<div dir="ltr">Two of the drives that failed were OCZ and didn't throw any errors prior to failure. One, actually, was partially readable, but it looked like one bank of memory had failed and almost every file had corrupt blocks, or couldn't be read. It lasted in that state for about 2 hours.<div><br></div><div>I can't remember the other type that failed. SanDisk, maybe? Also failed catastrophically (no prior warning, then DEAD). I've got Samsung drives now (< 3 years old) and they haven't failed yet. But still, I don't put anything on an SSD that I can't rebuild or restore from a regular hard drive. Mainly, they are my / partitions and /home directory ( / is rebuildable, /home is backed up nightly to a HDD).</div><div><br></div><div>Regular HDD's are a lot more forgiving about read errors. True, a controller failure can stop the drive cold, but you can always buy an identical model, swap the board and get your data back. Same for corruption. My daughter's MacBook drive died, but I was able to recover about 90% of the data off of it even with all the read errors (and it took like 24+ hours to read the initial image to another hard drive to start the restoration process).</div></div><div dir="ltr"><div><br></div><div>E</div></div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr">On Fri, Jan 15, 2016 at 8:22 AM Simon Hobson <<a href="mailto:linux@thehobsons.co.uk" target="_blank">linux@thehobsons.co.uk</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">Craig Huff <<a href="mailto:huffcslists@gmail.com" target="_blank">huffcslists@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
<br>
> I have migrated my system disk to an SSD with /var mounted on a separate hard drive to limit wear on the SSD. For protection against the day the SSD fails, I'm thinking of mirroring it to a partition on an available hard drive.<br>
<br>
Everyone will have their own preferences.<br>
I stuck an SSD in my backend a while ago, and I just have it as a standalone drive. It replaced raid1 arrays.<br>
<br>
As for backups, the solution I use at work is to use rsync to copy everything to a drive on a backup machine, and then use StoreBackup to keep multiple restore points efficiently. At home, well since you mention it, that reminds me* ...<br>
<br>
<br>
* Actually I do have a backup made with Retrospect, but it doesn't get done as often as I should.<br>
<br>
_______________________________________________<br>
mythtv-users mailing list<br>
<a href="mailto:mythtv-users@mythtv.org" target="_blank">mythtv-users@mythtv.org</a><br>
<a href="http://lists.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">http://lists.mythtv.org/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users</a><br>
<a href="http://wiki.mythtv.org/Mailing_List_etiquette" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">http://wiki.mythtv.org/Mailing_List_etiquette</a><br>
MythTV Forums: <a href="https://forum.mythtv.org" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">https://forum.mythtv.org</a><br>
</blockquote></div>