Guru3D.com
  • HOME
  • NEWS
    • Channels
    • Archive
  • DOWNLOADS
    • New Downloads
    • Categories
    • Archive
  • GAME REVIEWS
  • ARTICLES
    • Rig of the Month
    • Join ROTM
    • PC Buyers Guide
    • Guru3D VGA Charts
    • Editorials
    • Dated content
  • HARDWARE REVIEWS
    • Videocards
    • Processors
    • Audio
    • Motherboards
    • Memory and Flash
    • SSD Storage
    • Chassis
    • Media Players
    • Power Supply
    • Laptop and Mobile
    • Smartphone
    • Networking
    • Keyboard Mouse
    • Cooling
    • Search articles
    • Knowledgebase
    • More Categories
  • FORUMS
  • NEWSLETTER
  • CONTACT

New Reviews
ASUS GeForce RTX 3080 Noctua OC review
AMD Ryzen 5 5600 review
PowerColor RX 6650 XT Hellhound White review
FSP Hydro PTM Pro (1200W PSU) review
ASUS ROG Radeon RX 6750 XT STRIX review
AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution 2.0 - preview
Sapphire Radeon RX 6650 XT Nitro+ review
Sapphire Radeon RX 6950 XT Sapphire Nitro+ Pure review
Sapphire Radeon RX 6750 XT Nitro+ review
MSI Radeon RX 6950 XT Gaming X TRIO review

New Downloads
AIDA64 Download Version 6.70
FurMark Download v1.30
Display Driver Uninstaller Download version 18.0.5.1
Download Samsung Magician v7.1.1.820
Intel ARC graphics Driver Download Version: 30.0.101.1732
HWiNFO Download v7.24
GeForce 512.77 WHQL driver download
Intel HD graphics Driver Download Version: 30.0.101.1960
AMD Radeon Software Adrenalin 22.5.1 WHQL driver download
3DMark Download v2.22.7359 + Time Spy


New Forum Topics
Unique 17.3-inch mobile liquid crystal display at 5 mm Nvidia Shadercache setting. AMD is developing Smart Access Storage to enable speedier game loading. [3rd-Party Driver] Amernime Zone Radeon Insight 22.5.1 WHQL Driver Pack (Released) AMD Announces Ryzen 7000 - passing 5.5 GHz 15% Single Thread perf Increase - RDNA2 Are we ever going to get a new NVIDIA CONTROL PANEL ??? AMD FidelityFX Super Resolution 2.0 - Deathloop preview Watch AMD Computex 2022 Keynote - AMD Ryzen 7000 / 600-series AM5 motherboard Gigabyte confirms AMD X670 chipset based motherboards Computex 2022 Press Release Gigabyte Project Stealth Hides All Cables Inside Chassis




Guru3D.com » News » BackBlaze starts to report on SSD reliability, which they are bigtime.

BackBlaze starts to report on SSD reliability, which they are bigtime.

by Hilbert Hagedoorn on: 05/07/2021 10:58 AM | source: backblaze | 20 comment(s)
BackBlaze starts to report on SSD reliability, which they are bigtime.

We all know (well most of us) that datacenter giant Backblaze, from our many HDD failure rate reports. Withing the results they however have never posted the reliability on SSDs. Times are changing fast and they no offer their first results and show that SSDs are massively more reliable.

BackBlaze - We use SSD drives in several places, but we currently do not use them for storing customer data—that remains in the realm of hard disk drives. But one place we have both HDDs and SSDs is as boot drives for our storage servers. In our case, describing these drives as boot drives is a misnomer as this cohort is also used to store log files for system access, diagnostics, and more. In other words, these boot drives are regularly reading, writing, and deleting files in addition to their named function of booting a server at startup.A little over two years ago, Backblaze started using SSDs as boot drives. It was about that time we could start getting SSDs that were 200GB or so for less than $50 each, which was our price point for the 500GB hard drives we were buying.

 

 

What we have are two groups of drives, one HDDs and the other SSDs, which have performed the same functions in the same environment over time. The table below compares the failure rates in aggregate for Q1 2021 of our HDD and SSD boot drives.

Why didn’t we break these out by model? None of the models by themselves had enough drive days to be statistically relevant. In aggregate, the number of drive days is still on the lower side, but the obvious difference in the AFR between the HDD and SSD boot drives is eye-opening. If we look at the lifetime results for the HDD and SSD boot drives, the difference in AFR is less but still significant.

 

 

SSD Reporting Moving Forward
One obvious takeaway from these tables is that SSD drives fail less often than HDD drives, at least in this use case. But that ignores one important factor, drive age. If we focus on the age of each of the cohorts, there are potential cracks in our “SSD drives are better” supposition.The average age of the SSD drives is 12.7 months, and the average age of the HDD drives is 49.6 months. The oldest SSD drives are about 30 months old and the youngest HDD drives are 24 months old. The oldest HDD drives are nearly 96 months old—eight years old. Basically, the timelines for the age of the SSD and HDD drives don’t overlap very much and in general, drive failure rates typically increase as drive population ages. These two considerations make the conclusion that SSDs fail less often than HDD drives not as clear cut as it first seems. Over the coming months, we’ll dig into the data and align the SSD and HDD timelines to examine the HDD drives in their early years of use and we’ll publish those results. This will give us better insight into the failure rate profile over time for the HDD drives. In addition to the boot drives, we also utilize SSD drives for different use cases, for example on restore servers and so on. Over time, our goal is to instrument these drives as well without impacting performance, so we can build a library of SSD drive failure rates by use case.



BackBlaze starts to report on SSD reliability, which they are bigtime. BackBlaze starts to report on SSD reliability, which they are bigtime.




« Each Xbox console sold, is sold at loss · BackBlaze starts to report on SSD reliability, which they are bigtime. · Advertorial: May Sale:Windows 10 only $6.84 per PC »

Related Stories

Backblaze Outs 2020 Hard Drive Stats for HDDs - Reliability Increased - 02/02/2021 10:10 AM
In 2020, Backblaze added 39,792 hard drives and as of December 31, 2020 we had 165,530 drives under management. Of that number, there were 3,000 boot drives and 162,530 data drives....

Backblaze Outs Q2 2020 Hard Drive Stats for 142,630 Spinning HDDs - 08/19/2020 02:33 PM
As of June 30, 2020, Backblaze had 142,630 spinning hard drives in our cloud storage ecosystem spread across four data centers. Of that number, there were 2,271 boot drives and 140,059 data drives....

Backblaze Shares Hard Drive Stats for Q1 2020 - 05/13/2020 02:58 PM
As of March 31, 2020, Backblaze had 132,339 spinning hard drives in their cloud storage ecosystem spread across four data centers. Of that number, there were 2,380 boot drives and 129,959 data drives....

QNAP Integrates Backblaze B2 Cloud Storage to NAS Servers - 04/27/2020 12:12 PM
QNAP  announced its collaboration with Backblaze for the integration of Backblaze B2 Cloud Storage into several QNAP solutions, including HybridMount, VJBOD Cloud, and Hybrid Backup Sync 3 (HBS 3). W...

Backblaze Publishes Hard Drive Stats for 2019: Failure rates on the rise - 02/12/2020 04:42 PM
Backblaze published its 2019 hard drive failure rates for the data drive models in operation in their data centers. Backblaze had 124,956 spinning hard drives. Of that number, there were 2,229 boot d...


4 pages 1 2 3 4


TheDeeGee
Senior Member



Posts: 7844
Joined: 2010-08-28

#5911151 Posted on: 05/10/2021 10:49 AM
Meanwhile a 256GB SSD is dead after 40 days of Chia mining.

Noisiv
Senior Member



Posts: 8185
Joined: 2010-11-16

#5911164 Posted on: 05/10/2021 12:18 PM
@Noisiv
it will get worse. not after a year, but probably starts around 2-4y when memory/controller start aging.
at least that was previous data i've seen on ssds.

well yeah, that's what we're saying
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bathtub-curve

fry178
Senior Member



Posts: 1814
Joined: 2012-04-30

#5911209 Posted on: 05/10/2021 03:52 PM
@Ricepudding
except your sample size is too small to be relevant.
and i didnt mean write cycles.
it starts around 2y (and up) where controller/chips would die, in numbers 10x of whats expected (~25% vs ~sub 3%).

Orion_13
Junior Member



Posts: 1
Joined: 2021-05-11

#5911441 Posted on: 05/11/2021 11:15 AM
Dumb question here, how did they calculate the AFR percentage?

Noisiv
Senior Member



Posts: 8185
Joined: 2010-11-16

#5911445 Posted on: 05/11/2021 11:33 AM
Dumb question here, how did they calculate the AFR percentage?


Annualized failure rate = probability that the drive will fail in a year = drive failures / drive years
drive years = drive days / 365

4 pages 1 2 3 4


Post New Comment
Click here to post a comment for this news story on the message forum.


Guru3D.com © 2022