In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Hans Petter Selasky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: : On Sunday 21 August 2005 01:12, M. Warner Losh wrote: : > In message: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> : > : > Hans Petter Selasky <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: : > : On Saturday 20 August 2005 10:18, Mike Silbersack wrote: : > : > On Fri, 19 Aug 2005, Doug Ambrisko wrote: : > : > > Flash is nice but it has some issues. Atleast dropping it isn't one! : > : > > : > : > > Doug A. : > : > : > : > I'd be really happy if I could get a USB flash drive to last more than : > : > 8 months. Luckily, I started weekly backups after the first failure. : > : > That helped a lot when the second failure happened. : > : : > : Flash drives does usually not last more than 10000 writes, per bit, from : > : what I know. Probably you need some kind of special file-system that : > : moves the files around as the write quoute gets used up! Eventually the : > : size of the disk will reach zero, and you have to move the files : > : elsewhere :-) But this is probably off topic. : > : > Actually, 10,000 writes per bit is one or two orders of magnitude too : > low these days. It was more typical for the Linear Flash PCMCIA cards : > from 10 years ago. Today, typically flash devices are good for more : > like 100,000 or 500,000 writes per cell, and all the fobs you'd buy : > these days have built-in wear averaging. I've tried three times now : > to wear out a flash by writing an incrementing counter to a single : > location only to give up after weeks of hammering due to external : > factors (power failure, network failure, etc). : : Are you sure that the flash drive is not caching the writes in RAM?
Yes. I'm 100% positive. These devices do not have RAM. Warner _______________________________________________ [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-hackers To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"