Difference between revisions of "How to improve harddisk performance"

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hdparm stuff!
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== Description ==
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This tweak can increase the performance of your HDD by enabling DMA, IDE 32-bit I/O and setting the interrupt-unmask flag, which improves Linux's responsiveness. The last parameter sets the IDE Block Mode to fetch 16 blocks per I/O interrupt. Depending on your drive this value may vary (run hdparm -iI /dev/hda to find it out).
  
This parameter works for my T20 and T41
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'''Caution:''' On some hard disks, inadvertent experimenting with hdparm options may corrupt the filesystem! Again, have a look into the man page of hdparm to find out if your model is affected.
  
For harddisks:
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On systems where the traditional ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI stack is used, the following is appropriate:
  
hdparm -d1c1u1m16 /dev/hda
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<pre>
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hdparm -d1 -c1 -u1 -m16 /dev/hda
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</pre>
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On newer systems with SATA hard drives (exposed e.g. as /dev/sda), only -d option is applicable, and it has no effect as DMA is already enabled.  (An R61, interestingly, has a SATA HDD whilst the CD+DVD drive is connected via an IDE controller.)
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You may also want to tune the acoustic setting (-M), power management mode (-B): for best performance, try -M254 and -B254).
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== Successfully tested Thinkpad models ==
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The settings above have been successfully tested on the following models:
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T20, T22, T23, T40
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Please add your model if missing.

Latest revision as of 23:57, 10 November 2008

Description

This tweak can increase the performance of your HDD by enabling DMA, IDE 32-bit I/O and setting the interrupt-unmask flag, which improves Linux's responsiveness. The last parameter sets the IDE Block Mode to fetch 16 blocks per I/O interrupt. Depending on your drive this value may vary (run hdparm -iI /dev/hda to find it out).

Caution: On some hard disks, inadvertent experimenting with hdparm options may corrupt the filesystem! Again, have a look into the man page of hdparm to find out if your model is affected.

On systems where the traditional ATA/(E)IDE and ATAPI stack is used, the following is appropriate:

hdparm -d1 -c1 -u1 -m16 /dev/hda

On newer systems with SATA hard drives (exposed e.g. as /dev/sda), only -d option is applicable, and it has no effect as DMA is already enabled. (An R61, interestingly, has a SATA HDD whilst the CD+DVD drive is connected via an IDE controller.)

You may also want to tune the acoustic setting (-M), power management mode (-B): for best performance, try -M254 and -B254).

Successfully tested Thinkpad models

The settings above have been successfully tested on the following models:

T20, T22, T23, T40

Please add your model if missing.