| Forum Home | ||||
| Press F1 | ||||
| Thread ID: 108486 | 2010-03-30 22:26:00 | SSD Sandforce | SolMiester (139) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 871180 | 2010-03-30 22:26:00 | Hi all, anyone had experience with these SSD'd, I heard the 1500 controller wasnt going to be manufactured. I have been given the go ahead to get one of these for our Database data files and doc management data to speed up access, looking for info! |
SolMiester (139) | ||
| 871181 | 2010-03-31 00:30:00 | I don't know a lot about them, apart from that they are the pretty much the fastest SSDs you can buy... www.pcper.com Makes my X25-M look like a slug! :( |
wratterus (105) | ||
| 871182 | 2010-03-31 12:07:00 | I wonder how fast they are to break | Agent_24 (57) | ||
| 871183 | 2010-03-31 19:26:00 | I wonder how fast they are to break Indeed - I can certainly see the advantage of using SSD's for database I/O, but from what I know of Sandforce, it's bleeding edge tech; not sure if I'd be putting it in a production server? I'm sure Sol will test thoroughly however. |
nofam (9009) | ||
| 871184 | 2010-03-31 20:49:00 | Hehe....Just wait to get this baby is.....currently 758 connections to the database server, I have just expanded the RAID 10 array to 6 disks, however random read for these documents is pants, especially when they are encrypted and get transferred to another database before presentation to the user. It is not a highly updated database, so replication to another partition, and nightly backups will keep me safe.... | SolMiester (139) | ||
| 1 | |||||