Thanks. It may be worth checking the temp periodically and warning the user in case it is too high (70ºC+ or something). Even for devices that allow internal throttling, a user might wish to know whether the device neads a (better) heatsink.
> On Dec 7, 2023, at 5:02 PM, Maxim Sobolev <sobo...@freebsd.org> wrote: > > How quickly it heats up depends on lots of factors. Usually those devices > burn some 3-7 watts per stick at 100% load, so maybe this would give you some > idea. At least some of them support several toggleable performance modes, > which use throttling internally to limit power consumption to a certain level > (man nvmecontril). It helped me recently to make a system stable, which > otherwise would hang with timeout after reaching 70-75C until I got the > chance to take it apart and attach a heatsinks to the nvmes. Once the > temperature dropped to <= 50C the drives become 100% stable. > > -Max > > On Thu, Dec 7, 2023, 4:07 PM Bakul Shah <ba...@iitbombay.org > <mailto:ba...@iitbombay.org>> wrote: >> On Dec 7, 2023, at 3:59 PM, Warner Losh <i...@bsdimp.com >> <mailto:i...@bsdimp.com>> wrote: >> > >> > >> > *Overheating caused hang of NVMe controller or PCI bridge on SSD, or >> > >> > Yes. Most drive's firmware when it overheats resets. There might be >> > something >> > that the pci code can do when this happens to retrain the link, reprogram >> > the >> > config registers, etc. >> >> How quickly can the device heat up? Can it be queried frequently >> enough act before it overheats by throttling io? >> >> >> >>