Re: Unidentified subject!
>> AFAIK the bogus 128TB drives do properly report such ridiculous sizes:
>> the reality only hits when you try to actually store that amount of
>> information on them.
>> [ I'm not sure how it works under the hood, but since SSDs store their
>> data "anywhere" in the flash, they can easily pretend to have any size
>> they want, and allocate the physical flash blocks only on-the-fly as
>> logical blocks are being written.
>> Also, some Flash controllers use compression, so if you store data
>> that compresses well, they can let you store a lot more than if you
>> store already compressed data. ]
>> IOW, to really check, try to save 2TB of videos (or other already
>> compressed data), and then try and read it back.
>>
> Sounds like a lawsuit to me. If I can get Alexanders script from a few days
> back to run. Is bash not actually bash these days? It is not doing for
> loops for me.
As discussed in related threads, there's the `f3` package in Debian
designed specifically for that.
You can try `f3probe /dev/sdX` (or use `f3write` and `f3read` if you
prefer to test at the filesystem level rather than at the block level).
Stefan
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