SD Express cards from Samsung promise faster-than-SATA speeds for microSD(arstechnica.com)
arstechnica.com
SD Express cards from Samsung promise faster-than-SATA speeds for microSD
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/02/sd-express-cards-from-samsung-promise-faster-than-sata-speeds-for-microsd-devices/
15 comments
Yeah, the unreliability of SD cards is the main reason that I stopped using single board computers as my home server. It was extremely frustrating to have everything break when the SD card decided to stop working.
Say what you want about spinning disk drives, but in my experience they tend to be a lot more resilient than SD cards.
Say what you want about spinning disk drives, but in my experience they tend to be a lot more resilient than SD cards.
eMMC has been far more reliable for SBC use in my experience so far, compared to SD and microSD cards.
For example, Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 has variants with different sizes of eMMC.
Also, making the rootfs read-only goes a long way. In Raspberry Pi OS you can go into the raspi-config menu and choose Performance -> Overlay, something like that to make the rootfs readonly with an overlay fs that exists in ram only. Depending on your situation it may be useful to enable this. (Anything you actually want to persist you’ll have to write to another attached storage, or send over the network to somewhere else.)
For example, Raspberry Pi Compute Module 4 has variants with different sizes of eMMC.
Also, making the rootfs read-only goes a long way. In Raspberry Pi OS you can go into the raspi-config menu and choose Performance -> Overlay, something like that to make the rootfs readonly with an overlay fs that exists in ram only. Depending on your situation it may be useful to enable this. (Anything you actually want to persist you’ll have to write to another attached storage, or send over the network to somewhere else.)
The last one I used was the Nvidia Jetson Nano. I'm sure there's a way of getting eMMC working on there, but after frying the fifth of sixth microSD card I threw my hands in the air and decided to go back to Intel.
I wonder if the NixOS tmpfs trick could be useful for something like this though...
I wonder if the NixOS tmpfs trick could be useful for something like this though...
I meet people that actually store things on their SD cards, like all their photos and videos they took are never on any other device
I’m flummoxed!
probably common
I’m flummoxed!
probably common
Either it works and you have them in a nice convenient place, or it doesn't and you don't have to worry about it anymore. It's a win win.
Wonder if anyone has made a mirrored raid type device where two micro’s go into a full size
This would be great for something like a Steam deck or Switch. And phones as well, less of an excuse to leave out a MicroSD slot.
>The SD Express standard allows SD cards to take advantage of a single lane's worth of PCIe bandwidth,
so worse CF Express?
so worse CF Express?
> Version 8.0 was announced on 19 May 2020, with support for two PCIe lanes with an additional row of contacts and PCIe 4.0 transfer rates, for a maximum bandwidth of 3938 MB/s.
According to wiki it's two lanes at most
According to wiki it's two lanes at most
Do they have better reliability though?
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Better make a backup copy of anything you put on an SD card because the failure rate is rather high in my experience.