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#21
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
(PeteCresswell) wrote:
Per (PeteCresswell): Also, is there anything to be gained by having Windows use several paging files? I've got 3 2-TB discs used for media plus a 1-TB disc used for backup... And how about putting another 8 gigs of memory in the PC and, either just calling it a day and disabling pagefile.sys altogether or installing some sort of ramdrive utility and assigning pagefile.sys to the ramdrive? I've done all sorts of these tests here, and my general advice is to leave pagefile alone. It's not that you can't have a ton of fun playing with it. It's what happens when you break something, that matters. How do you "back out", when you bust paging ? Which registry setting do you modify ? How do you modify the registry when Windows won't run ? ******* Try watching the Peak on Task Manager, after a day of PC usage. What was your Peak usage ? Did you use all of the available RAM on the PC ? That's how you estimate whether you need more RAM. If you want to try a "stressor", try the 64 bit version of CHKDSK on a modern OS. They designed it to "waste all available memory". If I need a means to generate some page-outs, that's a way to do some testing. If you snag a copy of the 32 bit version of CHKDSK, and run it on the 64 bit version of Windows, then it won't use all the RAM (addressing limit). That's my work-around for the stupid behavior of CHKDSK. You can use Task Manager. You can also use "resmon" on the later Windows, as it can tell you about page file usage while the system is running. The Performance plugin has counters it keeps, which can track stuff you're interested in. For example, it records Page Writes/sec, and mine just sits there at zero right now. It also records percentage of pagefile currently in usage. Mine reads 2.3% or roughly 47MB. Is that 47MB write to the SSD going to hurt it ? The option to "clear pagefile at shutdown", is probably going to do more damage than that. As that would rewrite my entire pagefile. ******* I've done the following test case. 1) WinXP x32 with 4GB memory license. 2) PC with 8GB of RAM installed (i.e. "4GB wasted") 3) DATARAM RAMDisk free, with ability to use PAE memory space, and capable of using the 4GB of "inaccessible memory". A driver in Ring0 is not subject to the memory license. 4) Put pagefile on RAMDisk. 5) Result ? Buttery smooth transition, when Windows programs are using 5GB of memory, and you move from program to program to get the paging going. It works very nicely. Downside ? It takes several minutes to shut down the PC (hibernation mode). It was unbearably slow, so I took it apart. I reboot more than the average user. It was driving me nuts. Also, there are tiny glitches that show this method is not completely stable. I tested for a total of maybe three or four days, and two "events" happened that convinced me it's not ready for prime time. ******* If you wanted to do this seriously, you'd purchase a Gigabyte RAMDrive (no longer made) and use one of those for your pagefile. That's a SATA device. The modern equivalent of that, is the ACARD stuff. http://www.acard.com.tw/english/newstabpop.jsp?idno=93 These are the models still in production. http://www.acard.com.tw/english/fb01...Disk%20&ino=28 The ACARD uses CF for backup storage. page 9. If you wear it out, you could insert another. Using the CF, also ensures the disk is "formatted" when your OS goes to page to it at T=0 :-) The DATARAM software RAMDisk, also restores from backup, so it can be started in a "formatted" state. http://dl.acard.com/manual/english/A...10BA(ECJ)Q.pdf A whole lot of work for nothing, but it's there if you want it. ******* Wanna test it ? Be my guest. Just make sure you know how to back out later, depending on what you're doing. I suffered a small amount of hair loss one day, because of stuff like this :-) You've been warned. Paul |
#22
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
On 12/16/2013, (PeteCresswell) posted:
Per (PeteCresswell): Also, is there anything to be gained by having Windows use several paging files? I've got 3 2-TB discs used for media plus a 1-TB disc used for backup... And how about putting another 8 gigs of memory in the PC and, either just calling it a day and disabling pagefile.sys altogether or installing some sort of ramdrive utility and assigning pagefile.sys to the ramdrive? The disadvantage of paging to the SSD is that it might hasten the eventual decrepitude of that drive. The disadvantage of paging to a RAM drive is that you're using the memory that you're paging *from* to hold the page file that you're paging *to*. It's worse than a Ponzi scheme :-) -- Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch) |
#23
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
On 12/16/2013 6:15 AM, (PeteCresswell) wrote:
Per Ron Hardin: I think it corresponded to the SSD wearing out from writes, as SSDs are reported to do. The spot may read correctly or it may not, but the SSD as a whole is otherwise sane. After reading this thread, it's beginning to dawn on me that maybe the Windows paging file should be moved from the SSD card to a conventional hard drive. Correct so far? Downsides? Also, is there anything to be gained by having Windows use several paging files? I've got 3 2-TB discs used for media plus a 1-TB disc used for backup... This is based on research I did a year ago when I decided not to invest in a SSD. I'm sure the nitpickers can come up with a zillion counterexamples. But, for most of us, a SSD is a bad decision. If your primary concern is how fast your system boots, by all means, the SSD is for you. If battery life is a primary concern, the SSD may be for you, but the percentages vary with what else is going on. If you like to throw machine around while it's running, SSD is a good idea. Otherwise, save your money. If you need a swap file, you have too little ram. Swap is where stuff goes when it won't fit in ram. You're trading very fast RAM access for extremely slow disk access. SSD is faster, but not very, compared to ram. Swap was very important when RAM was expensive. Today, not so much. I ran XP with 2GB of ram and no swap for years. Only time I ever got an out of memory error was when I tried to run two virtualbox sessions at once. Had to turn swap back on for that. If you have a second mechanical drive, put swap there. Won't matter how slow it is if it's rarely used. I put swap on D: for a different reason. I don't have to keep telling the backup program to ignore it when I backup C:. SSD is written in whole blocks. If you change one byte, the whole block gets read, changed and rewritten back, probably to a different location depending on the wear leveling algorithm. I read one article that claimed that in active use, stock windows could kill a SSD in a matter of days, based on write counts. Those blocks need to be aligned with the methods used by the OS. Modern operating systems have the nasty habit of updating the access time when you access a file. There's another block write. Then there are caches, wear leveling, all manner of optimizations designed to deal with rotating media. If the OS was written with full knowledge of all the characteristics of that exact SSD drive, it would be simple. But all that magic is secret and constantly changing. Google will find you many strategies for prolonging the life of a SSD. Suggest you decide which one you trust and implement it. Maybe the drive vendor's one would be a good choice. Google will also find you many stories about how SSD's start out fast and progressively slow down with use. Don't remember the term, but you run a utility regularly to speed it back up. I would not just plug in a SSD. At the very least, turn off the last access update. It's called -noatime in linux. Don't remember the term for windows. Too much hype for too little performance/price ratio for me. |
#24
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
On Mon, 16 Dec 2013 12:23:37 -0800, Gene E. Bloch
wrote: On 12/16/2013, (PeteCresswell) posted: Per (PeteCresswell): Also, is there anything to be gained by having Windows use several paging files? I've got 3 2-TB discs used for media plus a 1-TB disc used for backup... And how about putting another 8 gigs of memory in the PC and, either just calling it a day and disabling pagefile.sys altogether or installing some sort of ramdrive utility and assigning pagefile.sys to the ramdrive? The disadvantage of paging to the SSD is that it might hasten the eventual decrepitude of that drive. The disadvantage of paging to a RAM drive is that you're using the memory that you're paging *from* to hold the page file that you're paging *to*. It's worse than a Ponzi scheme :-) Yes, assuming that you are running 64-bit Windows, and therefore using all the RAM. Paging to a RAM drive is always a bad thing to do. And he should also note that with 8GB+ of RAM, depending on what apps he runs, there's an excellent chance that he would almost never use the page file at all. |
#25
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
On 12/16/2013, J. P. Gilliver (John) posted:
In message , Gene E. Bloch writes: On 12/16/2013, (PeteCresswell) posted: Per (PeteCresswell): Also, is there anything to be gained by having Windows use several paging files? I've got 3 2-TB discs used for media plus a 1-TB disc used for backup... And how about putting another 8 gigs of memory in the PC and, either just calling it a day and disabling pagefile.sys altogether or installing some sort of ramdrive utility and assigning pagefile.sys to the ramdrive? The disadvantage of paging to the SSD is that it might hasten the eventual decrepitude of that drive. The disadvantage of paging to a RAM drive is that you're using the memory that you're paging *from* to hold the page file that you're paging *to*. It's worse than a Ponzi scheme :-) Not if the RAM drive is in a part of the RAM that the normal OS doesn't have access to, surely? (I. e. that above 4G, in this case?) Surely :-) You are correct; I assumed 64-bit and lots of RAM even though Pete didn't say that. Even if he did, it's definitely worth pointing out what you said. There was a thread a while back about that issue, where someone knowledgeable (hence, not me!) pointed out that RAM disk programs that can address that high memory definitely do exist. -- Gene E. Bloch (Stumbling Bloch) |
#26
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
On 12/16/2013 4:33 PM, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , mike writes: [] I read one article that claimed that in active use, stock windows could kill a SSD in a matter of days, based on write counts. I remember seeing such a claim about USB memory sticks when used as extra RAM, about the time netbooks - and similar - first appeared. Except I think it said hours, not days. [] I would not just plug in a SSD. At the very least, turn off the last access update. It's called -noatime in linux. Don't remember the term for windows. Too much hype for too little performance/price ratio for me. I tend to agree. But I saw three (expensive) laptops in my local Sainsburys on Saturday, so they _are_ entering the mainstream. Oh man! I have three Asus netbooks from 2008 that sports SSD and they are still working just fine. Heck even this Dell Tablet (I have two of them) runs from a SSD. I was so worried about writes wearing them out in the beginning. But I haven't seen one of them wear out yet. I was so careful at first, as I buffered all writes to RAM. And I only allowed about 400MB of writes per day to an Asus XP machine. Then I figured out that it would take like 4000 years to wear it out at that rate. Then I thought, who cares if it is still working 3999 years later? Now I use them like regular hard drives and the writes that I do to them should last like 70 years before they wear out. Again, who cares? By then, you could use a 3D printer and print you a new one in no time. But this machine will probably be useless in 70 years from now anyway. ;-) -- Bill Dell Latitude Slate Tablet 128GB SSD ('12 era) - Thunderbird v12 Intel Atom Z670 1.5GHz - 2GB - Windows 8 Professional |
#27
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
On 12/16/2013 3:20 PM, mike wrote:
On 12/16/2013 6:15 AM, (PeteCresswell) wrote: Per Ron Hardin: I think it corresponded to the SSD wearing out from writes, as SSDs are reported to do. The spot may read correctly or it may not, but the SSD as a whole is otherwise sane. After reading this thread, it's beginning to dawn on me that maybe the Windows paging file should be moved from the SSD card to a conventional hard drive. Correct so far? Downsides? Also, is there anything to be gained by having Windows use several paging files? I've got 3 2-TB discs used for media plus a 1-TB disc used for backup... This is based on research I did a year ago when I decided not to invest in a SSD. I'm sure the nitpickers can come up with a zillion counterexamples. But, for most of us, a SSD is a bad decision. If your primary concern is how fast your system boots, by all means, the SSD is for you. If battery life is a primary concern, the SSD may be for you, but the percentages vary with what else is going on. If you like to throw machine around while it's running, SSD is a good idea. Otherwise, save your money. If you need a swap file, you have too little ram. Swap is where stuff goes when it won't fit in ram. You're trading very fast RAM access for extremely slow disk access. SSD is faster, but not very, compared to ram. Swap was very important when RAM was expensive. Today, not so much. I ran XP with 2GB of ram and no swap for years. Only time I ever got an out of memory error was when I tried to run two virtualbox sessions at once. Had to turn swap back on for that. If you have a second mechanical drive, put swap there. Won't matter how slow it is if it's rarely used. I put swap on D: for a different reason. I don't have to keep telling the backup program to ignore it when I backup C:. SSD is written in whole blocks. If you change one byte, the whole block gets read, changed and rewritten back, probably to a different location depending on the wear leveling algorithm. I read one article that claimed that in active use, stock windows could kill a SSD in a matter of days, based on write counts. Those blocks need to be aligned with the methods used by the OS. Modern operating systems have the nasty habit of updating the access time when you access a file. There's another block write. Then there are caches, wear leveling, all manner of optimizations designed to deal with rotating media. If the OS was written with full knowledge of all the characteristics of that exact SSD drive, it would be simple. But all that magic is secret and constantly changing. Google will find you many strategies for prolonging the life of a SSD. Suggest you decide which one you trust and implement it. Maybe the drive vendor's one would be a good choice. Google will also find you many stories about how SSD's start out fast and progressively slow down with use. Don't remember the term, but you run a utility regularly to speed it back up. I would not just plug in a SSD. At the very least, turn off the last access update. It's called -noatime in linux. Don't remember the term for windows. Too much hype for too little performance/price ratio for me. Oh man! I use both SSDs and classic mechanical hard drives. And I have been using SSDs really heavy since 2008. Thus IMHO, the fear of wearing them out is so overrated. For most people, I don't think you will wear the average one out in about 70 years plus. If you get 30 years out of your average mechanical hard drive, you are doing great. But I don't think most would care after 10 years anyway since new drives will always be so much larger and faster and cheaper anyway. -- Bill Dell Latitude Slate Tablet 128GB SSD ('12 era) - Thunderbird v12 Intel Atom Z670 1.5GHz - 2GB - Windows 8 Professional |
#28
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
In message , BillW50
writes: On 12/16/2013 3:20 PM, mike wrote: [] I would not just plug in a SSD. At the very least, turn off the last access update. It's called -noatime in linux. Don't remember the term for windows. Too much hype for too little performance/price ratio for me. Oh man! I use both SSDs and classic mechanical hard drives. And I have been using SSDs really heavy since 2008. Thus IMHO, the fear of wearing them out is so overrated. For most people, I don't think you will wear the average one out in about 70 years plus. If you get 30 years out of your average mechanical hard drive, you are doing great. But I don't think most would care after 10 years anyway since new drives will always be so much larger and faster and cheaper anyway. There is still the matter that failure, when it comes, is more likely to be sudden and total for an SSD than for a rotating drive. (S&T failure does of course occur for the latter, but isn't the normal mode of failure.) -- J. P. Gilliver. UMRA: 1960/1985 MB++G()AL-IS-Ch++(p)Ar@T+H+Sh0!:`)DNAf The summit of Everest is marine limestone. |
#29
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SSD - is it ok to use in XP laptop
On 12/30/2013 1:51 AM, J. P. Gilliver (John) wrote:
In message , BillW50 writes: On 12/16/2013 3:20 PM, mike wrote: [] I would not just plug in a SSD. At the very least, turn off the last access update. It's called -noatime in linux. Don't remember the term for windows. Too much hype for too little performance/price ratio for me. Oh man! I use both SSDs and classic mechanical hard drives. And I have been using SSDs really heavy since 2008. Thus IMHO, the fear of wearing them out is so overrated. For most people, I don't think you will wear the average one out in about 70 years plus. If you get 30 years out of your average mechanical hard drive, you are doing great. But I don't think most would care after 10 years anyway since new drives will always be so much larger and faster and cheaper anyway. There is still the matter that failure, when it comes, is more likely to be sudden and total for an SSD than for a rotating drive. (S&T failure does of course occur for the latter, but isn't the normal mode of failure.) Once again, have you ever seen a failed SSD before? I have and that wasn't in my experience either. As I purchased an used Asus 702 netbook that the seller claimed it suddenly couldn't see the SSD one day. Instead of sending it back for warrantee repair, he decided to just sell it. When I got it, I got a repair RMA number and I was going to send it in for warrantee repair. Although I decided to repair it myself instead. And while playing with it I got busy on another machine. And when I got back to it, the SSD was suddenly working just fine. Then I discovered that if you have power applied for at least 90 minutes first, then the SSD would operate normally. This is hardly a total failure. Of course I purchased another SSD and dropped it in there. And much later I discovered that the failed SSD was from a known lot that had a manufacturing defect. And besides that one defective SSD, I've never found another SSD with a problem. Wish I could say the same for a number of complete failed hard drives I've ran into. :-( -- Bill Dell Latitude Slate Tablet 128GB SSD ('12 era) - Thunderbird v12 Intel Atom Z670 1.5GHz - 2GB - Windows 8 Professional |
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