So as not to muddy the New BootROM 138.0.0.0.0... thread w/ more of this offshoot, I hoped I might solicit some advice about this TRIM issue in a new thread. Basically, I have a pair of SSUBX 512GB blades in a RAID1 mirror in a server. The read speed after the firmware update (and using Slots 2 & 3) is over 2500MB/s. However, the write speeds are extremely low at around 200-300MB/s (continues below quotes):
This is actually an in-production 10.6.8 Server. I can take it down for short periods in off hours, but nothing lengthy. I will try fsck in Single User Mode, but it sounds like that might not work for a RAID. Any thoughts on a repeatable, minimally intrusive process to work around this periodically, since it appears that TRIM is not functioning on the RAID?
I like the redundancy of having 2 mirrored boot SSDs on my servers (more than one configured this way), but should I consider another way if they're all going to degenerate to this level of write performance?
Thanks,
Fred
@h9826790
Your post about better RAID performance with dual low cost PCIe cards with 138.0.0.0.0 is correct. @fhturner tested it now after I did his BootROMs. AJA with Dual SSBUX 512 RAID1:
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Yeah, I definitely have a problem going on there w/ the write speed. But as Alexandre points out, the cool part is the Read speed approaching 2x the single SSD (1400-1500MB/s). As he also points out, this is actually a RAID1 mirror (which is probably what you meant)...so while the write speed, when not fouled up like this, will be approx 1x of a single SSD, since the same thing is written in tandem to both SSDs; but the read speed can function like a RAID0 and get nearly 2x that of a single SSD.
These are SSUBX blades, so Samsung/Apple. Just re-checked, and they do in fact show TRIM Support status of "Yes" in System Profiler.
If that's a test drive, you may un-RAID them now, and just to check if the writing performance still the same. If yes, then may be TRIM is activated on 10.6.8, but not be used in RAID.
This is actually an in-production 10.6.8 Server. I can take it down for short periods in off hours, but nothing lengthy. I will try fsck in Single User Mode, but it sounds like that might not work for a RAID. Any thoughts on a repeatable, minimally intrusive process to work around this periodically, since it appears that TRIM is not functioning on the RAID?
I like the redundancy of having 2 mirrored boot SSDs on my servers (more than one configured this way), but should I consider another way if they're all going to degenerate to this level of write performance?
Thanks,
Fred