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LocutusOfBorges | 1 year ago

Is this actually enough? I've never been able to find a clear answer on this - it's become increasingly common to install SATA SSDs in retro game consoles, for example, but nobody seems to have ever done any testing to see if the functionality on newer SSDs is adequate to handle systems without TRIM support.

You used to hear all kinds of horror stories about people who threw a SSD into their PS3 and found their whole system grinding to a halt within a year.

discuss

order

wat10000|1 year ago

Can you work around it by massively overprovision by partitioning the drive and leaving half of it unallocated? The amount of space you need for an older system like this should be tiny compared to modern storage.

jsheard|1 year ago

That works as long as you prepare the drive on a machine that does support TRIM, to ensure the unpartitioned area gets TRIMed one last time before the drive is moved to the old machine. Then it should remain in that state as long as it's never written to.

rasz|1 year ago

Yes if you trim it after making that partition and system correctly informs SSD about empty space. Secure Erase before making partition would be the safest bet - that way SSD firmware has full control over free unallocated space.

deaddodo|1 year ago

While internally managed garbage collection is less efficient than TRIM managed, it's significantly better than unmanaged.

"Enough" is a relative term and is up to you to decide. The alternative is significantly less performant coupled with unpredictable reliability (outside of expensive enterprise options), but a higher overall lifetime.

p_ing|1 year ago

While a year of lifetime would suck, does it ultimately matter? This is old equipment not used for anything critical in the context of the discussion in this thread.

LocutusOfBorges|1 year ago

It only matters insofar as it has the potential to cause people some annoyance down the line which they'd likely prefer to avoid.

People don't tend to want to have to actively maintain their old tech any more than they absolutely have to.

dylan604|1 year ago

It’s still cheaper than actually having pay for the games that’s going unpaid for with these systems, so it all comes out in the wash for the user