- Nov 18, 2005
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The recent SSD Defrag thread reminded me that I have been very curious about a similar subject:
Storing a VM data store on an SSD used to be strongly advised against. Is this still bad practice to store on an SSD?
I've got a VM I use for work stuff (Win10 vm) and the performance difference is noticeable, but it seems to be strictly disk-limited performance, otherwise it feels like it really keeps up for what I need. I'm just wondering if throwing the datastore on an SSD would be a bad idea.
I know it used to be all about the fact that the whole data store would be viewed as a single file to the file system and thus the SSD wouldn't be able to properly utilize TRIM and wear-leveling on those blocks and would create uneven wear.
On a similar note, I am considering the same thing for an ESXi box I plan to build this summer. For that, I would put a few different VM data stores on an SSD.
Storing a VM data store on an SSD used to be strongly advised against. Is this still bad practice to store on an SSD?
I've got a VM I use for work stuff (Win10 vm) and the performance difference is noticeable, but it seems to be strictly disk-limited performance, otherwise it feels like it really keeps up for what I need. I'm just wondering if throwing the datastore on an SSD would be a bad idea.
I know it used to be all about the fact that the whole data store would be viewed as a single file to the file system and thus the SSD wouldn't be able to properly utilize TRIM and wear-leveling on those blocks and would create uneven wear.
On a similar note, I am considering the same thing for an ESXi box I plan to build this summer. For that, I would put a few different VM data stores on an SSD.