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Data Storage

Backblaze's 6 TB Hard Drive Face-Off 173

Esra Erimez writes: Backblaze is transitioning from using 4 TB hard drives to 6 TB hard drives in the Storage Pods they will be deploying over the coming months. With over 10,000 hard drives, the choice of which 6TB hard drive to use is critical. They deployed 45 and tested Western Digital (WD60EFRX) and Seagate (STBD6000100) hard drives into two pods that were identical in design and configuration except for the hard drives used.
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Backblaze's 6 TB Hard Drive Face-Off

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  • by hcs_$reboot ( 1536101 ) on Wednesday December 17, 2014 @01:18PM (#48618265)
    - Initial reliability (how many drives failed) – No failures.
    - Running reliability (3 months) – No failures
    - SMART Stats (3 months) – No error conditions recorded for the 5 stats that we utilize.
    - Hard Drive Cost – about the same.
    - Energy Use – The Seagate drives were 7200 rpm and used slightly more electricity than the Western Digital drives which were 5400 rpm. This small difference adds up when you place 45 drives in a Storage Pod and then stack 10 Storage Pods in a cabinet.
    - Loading speed – Edge to Western Digital, by a little over 1 TB per day on average.
    • Those of us behind corporate firewalls thank you.
    • by Solandri ( 704621 ) on Wednesday December 17, 2014 @02:07PM (#48618795)

      - Energy Use â" The Seagate drives were 7200 rpm and used slightly more electricity than the Western Digital drives which were 5400 rpm. This small difference adds up when you place 45 drives in a Storage Pod and then stack 10 Storage Pods in a cabinet.
      - Loading speed â" Edge to Western Digital, by a little over 1 TB per day on average.

      That didn't really make sense to me that the 5400 RPM drive beat out the 7200 RPM drive, so I did a bit of research.

      The WD drives were the WD60EFRX. It's a 5-platter 6TB drive [anandtech.com], or 1.2 TB/platter. It has 64MB cache.

      The Seagate drives were the STBD6000100. It's a 6-platter drive [techradar.com], or 1 TB/platter. It has 128MB cache. Googling for it brings up contradictory information, listing it as both 7200 RPM and 5900 RPM. (Note: It's pathetic that Seagate doesn't list basic information like RPM on their website.)

      So apparently the higher areal density on the WD (meaning more data can be written per rotation, and shorter r/w head strokes to move to a given number of cylinder tracks) is enough to overcome its RPM disadvantage. Given the results, it's likely the Seagate STBD6000100 is 5900 RPM drive, as 7200/5400 = 1.33 which would've exceeded the WD's higher areal density.

      I'd caution though that Backblaze's application seems to be a highly sequential task. Peak transfer rates were over 7 TB/day, which is more than 80 MB/s. Given the larger cache and higher RPM (whether 5900 or 7200), I'd expect the Seagate drive to perform better under random read/writes.

      • by Jahoda ( 2715225 )
        This is great information you've pulled together. I'd like to add that 5900 RPM is a common Seagate speed - and if the drive actually were 7200 RPM, it is likely based on past products in the market that it would be much more expensive than it currently is. Additionally, Seagate would miss no opportunity to advertise 7200 RPM on its website.
      • by sshir ( 623215 )
        I seriously doubt that difference in load is due to drive speed, at least not directly. Their pods are connected by slow (1Gb?) Ethernet. My guess is that there is a sort of interference effect between disk rotation speed, network data rate, buffer sizes, tcp window size etc.
    • by Rich0 ( 548339 )

      - Energy Use – The Seagate drives were 7200 rpm and used slightly more electricity than the Western Digital drives which were 5400 rpm. This small difference adds up when you place 45 drives in a Storage Pod and then stack 10 Storage Pods in a cabinet.

      This makes me wonder if I really should still be buying 7200RPM drives. For the longest time I'd never consider anything else, and for a single-drive desktop I'd still stick with it. However, for systems with OS on SSD and large media on HD I should probably think about dropping to 5400RPM and saving money/power and gaining reliability.

      On Windows I need to think about SSDs and gaming. I really don't want to buy a huge SSD - so I should probably consider installing everything to a large HD and then just m

      • Windows is a pain in the ass, but with some determination you can set everything up on the SSD and then use "junction points" from the rescue disk to connect to a Users directory on a big spinning drive. If you are willing to get about 90% of the way there with just conventional tools, you can just move the "My Documents, My Music, etc." type directories by right-clicking on them, selecting Properties, and then going to the Location tab. From there you can move them to the spinning disk. This is fine if you

        • \Users on the spinning drive means your firefox cache, mails (for people who use mail clients) and other little data (configuration, some pictures, boring documents etc.) sits there too instead of being on SSD. I'd be curious to see if it's better to have Windows on HDD and \Users on SSD instead.

          • I'm thinking (hoping?) that normal disk caching would take care of stuff like that. Honestly, I'd just use the supported method unless your SSD was very, very tiny. I use the junction point method because I wipe out the C: drive from time to time to avoid Windows cruft. Every so often I apply Windows updates and re-baseline.

        • Or even easier, just cut and paste the directories to where you want them and Windows takes care of updating the locations.

          • Thanks, I did not know that. But to be clear, this does not create junction points... this is the "official" method that I reference. I don't want people cutting-and-pasting Users :)

      • I really don't want to buy a huge SSD - so I should probably consider installing everything to a large HD and then just moving data to SSD when it is in use. I just don't know how well-supported that is in Windows.

        What you're asking for there sounds a lot like what the hybrid drives do, and they don't need any software support. I'm happily using one of the Seagate SSHD hybrids in one laptop. It's a nice middle step between the speed of full SSD and the capacity of a regular drive. I got 1TB and faster boots than a regular drive for something like $60.

  • Man, am I old ... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by gstoddart ( 321705 ) on Wednesday December 17, 2014 @01:23PM (#48618319) Homepage

    I remember punching the side of 360K floppies to get another 360K on the other side.

    Now you can buy a couple of gigs of USB drive next to the gum in the express lane at Wal Mart.

    This stuff is awesome and all, but sometimes it's hard to really wrap my head around that pretty much everything about computers (except for physical size) is a billion times bigger than when I started using computers.

    It really is hard to explain to people that at one point your entire digital life was about 20 floppy disks in a plastic case, and that what was once a completely hypothetical amount of storage is commonplace.

    • I remember erasing bootleg Doctor Demented/Dementoid ? radio shows so I could save a new version of a program I had written on my commodore 64.

      I don't think I found how many KB a 60 / 90 or 110 minute Sony audiotape would hold. If anyone remembers please post.

    • I remember buying my first computer. It had a 40 megabyte hard drive and I thought: "This is HUGE! There is no way I'll EVER fill this up." Now, can put thousands of times that amount on a microSD card the size of my fingernail. I just bought a 3TB external hard drive because our old 1TB models were filling up.

      • by geekoid ( 135745 )

        I remember when we just hooked them into a personal tape drive to load something that will fail an hour later at the very end of the load.

        Good times.... was something no one said.

    • C64 Cassette tape (Datasette I think was the name) here.

      One of the best parts - the reader/writer head tended to be off alignment, so there were times you couldn't even share cassettes with your friends - though I was the only one with a Commodore computer anyway (the friends in my pay grade had no comp, my rich friends had Apple II series).

      And my first computer had 2KB of RAM, I'm typing this from a 12Gb Desktop.

      • by GNious ( 953874 )

        C64 Cassette tape (Datasette I think was the name) here.

        One of the best parts - the reader/writer head tended to be off alignment, so there were times you couldn't even share cassettes with your friends - though I was the only one with a Commodore computer anyway (the friends in my pay grade had no comp, my rich friends had Apple II series).

        And my first computer had 2KB of RAM, I'm typing this from a 12Gb Desktop.

        From memory, some loaders/compressors would display a visual "picture" indicating whether the head was aligned according to the data on the tape - then you could use a tiny screwdriver (hole pre-made for the purpose in the device), to properly align the head.

        • by jandrese ( 485 )
          At the risk of being unable to read any of the tapes you made with the old misaligned head. It's saying something when the horribly brain damaged 1541 disk drive for the C=64 was considered a major step up from the other options.
    • Yeah, I remember when 1mhz was fast.

    • Sorry, punching the tab out on the other side so that you could flip the disk over only worked on single-sided drives.

      Single-sided, single-density: 90K
      Single-sided, double-density: 180K
      Double-sided, double-density: 360K

      So if you were already at 360K, you were already double-sided.

      • wrong, there was also 80 cylinder, 96 TPI, single sided, double density, 360Kb disk

        • http://www.3480-3590-data-conv... [3480-3590-...ersion.com]

          • by crow ( 16139 )

            Thanks for finding that source! I was looking at the list of floppy disk formats on Wikipedia to respond, and it didn't have that.

            80 cylinder, 96 TPI

            This was the second type of 5.25" drive made, and the least popular (and known) of the three types of drives. These double the capacity of the original drive by doubling the number of cylinders (tracks) from 40 to 80. They use the same media as the the 40 cylinder 48 TPI drives, but it is certified (tested) on all 80 tracks, as opposed to the standard disks wh

            • No, I had a Teac DSDD drive on my TRS-80 Model I. I had to build a custom disk controller to support it though. This was in '80, so it predated the IBM PC by about a year and a half. Also, the PC used soft sectors, didn't it? The TRS-80 drive controllers were all hard sector.

              I also had a Shugart 35-track SSDD drive, if I remember correctly.

              It's obviously been a while, but I remember 35 track hard sector SSSD, 40 track hard sector SSSD, 40 track hard sector SSDD, and the brilliant Holy Grail of 40 track DSDD

      • by jandrese ( 485 )
        You could punch a hole to turn a double-density floppy into a high density floppy, at least with the 3.5" floppies. It worked the few times I tried it but the need for antics like that faded pretty quickly as technology marched on.
    • Uh, if I remember correctly, PCs used both sides of the disk. Apple ][s did not.

      • Well, there was a point (and I am talking DOS here) where some PCs did.

        Because I used to own the little punch thingy and did it. I did not own an Apple.

        I honestly don't recall the disk sizes, so I could be wrong about that.

        But, since I had a PC in around 1984/1985 which did this, I can tell you that some of them did use single sided floppies. Granted, it was a crappy Tandy PC, so it was extra useless and special. I had a whole 256K of RAM, so 640K seemed like so much. :-P

        On a machine running DOS, I most

        • Someone else pointed out that 360K was double sided double density disks, so yours probably was before that. I think that was the 90K single sided single density disks (the Apple ][s were superior during that time, being capable of 140K... :P :P Though, sadly, they never got to double density drives)

  • Since we have a Backblaze staff member here, can I ask why did you guys not test Hitachi's 6TB drives?

For God's sake, stop researching for a while and begin to think!

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