On Wednesday, September 6, 2017, Peter Humphrey <pe...@prh.myzen.co.uk>
wrote:
> On Sunday, 3 September 2017 21:56:43 BST R0b0t1 wrote:
>> On Sun, Sep 3, 2017 at 2:39 AM, Peter Humphrey <pe...@prh.myzen.co.uk>
> wrote:
>> > On Sunday, 3 September 2017 03:34:06 BST R0b0t1 wrote:
>> >> On Sat, Sep 2, 2017 at 8:49 AM, Peter Humphrey
> <pe...@prh.myzen.co.uk>
>> >
>> > wrote:
>> >> > A week or two ago I was investigating some other weirdnesses and at
>> >> > one
>> >> > point I zeroed out the first partition: the unformatted one
>> >> > containing
>> >> > the UEFI data. It took longer than I expected, having only 2MB to
>> >> > fill.
>> >> > I wonder if it strayed outside the partition...
>> >>
>> >> Are you trimming your drive?
>> >
>> > Yes; this is root's crontab:
>> >
>> > 9 3,15 * * *    /sbin/fstrim -a
>>
>> I think a reduction in drive performance (when you are maintaining it
>> properly) is the best argument for being ready to replace the drive,
>> as this seems unlikely to happen to me unless the drive is actually
>> wearing out.
>
> I haven't noticed any degradation of performance, though I haven't run any
> tests.
>

I interpreted the slow zeroing as a performance decrease. If you can
benchmark to check you may want to.

If that situation doesn't correspond to a general decrease in performance I
will be very surprised.

>> At the same time I have seen this exact situation fixed by a firmware
>> upgrade. Still, this seems more alarming than the other issues you've
>> described.
>
> Do you mean the firmware of the NVMe drive? How would I go about that? I
> don't see any mention of firmware on Samsung's site.
>

Typically a closed source Windows program which may bundle the firmware in
it.

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