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Dell PowerVault ME4 Series Storage System Administrator’s Guide

Overprovisioning

The write amplification factor of an SSD is defined as the ratio of the amount of data actually written by the SSD to the amount of host or user data requested to be written. This is used to account for the user data and activities like wear leveling. This affects wear leveling calculations and is influenced by the characteristics of data written to and read from SSDs. Data that is written in sequential LBAs that are aligned on 4KB boundaries results in the best write amplification factor. The worst write amplification factor typically occurs for randomly written LBAs of transfer sizes that are less than 4KB and that originate on LBAs that are not on 4KB boundaries. Try to align your data on 4KB boundaries.


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