SSD Longevity
Sallyanne Renolds (8890) 8 posts |
Hello everyone. I’m about to install an SSD boot disc onto my RPi400 and while I had a read about SSD experiences being very positive on the forums I was wondering if anyone can give an update on the drive’s longevity after a few years of use (posts go back to about 2019). It is my understanding that the SSD algorithms are not aware of filecore partitions and, therefore, do not spread read/writes across the disk thus reducing the drive’s life. Thanks in advance. SR |
David J. Ruck (33) 1635 posts |
I’ve been using a 120GB SanDisk Plus with a USB to SATA adaptor with my RISC OS Pi 4B for the past 3 years, it had been used for 4 years in a Windows laptop before that. Last time I checked the amount of data written to it, the usage by RISC OS was just a rounding error. None of other the mainly Samsung SSDs I’ve been using in Windows and Linux systems for almost 10 years have failed, so it’s pretty likely that the RISC OS one will do quite a few more years yet. However, always make sure you have a regular and preferably automated multi layer backup system in place, as any type of storage can fail at any time. SSDs should go read only if they detect problems, but there is a chance they could fail and be completely unreadable. |
Chris Mahoney (1684) 2165 posts |
Mine’s probably around eight years old at this point and I haven’t had any issues. |
Sallyanne Renolds (8890) 8 posts |
Thank you, David. Thanks Chris. Good to know! **E.g. StarTech Dual M.2 SATA Enclosure – RAID – USB 3.1 Gen 2 USB C / USB A |
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
No risk here, since it does not work this way. But the lack of TRIM IS a real problem. On my system, benchmarks are now half (still 160MB/s) of what they were when I bought the system (ealier this year). Of course, don’t expect much more speed with an USB SSD. |
Sallyanne Renolds (8890) 8 posts |
Thanks David (F). Truth be told I’d be happy with my current speeds. Any speed the SSD contributes will be a bonus. I’m more concerned about losing data. Are you using a titanium? |
David Feugey (2125) 2709 posts |
Nope: a FAST from RISCOSbits. Nota: format your SSD with 256GB-1MB size (for example with PartMgr), else Free will not work. |
Stuart Painting (5389) 714 posts |
I think that may have been my fault (when composing the wiki pages I thought there were other issues besides TRIM). I’ve altered the Wiki pages to correctly mention TRIM. My apologies for the poor wording previously on those pages. |
Chris Gransden (337) 1207 posts |
If you’re worried about drive longevity, type and size of drive have a much bigger impact than lack of TRIM support. e.g. for Samsung SATA SSD. Samsung drives have a dedicated SDRAM cache. Cheaper brands may have no cache or use a dedicated NAND cache. Write performance can drop drastically after writing a certain amount of data. The warranty is based on the TBW or a number of years. Whichever comes first. Typically the bigger the drive and the lower the number of MLC bits the higher the TBW (Terrabytes written). The largest filecore partition size is 256GB. So just get a bigger drive and format it as 256GB and/or spend more to get a 2-bit MLC drive.
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Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
Not all SD cards are alike. Some may simply not work, at all. |
Steffen Huber (91) 1953 posts |
Always worth mentioning that, but in a thread about SSDs? |
Sallyanne Renolds (8890) 8 posts |
David, Nice! My next purchase, perhaps.
So, Stuart, you’re to blame for my SSD anxiety! Anyway, totally understandable when dealing with complexities such as these, so no need to apologise. Besides, your work and the wiki is an admirable effort!
Good to know Chris. I really have to brush up on this technology.
It is always worth mentioning. So far, I haven’t had any trouble with my Verbatim and SanDisk micro SD cards. Not that I checked, they just worked, but I will keep an eye on that list. Thank you. |
Rick Murray (539) 13840 posts |
The “Wiki pages” text above in Stuart’s post is actually two separate links. Click the “pages” and you’ll see why I mentioned this here. |
Sallyanne Renolds (8890) 8 posts |
I see your point, thanks. Thanks to all of you, actually! |
Alan Adams (2486) 1149 posts |
My experience may not be typical, but on my ARMX6 the Samsung 256GB SSD started misbehaving after about 4 years use. Problems showed up as failures (at random) to boot, or occasional lockups. When I replaced it with spinning rust, the problems went away. I’ve since replaced it with another Samsung 256GBSSD, and so far no problems. The ARMX6 uses a SATA connection from the motherboard. |
Mr Rooster (1610) 20 posts |
I’ve not used SSDs under RO, but it’s worth mentioning one experience I have had. I’ve always used Samsung SSDs (horrible company, but they do make the best SSDs), I’ve only ever had one issue, with an 850PRO SATA drive, it developed read errors after a few years. (I think this was database related). I’d bought it from Amazon, and unbeknown to me it was a grey import, so I had an issue where Samsung would acknowledge it was one of their drives, and was covered by a 10 year warranty, but because it had been destined for the US market not the EU one they refused to honour it. Apparently I should be party to the distribution lines of everyone I buy from or something?? Generally the larger the SSD the more ‘levels’ used in the flash, an increase in levels translates to a decrease in write speed, multi level flash actually have write speeds that are fairly similar to standard HDs. Most SSDs get round this by having a few gig of fast flash, and then internally shuffle the data around, so if you write a lot of data at once then your write speed will tank. I’d be impressed if you could hit this data volume on RO though. |