Date: Sun, 08 Apr 2007 17:33:13 -0700 From: Garrett Cooper <youshi10@u.washington.edu> To: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org Subject: Re: Automatic means for spinning down disks available? Message-ID: <461989C9.8010103@u.washington.edu> In-Reply-To: <200704081917.14052.freebsd@dfwlp.com> References: <46192C1B.4060706@u.washington.edu> <20070408230454.GB17305@thought.org> <461976B7.2060808@u.washington.edu> <200704081917.14052.freebsd@dfwlp.com>
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Jonathan Horne wrote: > On Sunday 08 April 2007 18:11:51 Garrett Cooper wrote: > >> Gary Kline wrote: >> >>> On Sun, Apr 08, 2007 at 10:10:17PM +0400, Yuri Grebenkin wrote: >>> >>>> Just wonder if it's better for an HDD not to spindown at all. >>>> Maybe it's safer to spin in peace than to park/launch? >>>> What do you think? >>>> >>> My guess (really a SWAG) is that it's bettter to leave things >>> just happily spinning, 24*7. In Nov, '99 a power off//on >>> destryed my new (105-day-old) 9G SCSI drive. Off ffor fewer >>> than five seconds, then a spike or two, and the drive went >>> deadder than a decade-old corpse. Lost 10 months of files. >>> ((Well, my tape backup had flubbed up.)) >>> >>> Who would know??? I've heard both sides, and so far, just >>> leaving drive spin seems slightly better. >>> >>> {Futureistic[?] idea: maybe a new drive can have a mode of >>> Full-Operation and (slower) Spin. It wouldn't take more than >>> a second to transition from the slow-spin to full-op mode. >>> Open files, OS states, and whatever could be stored to RAM... . >>> >>> Any little old winemakers, er, diskmakers out there? >>> } >>> >> Good point. The worst stress points during a disks life are at spin-up >> from what I've read. >> >> Also, about the disk spinning at different speeds: many contemporary >> disks have "acoustics" levels where you can adjust the speed on demand >> (assuming you knew the hardware level instructions to send to the >> controllers). Unfortunately I don't know those settings, so I can't say >> what is and isn't possible. >> >> The only upside is at least all disk makers seem to be amalgamating into >> either: Fujitsu, Hitachi, Quantum, Seagate, and WD, so figuring out the >> standards shouldn't be *too* hard =). >> >> -Garrett >> >> >>> gary-the-thrifty >>> >>> >>>>> Hello again all, >>>>> I was wondering if there was an automatic, and possibly timed means to >>>>> spin down disks available in either ports or the base system, by >>>>> chance. Just trying to cut down on energy use, and increase my disks' >>>>> lives :). TIA, >>>>> -Garrett > personally, my solution for solving the "lower power consumption but still > remotely available" issue, by configuring Wake On Lan. my web server is > always on, so i just installed net/wakeonlan there. simple lines in crontab > wake all the rest of my hosts each morning (after im gone to the office of > course) for backups, and then they all power themselves back down about 2 > hours later. during the day, if i need to get to a system while im still > remote, i just log into the webserver and wake it backup again. > > i would agree that the greatest stress on a disk might just be while its > turning on from cold... but with the warranties that seagate is offering > these days, i feel bold enough to power them off/on at least once a day. Well, I feel the same but only about WD's drives. Seagate's newer drives seem to die a lot more frequently than they used to (I've had 4 / 7 Seagate drives die on me in the past few months and 1/6 WD drives die on me). But then again that's my take on stuff :). -Garrett
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