step 1: Open Azure PowerShell and install the Azure Storage PowerShell module. 

Install-Module Az.Storage -Repository PSGallery -Force

Step 2: Sign in to your Azure account.

Connect-AzAccount

Step 3: Create the storage account context.

  • Storage account name is onelake.
  • Set -UseConnectedAccount to pass through your Azure credentials.
    • Set -endpoint as fabric.microsoft.com.
$ctx = New-AzStorageContext -StorageAccountName 'onelake' -UseConnectedAccount -endpoint 'fabric.microsoft.com'

Get the size of an item

This example gets the size of an item “mylakehouse.lakehouse” in the workspace “myworkspace”.   

$workspaceName = 'myworkspace'
$itemPath = 'mylakehouse.lakehouse'
$colitems = Get-AzDataLakeGen2ChildItem -Context $ctx -FileSystem $workspaceName -Path $itemPath -Recurse -FetchProperty | Measure-Object -property Length -sum
"Total file size: " + ($colitems.sum / 1GB) + " GB"

Keep in mind, if the workspace name does not meet Azure Storage naming criteria (ex. must be lowercase letters) then replace the workspace and item names with their GUIDs.  You can find the associated GUID for your workspace or item in the URL on the Fabric portal. You must use GUIDs for both the workspace and the item, and don’t need the item type.

Get the size of a folder

$workspaceName = 'myworkspace'
$itemPath = 'mylakehouse.lakehouse/Files/folder1'
$colitems = Get-AzDataLakeGen2ChildItem -Context $ctx -FileSystem $workspaceName -Path $itemPath -Recurse -FetchProperty | Measure-Object -property Length -sum
"Total file size: " + ($colitems.sum / 1GB) + " GB"

Additional Details

  • These PowerShell commands won’t work on shortcuts that directly point to ADLS containers.  It’s recommended you create ADLS shortcuts to a directory that is at least one level below a container.
  • If you would like to fully automate these steps, you can obtain the workspace and item information with these APIs: Workspaces – List Workspaces – REST API and Items – List Items – REST API.

Next steps

We hope you continue to explore the ways you can leverage ADLS tools and APIs with your OneLake data.  To learn more about how to connect to OneLake, check out these links:

Zugehörige Blogbeiträge

Getting the size of OneLake data items or folders

Juli 15, 2025 von Dipti Borkar

We are thrilled to announce the general availability of Mirroring for Azure Databricks Unity Catalog in Microsoft Fabric—a secure, high-performance integration that provides seamless access to Azure Databricks tables from Fabric. With Fabric and Azure Databricks, we are building the future of data platforms on a lakehouse foundation, powered by open data formats, full interoperability, … Continue reading “Unified by design: mirroring Azure Databricks Unity Catalog to Microsoft OneLake in Fabric (Generally Available)”

Juli 10, 2025 von Matthew Hicks

Effortlessly read Delta Lake tables using Apache Iceberg readers Microsoft Fabric is a unified, SaaS data and analytics platform designed for the era of AI. All workloads in Microsoft Fabric use Delta Lake as the standard, open-source table format. With Microsoft OneLake, Fabric’s unified SaaS data lake, customers can unify their data estate across multiple … Continue reading “New in OneLake: Access your Delta Lake tables as Iceberg automatically (Preview)”