12 years of HDD analysis brings insight to the bathtub curve’s reliability

-


Backblaze is a backup and cloud storage company that has been tracking the annualized failure rates (AFRs) of the hard drives in its datacenter since 2013. As you can imagine, that’s netted the firm a lot of data. And that data has led the company to conclude that HDDs “are lasting longer” and showing fewer errors.

That conclusion came from a blog post this week by Stephanie Doyle, Backblaze’s writer and blog operations specialist, and Pat Patterson, Backblaze’s chief technical evangelist. The authors compared the AFRs for the approximately 317,230 drives in Backblaze’s datacenter to the AFRs the company recorded when examining the 21,195 drives it had in 2013 and 206,928 drives in 2021. Doyle and Patterson said they identified “a pretty solid deviation in both age of drive failure and the high point of AFR from the last two times we’ve run the analyses.”

As Doyle and Patterson wrote, the tested drives’ high failure percentage peaks this year were 4.25 percent at 10 years and three months, compared to 13.73 percent at about three years and three months in 2013 and 14.24 percent at seven years and nine months in 2021.

“Not only is that a significant improvement in drive longevity, it’s also the first time we’ve seen the peak drive failure rate at the hairy end of the drive curve. And, it’s about a third of each of the other failure peaks,” Doyle and Patterson wrote.

You can check out Paterson and Doyle’s August blog post for more information about the drives they analyzed this year. The drives were from HGST, Seagate, Toshiba, and WDC, and they had an average age of 3.7 months to 103.9 months (about 8.7 years). The drives ranged from 4TB to 24TB. In 2021, Backblaze’s sample had drives from the same vendors, and the drives tested for each model had an average age of 3.57 to 80.85 months (about 6.7 years). The drives ranged from 4TB to 16TB.

As Backblaze has done in the past, Doyle and Paterson compared the behaviors of Backblaze’s datacenter HDDs with the bathtub curve, an engineering principle that says component failure rates tend to follow a U-shape over time, with more failures occurring early in life before the rate drops, settles, and then picks up again as the component ages.



Source link

Latest news

Lenovo’s Legion Go 2 Is a Good Handheld for Power Users

The detachable controllers go a long way towards making the device more portable and usable. The screen has...

Why Tehran Is Running Out of Water

This story originally appeared on Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists and is part of the Climate Desk collaboration.During...

Move Over, MIPS—There’s a New Bike Helmet Safety Tech in Town

Over the course of several hours and a few dozen trail miles, I had little to say about...

Security News This Week: Oh Crap, Kohler’s Toilet Cameras Aren’t Really End-to-End Encrypted

An AI image creator startup left its database unsecured, exposing more than a million images and videos its...

Gevi’s Espresso Machine Works Fine, but There Are Better Options at This Price Point

The coffee gadget market has caused a massive proliferation of devices for all tastes, preferences, and budgets, but...

Gear News of the Week: Google Drops Another Android Update, and the Sony A7 V Is Here

It was only back in June that Android 16 delivered a raft of new features for Google's operating...

Must read

You might also likeRELATED
Recommended to you