On 06/11/2014 02:12 PM, Ralf wrote:
Hi there,
I'm using Gentoo ~amd64 on my NAS.
This is my setup:
Mainboard - Asus E35M1
CPU - AMD E350
HDD - 1x 500GiB WD Caviar Green WD5000AADS (root)
HDD - 4x 3TiB WD Caviar Green WD30EZRX (Raid10)
As these hard drives are desktop hard drives and not designed for
24/7 purposes, I want to spin them down when they are not in use.
(And in fact, they will probably be idling most of the time, so
let's save energy)
I'm able to force spin down those drive by using hdparm -y. hdparm
-C then tells me, that they switched from active/idle to standby.
Setting standby-time using hdparm -S also seems to work fine:
hdparm -S 10 /dev/sdb
/dev/sdb:
setting standby to 10 (50 seconds)
But this does not standby my drive after 50 seconds. So I tried to
set the Power Management Level:
hdparm -B 5 /dev/sdb
/dev/sdb:
setting Advanced Power Management level to 0x05 (5)
HDIO_DRIVE_CMD failed: Input/output error
APM_level = not supported
Obviously, my system does not support APM what I can hardly
believe...
So I tried to enable APM but my kernel configuration doesn't allow
me to enable APM support as long as I use a 64 bit kernel - APM
option is only available for 32 bit kernels.
What am I doing wrong? My hardware is *relatively* new and I don't
believe that it doesn't support those power management features.
But besides that, does anyone have further tips or tricks to
protect hard drives? E.g. try to minimize Load Cycle Count, ...
Output of hdparm -I: http://pastebin.com/RyAU6u8T
Cheers,
Ralf
50 seconds is very small timeout, be wary of spinup/spindown cycles
which imho are worse than always spinning.
depending on what is accessing /dev/sdb you might find that it
sleeps then immediately is woken. lsof is your friend here.
this is how I do it (my time is ten mins)
# /etc/conf.d/hdparm
# or, you can set hdparm options for all drives
all_args="-S120"
then..
# /etc/init.d/hdparm start