On 5/4/2011 9:06 PM, Scott Marlowe wrote:
Most of it is. But certain parts are fairly new, i.e. the controllers. It is quite possible that all these various failing drives share some long term ~ 1 year degradation issue like the 6Gb/s SAS ports on the early sandybridge Intel CPUs. If that's the case then the just plain up and dying thing makes some sense.
That Intel SATA port circuit issue was an extraordinarily rare screwup. So ok, yeah...I said that chips don't just keel over and die mid-life and you came up with the one counterexample in the history of the industry :) When I worked in the business in the 80's and 90's we had a few things like this happen, but they're very rare and typically don't escape into the wild (as Intel's pretty much didn't). If a similar problem affected SSDs, they would have been recalled and lawsuits would be underway. SSDs are just not that different from anything else. No special voodoo technology (besides the Flash devices themselves). -- Sent via pgsql-general mailing list (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx) To make changes to your subscription: http://www.postgresql.org/mailpref/pgsql-general