Virtual ram drive for paging file with SSD

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  • MrMaxwell
    Too lazy to set a custom title
    • Jul 2005
    • 10057

    #1

    Virtual ram drive for paging file with SSD

    Not too worried about speed, but I thought maybe my SSD will last longer if I page to a virtual drive? The thing is, I have 16gb of memory.. and supposedly if the paging file is not a little larger than the actual ram, that's not good?

    I try to run without a paging file and windows tells me to fuck myself.. it puts one on there anyway
  • AdultEUhost
    ORLY?
    • Oct 2005
    • 2579

    #2
    Underpartition your SSD so it wears longer

    So if your SSD is 120Gb, create a partition of let's say 100Gb
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    • Mr Pheer
      So Fucking Banned
      • Dec 2002
      • 22083

      #3
      Do they not last long?

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      • ruff
        I have a plan B
        • Aug 2004
        • 5507

        #4
        If you're using Win 7, leave the paging file alone. Especially with an SSD.
        CryptoFeeds

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        • AdultEUhost
          ORLY?
          • Oct 2005
          • 2579

          #5
          If it's a laptop, you should disable hibernate and just shutdown as it will save your memory to a file on every shutdown to save your current session
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          Nominated for an XBIZ Award as "Webhost of the Year" in 2007, 2012, 2013 and 2014

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          • Brent 3dSexCash
            Octopus Anime
            • Sep 2007
            • 1064

            #6
            Originally posted by Mr Pheer
            Do they not last long?
            They have a limited lifespan when it comes to writing to the drive. I guess the memory cells can only handle being written over a certain amount of times -- but it's in the millions (i forget the exact number).

            THE NICE THING ABOUT SSDS is....even if your drive fails (i.e. you've killed it by writing too many times), your machine will still boot, and you can still get all the data off it. It has an unlimited 'read' life cycle.

            Also never, ever, ever defragment an SSD. ever.

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            • bronco67
              Too lazy to set a custom title
              • Dec 2006
              • 29032

              #7
              Page files are small reads and writes...and SSd's are good at that. So, there you go.

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              • EddyTheDog
                Just Doing My Own Thing
                • Jan 2011
                • 25433

                #8
                What speed do you get from an SSD?

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                • raymor
                  Confirmed User
                  • Oct 2002
                  • 3745

                  #9
                  16 GB = little to no paging = no worries
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                  • EddyTheDog
                    Just Doing My Own Thing
                    • Jan 2011
                    • 25433

                    #10
                    I havnt got a clue really - I am looking at SSD for my next destop though.

                    Just wondering if a USB 3 flash drive would work for paging?

                    Comment

                    • femdomdestiny
                      Confirmed User
                      • Apr 2007
                      • 5183

                      #11
                      Originally posted by EddyTheDog
                      What speed do you get from an SSD?
                      OCZ Vertex 3 - Max Read: up to 550MB/s - Write: 500MB/s. Works fine here.
                      Femdom Destiny


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                      • 2MuchMark
                        Mark of 2Much.net
                        • Aug 2004
                        • 50977

                        #12
                        SSD drives have no moving parts, and it doesn't matter how much you use it or how you partition it. It will last as long as any other electronic component, and much longer than hard drives.

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                        • rowan
                          Too lazy to set a custom title
                          • Mar 2002
                          • 17393

                          #13
                          Originally posted by Brent 3dSexCash
                          THE NICE THING ABOUT SSDS is....even if your drive fails (i.e. you've killed it by writing too many times), your machine will still boot, and you can still get all the data off it. It has an unlimited 'read' life cycle.
                          This would probably only be relevant with that little 8GB drive that you paid $1000 for in 2004... with modern SSDs it's unlikely that typical use would ever wear out the cells.

                          SSDs as a whole are still pretty flaky. A current drive is more likely to just die completely than go "read only" because you wrote to it too many times.

                          Comment

                          • rowan
                            Too lazy to set a custom title
                            • Mar 2002
                            • 17393

                            #14
                            Originally posted by MarkPrince
                            SSD drives have no moving parts, and it doesn't matter how much you use it or how you partition it. It will last as long as any other electronic component, and much longer than hard drives.
                            The last bit is also something I'd dispute... I think it was SSDs with early Sandforce controllers that routinely committed suicide, they just stopped working without warning.

                            With block deduplication, compression, virtual to logical sector mapping... data recovery is a hell of a lot more complicated with SSD.

                            So whatever you're using, you still need to back up.

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