On 25/06/2023 18:28, Jaimie Vandenbergh wrote:
... whether SMR drives have got any better -- or, rather, have
they improved enough -- now that they have bigger cache and
controllers that clearly remap sectors to minimize rewriting.
They were, in fact, always fine for most purposes in a domestic PC.
The amount of cache around hides the issues almost all the time
because domestic PC use doesn't stress the caches.
Thanks for that insight, Jaimie.
Yes, for most domestic PCs (and for mine, much of the time) that's
certainly true. However I do know that some of the things I regularly
(though not frequently) do ARE likely to stress the caches. Most SMR
drives seem to have about 4 times the cache of a similar-sized CMR
drive, and this may be enough to avoid any problems -- I don't know,
which is why I'm after some real-world data.
I do appreciate that I am probably looking into this more deeply than I
need ...
The primary thing they're troublesome for is using in RAID
configurations ...
Yes, though why rebuilding a RAID array can't be done in such a way that
the writes are all sequential is a bit of a puzzle ... perhaps the issue
arises because the array is in use while it is rebuilding ...?
ZFS also gets a mention as having problems with SMR.
After the debacle of WD selling NAS-labelled SMR drives in 2020 or
so, they now declare themselves.
Most of the manufacturers seem to do so ... if you look hard enough at
the spec sheets and read enough small print. The only data sheets I've
come across recently that make no mention at all of SMR are dated around
2015 or so, and so probably predate the problem!
Back at the time, the clear answer was "get a >4TB HDD, it'll be
CMR":
If anything, it's the larger drives that seem more likely to be SMR,
these days, except for 'enterprise grade' drives and NAS drives which
tend to be CMR (for a reason) and more expensive. A good rule of thumb
seems to be that if it has 64MB cache it's probably CMR and if it has
256MB it's probably SMR (though larger/faster drives tend to have more
cache than smaller/slower/cheaper ones).
Do note that a drive that *doesn't* specify could be either SMR or
CMR but is very likely to be CMR. Don't pay double just because the
shop page says CMR
Indeed. Always go by the data sheets, and try to understand what you're
getting for the money. I know that.
--
Cheers,
Daniel.
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