I also do that on my host, a small 10W Atom with two enterprise SSDs. Runs just fine!As I am also running my firewall and home automation on this host, they have been really, really annoying from time to time...
I also do that on my host, a small 10W Atom with two enterprise SSDs. Runs just fine!As I am also running my firewall and home automation on this host, they have been really, really annoying from time to time...
Depends on the use case, but often yes.here use zfs software raid with their entreprise-class ssd, isn't it ?
thanks, but I am using a LSI MegaRAID SAS 9240-4i controller for this SSDs, not the motherboard ones...imho, your consumer ssd slowdown because hw raid doesn't support / expose trim, check wear level on motherboard ahci sata port.
consumer ssd is ok on ext4/lvm outside hw raid or hw raid in it mode because trim support.
i've one system with 1 consumer ssd then daily backup on second ssd, not really raid but acceptable alternative for this system.
many people here use zfs software raid with their entreprise-class ssd, isn't it ?
do you use RAID ? hw raid ? zfs ? if yes how many RAM ?I also do that on my host, a small 10W Atom with two enterprise SSDs. Runs just fine!
so you can't check wear level of your ssd because of raid controller, unplug all disks, plug one ssd temporarily to motherboard then just check wear level using live cd , don't boot pve, you'll have the explanation of the slowdown of yours ssd.thanks, but I am using a LSI MegaRAID SAS 9240-4i controller for this SSDs, not the motherboard ones...
Yes, it's (not only) trim, it's the consumer grade quality with less performant chips and caching in place.but I had those lags from the beginning. did never hear of wear-level before.
We use all variaties dependend of their use case (all SSD-only or stated otherwise):do you use RAID ? hw raid ? zfs ? if yes how many RAM ?
ZFS ?My local (home) system is the smallest with only 16 GB-RAM with RAID1 on 2 Samsung SSDs and only LX(C) containers.