How do I find out what write continuously on my pfSense SSD
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@stephenw10
this should added to the documentation (IMHO), if someone enable pfBlockerNG on a 1100
it will write "down" the storage.Maybe an hint here:
https://docs.netgate.com/pfsense/en/latest/packages/pfblocker.htmlI learned (again) many thinks of pfSense / FreeBSD.
Thanks @bmeeks @Gertjan @stephenw10 -
This wasn't a big issue with UFS, but it has become a problem with the functionality of ZFS.
With a RAM disk this is no longer a problem, so it should be included in the documentation.Keep an eye on the RAM disk values when you trigger the pfBlocker reload, then you need space for all the tables.
That's why I use 256/2048MB. -
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RAM disk works as expected, what a huge difference!
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Now more than four months later we had the same written data units like before in one week without the ram disk.
Available Spare: 100% Available Spare Threshold: 10% Percentage Used: 68% Data Units Read: 25,221 [12.9 GB] Data Units Written: 93,370,737 [47.8 TB] Host Read Commands: 4,428,272 Host Write Commands: 4,340,924,956 Controller Busy Time: 42,507 Power Cycles: 25 Power On Hours: 16,659
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@stephenw10 curious but do most customers run RAMDISK as part of their standard deployment or is it used mainly for systems with weaker storage drives?
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No, RAM disks are pretty rare amongst the general customer base in my experience.
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@michmoor said in How do I find out what write continuously on my pfSense SSD:
weaker storage drives?
Define a weaker storage drive?
I my case it is a server SSD with 128 GB, but 47 TB in 1 1/2 year is to much for a router... -
Generally, eMMC or CF/SD cards vs SSDs.
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@NOCling said in How do I find out what write continuously on my pfSense SSD:
Keep an eye on the RAM disk values when you trigger the pfBlocker reload, then you need space for all the tables.
That's why I use 256/2048MB.Is there a way to monitor it easily? And are your values failsafe? I just noticed I had a much to low value for /tmp...
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The size and usage are shown on the dashboard in the Disks widget.