On Feb 9, 2011, at 3:06 AM, Matt Connolly wrote:

> I stil get these symptoms with OI-148.
> 
>> 2. They spin down heads every 8 seconds.
> 
> This particular problem can be overcome by using the WD3IDLE command to 
> defeat this behaviour.
> 
>> 3. I have seen a few bad sector reports and bad heads on those drives.
> 
> I haven't seen any read/write errors in `zpool status` ever. (nearly one year 
> old).
> 
> I'm not going to get another WD * EARS drive.

This and another thread about ECC vs non-ECC memory got me thinking... I don't 
know how this applies to ZFS but under Windows XP there's an "advanced format 
align utility" that WD has for aligning 512 byte writes on 4k boundaries.

But what really stands out is that you're using a desktop drive & expecting 
enterprise features from it. The white paper below was written shortly before 
4k sector drives but it's still relevant. One thing it doesn't mention that I 
often hear from junior sysadmins is some clarification about OEM server drives 
vs off the shelf desktop drives -- a conversation usually started over pricing 
differences.

This is becoming less of an issue in the enterprise because fewer servers use 
SATA drives these days but if you're building your own array using SATA drives 
or some mix of SAS and SATA in the same chassis then it's something to keep in 
mind. OEMs often have their own disk controller firmware tweaks and burn-in 
testing procedures that are applied before shipping. Without confusing the 
issue by talking more about OEM vs standard enterprise drives in this message, 
please consider the details in the white paper before deploying drives for home 
or office in a system that you're expecting to use for long term retention of 
data.

-Gary 

ftp://download.intel.com/support/motherboards/server/sb/enterprise_class_versus_desktop_class_hard_drives_.pdf


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