On 1/13/2010 3:31 PM, Bob McConnell wrote: > Emanuel Machado wrote: >> Another issue to consider with SSDs is that they are based on Flash >> technology. Each flash cell can only be written on about 10,000 to >> 100,000 times or so (*), so if you're using extensive read/write on >> your server you will be impacted. SSD manufacturers go around this >> issue by giving some intelligence to the drive controllers, so that >> they minimize the per-cell usage (which means moving things around a >> bit internally, transparently to you), so in many cases you will not >> see any impact. However, I would be careful on what I run on it, and >> what services are enabled, maybe having another disk around for write >> intensive apps. > > No, you can write (append) as often as you like. It is the erase cycles > that are limited. So the chip life depends on how often those files get > deleted. But every time you append to a file the inode info is updated and the free space list may need to be rewritten so it dies when erase/write count is exceeded on the filesystem metadata. If you don't turn off atime updates, you'll rewrite even on file reads. -- Les Mikesell lesmikesell@xxxxxxxxx _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos