On September 6, 2014 11:52:20 PM EDT, nick <[email protected]> wrote:
>I ran a basic postmark today and the results are below for the btrfs
>code on a Seagate Constellation drive I 
>have for testing. If any of the the btrfs developers read the kernel
>newbies list, please send me a list of 
>tests with docs on how to run them on this drive ,I don't care about
>killing it :) and also since it's an
>enterprise drive, you can test enterprise tests if wanted.

I'm curious if many here know the difference between a consumer drive and a 
enterprise drive.

Obviously a lot of enterprise drives have higher performance and quality specs, 
but the biggest difference is how they treat media errors.

A consumer driver is targeted at standalone use, an enterprise drive is 
targeted at raid array use.

Thus when a consumer drive hits a media error the firmware is setup to re-read 
that sector repeatedly before it gives up and returns an error to the OS.

An enterprise drive's firmware on the other hand is setup to be in a fail fast 
mode.  The idea is from a system perspective it should be better to have the 
drive return an error immediately upon a media error and let the system get the 
data via raid-redundancy.  That also means the raid system has more granular 
knowledge of what's going on with the drive and can rewrite valid data as an 
example to that bad sector.  A rewrite can trigger an internal sector 
reallocation from the spare list.

The key thing to note is that in general an enterprise drive is a bad choice 
for standalone use.  The firmware is just setup wrong.

I've forgotten if hdparm can be used to switch between the two operating modes.

Greg

-- 
Sent from my Android phone with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.

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