On Tue, Nov 30, 2010 at 3:21 PM, Brad Tilley <b...@16systems.com> wrote:
> Kevin Chadwick wrote:
>
>> I almost completely agree, but also disagree and yes I'd say it's not
>> worth getting into again. I would have to check the latest developments
>> as I can imagine an algorithm which solved the problem during idle
>> periods or didn't use it's full capacity but currently I don't agree
>> fully with "huge amounts of data". The problem was reduced immensely by
>> spreading writes across all free sectors rather than sequentially but I
>> believe? the problem re-appears on a busy nearly full disk. I would also
>> hope/imagine the only affect would be getting bad sectors in that area
>> but I haven't looked into it very far as I currently have no need to
>> and so maybe I should shut up untill I do. However, I for one will not
>> be treating SSDs like HDDs in all applications of disks untill after I
>> learn more.
>
> One thing you might consider... buy a SSD and do some testing. Attach it
> to an OpenBSD box, put a file system on it, then write a script similar
> to this to repeatedly fill and empty the file system:
>
> while :
>  do
>        dd if=/dev/arandom of=big_un.bin bs=64k
>        sync
>        sleep 1
>        rm -P big_un.bin
>  done
>
> Let that run for a few years and see how long the disk actually lasts.
> You could put up a website with live results. You'd become famous too...
> especially if you hit the decade mark and the thing still works :)
>
> Also, I just noticed that the high-end Intel SSDs claim 2,000,000 hours
> MTBF. I wonder why they market that number and then say "3 year
> warranty". There's only roughly 26,280 hours in a three year period.
>
> Brad

MTBF numbers are typically cumulative, i.e. for the population of
devices as a whole.  If you had 2,000,000 Intel SSDs, you could expect
(statistically) for one of them to fail every hour.

Paul.



--
------------------------------
Paul D. Ouderkirk
Senior UNIX System Administrator
p...@ouderkirk.ca
------------------------------
laughing,
in the mechanism
-- William Gibson

Reply via email to