• @LazerFX@sh.itjust.works
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    45 months ago

    That’s because the drive was written to its limits; the defrag runs a TRIM command that safely releases and resets empty sectors. Random reads and sequential reads /on clean drives that are regularly TRIMmed/ are within random variance of each other.

    Source: ran large scale data collection for a data centre when SSDs were relatively new to the company so focused a lot on it, plus lots of data from various sectors since.

    • @Alawami@lemmy.ml
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      5 months ago

      I’m pretty sure running XFS defrag will defrag without trimming no matter the type of block device.

      Edit: yea you might actually be right. I Played with my fstab too much years ago, and never thought of that untill now

        • @Alawami@lemmy.ml
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          25 months ago

          yea you might actually be right. I Played with my fstab too much years ago, and never thought of that until now

          But does that flag affect manually running xfs_fsr?

          • @LazerFX@sh.itjust.works
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            25 months ago

            According to the man(8) page, it will avoid touching any blocks that have the chattr -f flag set, which is XSR_XFLAGS_NODEFRAG… So I think if the docs are still accurate to the code, yes.

            A lot of ifs in that assumption.