similar to: Intel Z-U130 SSD

Displaying 20 results from an estimated 10000 matches similar to: "Intel Z-U130 SSD"

2018 May 09
3
OT: hardware: sanitizing a dead SSD?
> Am 08.05.2018 um 21:46 schrieb Stephen John Smoogen <smooge at gmail.com>: > > On 8 May 2018 at 15:34, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: >> Anyone have any clues about how to sanitize a dead SSD? We haven't had it >> yet, but we're sure it's coming. Esp. since I'm a federal contractor, a >> dead disk gets deGaussed, but what the hell do you do
2015 Nov 18
1
Intel SSD
On 18/11/2015 16:37, Eero Volotinen wrote: > What is Intel SSD Data Center Tool (ISDCT) ? " This tool provides a command line interface for interacting with and issuning commands to Intel SSD Data Center devices. It is intended to configure and check the state of Intel PCIe SSDs and SATA SSDs for a production environment. " > Does Linux kernel detect disk on sata ports? >
2018 May 09
2
OT: hardware: sanitizing a dead SSD?
On 9 May 2018 at 07:18, Pete Biggs <pete at biggs.org.uk> wrote: > On Wed, 2018-05-09 at 13:00 +0200, Leon Fauster wrote: >> > Am 08.05.2018 um 21:46 schrieb Stephen John Smoogen <smooge at gmail.com>: >> > >> > On 8 May 2018 at 15:34, <m.roth at 5-cent.us> wrote: >> > > Anyone have any clues about how to sanitize a dead SSD? We
2018 May 08
8
OT: hardware: sanitizing a dead SSD?
Anyone have any clues about how to sanitize a dead SSD? We haven't had it yet, but we're sure it's coming. Esp. since I'm a federal contractor, a dead disk gets deGaussed, but what the hell do you do with a SSD?
2015 Nov 18
1
Intel SSD
Michael Hennebry wrote: > On Wed, 18 Nov 2015, Birta Levente wrote: > >> I have a supermicro server, motherboard is with C612 chipset and beside that with LSI3108 raid controller integrated.Two Intel SSD DC S3710 200GB. OS: Centos 7.1 up to date. >> >> My problem is that the Intel SSD Data Center Tool (ISDCT) does not recognize the SSD drives when they connected to the
2015 Nov 18
5
Intel SSD
Hi I have a supermicro server, motherboard is with C612 chipset and beside that with LSI3108 raid controller integrated. Two Intel SSD DC S3710 200GB. OS: Centos 7.1 up to date. My problem is that the Intel SSD Data Center Tool (ISDCT) does not recognize the SSD drives when they connected to the standard S-ATA ports on the motherboard, but through the LSI raid controller is working. Does
2015 Nov 18
2
Intel SSD
I always tell vendors I'm using RHEL, even though we're using CentOS. If you say CentOS, some vendors immediately throw up their hands and say "unsupported" and then won't even give you the time of day. A couple tricks for fooling tools into thinking they are on an actual RHEL system: 1. Modify /etc/redhat-release to say RedHat Enterprise Linux or whatever the actual RHEL
2008 Sep 10
7
Intel M-series SSD
Interesting flash technology overview and SSD review here: http://www.anandtech.com/cpuchipsets/intel/showdoc.aspx?i=3403 and another review here: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/Intel-x25-m-SSD,2012.html Regards, -- Al Hopper Logical Approach Inc,Plano,TX al at logical-approach.com Voice: 972.379.2133 Timezone: US CDT OpenSolaris Governing Board (OGB) Member - Apr 2005
2013 Jan 30
8
RAID 0 across SSD and HDD
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 I''ve been unable to find anything definitive about what happens if I use RAID0 to join an SSD and HDD together with respect to performance (latency, throughput). The future is obvious (hot data tracking, using most appropriate device for the data, data migration). In my specific case I have a 250GB SSD and a 500GB HDD, and about 250GB of
2011 May 20
3
SSD for Centos SWAP /tmp & /var/ partition
Has anyone actually used a SSD in a Centos setup? My little experiment with a s/h WD drive for /tmp and SWAP partitions kicked the bucket on Wednesday, when the poor WD drive caught the click-of-death. It was a s/h drive to start with and lasted about 4 months. But that was without the /var/log/ partition being written to it, as I mounted that back onto /var/log from the original drive. So
2012 Apr 17
3
SSD as system drive - partitioning question
I mentioned here the other day that I was planning to set up a Centos 6 system using a SSD for the system drive and a regular hard drive for a data drive. My plan is to have everything that doesn't change (much) on the SSD, such as /boot, /lib, /bin and so on. I want to put /tmp and /var and /home on the regular hard drive. Now that I'm at the stage of actually setting this up I have
2002 Dec 20
1
read.ssd {foreign} (Reading a permanent SAS dataset into an R data frame)
I just downloaded and installed R 1.6.1 on my Windows machine where I also run SAS. I want to use the 'read.ssd' function so that I can convert a permanent SAS data set into an R data frame. I downloaded and installed the package 'foreign' on my machine, which includes the 'read.ssd' function. I read the instructions, and followed the example closely in the R
2018 May 08
1
OT: hardware: sanitizing a dead SSD?
On Tue, 2018-05-08 at 15:46 -0400, Stephen John Smoogen wrote: > SSD disks must be shredded as the data has been written over multiple > sectors many times to 'even the writes'. This allows for even a 'dead' > disk to be disassembled with 'off-the-shelf' equipment to extract > items from the dead places. Depending on the data involved, there may > be
2010 Jul 28
5
Dovecot and SSD
I'm considering setting up my own mailserver with Dovecot 2.0 (as soon as it's out) and SSD. I'm debating whether it's worth it or not. I have been running a mailserver with the Dovecot 1.1 train for a couple of years and it's been flawless and amazing. I'm thinking about using either FreeBSD 8.1 w/ZFS or OpenBSD 4.8-beta on a 64 GB or 80 GB SSD (Corsair or Intel) using
2016 Jan 05
4
SSD drives for the OS - 1 or 2?
Preparing to build a small replacement server (initially built in 2005) and normally for the OS I would buy 2x500GB drives and deploy in a RAID 1 configuration. Now we have SSD drives available - does just a single SSD drive offer the same reliability or is there advantage in deploying two in a Raid 1 config? Also, what form factor / interface is best for the SSD OS boot device on a server
2012 Apr 13
3
SSD for boot drive and OS
I just ordered a new machine that's destined to become a Centos 6 application server for a publishing company, and decided to get one with a 40GB SSD as well as a standard hard drive. I'm thinking that I can put most of the operating system on that drive and have the home directories and whatnot on the regular hard drive. Are there any pitfalls lying in wait for an unwary person like me
2010 Jul 10
2
block align SSD for use as a l2arc cache
I have an Intel X25-M 80GB SSD. For optimum performance, I need to block align the SSD device, but I am not sure exactly how I should to it. If I run the format -> fdisk it allows me to partition based on a cylinder, but I don''t think that is sufficient enough. Can someone tell me how they block aligned an SSD device for use in l2arc. Thanks, Geoff
2009 Oct 29
2
Difficulty testing an SSD as a ZIL
Hi all, I received my SSD, and wanted to test it out using fake zpools with files as backing stores before attaching it to my production pool. However, when I exported the test pool and imported, I get an error. Here is what I did: I created a file to use as a backing store for my new pool: mkfile 1g /data01/test2/1gtest Created a new pool: zpool create ziltest2 /data01/test2/1gtest Added the
2015 Nov 18
0
Intel SSD
What is Intel SSD Data Center Tool (ISDCT) ? Does Linux kernel detect disk on sata ports? Supported usually means that they have tested it and they can say that it works.. Many of hardware still works as linux kernel support lots of drivers -- even they are not officially supported by vendor. -- Eero 2015-11-18 16:25 GMT+02:00 Birta Levente <blevi.linux at gmail.com>: > Hi > > I
2010 Oct 19
7
SSD partitioned into multiple L2ARC read cache
What would the performance impact be of splitting up a 64 GB SSD into four partitions of 16 GB each versus having the entire SSD dedicated to each pool? Scenario A: 2 TB Mirror w/ 16 GB read cache partition 2 TB Mirror w/ 16 GB read cache partition 2 TB Mirror w/ 16 GB read cache partition 2 TB Mirror w/ 16 GB read cache partition versus Scenario B: 2 TB Mirror w/ 64 GB read cache SSD 2 TB