Capacitors, etc., in hard drives and SSD for DBMS machines... - Mailing list pgsql-performance

From Jean-David Beyer
Subject Capacitors, etc., in hard drives and SSD for DBMS machines...
Date
Msg-id 577F7F2A.10307@verizon.net
Whole thread Raw
Responses Re: Capacitors, etc., in hard drives and SSD for DBMS machines...  (Levente Birta <blevi.linux@gmail.com>)
Re: Capacitors, etc., in hard drives and SSD for DBMS machines...  (Thomas Samson <koollman@gmail.com>)
Re: Capacitors, etc., in hard drives and SSD for DBMS machines...  (Karl Denninger <karl@denninger.net>)
Re: Capacitors, etc., in hard drives and SSD for DBMS machines...  (vincent <vinny@xs4all.nl>)
List pgsql-performance
Why all this concern about how long a disk (or SSD) drive can stay up
after a power failure?

It seems to me that anyone interested in maintaining an important
database would have suitable backup power on their entire systems,
including the disk drives, so they could coast over any power loss.

I do not have any database that important, but my machine has an APC
Smart-UPS that has 2 1/2 hours of backup time with relatively new
batteries in it. It is so oversize because my previous computer used
much more power than this one does. And if my power company has a brown
out or black out of over 7 seconds, my natural gas fueled backup
generator picks up the load very quickly.

Am I overlooking something?

--
  .~.  Jean-David Beyer          Registered Linux User 85642.
  /V\  PGP-Key:166D840A 0C610C8B Registered Machine  1935521.
 /( )\ Shrewsbury, New Jersey    http://linuxcounter.net
 ^^-^^ 06:15:01 up 36 days, 12:17, 2 users, load average: 4.16, 4.26, 4.30


pgsql-performance by date:

Previous
From: Mark Kirkwood
Date:
Subject: Re: Tuning guidelines for server with 256GB of RAM and SSDs?
Next
From: Levente Birta
Date:
Subject: Re: Capacitors, etc., in hard drives and SSD for DBMS machines...