What SSDs should you use in your servers and why it matters

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  • Опубликовано: 3 окт 2024

Комментарии • 24

  • @oanthatakealeboga571
    @oanthatakealeboga571 5 месяцев назад +8

    She explained it waaaaay better than any othe video on RUclips... Perfect and clear...

    • @scanitsolutions
      @scanitsolutions  5 месяцев назад +1

      Thanks for the kind feedback, glad to hear you found the video useful. - JG

  • @avg_joe117
    @avg_joe117 4 месяца назад +1

    8:00 I was trying to decide if I should buy small sizes or large sizes. Makes sense now, for reducing rebuild time.

  • @chasekaleikilo7150
    @chasekaleikilo7150 Год назад +2

    Answered many questions of mine, thanks!

    • @scanitsolutions
      @scanitsolutions  10 месяцев назад

      Thanks for the feedback, we're glad you found the video useful. - JG

  • @jedipdx0
    @jedipdx0 Год назад +2

    this was incredible

  • @parky85666
    @parky85666 2 года назад +5

    Great video guys, the QLC vs TLC vs MLC vs SLC was particularly useful. Do you find the enterprise drives tend to have higher read/write throughput or is this commonly the same across both consumer and enterprise?

    • @scanitsolutions
      @scanitsolutions  2 года назад +2

      Thanks for the feedback and question. All things being equal, i.e. bus type, (M.2, U.2, SATA, SAS) and bus speed (the number of PCIe lanes) enterprise drives have much faster sustained read and write throughput. Consumer drives are built for burst rather than sustained performance so their performance drops off a cliff after a few seconds. The graph at 3:31 in the video shows this phenomena. - JG

    • @randomdamian
      @randomdamian Год назад

      A new TLC is better than a older MLC but a MLC can have faster reaction speed

  • @dennisbusch7867
    @dennisbusch7867 4 месяца назад

    Hey i got a small network server with some 1tb hdds that sound not that good and i got 2 1tb intenso ssds
    How long will they last in the server
    I usually use 200-300 gb of them

  • @johnsmith-gy9zu
    @johnsmith-gy9zu Год назад +6

    I was sad this morning, all i needed was a beautiful blonde girl talking about ssd, feeling better now

  • @anintrestedparty7750
    @anintrestedparty7750 2 года назад +3

    Came back and watched this again after seeing the best data center SSD video. They work really well together.

  • @johncollins4888
    @johncollins4888 5 месяцев назад

    I have a hold house solar system with the power grid as backup. So I would like to use SSDs!

  • @alfred572
    @alfred572 Год назад +1

    amazing!! thanks!!

  • @syleishere
    @syleishere 2 года назад +1

    I don't think you can justify the cost of enterprise SSD over consumer SSD based on fact servers run on UPS. Power protection is a moot point.
    I'd focus more on writes and setting up a ZFS storage with many SSDs in a pass through scenario in a raid 0, then using rsync to copy data off it once a night to the rust bucket spinning mechanical drives offsite backup.
    A better question would be is it more cost effective long term to get a cheap dell r710 used server and stack a ton of PCIe 3.0 drives in them, or just get a microtech motherboard with PCIe 5.0 and go all PCIe 5.0 nvme SSDs longterm
    I think your most likely better off taking price difference between consumer and enterprise SSDs and putting that towards buying more SSDs so you have enough storage space for all your files, backups and database files.
    Making sure server never goes offline should always be first priority. Colocation with backup generators, or at home you can go UPS. Your probably better off at home getting an inverter, lifepov4 280ah batteries from China with 6000 cycles and some solar panels though long-term.

    • @scanitsolutions
      @scanitsolutions  2 года назад

      Thanks for the detailed feedback on the video and suggested storage configurations.
      We agree that power-loss protection is a secondary selling point for enterprise SSDs, which is why we put it towards the end of the video compared to more important factors, such as performance consistency and endurance.
      On the other hand, having that extra bit of peace of mind you get from power-loss protection can only be a good thing. It would be interesting to know how much it actually costs to implement in SSDs, but we haven't seen any data specifically on that. - JG

    • @syleishere
      @syleishere 2 года назад +1

      @@scanitsolutions For home server, I don't think would matter much. For datacenter or company, I'd probably go enterprise just for that piece of mind for sure. Company is abit different story as warranty plays a big factor with them if anything fails.

    • @scanitsolutions
      @scanitsolutions  2 года назад

      True enough, the biggest cost for most companies in situations like this is downtime rather than actual data loss as the data should be backed up somewhere else anyway regularly. - JG

    • @tenand11
      @tenand11 6 месяцев назад

      खूपच विद्वान दिसायलेत तुम्ही लोकं