FaRKle0079
2[H]4U
- Joined
- Jan 11, 2005
- Messages
- 2,686
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Nope. Already addressed:THat really depends, it depends on what environment they were used in, heavy reads or writes.....
Folks are getting too hung up on the life remaining on these drives. 59% of this drive left means you still have ~12PB of writes left. Consumer drives are much less than that. 100-300TB is probably normal. Even exaggerating that to 500TB for easy math, you've got 24 consumer SSD's worth of lifespan here.
Viper22
A brand new Samsung 960 EVO NVME drive (very popular and highly recommended around here for an OS drive) is rated at 200TB endurance. I’ve never heard anyone talking about actually wearing one out. 200TB vs 20PB. Thats factor of 100.
So, you still have ~60 times that on your 59.6% life remaining Fusion I/O card.
If your used enterprise Fusion I/O card showed only 1% remaining life, it would be the same as a brand new Samsung 960 Evo NVME SSD at 200TB.
Depending on which UPS you have, you can possibly find your battery cheap in the CDW Outlet or other open box/clearance places. That's usually what I do with my UPS units--pick up a new one cheap (usually less than the replacement battery cost) and then wait for a great price on a replacement battery and then get the older unit back up and running as a spare.Thanks for the tip, but I have ready removed it from service until I can replace them. They don't do any good if they don't hold a charge and as you mentioned can be detrimental. So ATM I have my redundant PSU plugged into normal outlets.
A workaround to the long check in the thread here:This came up earlier in the thread but got glanced over... Any solution to the annoying disk check after an unexpected shut down? Had a random crash firing up RDR2 the other day, which ended up being a 45 minute reboot. That's sort of insane, was pretty fustarating losing that much time.
This came up earlier in the thread but got glanced over... Any solution to the annoying disk check after an unexpected shut down? Had a random crash firing up RDR2 the other day, which ended up being a 45 minute reboot. That's sort of insane, was pretty fustarating losing that much time.
A workaround to the long check in the thread here:
https://hardforum.com/threads/3-2tb-ssd-for-240.1991865/post-1044500829
You still have to run it, but you can run it from within windows.
As with most things, the documentation helps a lot. The exact command (assuming this is the first Fusion ioMemory device on your board) you are looking for is: fio-attach /dev/fct0
If you have more than one, use /dev/fct1 for the second device, /dev/fct2 for the third, etc.
Edit: To clarify, skip the disk check by hitting ESC key when prompted on boot-up. Then open command prompt as administrator and type in the above statement to attach the drive (logically) and have it run the consistency check.
But I'm assuming that in windows you could still use the system aside from that drive that is running the check and re-attaching.Thank you. Still not ideal (I'm assuming the check is no faster in windows), but it's better than sitting at a black screen.
Thanks, yeah they are very standard 12v batteries and I can get them on Amazon for cheap. Not very expensive but the UPS is old, I haven't had power drop in about a year, and being a home server I have nothing critical on it, 10 minutes wait for it to boot is the last thing I care about when my power comes back on, lol. It's not like it's unstable and shutting down daily. If you use this is in a daily driver PC that's less than stable I could see it being annoying.Depending on which UPS you have, you can possibly find your battery cheap in the CDW Outlet or other open box/clearance places. That's usually what I do with my UPS units--pick up a new one cheap (usually less than the replacement battery cost) and then wait for a great price on a replacement battery and then get the older unit back up and running as a spare.
You're welcome!Thank you. Still not ideal (I'm assuming the check is no faster in windows), but it's better than sitting at a black screen.
Yes, this is correct. The 'usability' of the system just depends on whether or not you have all your games, programs, whatever that you need to access on the Fusion ioMemory device being attachedBut I'm assuming that in windows you could still use the system aside from that drive that is running the check and re-attaching.
That is correct. Hard reboot, yanking the power cord, BSOD, etc. will result in a scenario in which the consistency/integrity check will run on the Fusion ioMemory device before it is seen by the operating system.If I understand this correctly, it only does the drive check when there is an unexpected crash?
Not all batteries are the same. My genuine batteries last far longer than any compatibles I've bought. ymmv.Thanks, yeah they are very standard 12v batteries and I can get them on Amazon for cheap. Not very expensive but the UPS is old, I haven't had power drop in about a year, and being a home server I have nothing critical on it, 10 minutes wait for it to boot is the last thing I care about when my power comes back on, lol. It's not like it's unstable and shutting down daily. If you use this is in a daily driver PC that's less than stable I could see it being annoying.
Yep, but you can play slither.io while waiting.You're welcome!
Yes, this is correct. The 'usability' of the system just depends on whether or not you have all your games, programs, whatever that you need to access on the Fusion ioMemory device being attached
That is correct. Hard reboot, yanking the power cord, BSOD, etc. will result in a scenario in which the consistency/integrity check will run on the Fusion ioMemory device before it is seen by the operating system.
You have to install the 3.2TB ioScale first then the 6.4TB ioMemoryView attachment 226781
If you are having issues with the card consistently being picked up by the BIOS or Windows, it can also be a power problem. Especially if you have multiple storage cards along with power hungry GPUs. I have a 2070, a dell HBA 330 card and the 3.2 GB i/o card and the hba would have issues. I aplugged in the auxiliary 6 pin gpu to the motherboard and it all works perfectly now.
Having a problem getting my 6.4 tb working says the firmware is not compatible with the driver. I downloaded the driver from western digital is there a specific driver I need to use or how do I update the firmware?
Do both of your drives load properly during reboot? For some reason the 6.4TB shows up and the 3.2TB needs to be uninstalled in device manager and refreshed to be detected and work properly.Tested this, with the 6.4TB in the known working pcie slot. Both cards do load fine.
Installed Fusion_ioMemory_VSL_3.2.15.1699_x64.exe, then installed Fusion_ioMemory_VSL_4.3.7.1205_x64_storport.exe. Both appeared immediately after each installer completed.
Thank you. I updated the firmware using the fusion_4.3.7-20200113.fff file like you said and it said successful to reboot but now my pc will not boot with the 6.4 tb card installed. Windows 10 hangs at the spinning dots and I do not get to the log in screen. I remove the 6.4 tb card and it boots fine. Any ideas on how to fix? Does the bios update not work in win10 even though it said it did?Your firmware is really old, from 2014. At the Western Digital site where you downloaded the driver should also be the firmware. Your device is /dev/fct0 that's zero, according to your fio-status-a readout
You need a file with the extension .fff for example fusion_4.3.7-20200113.fff then to install it, use the command
fio-update-iodrive -d /dev/fct0 c:\folder you put the firmware\ fusion_4.3.7-20200113.fff
Maybe try reinstalling the drivers for the card. What does booting into safe mode do?Thank you. I updated the firmware using the fusion_4.3.7-20200113.fff file like you said and it said successful to reboot but now my pc will not boot with the 6.4 tb card installed. Windows 10 hangs at the spinning dots and I do not get to the log in screen. I remove the 6.4 tb card and it boots fine. Any ideas on how to fix? Does the bios update not work in win10 even though it said it did?
Safe mode freezes unless I remove the card. Card is really hot to touch when I remove it. Hesitant to try it in server.Maybe try reinstalling the drivers for the card. What does booting into safe mode do?
These things can run very hot because they're designed for servers that usually have a lot of air moving. If your server has a lot of air moving, it might actually be happier in the server.Safe mode freezes unless I remove the card. Card is really hot to touch when I remove it. Hesitant to try it in server.
Does not work in the server either. Server detects with fio-status -a and is in minimal status but can't mount it. Could I have a bad drive I need to return?These things can run very hot because they're designed for servers that usually have a lot of air moving. If your server has a lot of air moving, it might actually be happier in the server.
Not sure, I'm not familiar enough with these to know what to try next.Does not work in the server either. Server detects with fio-status -a and is in minimal status but can't mount it. Could I have a bad drive I need to return?
Tempted...PM me.Anybody here looking for one of the 3.2TB models? I replaced mine with the 6.4TB SX300. The ioScale has 83.94% life remaining.
Not much of a heatsink on that SX350? Less power use or expected active cooling?The seller that I bought my 6.4TB unit from for $400 has 3.2TB ioScales listed for $4xx, but it's worth making an offer of $2xx.
Here's a listing for 3.2TB ioMemory SX350 for $260. The SX350 is newer than the ioScale and SX300. When Sandisk moved from the SX300 to SX350 they switched from using Micron NAND to their own/Toshiba/Kioxia's. Here's another seller with multiple listings for $298, but this one accepts offers. (Listing 1, Listing 2, Listing 3)
The seller that I bought my 6.4TB unit from for $400 has 3.2TB ioScales listed for $4xx, but it's worth making an offer of $2xx.
Here's a listing for 3.2TB ioMemory SX350 for $260. The SX350 is newer than the ioScale and SX300. When Sandisk moved from the SX300 to SX350 they switched from using Micron NAND to their own/Toshiba/Kioxia's. Here's another seller with multiple listings for $298, but this one accepts offers. (Listing 1, Listing 2, Listing 3)
Not much of a heatsink on that SX350? Less power use or expected active cooling?