Rich Freeman <ri...@gentoo.org> wrote: > On Tue, May 19, 2015 at 11:22 AM, <gottl...@nyu.edu> wrote: > > On Tue, May 19 2015, Peter Humphrey wrote: > > > >> On Tuesday 19 May 2015 10:53:26 Rich Freeman wrote: > >>> On Tue, May 19, 2015 at 10:44 AM, Peter Humphrey <pe...@prh.myzen.co.uk> > >> wrote: > >>> > Incidentally, what's the received wisdom on frequency of file-system > >>> > trimming on SSDs these days? I've seen values quoted between twice a day > >>> > and once a week. And how does trimming affect btrfs? > > > > I included "discard" in fstab for my ssd filesystems, presumably > > following some installation guide. For example I have > > > > /dev/sda5 / ext4 noatime,discard 0 1 > > /dev/vg/local /local ext4 noatime,discard 0 2 > > > > Is it preferred to instead issue explicit trim's via cron? > > > > It depends. > > In theory giving your drive useful information about allocation now is > better than giving it the information later. The drive can make use > of that information to improve performance. > > In practice some drives have brain-dead firmware and they'll do stupid > things with that information. If you trim part of an erase block, the > drive should just file that info away and make use of that information > when it can. However, some drives will immediately copy/erase the > rest of the block at that moment, which creates an unnecessary erase > cycle and creates IO load at a moment that the drive is already busy. > > So, if your drive isn't brain-dead discard is better. If your drive > is brain-dead fstrim is almost as good if the drive isn't too full. > I've yet to test discard and see how well it works.
Do you know if the Samsung 850 evo or similar are considered brain-dead? -- Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: How do you spend it? John Covici cov...@ccs.covici.com