Page 35 of 220 FirstFirst ... 25323334353637384585135 ... LastLast
Results 851 to 875 of 5495

Thread: SSD Write Endurance 25nm Vs 34nm

  1. #851
    Xtreme X.I.P.
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    2,838
    The 320 can report another value for "wearout"

    Look at post #799, could be that I've already been there as I've done a few extra tests on the 320 Series, will check when I get back home later tonight.
    -
    Hardware:

  2. #852
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    609
    Morning update:
    214 hours, 62.8925TiB, Wear Leveling Count and Percentage of the rated lifetime used has gone from 66 to 64.
    Avg speed for all 214 hours is roughly is 85.6 MiB/s

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	M4-CT064 M4SSD2 SATA Disk Device_1GB-20110710-1158.PNG 
Views:	1466 
Size:	106.9 KB 
ID:	117496
    1: AMD FX-8150-Sabertooth 990FX-8GB Corsair XMS3-C300 256GB-Gainward GTX 570-HX-750
    2: Phenom II X6 1100T-Asus M4A89TD Pro/usb3-8GB Corsair Dominator-Gainward GTX 460SE/-X25-V 40GB-(Crucial m4 64GB /Intel X25-M G1 80GB/X25-E 64GB/Mtron 7025/Vertex 1 donated to endurance testing)
    3: Asus U31JG - X25-M G2 160GB

  3. #853
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Posts
    87
    Quote Originally Posted by Anvil View Post
    The 320 can report another value for "wearout"

    Look at post #799, could be that I've already been there as I've done a few extra tests on the 320 Series, will check when I get back home later tonight.
    I was hoping that might be useful.

  4. #854
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Posts
    211
    Too bad the Samsung and the Crucial have crippled SMART data. Intel is still the best at this point in time. Hoping they get their act together and develop their own 6gbps controller with 34nm NAND and best for 4K random read / write ( only few care about sequential ) !!!

  5. #855
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    609
    Eveningupdate:
    225,5 hours, 66.3894 TiB, Wear Leveling Count and Percentage of the rated lifetime used has gone from 64 to 62.
    Avg speed for all 214 hours is roughly is 85,75 MiB/s

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	M4-CT064 M4SSD2 SATA Disk Device_1GB-20110710-2327.PNG 
Views:	1349 
Size:	104.6 KB 
ID:	117512
    1: AMD FX-8150-Sabertooth 990FX-8GB Corsair XMS3-C300 256GB-Gainward GTX 570-HX-750
    2: Phenom II X6 1100T-Asus M4A89TD Pro/usb3-8GB Corsair Dominator-Gainward GTX 460SE/-X25-V 40GB-(Crucial m4 64GB /Intel X25-M G1 80GB/X25-E 64GB/Mtron 7025/Vertex 1 donated to endurance testing)
    3: Asus U31JG - X25-M G2 160GB

  6. #856
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Las Vegas
    Posts
    936
    Quote Originally Posted by bulanula View Post
    Too bad the Samsung and the Crucial have crippled SMART data.
    Huh? I think the Crucials have the most comprehensive SMART attributes of any of the SSDs in this experiment.

  7. #857
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Las Vegas
    Posts
    936
    Quote Originally Posted by johnw View Post
    92.630 TiB, 262 hours, sa177: 1/1/7588
    102.957 TiB, 290 hours, sa177: 1/1/8517

    The other two unknown SMART attributes, 178 and 235, are still at 72/72/276 and 99/99/2, just as they were when the SSD was fresh out of the box.

  8. #858
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    609
    Morning update:
    237 hours, 69,87084 TiB, Wear Leveling Count and Percentage of the rated lifetime used has gone from 62 to 60.
    Avg speed for all 237 hours is roughly is 85,87 MiB/s

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	M4-CT064 M4SSD2 SATA Disk Device_1GB-20110711-1059.PNG 
Views:	1319 
Size:	110.6 KB 
ID:	117533
    1: AMD FX-8150-Sabertooth 990FX-8GB Corsair XMS3-C300 256GB-Gainward GTX 570-HX-750
    2: Phenom II X6 1100T-Asus M4A89TD Pro/usb3-8GB Corsair Dominator-Gainward GTX 460SE/-X25-V 40GB-(Crucial m4 64GB /Intel X25-M G1 80GB/X25-E 64GB/Mtron 7025/Vertex 1 donated to endurance testing)
    3: Asus U31JG - X25-M G2 160GB

  9. #859
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Posts
    2,597
    Hi Vapor, any chance of showing the writes that have occurred following notification that the MWI is exhausted? Maybe a hatched extension on the bar in the MWI Exhaustion graph?

    I'm surprised at how much the Samsung 470 has been able to write after MWI exhaustion. At this rate it will be able to double the amount of data it took to exhaust the MWI.

    Is anyone else going to getting a SF2xxx drive to test? If not I might pick one up. One "hacked" and one with throttling enabled would be interesting.

  10. #860
    Xtreme X.I.P.
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    2,838
    Quote Originally Posted by Ao1 View Post
    Looking at info I could find on the web....
    I'll find out on mine as well, just need to get an opportunity to power down for a few minutes.
    +
    ^ look in your PM.

    Quote Originally Posted by One_Hertz View Post
    190.5TB. 1%. Still 19 sectors.
    I've reached the magical point except the SSD clearly doesn't care.


    I'll try to get a special build for you later today, in order to find that special SMART attribute for reporting wearout.
    I've figured out the Host writes on the 320 series using totally undocumented vendor specific info returned by WMI.

    --

    149.40TB Host writes
    MWI 18
    Reallocated sectors : 6
    MD5, all tests were OK.

    @Vapor

    A P/E count chart would be useful in general. (TiB written/capacity)
    Last edited by Anvil; 07-11-2011 at 02:54 AM.
    -
    Hardware:

  11. #861
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Posts
    211
    Is nobody going to take out my offer and start testing endurance in terms of secure erases. This is just like writing the whole capacity of the SSD in a couple of seconds as it "zaps" the SSD NAND cells and resets them to 0. Anyone interested so we can see how durable this mechanism is and how many times it can be secure erased before it fails ??? Maybe an automated hdparm script or something. Anyone ???

    This really is a valid point that also needs to be tested if we are talking about SSD endurance.

    Or maybe test it on the V2 drive so we can see how many secure erases it can take if the standard endurance test failed because of throttling etc. ???

  12. #862
    SLC
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Ottawa, Canada
    Posts
    2,795
    ^^

    You need to repower the drive every time you do a secure erase. Nobody is going to sit there and do it.

  13. #863
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Posts
    87
    Quote Originally Posted by bulanula View Post
    Is nobody going to take out my offer and start testing endurance in terms of secure erases. This is just like writing the whole capacity of the SSD in a couple of seconds as it "zaps" the SSD NAND cells and resets them to 0. Anyone interested so we can see how durable this mechanism is and how many times it can be secure erased before it fails ??? Maybe an automated hdparm script or something. Anyone ???

    This really is a valid point that also needs to be tested if we are talking about SSD endurance.

    Or maybe test it on the V2 drive so we can see how many secure erases it can take if the standard endurance test failed because of throttling etc. ???
    It appears you have it covered.
    Keep us posted on how your testing goes.

  14. #864
    Admin
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Ann Arbor, MI
    Posts
    12,338
    Quote Originally Posted by Ao1 View Post
    Hi Vapor, any chance of showing the writes that have occurred following notification that the MWI is exhausted? Maybe a hatched extension on the bar in the MWI Exhaustion graph?
    That was the intention when I first made it, thanks for reminding me

    Anvil, do you mean a bar chart with P/E cycles? Or a bar chart with normalized writes? Unfortunately, only the Crucials, the Samsung, and the SandForce show anything directly related to NAND writes (and therefore P/E cycles).

    C300 update from earlier today, didn't have a chance to post.

    29.971TiB, 90 MWI, 505 P/E cycles, 61.8MiB/s, ~240/0 MD5 runs/mismatches

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	29_971t.PNG 
Views:	1273 
Size:	131.1 KB 
ID:	117544

  15. #865
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    609
    Eveningupdate:
    248,5 hours, 72,6775 TiB, Wear Leveling Count and Percentage of the rated lifetime used has gone from 60 to 59.
    Avg speed for all 248,5 hours is roughly is 85,18 MiB/s (avg has gone down some due to 30 min of win update)

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	M4-CT064 M4SSD2 SATA Disk Device_1GB-20110711-2228.PNG 
Views:	1344 
Size:	115.0 KB 
ID:	117546
    1: AMD FX-8150-Sabertooth 990FX-8GB Corsair XMS3-C300 256GB-Gainward GTX 570-HX-750
    2: Phenom II X6 1100T-Asus M4A89TD Pro/usb3-8GB Corsair Dominator-Gainward GTX 460SE/-X25-V 40GB-(Crucial m4 64GB /Intel X25-M G1 80GB/X25-E 64GB/Mtron 7025/Vertex 1 donated to endurance testing)
    3: Asus U31JG - X25-M G2 160GB

  16. #866
    Xtreme X.I.P.
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    2,838
    Quote Originally Posted by Vapor View Post
    Anvil, do you mean a bar chart with P/E cycles? Or a bar chart with normalized writes? Unfortunately, only the Crucials, the Samsung, and the SandForce show anything directly related to NAND writes (and therefore P/E cycles).
    No, I meant "Host writes" / Capacity, which can be used by all* drives and it should be pretty close to the P/E count for the Intels.
    (all drives if using the running total option)

    We will need something as the counters stops telling what's going on and that time has come for the 320, unless we find some way to get to the other wear-out counter, it would still leave the X25 series out in the cold as there is no extra wear-out counter.

    It's not much but it's something.
    -
    Hardware:

  17. #867
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Las Vegas
    Posts
    936
    Quote Originally Posted by johnw View Post
    102.957 TiB, 290 hours, sa177: 1/1/8517
    110.000 TiB, 309 hours, sa177: 1/1/9123

    The other two unknown SMART attributes, 178 and 235, are still at 72/72/276 and 99/99/2, just as they were when the SSD was fresh out of the box.

    110 TiB comes to 66.2 GB per day for 5 years. So the Samsung 470 64GB SSD has passed the milestone where you could have written the entire available capacity of the SSD, 64GB, each and every day for 5 years.

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	smart_cdi_20110711_1728.png 
Views:	1292 
Size:	46.3 KB 
ID:	117554

  18. #868
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Las Vegas
    Posts
    936
    Quote Originally Posted by Ao1 View Post
    Is anyone else going to getting a SF2xxx drive to test? If not I might pick one up. One "hacked" and one with throttling enabled would be interesting.
    The 60GB Corsair Force GT is $145 on newegg ($155 - $10 for promo code HARDOCPX7X6D until 7/12)

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820233193

  19. #869
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Nov 2004
    Posts
    239
    Quote Originally Posted by Vapor View Post
    The tester chose to stop testing but the drive was still functioning as intended
    I completely disagree with that statement. Nobody buys an SSD to run at those speeds. For all intensive purposes, it experienced failure.
    | Intel 2500K @ 5GHz | Noctua NH-D14 | Asus P67 Sabertooth | Samsung 2x4GB DDR3 @ 2133 MHz | Crucial M4 256GB | Asus GTX 770 OC | OCZ Fatal1ty 750W | Qnix QX2710

    History: AXP-2400M, AXP-2500M, Core2 E6600 - all minimum 50% overclock

  20. #870
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    609
    261 hours, 76,4858 TiB, Wear Leveling Count and Percentage of the rated lifetime used has gone from 59 to 57.
    Avg speed for all 261 hours is roughly is 85,35 MiB/s

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	M4-CT064 M4SSD2 SATA Disk Device_1GB-20110712-1058.PNG 
Views:	1138 
Size:	119.9 KB 
ID:	117566
    1: AMD FX-8150-Sabertooth 990FX-8GB Corsair XMS3-C300 256GB-Gainward GTX 570-HX-750
    2: Phenom II X6 1100T-Asus M4A89TD Pro/usb3-8GB Corsair Dominator-Gainward GTX 460SE/-X25-V 40GB-(Crucial m4 64GB /Intel X25-M G1 80GB/X25-E 64GB/Mtron 7025/Vertex 1 donated to endurance testing)
    3: Asus U31JG - X25-M G2 160GB

  21. #871
    Xtreme X.I.P.
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    2,838
    Quote Originally Posted by johnw View Post
    110 TiB comes to 66.2 GB per day for 5 years. So the Samsung 470 64GB SSD has passed the milestone where you could have written the entire available capacity of the SSD, 64GB, each and every day for 5 years.
    Impressive, and it's not done for yet.

    Wonder when they release the 27nm drives, hopefully they'll include more SMART attributes.


    --

    152.06TB Host writes
    MWI 17
    Reallocated sector count 6

    MD5, no issues.
    -
    Hardware:

  22. #872
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2011
    Posts
    211
    Quote Originally Posted by One_Hertz View Post
    ^^

    You need to repower the drive every time you do a secure erase. Nobody is going to sit there and do it.
    Maybe somebody could setup a sort of script like this or something with an old unused device etc. ???

  23. #873
    SLC
    Join Date
    Oct 2004
    Location
    Ottawa, Canada
    Posts
    2,795
    198TB. 20 reallocated sectors. Md5 OK. Anvil - I will try your new app tonight to see if I can get that SMART attribute.

  24. #874
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Jun 2011
    Location
    Norway
    Posts
    609
    There was something wrong with xs last night so here are the numbers from yesterday evening:
    273 hours, 80,1158 TiB, Wear Leveling Count and Percentage of the rated lifetime used has gone from 57 to 54.
    Avg speed for all 273 hours is roughly is 85,47 MiB/s

    This mornings numbers are:
    283 hours, 83,1993 TiB, Wear Leveling Count and Percentage of the rated lifetime used has gone from 54 to 53.
    Avg speed for all 283 hours is roughly is 85,63 MiB/s

    Click image for larger version. 

Name:	M4-CT064 M4SSD2 SATA Disk Device_1GB-20110713-0907.PNG 
Views:	1011 
Size:	110.0 KB 
ID:	117586
    1: AMD FX-8150-Sabertooth 990FX-8GB Corsair XMS3-C300 256GB-Gainward GTX 570-HX-750
    2: Phenom II X6 1100T-Asus M4A89TD Pro/usb3-8GB Corsair Dominator-Gainward GTX 460SE/-X25-V 40GB-(Crucial m4 64GB /Intel X25-M G1 80GB/X25-E 64GB/Mtron 7025/Vertex 1 donated to endurance testing)
    3: Asus U31JG - X25-M G2 160GB

  25. #875
    Banned
    Join Date
    Jan 2010
    Location
    Las Vegas
    Posts
    936
    Quote Originally Posted by johnw View Post
    110.000 TiB, 309 hours, sa177: 1/1/9123
    118.719 TiB, 332 hours, sa177: 1/1/9774

    The other two unknown SMART attributes, 178 and 235, are still at 72/72/276 and 99/99/2, just as they were when the SSD was fresh out of the box.

Page 35 of 220 FirstFirst ... 25323334353637384585135 ... LastLast

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •