Analyzing Long-Term SSD Failure Rates 149
wintertargeter writes "It looks like Tom's Hardware has posted the first long-term study of SSD failure rates. The chart on the last page is interesting — based on numbers, it seems SSDs aren't more reliable than hard drives. "
Uh, yes they are (Score:4, Informative)
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While the chart isn't a very good chart, I also can't figure out how anyone could write
based on numbers, it seems SSDs aren't more reliable than hard drives
about it. Even if the projections are thrown out there are wild differences between all the SSD plots and all the HDD plots.
This is an off-topic post. (Score:2)
Reply to un-do accidental moderation. Apologies.
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It would not be a surprise if the long term failure rate of SSD is drastically different than the one for HDD. Although the extrapolation may turn out to be wrong (it's an extrapolation after all), I do not believe it is that far fetched. From another point of view, fitting HDD failure rate curves to SSD would be plain wrong.
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Re:Uh, yes they are (Score:5, Insightful)
Did the poster even look at the chart he linked to?
Did you? Apparently not.
Ignore the dashed lines-- those curves are not data, they are "projection." The chart has no data on SSD failures late in the lifetime. So, when you say "...SSD failures only exceed HD failures very early on in their lifetimes," that is equivalent to saying "SSD failures only exceed HD failures in the region of the graph for which there is data."
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But that's not true. Every SSD on the chart has a lower failure rate in the small section proceeding the 6 - 12 month mark.
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But that's not true. Every SSD on the chart has a lower failure rate in the small section proceeding the 6 - 12 month mark.
??
Apparently we are looking at different graphs. The graph I'm looking at is the one linked in the summary above, here: http://media.bestofmicro.com/4/A/302122/original/ssdfailurerates_1024.png [bestofmicro.com]
In the "small section proceeding the 6 - 12 month mark" that you refer to, the highest failure rate is the light green curve, labelled "SLC SSD (Ku 2011)", while the lowest failure rate is the red curve, labeled "HDD (Schroeder 2007)".
The red HDD curve remains the lowest out to 2.5 years, which is farther out than an
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The purple Google HDD curve is by far the worst, but theirs looks like after 3 years 20% of the drives will have failed. That by far is the worst graph on there, and shoots above the SSDs quite quickly.
Re:Uh, yes they are (Score:4, Insightful)
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You do know that HDDs also require wear leveling right? (Well, not really, but defective blocks were pretty much part of life when HDDs were in the 10-100MB size.)
So yes, both SSDs and HDDs are likeyly to wear out after time. What wear leveling does is that it makes sure that the entire disk is pretty much worn out when you start encountering bad blocks.
With SSDs there is however one slight improvement. Since flash memory have been used for so long without wear leveling and in applications were it's damn im
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Totally agree - it's just a horrible chart. The notion of given arithmetic projections on the small amount of data available for SSD's is ridiculous, especially given that failure rates for all the drives for which there are data over an extended period are all geometric.
As Niels Bohr might have remarked, any conclusions drawn from data on that chart "would not even be wrong."
Apparently (Score:2)
The poster probably saw the chart, as they seem to have actually read the article in addition to merely glancing at a picture on the last page. Right below that graph:
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The poster probably saw the chart, as they seem to have actually read the article in addition to merely glancing at a picture on the last page. Right below that graph:
So you're quoting that SSDs are not 10x more reliable than HDDs. That doesn't exactly prove a point that HDDs are more reliable.
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They do not need to be.
What I mean is:
SSDs are way more expensive per gigabyte than hard drives. However, they are faster, use less power* and are more reliable, or it was said. So, if you do not care about speed SSDs are probably not worth the high prices, since they are not more reliable than HDDs.
* seems to me that the power consumption is not much less than that of the hard drives too.
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The original poster said "it seems SSDs aren't more reliable than hard drives." Do not create a straw man. The article indicates that while marketing and simpletons may point out select statistics as "more reliable," there's a lot more to the story, and it's difficult to impossible to get meaningful data at this point. That is, based on their analysis, SSDs are not provably mor
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Did the poster even look at the chart he linked to? Those big lines that shoot up to the top after 1-3 years? They're the failure rates for hard disks. The ones near the bottom? They're the failure rates for SSDs. Now, some of the SSD figures are projected and look quite optimistic, but the number of hard disks failing after 3 years looks high than the number of SSDs failing after three years by all of the studies. For most workloads, the SSDs fail less often, and the SSD failures only exceed HD failures very early on in their lifetimes.
Not only does the data point to better reliability for SSD, look at the application!
All of the HDD data is from datacenters - rack mounted, cooled, well cared for drives. Now imagine what happens to a drive in a laptop. I think it would be interesting to see that comparison.
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I understand that the latest crop of SSD's from companies like OCZ have been a real nightmare. I suspect the OCZ issue has to do with powering down the device, with the capacitor responsible for ensuring this happens corr
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This means that multiple metadata writes to the same block return much more quickly, but it also means that the data isn't really committed to stable storage when the OS thinks that it is. If the machine shuts down and that data still hasn't been flushed, it goes away.
The issue isnt File System corruption.. when the issue happens, the machine simply can no longer detect the drives no matter what you do. Its not simply data loss.. complete loss of any access to the device.
This means either an actual hardware failure, or that during power-on the firmware is failing to initialize. My theory is this second alternative, that its Block System (not the same as the File System! The Block System maps logical sectors to subsets of physical blocks in an arbitrary way) has become
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You're talking about a completely different failure than the "time warp". The "time warp" bug that I was referring to causes all the data on your disk to suddenly revert to a previous state.
Now it is possible that the two failures have the same root cause—I wouldn't begin to speculate on that
Read the paper, not the graph (Score:2)
The chart linked is not terribly useful, since the legend doesn't really explain what the curves are (three completely different curves with the same label, HDD Schroeder 2007).
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AFAIK (Score:2)
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Hasn't this always been the assumption? I've always been told by everyone in every discussion about SSD vs HDD that SSD has a lesser lifetime.
Doesn't make them less reliable, necessarily. An SSD may have a generally shorter lifespan than a HDD... but if the failure rates are known to be lower, then they are more reliable over that time period. For me, it's a moot point, since the rate at which I upgrade is quicker than either, so I go for both - SSD in my laptop for speed, small USB hard drive that I throw in the bag to store photos, media, etc, and two big RAID arrays at home for long term storage and short term backups. I'm more concerned about
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What do you call long term? I've had CDs (burned, not pressed) fail after sitting on the shelf for a decade. DVDs are reputed to be less stable, and Blu-Ray to be even less so.
For medium term storage I consider HDs to be optimal. DVDs are probably OK for 5 years. Can't even speculate on the lifetime of a burned BluRay...but I'd guess 2.5 years. (Guess is the word. Denser storage is usually more fragile is my only reasoning.) *IF* you have a thermostatically controlled vault, and *IF* you have either
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What do you call long term?
In the case of photos, long term = forever. Right now, I use a combination of online backups & multiple hard drives. Online because if my house burns down, I doubt I'll feel good about having had multiple copies go down in flames. Multiple drives, because I have trust issues with online cloud backups as a LONG TERM service.
Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
First divide by 4... Re:Huh? (Score:2)
For example:
Steadfast Networks' Karl Zimmerman, as quoted from bottom of this page (emphasis [tomshardware.com]
Whoever wrote that article.. (Score:2)
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IMO whoever wrote that article is a shill, full of shit or an idiot. The article is not analysis, it's far closer to "anal-related" stuff...
Example: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-reliability-failure-rate,2923-3.html [tomshardware.com]
Ultimately, the French-English language barrier was responsible for how hyped-up this information became. Sites like Mac Observer and ZDNet incorrectly reported these figures as "failure rates" based on a Google Translation.
A drive failure implies the device is no longer functioning. However, returns can occur for a multitude of reasons. This presents a challenge because we donâ(TM)t have any additional information on the returned drivesâ"were they dead-on-arrival, did they stop working over time, or was there simply an incompatibility that prevented the customer from using the SSD
But from the french retailer's stats:
Released in April 2011
http://news.softpedia.com/newsImage/French-Website-Publishes-HDD-SSD-and-Motherboard-RMA-Statistics-4.png/ [softpedia.com]
Released in December 2010
http://www.behardware.com/articles/810-6/components-returns-rates.html [behardware.com]
You will see that Intel ha
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Not to mention the site is an unnavigable mess of javascript. I think it sets a new record for how many 3rd party scripts noscript has blocked. I couldn't find which site to allow that would make the nav or image links work. Fallen very far downhill has tomshardware, I suppose this is why i haven't visited the site in years.
Too early to say? (Score:2)
I don't think it's really fair to say at this stage that SSDs aren't more reliable than hard drives.
For one, SSDs are still rather new. Yes, they've been around for a few years but compared to hard drives they are still at the beginning of their development cycle, and it shows: firmware issues and recalls, as stated in the article, may be a heavy contributing factor to the SSD failure rates. We can expect this to drop as manufacturers continually revise their firmware and manufacturing techniques for the be
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For one, SSDs are still rather new. Yes, they've been around for a few years but compared to hard drives they are still at the beginning of their development cycle, and it shows: firmware issues and recalls, as stated in the article, may be a heavy contributing factor to the SSD failure rates. We can expect this to drop as manufacturers continually revise their firmware and manufacturing techniques for the better.
I wouldn't bet on it.
Price is also a major factor - probably the major factor.
SLCs are almost impossible to find because of just that; even though they have a magnitude higher write count and much faster worst-case write times, they don't sell because of price.
If the customer has a choice between paying more to get a more reliable drive, or pay less to get a less reliable drive, guess what he will choose? That's also why computers who used to last ten years now last two.
Quality just isn't a major concern i
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Because we replace them every couple years.
Besides my homebuilt rigs last fine. Sure my power supply is a lot nicer than what dell provides, but that is what cheap gets you. I save in the long run though buy just replacing parts of the machine to upgrade.
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My Intel x-25 SLC (32 GB I think) is still going strong, it is about 4 years old, and I don't even have trim support. But it is all in how you use it. I load my video games on it so that I get fast load times. The data doesn't change much, and I get that speed where I need it the most.
Worst. Ever. (Score:5, Insightful)
Let me summarize:
A) Chart is worthless. I have never see a more ambiguous meaningless chart in my life. They might as well not bother to label things.
B) Lets do a reliability study on SSD's that they don't have any long term data on past 2 years, yet compare it to HDD that typically at least have a 3 year warranty. By that I only mean, I'll go out on a limb and guess that the average failure rate of HDD is > 3 years, if only for economic self preservation.
C) Results in either case depend highly on specific device model and configuration.
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But, you can make projections from limited data. Disclaimer, all I looked at was the chart and I think you can assume linear failure rates for SSDs and exponential for HDDs (probably because of more components and different failure points). The chart is pretty clear if I'm interpreting it correctly.
Just like sampling a population in statistics, you're working with limited data but you can hypothesize based on a small sample. What you can't tell is if there's some failure bomb (unlikely) outside the data
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http://xkcd.com/605/ [xkcd.com]
I agree. However if it only makes sense if you assume failure in 2 years or less.
If you are comparing them to the HDD on the graph, you can see that HDD have a failure rate of about 1-2% in the first two years (dependent on whatever the fsck the different colors mean), and beyond that can go as high as 20% after 5 years.
So what is it you are testing for? What are you doing comparisons against? Not to mention why they assume one is linear as opposed to all the other long term data being e
Anyway ..... (Score:2)
We don't buy SSDs because they are more reliable (they don't seem to be in our large RAID arrays), but because they are faster than HDDs.
Baed on numbers... (Score:2)
Based on numbers, the study shows SSDs to be more reliable than HDDs. The best data I have seen in that article is the following:
SSDs: 1.28--2.19% over 2 years
HDDs: >=5% over 2 years
The HDD data comes from: http://media.bestofmicro.com/2/N/289103/original/google_afrtemputilization_475.png [bestofmicro.com] The SSD data comes from the table on Page #6.
I don't think any of this data is particularly surprising, HDDs are mechanical so the curves for failure would not be linear. The most interesting part of the ar
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The most interesting part of the article for consideration with SSDs is that SMART is going to be near useless for them. Since most failures are random occurrences in electronics which SMART isn't good at detecting, we may need better technology for detecting SSD failures.
Have you ever seen SMART perform in a useful way on a mechanical disk? At work and at home, I've gone through a crap-ton of hard disks in the last decade or so that SMART's been prevalent and never have I seen SMART flag a drive as problematic before I already knew I had a serious problem. More often than not, I've had systems slow to a crawl due to massive numbers of read errors and sector reallocations while the drive firmware actively lied to me about the drive's condition. Only looking at the raw SMART
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The raw SMART stats are part of SMART. That's all I look at. With some brands of drive, certain counters increase wildly because those stats aren't supported, and you're seeing random data. I always go by Reallocated Sector Count, Pending Reallocations, and uncorrectable sectors - among others if they are available.
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How many uncorrectable/reallocated sectors do you consider hazardous?
My main HD is a 1TB Seagate 7200. I first noticed a SMART alert in Ubuntu with a number of reallocated sectors of around 45. A year or so afterwards, it reads 52.
Do you think I should worry?
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The drive has hundreds of spares. I start worrying when it's greater than 0, but it's really more about how quickly it's happening (if a large area of the drive has failed and it's constantly finding more bad spots. At your stage, I would run the manufacturers scan that would force it to check every last sector and see where you're at. Then, back up regularly and keep using it.
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Have you ever seen SMART perform in a useful way on a mechanical disk?
Yes. When my laptop drive failed the problem was very obvious from a perpetually increasing reallocated sector count; that gave me long enough to copy off my data files to a new disk and replace the old one.
I had a similar experience with the only other hard drive I've had fail; they both went gracefully with plenty of warning and plenty of time to get the data off.
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Usually those problems result in significant performance problems and THAT is why people notice and investigate. In most systems there is no reporting back to the end-user or the administrator and the SMART status has to be read with a special tool anyway.
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and those that do fail (Score:2)
Linear interpolation (Score:2)
I want a different study (Score:2)
I want to know if SSDs are more reliable than HDDs in an environment full of cat hair. I've never had a SCSI HDD outlast its warranty.
SchrÃdinger's (Score:2)
You are using the wrong sort of cat.
Put the disk in a box with SchrÃdinger's cat .. then the drive can be both alive and dead at the same time as the cat ;)
Re:SchrÃdinger's != Schrodinger's :) (Score:2)
Oh boy, did /. make a mess of Schrodinger's with an umlaut :)
I must preview before I submit!
Firmware is still trumping physical chip limits (Score:2)
That's my take. And unlike a hard drive, firmware is something which can be continuously improved. SSD manufacturers are starting to understand and deal with the failure modes.
One thing they don't mention is off-line storage. If I take a hard drive out of service and store it on a shelf for a year, it's virtually guaranteed to fail when I power it up. That is, every single HDD I've taken off the shelf will tend to work for a short while, long enough for me to get the data off of it usually, but every si
Jeff Atwood had a good take on this (Score:2)
Any thread on SSD failures should include a link to Jeff Atwood's blog entry on the topic:
Full post here: http://www.codinghorror.com/blog/2011/05/the-hot-crazy-solid-state-drive-scale.html [codinghorror.com]
HD vs SSD (Score:2)
I think a good question is how do HD's fail vs how SDD's fail.
There are two distinct ways that an HD can fail, either the circuitry on the PC board goes bad or what's inside the sealed chamber goes bad.
In the former case the data SHOULD be recoverable. In the later case there are three possible failure points, the platter motor, the head stepper motor, or the heads themselves. In the first two cases the drive could be repaired and the data salvaged, but it will take more effort and money to do so. If the
Very UNinteresting (Score:2)
What I care about is MTTDL (Mean Time to Data Loss) of a complete system. Hard drives are unreliable as is any component in your computer. That's why you should make at the very least every individual component your data path follows double or triple redundant. This is easily accomplished these days, ZFS, RAID6 etc. Make sure you don't just rely on the mechanical parts of your system to keep your data safe.
What else you want to know is undetected data corruption. Hard disks are very bad at keeping data, SSD
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Besides that, SSD's give way more IOPS than any hard drive available (even the 15k RPM ones)
Several orders of magnitudes higher. There are SSD's producing as many as 50,000 random 4k IOPS vs about 250 from a 15k RPM fiber channel hard disk.
Hard drive have magnets. (Score:2)
You might find parts in an SDD drive which you can use for pinning stuff to your fridge. But anyone who ever put a hard drive magnet on his fridge knows that nothing can hold your data as reliably as a hard drive magnet.
By definition anything that contains powerful magnets is cool.
(Oh, and a fast spinning BLDC motor.)
Shiny platters!
First Generation (Score:2)
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Either way, the SSD drive market, is oddly enough, as good as spindrives but like anything else, the data rele
acid base SSD (Score:2)
Think of flash memory as acid/base chemistry: a one is stored by pH much lower than 7, a zero is stored by a pH much greater than 7. The reaction is confined to pores in a pumice stone. In order to reduce cost, pumice stone with increasingly small bubble cavities (and mineral wall thickness) has been pressed into service.
By the laws of solid state physics, this makes acid/base pumice stone inherently more reliable than magnetic domains spinning on a fluid bearing.
The bottom line here is that every SDD die
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Citations needed...
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They're more durable - you can bang one against the desk, throw it around the room all day, then plug it in and it should still work (or, at worst, require fixing a broken solder joint or two, SMD capacitors sometimes fall off the PCB after a strong enough jolt), while no HDD in the world is going to survive that. Maybe people got that confused, the word "reliable" means many different things in layman's speech.
I say they are more reliable. (Score:2)
I have had laptop hard drives fail on me because of the hits they take in my bicycle carrier or on my lap as I bounce along in the shuttle on city roads. My SSDs have yet to fail. Never again will I get a hard drive in my laptop, because of reliability.
Re:Who said they were? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Many people refer to SSDs as more reliable when they're talking about laptop drives... when you drop your laptop, it's much easier to kill a hard drive than an SSD :)
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"That isn't reliability, to me. That's durability."
Agreed. Some people don't understand this, hence, "SSDs are much more reliable!!!!one11!"
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Not really. In my mind, durability is the ability to survive abuse. Reliability is the ability to survive ordinary, typical use. It's not really interesting to say that a drive lasts for a hundred years when left spun down in a temperature controlled clean room, so any useful measure of reliability must take into account typical usage, or else it is a completely useless metric.
Remember that desktop drives are expected to sit in one place and never move, but laptop drives aren't. Laptop drives are design
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That's not normal use... SOP for laptops with spinning drives is not to wake them from standby until they're safely on the desk or your lap.
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Even if you do, if you put it on your lap, it's going to be moving around.
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Well... yeah. But suddenly and vigorously enough to cause a head crash or a shattered platter? I doubt it :p
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sigh, someone else who didn't RTFA. If you look on page 8 you'll see this image [tomshardware.com] where Intel's 'reliability study at IDF 2011' says HDDs are pants, SSDs are great.
of course, this is part of Intel's marketing for SSDs, so you'd expect them to say this kind of thing. Of course, that means someone has said this - specifically as some sort of selling point.
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Apparently Intel's SSDs are more reliable than HDDs.
April 2011
http://news.softpedia.com/news/French-Website-Publishes-HDD-SSD-and-Motherboard-RMA-Statistics-196538.shtml [softpedia.com]
http://news.softpedia.com/newsImage/French-Website-Publishes-HDD-SSD-and-Motherboard-RMA-Statistics-4.png/ [softpedia.com]
December 2010
http://www.behardware.com/articles/810-6/components-returns-rates.html [behardware.com]
Yes I know these are return rates and not failure rates. But "spinning disk drives" should in theory more vulnerable to "shipping and mishandling" and "oo
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I do not replace working drives. If I need the space I add a new drive to the system, not replace an old one with a new one.
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As I usually want to save money, I keep the old drives. For example, I have about 3TB distributed over ~10 drives (and multiple PCs). I could buy a 3TB drive and stop using the old ones, but then I would just pay money for no increase in capacity. I would not be able to afford a lot of 3TB drives, but if I wanted I could buy a 2TB drive and place it in an empty slot to use it together with all my other drives. Now, if I reached a point where all slots are full and still need more space, I would consider buy
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Only if the failure is caused by the flash parts wearing out. Most SSD failures are, amusingly, caused by cold solder joints, same as a sizable percentage of hard drive failures.
I'm still waiting for somebody to build a micro-RAID out of solid state storage. Use a single SATA connector, but make them show up on separate LUNs. Have a row of stick-style SSDs connected to a single controller, all in the space of a standard laptop HD. Then RAID the individual sticks with a drop-dead simple controller that d
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
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The fix for this was released a long time ago, it is called proper backups. Instead of avoiding a superior product, trying using them and proper backups.
Re:Whaddayamean "long term"? (Score:5, Interesting)
If you're unlucky backups won't save you from this:
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r25491097-Dell-Laptop-and-SSD-Time-warp-issue [dslreports.com]
yesterday I spent over an hour fomatting, re-installing windows and everything else I needed.
Also updated windows fully, customized everything to my liking... in short, a good 2-3h of work.
This morning, I open up the laptop and surprise... EVERYTHING's back to the pre-format. I have no idea how this is even remotely possible.
OCZ is calling this the time warp issue, and is related to the sandforce controller...
http://forum.notebookreview.com/alienware-m17x/552728-fresh-os-install-ocz-ssd-r3.html [notebookreview.com]
any firmware before 1.29 can result in you experiencing what OCZ refers to as "Time Warp" (you lose all info stored on drive since last boot - happens at random). 1.29 decreases likelihood of this happening, but does not eliminate the possibility.
The big problem with this failure mode is the drive still appears to work. So if you are unlucky to not notice that the pricelist/tender document you are about to send or commit to is no longer showing the corrected figures/information, things could get way more painful than if your drive just didn't work (in which case work would just be delayed while you restore from backups, or if you have no backups you would just have to deal with the data loss).
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Given you don't appear to have read what I posted, you might not be one of those who would notice in time.
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I read it fine. This is not much different than any other method of losing data. The cause is not a huge deal, fixing it is. I would assume I would notice as soon as the times on files looked wrong.
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always remember: RAID is not backup.
One day, with a traditional HDD based setup, you'll come into the office to find the place a mess, everyone standing around and when you ask "what's happened", you'll get the reply "we were burgled, your PC is right now being sold on ebay".
So who cares whether SSDs fail immediately or with a huge flashy light show whilst beeping out La Marseillaise, it won't help you none.
You'll find other stories of HDD RAID that failed simultaneously (which is more common than you think
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PS. you replaced your SSDs with a pair or HDDs in RAID 0 format. Beggers belief.
and on top of that because the SSD failed and they lost data .. makes me wonder if they even have a clue what they are doing.
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nope, wrong, sorry. Don't expect me to explain next time it goes poof.
With HDDs you sometimes get warnings its about to fail. Net result: just as unsafe as SSDs, as we're managing risk here it's not about the 99.99999% of the time that they work, its about that last tiny chance of failure. When you put the two side-by-side, that chance is still there even with HDDs, so there's realistically no difference between them.
I use HDDs, the cost is too great compared to the performance gain of SSD. But reliability
Re:Whaddayamean "long term"? (Score:4, Informative)
The other failure mode is the "time warp" failure.
http://www.dslreports.com/forum/r25491097-Dell-Laptop-and-SSD-Time-warp-issue [dslreports.com]
Also updated windows fully, customized everything to my liking... in short, a good 2-3h of work.
This morning, I open up the laptop and surprise... EVERYTHING's back to the pre-format. I have no idea how this is even remotely possible.
The big problem with this failure mode would be if the user doesn't notice anything wrong till too late.
A 100% dead drive sucks, but if you do regular backups you lose 1 day of data.
A "time warp" failure that you don't notice could result in you sending out of date info in an important email. Or overwriting something important with invalid data and not noticing. The resulting damage could be far far worse than a dead drive.
In my experience "spinning rust" rarely fails 100% without warning (or abuse - e.g. you drop the drive ;) ). You can often salvage some stuff out (just hope it's the stuff you want ;) ). I've managed to use knoppix to salvage data from people's failed spinning disk drives.
In contrast these SSDs just go totally dead. Or really weird shit happens.
In both cases the manufacturer might get an RMA. But they're not the same. If OCZ drives are getting RMA'ed at higher rates than spinning drives, and their failure modes are 100% dead or "time warp" they are far worse than the stats show: http://news.softpedia.com/news/French-Website-Publishes-HDD-SSD-and-Motherboard-RMA-Statistics-196538.shtml [softpedia.com]
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Just to throw another data point into the soup .. I had one fail.. and it did so in a gradual and obvious manner. Basically it would periodically lock up for a few seconds, and I'd see the appropriate error message in syslog. These lockups became more frequent and eventually the drive just died (no longer recognized at boot).
It was no big deal because I had an up to date full backup of the drive. I have an internal file server where I keep most of my "real" files, and my desktop just has a small (the one th
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The failure mode that is easiest to manage is when they completely fail.
Good luck to you with disks that fail silently over a long period of time, corrupting your data without you knowing about it.
Some correct fixes for this are combinations of RAID, backups, a filesystem that checksums data and metadata (BTRFS, WAFL, ZFS). Limping along on half knackered drives is probably one of the worst things you can do.
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I've not seen much evidence of bias from Tom's Hardware, although I did stop reading their site several years ago, just shocking levels of ignorance and stupidity.
Exactly. What a bunch of idiots. I'm surprised that they're actually able to turn on their computers, much less run a website.
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Our next SAN/NAS purchase will definitely have good MLC SSDs on tier-0 or as massive read/write cache
Did you perhaps mean SLC? MLC would be such a waste in that use case.
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I have over 100 Intel 320 and X25-M drives in my organization and not had one fail yet.
Good luck. The 320 has a known bug where it will power up claiming to only have an 8MB capacity and requires a complete wipe to recover (do a web search for intel 320 8mb).
Sadly this was discovered about a week after I bought one.
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I use SSDs on systems I want to boot fast, but that's about the only use I have for them and find the 'no, don't upgrade CPU/RAM/whatever, get an SSD it's the best upgrade for any system' nutters rather amusing.
I have seen people saying that SSDs speed up compilation a lot though I'm surprised because header files and the like should pretty quickly go into the disk cache and never require another read from disk. However, those same people also say they have to replace the SSDs at least once a year because t
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What did surprise me, though, are the return rates on hard disks. Multiple percent in a single year seems high to me! I'm glad I'm not in the hardware business.
I would guess that most of the failures are due to damage during shipping or installation. I'm still amazed by the limited protection on some of the disks I've received through the mail.