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Date:      Fri, 9 Jun 2006 08:53:11 +0200
From:      Wilko Bulte <wb@freebie.xs4all.nl>
To:        "Daniel O'Connor" <doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
Cc:        freebsd-current@freebsd.org, Pawel Jakub Dawidek <pjd@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Data authentication for geli(8) committed to HEAD.
Message-ID:  <20060609065311.GB4251@freebie.xs4all.nl>
In-Reply-To: <200606091215.41787.doconnor@gsoft.com.au>
References:  <20060608132048.GD86198@garage.freebsd.pl> <20060608174113.GC1075@roadrunner.q.local> <200606091215.41787.doconnor@gsoft.com.au>

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On Fri, Jun 09, 2006 at 12:15:33PM +0930, Daniel O'Connor wrote..
> On Friday 09 June 2006 03:11, Ulrich Spoerlein wrote:
> > I have an external HDD that I initially attached via Firewire, but I've
> > since switched to USB, as our firewire subsystem is less than rock
> 
> Interesting. I find the reverse :)
> Then again I started using Firewire in 4.x where USB2.0 didn't exist and the 
> USB 1 code was kind of dodgy.
> 
> > The question really is, are 512 byte disk writes considered to be some
> > kind of "atomic" as it is the smallest disk block size? What does the
> > ATA subsystem do with writes of 4096? Are they completed atomically too,
> > or not?
> 
> I think that in reality with a modern high capacity disk you don't get atomic 
> writes at all because they all re-write whole tracks.
> 
> Yes this violates the assumption soft updates makes, I believe the only way 
> around it is to buy SCSI drives (not because they're SCSI per se, but because 
> they're smaller capacity so they don't do this)

Don't tell my 300GB SCSI disks (at work) that they are 'small'.

-- 
Wilko Bulte				wilko@FreeBSD.org



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