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#1
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Hi, I am thinking about trialing Returnil System Safe free. My OS (Win 7 x64) is on an SSD.
On the manual it reads that SSD are in the Supported Hard Disk Drives configurations. I also reads in the FAQ Quote:
Any other comments on the topic welcome ![]() |
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#2
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Hello newbino, Write minimization is a goal for solid state drives due to their inherent physical limitation on the number of life-time writes each sector of the disk will support. With virtualization however, there is potential for some sectors of the disk to be heavily used due to the use of a cache. One way to minimize the potential issues, extend the life of the disk, and to increase system performance; some have employed methodology where they only allow reads from the SSD (like flash media, this is much faster on a SSD than a platter drive) while restricting writes to a sacrificial platter drive which is much faster at this process than a SSD. SSD = faster reads platter = faster writes The multi-disk virtualization in RSS/RVS support moving the virtual system cache for non-system disks and partitions to a different drive or partition which in this scenario would be the sacrificial platter drive. Due to limitations in the Windows OS platform however, this "shifting" of the (usually C:\ drive) cache to a sacrificial platter drive is not possible as the cache for the System Partition MUST be on the System Partition and this is why write minimization is not fully realized in the software. Mike |
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#3
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Hi Mike and thanks for your reply.
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Apart from this, if I understand your points: a. RSS/RVS creates a virtual system cache b. due to limitations in the Windows OS platform the System Partition cache MUST be on the System Partition c. write minimization is not fully realized in RSS/RVS due to b) If this is correct, than the question becomes: how can we quantify the impact on "some sectors of the disk ... heavily used due to the use of a cache"? |
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#4
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Unlike those solutions that use a static cache approach, the caches in RSS/RVS are dynamic and may or may not use the same free disk space to create the cache with each boot session so it is very difficult to get into the weeds of this as the scenario is more potential than with those solutions using the same exact space over and over to divert and track disk writes. Flash media is getting more robust as time passes, but still has a limitation on the number of times a sector can be written to with the traditional platter drive having a higher tolerance and thus, greater life span (potentially) than the SSD. |
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#5
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thanks Mike PS a further question, if you don't mind: what are the relative merits of static vs dynamic cache approaches? Thanks! Last edited by newbino : June 19th, 2012 at 08:56 AM. |
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