Re: SSD Drives
От | John R Pierce |
---|---|
Тема | Re: SSD Drives |
Дата | |
Msg-id | 53407734.3050905@hogranch.com обсуждение исходный текст |
Ответ на | Re: SSD Drives (David Boreham <david_list@boreham.org>) |
Список | pgsql-general |
On 4/5/2014 8:13 AM, David Boreham wrote: > On 4/4/2014 5:29 PM, Lists wrote: >> So, spend the money and get the enterprise class SSDs. They have come >> down considerably in price over the last year or so. Although on >> paper the Intel Enterprise SSDs tend to trail the performance numbers >> of the leading consumer drives, they have wear characteristics that >> mean you can trust them as much as you can any other drive for years, >> and they still leave spinning rust far, far behind. > > Another issue to bear in mind is that SSD performance may not be > consistent over time. This is because the software on the drive that > manages where data lives in the NAND chips has to perform operations > similar to garbage collection. Drive performance may slowly decrease > over the lifetime of the drive, or worse : Consumer drives may be > designed such that this GC-like activity is expected to take place > "when the drive is idle", which it may well be for much of the time, > in a laptop. However, in a server subject to a constant load, there > may never be "idle time". As a result the drive may all of a sudden > decide to stop processing host I/O operations while it reshuffles its > blocks. Enterprise drives are designed to address this problem and are > specified for longevity under a constant high workload. Performance is > similarly specified over worst-case lifetime conditions (which could > explain why consumer drives appear to be faster, at least initially). My experience has been, consumer SSDs used in a high usage desktop type environment are about twice as slow after a year as they were brand new. I note my current desktop system has written 15TB total onto my 250GB drive after about 16 months. The SMART wear leveling count suggests the drive has 91% of its useful life left. -- john r pierce 37N 122W somewhere on the middle of the left coast
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