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A hybrid drive (solid state hybrid drive – SSHD, and dual-storage drive) is a logical or physical computer storage device that combines a faster storage medium such as solid-state drive (SSD) with a higher-capacity hard disk drive (HDD). The intent is adding some of the speed of SSDs to the cost-effective storage capacity of traditional HDDs.
A hard disk head on an access arm resting on a hard disk platter. The access time or response time of a rotating drive is a measure of the time it takes before the drive can actually transfer data. The factors that control this time on a rotating drive are mostly related to the mechanical nature of the rotating disks and moving heads. It is ...
Origin device – provides slow primary storage (usually an HDD) Cache device – provides a fast cache (usually an SSD) Metadata device – records the placement of blocks and their dirty flags, as well as other internal data required by a cache policy, including per-block hit counts; a metadata device cannot be shared between multiple cache ...
Input/output operations per second (IOPS, pronounced eye-ops) is an input/output performance measurement used to characterize computer storage devices like hard disk drives (HDD), solid state drives (SSD), and storage area networks (SAN).
A 500 GB Western Digital hard disk drive with a 16 MB buffer In computer storage , a disk buffer (often ambiguously called a disk cache or a cache buffer ) is the embedded memory in a hard disk drive (HDD) or solid-state drive (SSD) acting as a buffer between the rest of the computer and the physical hard disk platter or flash memory that is ...
Also, flash-based devices experience memory wear that reduces service life resulting from limitations of flash memory that impose a finite number of program–erase cycles used to write data. Due to this, solid-state storage is frequently used for hybrid drives , in which solid-state storage serves as a cache for frequently accessed data ...
While storage devices usually have their size expressed in powers of 10 (for instance a 1 TB Solid State Drive will contain at least 1,000,000,000,000 (10 12, 1000 4) bytes), filesystem limits are invariably powers of 2, so usually expressed with IEC prefixes.
The core idea of ReadyBoost is that a flash memory (e.g. a USB flash drive or an SSD) has a much faster seek time than a typical magnetic hard disk (less than 1 ms), allowing it to satisfy requests faster than reading files from the hard disk. It also leverages the inherent advantage of two parallel sources from which to read data, whereas ...