On Fri, Dec 05, 2014 at 10:58:09PM +0000, Elliott, Robert (Server Storage) wrote: > > I have a Crucial_CT256MX1 (i.e. MX100) and it does reliably zero. > > make me concerned about this whitelist approach. > > I think you need a manufacturer assertion that this is indeed > the design intent; you cannot be certain based on observation > from outside. How is this different from a manufacturer assertion that they follow a SCSI or ATA standard? There have been cases in the distant past (fortunately) of disk manufacturers that ignored a CACHE FLUSH command just to get higher Winbench scores. Does that mean we can't trust them to do anything right? What I'd suggest instead is that if a vendor states this on a spec sheet --- more than just an e-mail assertion --- so they can be sued if they knowingly misrepresent their product, that we take their word at it. Of course, there will be bugs, which is why we have blacklists, or why we can remove them from the list if it turns out there are edge conditions where it appears the disk doesn't quite do the right thing. After all, we generally take the manufacturer's word that air bags will work as claimed, even if potentially 11 million of them are currently subject to recall. And do we think that "the community" would necessarily be more suited than the vendors and the manufacturer to figure out whether or not air bags or drives are working as desired? That being said, if someone wants to create a open source program which stress tests SSD's to look for cases where it is dropping a requested discard, that would certainly be a good thing to do... Cheers, - Ted -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-scsi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html