[mdlug] Some SSD notes

Brandon bfotiu at gmail.com
Thu Jan 16 10:16:40 EST 2014


Ray,

Thank you for the advice and the writeup. I'm planning on replacing my old
netbook's traditional HD with an SSD and I'll be using your recommendations.

Best,

Brandon
On Jan 16, 2014 9:43 AM, "Ingles, Raymond" <Raymond.Ingles at compuware.com>
wrote:

> As I've said before, I recently put my root partition onto SSD, while
> keeping my /home directory on standard hard disk. Taking advice from
> several articles on the web, I did the following tweaks to help the SSD
> system work more smoothly:
>
> 1.      Set up a daily TRIM operation on the SSD.
>
> This essentially advises the SSD which blocks are being used by the
> filesystem and which are not. This allows the SSD to more efficiently
> allocate, clear, and remap blocks, which speeds writing files considerably.
> There are a couple ways to do it; you can add the fs option "discard" to
> the mount options in the fstab, but apparently this can cause some
> noticeable overhead in normal file operations. Better is setting up a daily
> cron job to do the TRIM housekeeping, and get that overhead out of the way
> all at once. (References: https://patrick-nagel.net/blog/archives/337
> http://www.webupd8.org/2013/01/enable-trim-on-ssd-solid-state-drives.html)
>
> 2.      Add the 'noatime' and 'nodiratime' mount options to the root
> listing in /etc/fstab
>
> Unix filesystems typically keep track not just when a file was created or
> modified, but also when they are accessed. (Linus Torvalds has noted that
> causing a write operation for every read operation is pretty wonky...) Some
> software actually uses this (a few mail programs use it to check for unread
> mail, some backup tools, etc.) but mostly it's not that big a deal, and
> minimizing such writes can boost performance (and disk life) noticeably.
> I'm also pondering changing that to 'relatime' but we'll see. (References:
> http://linux.koolsolutions.com/2009/01/30/installing-linux-on-usb-part-4-noatime-and-relatime-mount-options/)
>
> 3.      Use tmpfs to minimize disk writes
>
> Some file information can be kept in RAM instead of on disk. Generally
> this should be stuff that doesn't need to survive a reboot. Linux supports
> the 'tmpfs' filesystem (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tmpfs) which
> essentially creates a RAM disk to store a directory tree. I've got /tmp,
> /var/spool, and /var/tmp mounted as tmpfs (see
> http://apcmag.com/how-to-maximise-ssd-performance-with-linux.htm ). (Of
> course, I have plenty of RAM. If your system swaps a lot, this might not be
> the way to go. Better still, get more RAM!)
>
> Other references:
>
> http://www.howtogeek.com/62761/how-to-tweak-your-ssd-in-ubuntu-for-better-performance/
> https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Solid_State_Drives
> https://wiki.debian.org/SSDOptimization
>
> Hope this might save someone else some time or trouble!
>
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