Western Digital Unveils First-Ever 512Gb 64-Layer 3D NAND Chip (betanews.com) 78
BrianFagioli quotes a report from BetaNews: As great as these solid state drives are now, they are only getting better. For example, SATA-based SSDs were once viewed as miraculous, but they are now looked at as slow -- PCIe-based NVMe drives are all the rage. To highlight the steady evolution of flash storage, Western Digital today unveiled the first-ever 512 gigabit 64-layer 3D NAND chip. "The launch of the industry's first 512Gb 64-layer 3D NAND chip is another important stride forward in the advancement of our 3D NAND technology, doubling the density from when we introduced the world's first 64-layer architecture in July 2016. This is a great addition to our rapidly broadening 3D NAND technology portfolio. It positions us well to continue addressing the increasing demand for storage due to rapid data growth across a wide range of customer retail, mobile and data center applications," says Dr. Siva Sivaram, executive vice president, memory technology, Western Digital. Western Digital further explains that it did not develop this new technology on its own. The company shares, "The 512Gb 64-layer chip was developed jointly with the company's technology and manufacturing partner Toshiba. Western Digital first introduced initial capacities of the world's first 64-layer 3D NAND technology in July 2016 and the world's first 48-layer 3D NAND technology in 2015; product shipments with both technologies continue to retail and OEM customers."
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Where's the Data?
Whoops! Deleted
Write-only Disks
Warranty Denied
etc.
Re:Warranty Denied (Score:1)
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under a non-Western Digital warranty
So, an African Digital warranty? Or Asian Digital warranty?
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I hope it's better than their hard drives.
I call them Western Dataloss for a reason.
I've had more than a few WD drives fail on me. I call them "Write Only Memory" because the chance of getting data back out of them is unlikely.
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Showing my age: Micropolis, Rodime...
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"or back in the day when it was called a Winchester."
In my mainframe days, the Winchester was 'the drive that won the West.'
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Oy vey. That brought back memories. I still have one sitting on a shelf, monument to failure. Beautiful elegant-looking trash.
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I've got one that finally failed after over 20 years in service. Most reliable drive I've ever had, that Rodime.
The funny thing is that it was recalled a few months after I got it, Apple wanted to replace it with a Seagate. After two bad drives out of the box, I told the dealer I'd keep the Rodime.
No, the Apple IIgs it was connected to wasn't being used much by the time that drive finally died, but it was still annoying. The computer still works, it's over 30 years old now.
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I've seen WD go through waves of quality control issues over the years. For a couple of years I wouldn't touch one except under duress, then they got good again. Then crap, then good, wash, rinse, repeat. Where they are in the cycle now I don't know.
Re:Hopefully better than their hard drives. (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't care what vendor you use...
If you care about your data you either RAID (and monitor) or keep good backups that you routinely test. (preferably both)
My Personal file server is software RAID-5 with a hot spare and a replacement drive on the shelf. PLUS I keep a nightly mirrored backup online and rotate the spindles offsite to the In-laws basement every time we visit. (I know I'm cheap, but 4 Gig is kind of expensive to back up to the cloud and I have security to consider.) I lost a small portion of the photos once and thought my wife was going to kill me, NEVER again unless the zombie apocalypse happens.
WD drives do seem to be on the lower end of reliability, but I really don't care that much myself. I buy what's cheap and I'll toss it when it breaks...
"Hot spare" is a give away (Score:3)
While it is, indeed, prudent to keep a cold spare on the shelf, wasting a slot in your enclosure for a "hot spare" is just that — a waste. Here is my proof of it [algebra.com], but you can find other people telling you the same thing.
It is extremely unlikely, that a second disk will randomly die on you during those few hours it will take you to replace the first one with your cold spare and for the array to rebuild. Wha
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"wasting a slot in your enclosure for a "hot spare" is just that — a waste. Here is my proof of it [algebra.com]"
That's a really horrible 'proof' You keep a hot spare so you can simply yank the drive and run in case of a fire, thus your data is still safe, or if you want an off-site backup, you just yank the drive, plug the fresh one in and mirror to it, and take the drive you just pulled wherever you need to go.
And the hot-plug bays for such a thing are like ten bucks. If you aren't going to spend ev
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Safe in case of a fire?!
This 4-bay [amazon.com] enclosure costs over $400, making each slot cost over $100. This 8-bay one [amazon.com] is $750...
More importantly, you don't just buy it once — you maintain it. It takes up space. The spinning drive consumes electricity, wears out, produces noise. And none of it is justified — you do not add anything to your data's chances of surv
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"The spinning drive consumes electricity,"
Who the fuck uses spinning drives now days?
Your shopping lists are for new stuff made TODAY. I can still get SATAII hot-swap drive bays for $10. My old Antec case came with them built-in (and the case was only $90.) Do you not know how to bargain shop?
"Safe in case of a fire?!"
I can tell you have never dealt with computer users whom are smokers. It's really easy - ashtray catches on fire due to negligence/carelessness. No time to unplug the computer tower - just gra
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I have. Apparently you've never built and tested RAID 1 *MIRRORED* drive arrays, before.
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Utter bullshit. The second drive will not fail "randomly", but through the torture of the rebuild process. Single-drive redundancy like RAID5 is just a good way to lose 100% of your data instead of some of it (individual separate drives). It is BARELY better than non-redundant RAID1 spanning. I don't trust it at all for anyth
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Yes, there is such an opinion [open-e.com] too. But that just confirms, what I said: hot spare is a waste — of money and space.
Do you have any numbers — how much more reliable is Z3 compared to Z2? But, in any case, you seem to agree, that hot spare is a waste...
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You assume all those drives are the same, purchased at the same time and pace and will fail at the same time? They are not...In my case, the drives are ones I have scavenged from junk heaps and apart from being the same capacity (or nearly so) they are generally not the same. So failure is likely (and in my case, expected).
BTW, because I don't use the file server at home continually, I allow the drives to spin down when idle, so they are not just grinding away 24/7. Sure, I sacrifice a bit of delay when
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Not at all — that's a recipe for a correlated failure. My calculations expect the drives to be similar in characteristics — with the real MTTF of 100000 hours (which is about 1/10th of what the manufacturers claim) — but with failures randomly spread across that period. Drives from the same batch doing the same work in the same enclosure will, likely, start dying together.
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Not at all — that's a recipe for a correlated failure. My calculations expect the drives to be similar in characteristics — with the real MTTF of 100000 hours (which is about 1/10th of what the manufacturers claim) — but with failures randomly spread across that period. Drives from the same batch doing the same work in the same enclosure will, likely, start dying together.
,
I have a scrap heap of drives with few similarities other than size. I think 2 where actually purchased for this application at different times, the rest where sourced from who knows where. So your assumptions are incorrect. Plus, not all my drives spin, the "Hot spare" actually only spins when it gets tested every few days. So your "it is not worth it" opinion is not shared by this operator mainly because I am often away from home for days at a time and wouldn't be able to get hands on the hardware.
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The whole point is, it does not buy you anything. You may as well pray for your data — "just in case".
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The whole point is, it does not buy you anything. You may as well pray for your data — "just in case".
Late breaking news.... One of my array's drives actually failed yesterday during a routine Antivirus scan... Guess what? My array rebuilt automatically restoring redundancy using the hot standby, all while I was at work and couldn't do a thing about it. No data loss and full redundancy restored w/o any operator interaction. Seems it actually DID buy me something in this case..
Now to start my evil plan of slowly replacing the 1 Gig drives in my array with bigger ones and increasing the available space... O
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They all fail.. It's just a matter of time...
When you run junk like I have, plan for failure or don't expect to keep your data..
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RAID != backup Please try to remember that kids. It has its place but don't be fool enough to think RAID will save you. RAID is perfectly happy to copy corrupt data until the bad drive is marked as failed. RAID is really only useful when a drive goes immediately from ON and working properly to OFF and dead.
Why are they expensive? (Score:2)
If you can get 512Gbits on one chip why are they expensive? Unless yields are low chips are not expensive to manufacture.
Re:Why are they expensive? (Score:5, Informative)
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COGS has little direct correlation to what the market will bear.
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If you can get 512Gbits on one chip why are they expensive? Unless yields are low chips are not expensive to manufacture.
I know this one! "3D lithography" is actually just regular lithography with an ridiculous amount of chemical deposition layers (64 in this case). Each layer has steps to add, subtract and verify that layer was properly made. Overall, this can take several weeks before a wafer is completed and yes, there are defects and they track those defects. They have a suitably high yield or they don't bother making them until they work out the process so that they do. Much of the work is done by machines but human
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If you can get 512Gbits on one chip why are they expensive? Unless yields are low chips are not expensive to manufacture.
I think they are expensive to manufacture, particularly depending on which process node. Also, are these NAND chip 1-bit, 2-bit or more bits per cell? That translates into very sensitive voltage sensing, which increases the manufacturing complexity
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If you can get 512Gbits on one chip why are they expensive? Unless yields are low chips are not expensive to manufacture.
Lots of layers = lots of potential for flaws = lower yields. If there's a 99% of a good layer then for 64 layers you only have 0.99^64 = 52% chance of a good chip.
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"So make twice as many and have a 104% yield" said the PHB.
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Samsung is obviously copying them.
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Western Digital Still in Business? (Score:3)
Maybe I'm just not keeping up, but Western Digital seems to have been on a downward path for quite a long time....I'm not sure why they are still in business.
Back in the early 90's, WD drives were OK, but seagate had a better reputation for anything important. Since then, they seem to have just languished - acquiring other companies products. Their enterprise/datacenter drives aren't that bad, but seagate still seems to rule the roost. On the consumer end, quality control has been quite hit or miss and despite their making ever larger drives at cheaper prices, I would never trust their drives with anything important.
As for SSD's, their competition has really been for the last several years between intel vs samsung versus 3rd parties (kingston/seagate/etc). Does WD sell a lot of SSD's comparatively?
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Western Digital seems to have been on a downward path for quite a long time....I'm not sure why they are still in business.
Seagate had a real rough period a few years back. Their 1.5TB models especially had a lot of trouble. A lot of people are still boycotting them for that reason. Not sure how long your "long time" is.
Boycotting manufacturers rather than models is pointless, but it's like banks. People get screwed and vow never to give money to X again, even though Y and Z are equally likely to screw them.
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Seagate had a real rough period a few years back
Few years back? I can't remember a time when Seagate wasn't having problems. Hell back in the 90's it was so bad that you could get factory sealed boxes(80 units) all DOA. And a few years later, the same thing happened again, and again in the 00's. It leads me to believe that Seagate operates on a "just good enough" margin of failure, and sometimes when they try to shave a few extra pennies per unit, it leads to multiple failures or multiple batch failures.
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WD has had the market share lead over Seagate for several years now, although they are fairly close.
Western Digital has also been more willing to embrace SSDs than Seagate. They had some SSDs that were nothing ground breaking but they were available and more recently (Q2 2016) they've bought out Sandisk which gave them NAND fab capacity via Sandisk's joint venture with Toshiba.
The last quarter I was able to find data for was Q3 2016 Western Digital is the second leading brand of SSDs (15.5% of market) behi
Re:Western Digital Still in Business? (Score:5, Insightful)
Nobody with truly important data trusts any drives with anything important. Local and cloud storage have gotten so cheap it's trivial to have multiple backups and RAID redundancy. If I could have a nickel for every person who comes to me begging to help them recover data off a drive which stopped working... Often they're faced with paying a recovery service $500+, all because they were too cheap to spend $80 on an external backup drive, or $20 for a USB flash drive (need to refresh these every few years for maximum safety) or some blank DVDs.
If you have a Gmail account, Google already gives you free unlimited cloud storage [google.com] of all your photos up to 16 MP. They also let you store videos for free, although I haven't been able to find what the limits are (used to be 15 minutes max per video, but I believe the new limit is just 1080p). If you have Amazon Prime, it also includes unlimited storage of any size photos [amazon.com]. And if you subscribe to Office 365, it includes 1 TB of cloud storage. Please, take advantage of these to back up the irreplaceable photos and videos of your wedding, your child's birth, your child's first steps, etc. It's disheartening having to tell people they will have to choose between recovering these precious memories and a half month's rent.
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They've also got a lot of more traditional stuff too - I believe WD bought over Toshiba's 3.5" hard drive business, and they also bought over Toshiba's NAND flash business very recently (a few weeks ago). (Remember, Toshiba invented NAND flash).
Not sure what happens to OCZ, Sandisk, or DiskOnChip, the first Toshiba bought to have their line of SSDs, the second Toshiba acquired cheaply (Sandisk used Toshiba NAND anyways), and ditto DiskOnChip.
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They've also got a lot of more traditional stuff too - I believe WD bought over Toshiba's 3.5" hard drive business, and they also bought over Toshiba's NAND flash business very recently (a few weeks ago). (Remember, Toshiba invented NAND flash).
Not sure what happens to OCZ, Sandisk, or DiskOnChip, the first Toshiba bought to have their line of SSDs, the second Toshiba acquired cheaply (Sandisk used Toshiba NAND anyways), and ditto DiskOnChip.
This has a lot less to do with WD going shopping and more to do with Toshiba's financial problems leading to a yard sale.
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WD is the largest and most profitable HDD vendor. Of course they have been buying others, when you're that big why wouldn't you buy your way into every segment.
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I know it is only anecdotal, but I have mostly WD drives (all mechanical), as I have had the best experience with them, and had bad luck with Seagate in particular.
I have a 320GB and a 500GB(ish?) external WD. Both have been hauled around in a laptop bag on airplanes and helicopters for years. Still work great. Have much newer 1.5TG and 2TB WD externals which have done the same, but not as long. I have (desktop external) 320GB, 750GB, 2TB and 4TB WD models (you can kind of guess the ages by the sizes) all s
PCIe RAID (Score:3)
I'm interested to know what /.ers opinions are on PCIe and RAID.
We run SATA SSDs as RAID1 or RAID6 in our servers and support for PCIe RAID is not great yet.
Are PCIe drives so reliable now, as to not needing RAID?
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Software RAIDs (e.g, md or raidz) don't care if its SATA, SAS or PCIe, they only need the block devices.
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I think the larger problem with nvme RAID is holding enough modules to get any capacity. There's only so many keyed slots. Do they make a 16x PCIe card that will take 4 nvme sticks at a time?
Nvme is wicked fast but it's difficult to get it to scale up in capacity with redundancy because of connectivity limitations. Do they make any cabinets that take nvme modules? Connected via SAS-12 it might not be too bad.
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Yes, there are PCIe cards with 4 m.2 slots (e.g. https://www.servethehome.com/the-dell-4x-m-2-pcie-x16-version-of-the-hp-z-turbo-quad-pro/ [servethehome.com]).
And there are plenty of rack servers with internal PCIe switches for up to 24 U.2 (2.5") devices.
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I guess I'm still left wondering how you scale this out to 10s/100s and more terabytes the way you would with 'ordinary' SAS/SATA drives and an expansion bus and enclosures. I would think that at some level of stripe depth with SAS bus flash disk you're getting very large scaling while still delivering throughput and latency competitive with nvme for all but the most corner usage cases.
Re:PCIe RAID (Score:4, Informative)
Are PCIe drives so reliable now, as to not needing RAID?
Personally, I never want a single point-of-failure in my storage system, no matter how reliable the devices are. Good NVMe SSD drives aren't cheap though, so I can imagine people running them without RAID if they're very confident about their backups and can withstand a bit of downtime.
What I find really interesting though is pushing the limits of performance by striping two or more of these drives together in RAID 0.
You're right, however, that hardware support for PCIe RAID is not really there yet.
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WD drives hold my hosts file and the access is very very fast, much faster than adblock!