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Special Forums Hardware Filesystems, Disks and Memory Life span of HDD - maximum reads/writes etc Post 302378386 by Azhrei on Monday 7th of December 2009 07:05:54 PM
Old 12-07-2009
From an engineering standpoint, yes. It would have to.

Most of the MTBF rates are based on some standard percentage of use, such as 30%. If you are keeping the drive busier than that, then you can expect the lifetime to be decreased.

Heavy usage over a long period is more likely to result in a thermal failure than anything else. The magnetic surface is good for X number of write operations and the servo motors are good for X number of direction reverses and distance traveled.

I would suggest that you have multiple spare drives ready to go (most shops will do this just out of a need for short-as-possible downtime). You could of course use some form of RAID that spreads the usage out over multiple drives. Using a form of RAID that provides redundancy also means that a drive failure doesn't immediately impact your uptime too.

Another option is to use rsync or similar technology that only copies the new files or those parts of the files that have changed, reducing the number of overall writes to the drive. The problem with rsync is that it has to read the file first and calculate block checksums which will have an impact on the overall access to the drives if they are configured for concurrent use.
 

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xfs_copy(8)                                                   System Manager's Manual                                                  xfs_copy(8)

NAME
xfs_copy - copy the contents of an XFS filesystem SYNOPSIS
xfs_copy [ -bd ] [ -L log ] source target1 [ target2 ... ] DESCRIPTION
xfs_copy copies an XFS filesystem to one or more targets in parallel (see xfs(5)). The first (source) argument must be the pathname of the device or file containing the XFS filesystem. The remaining arguments specify one or more target devices or file names. If the pathnames specify devices, a copy of the source XFS filesystem is created on each device. The target can also be the name of a regular file, in which case an image of the source XFS filesystem is created in that file. If the file does not exist, xfs_copy creates the file. The length of the resulting file is equal to the size of the source filesystem. However, if the file is created on an XFS filesystem, the file consumes roughly the amount of space actually used in the source filesystem by the filesystem and the XFS log. The space saving is because xfs_copy seeks over free blocks instead of copying them and the XFS filesystem supports sparse files efficiently. xfs_copy should only be used to copy unmounted filesystems, read-only mounted filesystems, or frozen filesystems (see xfs_freeze(8)). Oth- erwise, the generated filesystem(s) would be inconsistent or corrupt. xfs_copy does not alter the source filesystem in any way. Each new (target) filesystem is identical to the original filesystem except that new filesystems each have a new unique filesystem identifier (UUID). Therefore, if both the old and new filesystems will be used as sepa- rate distinct filesystems, xfs_copy or xfsdump(8)/xfsrestore(8) should be used to generate the new filesystem(s) instead of dd(1) or other programs that do block-by-block disk copying. xfs_copy uses synchronous writes to ensure that write errors are detected. xfs_copy uses pthreads(7) to perform simultaneous parallel writes. xfs_copy creates one additional thread for each target to be written. All threads die if xfs_copy terminates or aborts. OPTIONS
-d Create a duplicate (true clone) filesystem. This should be done only if the new filesystem will be used as a replacement for the original filesystem (such as in the case of disk replacement). -b The buffered option can be used to ensure direct IO is not attempted to any of the target files. This is useful when the filesystem holding the target file does not support direct IO. -L log Specifies the location of the log if the default location of /var/tmp/xfs_copy.log.XXXXXX is not desired. DIAGNOSTICS
xfs_copy reports errors to both stderr and in more detailed form to a generated log file whose name is of the form /var/tmp/xfs_copy.log.XXXXXX or a log file specified by the -L option. If xfs_copy detects a write error on a target, the copy of that one target is aborted and an error message is issued to both stderr and the log file, but the rest of the copies continue. When xfs_copy termi- nates, all aborted targets are reported to both stderr and the log file. If all targets abort or if there is an error reading the source filesystem, xfs_copy immediately aborts. xfs_copy returns an exit code of 0 if all targets are successfully copied and an exit code of 1 if any target fails. NOTES
When moving filesystems from one disk to another, if the original filesystem is significantly smaller than the new filesystem, and will be made larger, we recommend that mkfs.xfs(8) and xfsdump(8)/xfsrestore(8) be used instead of using xfs_copy and xfs_growfs(8). The filesys- tem layout resulting from using xfs_copy/xfs_growfs is almost always worse than the result of using mkfs.xfs/xfsdump/xfsrestore but in the case of small filesystems, the differences can have a significant performance impact. This is due to the way xfs_growfs(8) works, and not due to any shortcoming in xfs_copy itself. CAVEATS
xfs_copy does not copy XFS filesystems that have a real-time section or XFS filesystems with external logs. In both cases, xfs_copy aborts with an error message. SEE ALSO
mkfs.xfs(8), xfsdump(8), xfsrestore(8), xfs_freeze(8), xfs_growfs(8), xfs(5). xfs_copy(8)
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