The cloud storage company BACKBLAZE has published another in their series of quarterly articles looking into Disk Drive failure rates.
The company had 68,813 spinning hard drives in operation. For Q3 2016 they have 67,642 drives, which is 1,171 fewer than their last quarterly report. The decline is because they have been migrating from their 2 terabyte (TB) drives to 8 TB models. They currently run a mix of 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 and 8 TB drives in their cloud storage system from a mix of different vendors.
The 8 TB drives are too new to reflect anything other than infant mortality rates, but all of the other sizes have been heavily used for years, such that some brand-specific trends are starting to appear.
The results are summarized in a table with the key metric being Annualized Failure Rate which is computed as follows: ((Failures)/(Drive Days/365)) * 100.
The Seagate 8 TB drives are doing very well. Their annualized failure rate compares favorably to the HGST 2 TB hard drives. With the average age of the HGST drives being 66 months, their failure rate was likely to rise, simply because of normal wear and tear. The average age of the Seagate 8 TB hard drives is just 3 months, but their 1.6% failure rate during the first few months bodes well for a continued low failure rate going forward.
Still, when you look at all the brands and models involved, the HGST brand seem to show the lowest failure rates historically.
With some reporting failure rates over 10% annually, mirrored drives may still be a wise choice for not trusting in the cloud.
(Score: 2) by krishnoid on Friday November 18 2016, @07:48PM
Then again, I'm only a bear, and bears are said to have remarkably small brains.
I just had the strangest image go through my head.
"Gee Yogi, are you sure we can run this whole datacenter by ourselves?"
"Fret not, my diminutive friend! It's just a bunch of hard disks under vendor support. What could go wrong?"