On 02/09/2010 07:52 PM, Mike Lovell wrote:
does anyone have good recommendations as to some tools or utilities to use for exercising or burning in new hard disks? where i work, we buy *a lot* of disks and currently use a utility called thrash [1]. we just have it do a couple million random writes to the disk. but i could use some other tools to test the disks in different ways as well to get a better idea if the disk is going to hold up. i've thought about using bonnie++ or iozone as well. what you any of you use, if anything? thx.mike [1] http://www.csc.liv.ac.uk/~greg/thrash/
Just exactly how many disks do you find that fail with that method, and do you end up with less disks failing and needing replacement in the first few months of production versus more disks failing at one year, two years, etc?
I guess I am asking why you bother to waste man hours thrashing the poor disks and removing potential life from them rather than just making sure they are all in good RAID sets and replacing them as they fail (hot spares and man-hours to replace rather than test)?
My company deploys more than 100 new drives per week, and the testing alone would be much more time consuming to find the very few bad drives in testing versus replacing them as they fail in those first few weeks. Add to that the fact that the testing may reduce the life sufficiently that you have more failures at the one and two year points, and it seems a waste to test like that.
I am always open to better ways of doing things, so please, if you find the thrashing helps, I would love to hear the results.
-Steve
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME Cryptographic Signature
/* PLUG: http://plug.org, #utah on irc.freenode.net Unsubscribe: http://plug.org/mailman/options/plug Don't fear the penguin. */
