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by lazerl0rd
1589 days ago
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The funny thing here is that battery-backed enterprise systems are worse off in that manner, because you're much more likely to notice a dying battery that your entire device relies on than the little battery pack hooked up to your RAID array. Sure, you could write a program that periodically checks the battery rate (you'd have to poll since there's no ACPI notification like with a "device battery") and sends an email to the admin or something. However that's a tool that doesn't "exist" (as in, there isn't notable program that does so) which possibly hints that this isn't something system admins often do. The above also requires there to be an interface available from userland, not only in the management firmware or BIOS/UEFI. That exists for HP, but I'm not sure all other OEMs do so. |
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Getting all that right sounds so hard it is probably better to just have enterprise SSD's have a built in supercap to give 5 seconds or so of power to do all the necessary flushing, and for laptop/desktop grade SSD's they only need to offer barriers for data consistency. Laptop and desktop users don't care if they lose the last 1 second of data before a crash as long as what is on the drive is self consistent.