On 05/23/2010 01:57 PM, Les Mikesell wrote:
Robert Nichols wrote:
Another thing to keep in mind is that the SATA spec. only requires the internal SATA connector to withstand 50 insertions. I picked up some nice acomdata (TM) eSATA housings for the drives (512-byte sectors, thankfully) I use for my offsite backup copies. The eSATA connector is spec-ed for 50,000 insertions. My laptop came with a warning about the life of that connector, and I found those ratings mentioned at http://www.serialata.org/technology/esata.asp .
The trayless internal hotswap enclosures claim to be good for 10,000+ insertions and I'm using larger ones for the desktop drives I had been using without any problems. I have seen some postings to the effect that I need a newer kernel to recognize the 4k sectors besides doing the partition alignment. Maybe I can boot the RHEL 6 beta or a fedora iso and see if they are faster.
Sounds good, unless that 10,000 insertion spec is predicated on spreading the usage among 200 drives such that no individual drives has more than 50 insertions. ;-(
BTW, I got carried away typing zeros in that spec. for the eSATA connector. The right number is 5,000 insertions, not 50,000.
If you want a good write-up on what the kernel developers have to contend with to handle these 4KiB sector sizes, see https://ata.wiki.kernel.org/index.php/ATA_4_KiB_sector_issues
For those with a strong stomach for such things, a nice historical perspective on the horrors of ever-increasing drive sizes can be found at http://www.win.tue.nl/~aeb/linux/Large-Disk.html . Just be sure to keep the 2004 date in mind when it mentions "recent kernels."