The reason I'm using an SSD on my Raspberry Pi isn't about performance, it's about building a small, power efficient, server.
While a single SSD certainly is less power hungry than RAID5, it's comparing apples to pears :-). But I got your point.
I'm hoping to get the same sort of rock solid performance, over a reasonable lifetime, but a bit more green! So less power = less heat.
I wouldn't expect 10 years. I think that's a very long time for any computer system (my home server is in its 7th... but I did replace disks during that time). But if you were to build a dedicated LMS server using eg. piCorePlayer, it would be easy enough to backup settings and re-build a system within minutes if needed.
Maybe I'm being paranoid about LMS's use of the cache, and wear cycles on an SSD, but that's what I'm asking about! I don't know how often the cache is flushed, or even what it's used for! Just because I got a really good price on a 1Tb SSD, doesn't mean I want to throw it away too soon...
Just use it. I've read tests where they tried to simulate years of "average use" by continuously writing TBs after TBs to SSDs. This was late '17, and the title even mentioned "cheap SSD". And the result was basically "don't worry about wearing out SSD any more". Some of them took Petabytes of data written, before they gave up. But all of them would write 600+ TB. That's a lot of data.
-- Michael _______________________________________________ Squeezecenter mailing list [email protected] http://lists.slimdevices.com/mailman/listinfo/squeezecenter
