[ale] SSD info you need to know ( was OT SSD remaining lifetime indicator)

Ron Frazier (ALE) atllinuxenthinfo at techstarship.com
Wed Sep 12 12:36:05 EDT 2012


Hi Ed Cashin,
and Sam Rakowski (prior post),

I'm glad you both liked the information I posted.  Actually, I always 
intended to post sources.  I just haven't done it yet.  However, I 
appreciate you jogging my memory.

The last couple of days, I've been having loads of "fun" changing every 
password on every website I log into and setting up Lastpass after 
Linkedin lost a large part of their user database a few months ago.  I 
KNOW you're supposed to have a different random password for each site, 
but I was trying to do something I could remember to log in to sites 
manually.  Well, no more.  When I'm done, each web login will be 
different, each will be random (excluding symbols) if the site allows 
it, and, unfortunately, I will be totally dependent on Lastpass to log 
into anything.  Those of you considering something like this, just do 
it.  These corporations will never, as a group, implement proper 
password storage systems.  I may post more about that later.  However, 
if anyone wants help configuring Lastpass, feel free to contact me.

I digress.  Anyway, back to SSD's.  I hope to post some more references 
in a few days.  When I was researching it, I probably looked at 100 - 
200 sites in a couple of days and saved links to 20 or 30.  It will take 
me a little while to distill and collate that information.  The post I 
wrote was all from memory, but was accurate as far as I know.  If I 
don't get it done in a couple of weeks, jog me again.

Here are a couple of things to get you started in the mean time if you 
want to do research.  The Tom's Hardware site is very useful.

http://www.tomshardware.com/s/ssd%20reliability/
      - Search for ssd reliability on Tom's Hardware site.

http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ssd-reliability-failure-rate,2923.html
      - Tom's Hardware - Is your SSD more reliable than a HDD?

You could also try Googling the following.  Really, I'm not trying to 
evade your question.  I'll just have to allocate a few hours to do 
better.  Please post any good sources your find.

      ssd reliability
      ssd wear level indicator
      ssd media wear
      ssd failure modes
      ssd data recovery
      ssd warranty
      ssd endurance

Sincerely,

Ron


On 9/12/2012 12:50 AM, Ed Cashin wrote:
> I agree that it was very interesting.  Ron Frazier, if you remember
> the sources you used, would you mind please listing them?  I like to
> keep track of sources when I find good info.  If it's too much
> trouble, nevermind and thanks anyway!
>
> On Sat, Sep 8, 2012 at 3:36 AM, Sam Rakowski<devnull at iamdevnull.info>  wrote:
>    
>> On Sat, 8 Sep 2012, Ron Frazier (ALE) wrote:
>>
>>      
>>> Date: Sat, 08 Sep 2012 01:56:35 -0400
>>> From: "Ron Frazier (ALE)"<atllinuxenthinfo at techstarship.com>
>>> Reply-To: Atlanta Linux Enthusiasts<ale at ale.org>
>>> To: Atlanta Linux Enthusiasts<ale at ale.org>
>>> Subject: Re: [ale] SSD info you need to know ( was OT SSD remaining lifetime
>>>      indicator)
>>>        
>>      
>>> Hi guys,
>>> I've been doing more research into SSD's since Rich posted the info about that special that Tiger Direct had.  This topic is complex and confusing.  It's late at night and I'm tired, but I wanted to post several things I've found out.  I hope to post more in depth data later, maybe.  Finding data on SSD reliability is hard and there's lots of FUD (fear uncertainty and doubt) out there.  Here is a synopsis of what I believe to be reliable data.  I don't have time tonight to distill and quote all the sources.
>>> Intel seems to be the king of the hill in terms of reliability.
>>> Much of this probably also applies to memory sticks and memory cards.
>>> 1) NAND endurance shouldn't be a problem with GOOD QUALITY consumer drives in consumer applications when you're writing less than 10 GB / day to the drive.  See the specs and warranty for details.  The drive should last it's warranted time, usually 3 or 5 years.  A good measure to look at is the TBW (terabytes written) spec, which would give you a maximum about of data you can write before degradation.  Use the worst case number.  If the drive provides it, the media wear indicator should provide a reasonable indicator of remaining life percentage, but not necessarily time.
>>> 2) Some warranties end when the media wear indicator reaches 1 (starting from 100).  So, if you use it within the specified limits, you get the 5 year (for example) warranty.  If you exceed those limits, in effect, it wears out when it wears out, and your warranty is over.
>>> 3) What is more alarming is that SSD's are, in many cases, more susceptible to glitches caused by power failures, system lockups, firmware problems, controller failures, etc.  Failures of this type can sometimes trash all your data.  Some of this you cannot control.  However, you probably want to review published data on fault protection for your existing or proposed drive, make sure it has power fail protection or add some of your own, and upgrade to the latest firmware and upgrade again if you hear about problems that have been corrected.
>>> 4) NAND chips made on a smaller fabrication process, 25 nm vs 34 nm, etc., have LESS endurance but have a LOWER price.  Typical endurance for 25 nm MLC NAND is 3000 program / erase cycles.
>>> 5) Look for a controller architecture with a typical WRITE AMPLIFICATION of less than 1.  Higher numbers wear out the chips faster.  The Sandforce 2xxx controllers are highly regarded here.
>>> 6) I find this one very disturbing.  Many of the drives have a POWER OFF DATA RETENTION spec.  For CONSUMER drives, this is 1 year.  For ENTERPRISE drives, this is 3 MONTHS!  If you want your drive to keep your data, keep it turned on.  Don't put data on the drive and put the drive on a shelf, otherwise you could come back and find the data has vanished.  Supposedly, if the drive is on, the controller is periodically scrubbing the NAND for weak cells and will regenerate or relocate the data.
>>> 7) If the drive glitches out, for whatever reason, data recovery may be difficult or impossible.  It will likely be expensive.  You have to find a data recovery company with intimate experience with your particular NAND / controller setup.  Encryption makes things even worse.
>>> 8) Although endurance may not be a problem for most users, STUDIES SHOW THAT SSD'S ARE NOT SUBSTANTIALLY MORE RELIABLE THAN HDD'S OVERALL.  Failure rates for SSD's in the first few years of life are in the 1% - 2% range, fairly comparable to hard drives.  In later years of life, HDD's have a failure rate of up to 7%.  Little long term data is available for SSD's.  Half of all HDD failures occur because of non mechanical reasons.  Those non mechanical things are similar in both HDD's and SSD's.  Because of the vulnerability of SSD's to glitches and the difficulty of data recovery, your data may be less safe on an SSD, endurance and physical shock resistance notwithstanding.
>>> (I believe that rock solid power protection, both surge protection and power failure protection, is one of the  best ways to improve computer reliability, including the SSD's.  The Smart UPS line from APC can boost sagging line voltage or cut excessive line voltage, to a point.  This type of equipment is especially important in GA, where we have the 2nd highest incidence of lightning in the USA.)
>>> 9) I have been able to find very little about the possible failure modes of the drive when it wears out.  However, Intel's documentation recommends that you replace the drive when the media wear indicator reaches 1 to avoid data loss.
>>> If you are considering or are using SSD's, I hope you find this useful.  Please feel free to add to the discussion from your own experience.  I certainly found these facts eye opening and somewhat disturbing.
>>>        
>> Excellent post. Full of useful information. Thank you very much.
>>
>> --
>> /dev/null
>> 4057 0DA0 0983 FFA1 8756  670F 754A 0CB9 A367 275B
>> http://devnull.iamdevnull.info/gpg.gpg
>> _______________________________________________
>> Ale mailing list
>> Ale at ale.org
>> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo/ale
>> See JOBS, ANNOUNCE and SCHOOLS lists at
>> http://mail.ale.org/mailman/listinfo
>>      
>
>
>    

-- 

(To whom it may concern.  My email address has changed.  Replying to former
messages prior to 03/31/12 with my personal address will go to the wrong
address.  Please send all personal correspondence to the new address.)

(PS - If you email me and don't get a quick response, you might want to
call on the phone.  I get about 300 emails per day from alternate energy
mailing lists and such.  I don't always see new email messages very quickly.)

Ron Frazier
770-205-9422 (O)   Leave a message.
linuxdude AT techstarship.com



More information about the Ale mailing list