Micron 5200 ECO 3.84TB SATA SSD $99.50

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Sacrilego

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Jun 23, 2016
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Seems like it didn't last too long. Listed at 129.89 + Shipping with no Make offer.
 
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Samir

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I've got a crazy inclination to put one of these in a nas along side a 4TB HD and run them raid1--bad idea?
 

Sacrilego

Now with more RGB!
Jun 23, 2016
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I've got a crazy inclination to put one of these in a nas along side a 4TB HD and run them raid1--bad idea?
I think it's a bad idea. While it may work, your speed is going to be limited to that of the HD.
 
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Samir

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I think it's a bad idea. While it may work, your speed is going to be limited to that of the HD.
Good point, although that wasn't what I was worried about. I was thinking more on the lines of the raid sync timing being outside of parameters (hdd to hdd timing or sdd to sdd timing vs hdd to sdd), so then it would think one of the drives is bad.
 
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amp88

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Jul 9, 2020
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I think most nas units use mdadm (or whatever it is today) so I think that aspect would be fine. Good to hear about zf handling it.
If you're using mdraid and you're able to manually configure it, you may wish to investigate the use of the write-mostly feature. Using this, your write speed will still be limited to the slowest member in the mirror, but your read performance should be that of the fastest member (your SSD in this case). For a mostly read workload from your NAS this could be a benefit.
 

unwind-protect

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Mar 7, 2016
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It is not certain that a RAID1 with one slow and one fast device will always perform at the level of the faster device for read access.

It would be rather trivial to stage reads so that they don't strictly alternate but get batched so that the faster device will satisfy multiple reads for every single read the slower device serves.
 
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Samir

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If you're using mdraid and you're able to manually configure it, you may wish to investigate the use of the write-mostly feature. Using this, your write speed will still be limited to the slowest member in the mirror, but your read performance should be that of the fastest member (your SSD in this case). For a mostly read workload from your NAS this could be a benefit.
Very neat to see this feature. I'm just using the usual single box commodity nas units, so probably can't do this without some sort of hacking, but interesting that it's possible.
 
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zunder1990

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Nov 15, 2012
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I got one of those drives wow they shipped it fast to me here in SC.
Smart says the drive has 46 power on hours and 4 power cycle, I find that a bit hard to believe
1699139094638.png
 
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Samir

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I got one of those drives wow they shipped it fast to me here in SC.
Smart says the drive has 46 power on hours and 4 power cycle, I find that a bit hard to believe
View attachment 32579
Could have been on some sort of offline backup array, hence the low duty cycle. I would look at the number bytes read and written to get a better idea of use as that's more critical for ssds anyways.