[Discuss] SSD drives vs. Mechanical drives
Kent Borg
kentborg at borg.org
Mon May 5 15:30:42 EDT 2014
On 05/05/2014 11:47 AM, Richard Pieri wrote:
> Any medium can fail with no warning.
Indeed, though disks frequently (usually?) degrade with warning. SMART
monitoring can note ECC-errors, for example. And other key components
tend to have "lifetime" reliability, i.e., CPUs and RAM and motherboards
are usually replaced while still functioning. Fans sometimes die early,
but usually make a hellish noise first as a warning.
Flash is a bit unique in that it has an advertised finite life in
write-cycles (scarily small number per-cell with modern flash) and
though firmware cleverness extends this, they have still been observed
to die with no warning. Very unnerving. Very trendy, too: are Mac
notebooks even available without SSDs these days? Does Apple have some
magic exemption to these flash problems? Very unnerving.
> Good backups have always been the go-to recourse for these occurrences.
The term "backup" tends to refer to having historical copies of data,
usually with a notable delay in how long it takes to restore the data.
I would suggest that with flash, hardware redundancy (external to
whatever proprietary hocus-pocus is already in a flash product) is wise.
Something present and immediately bootable.
In my case (1) limiting the use to a regime that is not so stressful to
flash and (2) having a ready backup boot device, should address that.
Unfortunately, if it does fail on me, a human presence is probably
needed to reboot things. Just my personal basement server, so I think I
can live with that.
-kb
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