> > > Then I started another set of 100 trials and let them run tonight, and > > the first 10 trials were around 1000s, then gradually decreased to > > ~300s, and finally settled around 200s with some trials below 70-80s. > > This to say, times are extremely variable and for the first time I > > noticed a sort of "performance increase" with time. > > > > The sheer volume of testing (probably some terabytes by now) would > exercise the wear leveling algorithm in the FTL. > But with "old kernel" the copy operation still is "fast", as far as i understood. If FTL (e.g. wear leveling) would slow down, we would see that also in the old kernel, right? Andrea, can you confirm that the same device used with the old fast kernel is still fast today? BR Carsten