John Conover (12022-12-26):
> So, the more unused SD space is better, since wear leveling writes to
> a "bit" that has been written to fewer times.
> 
> To test, say with a 16 GB SD, fill the SD to all except the last 1 KB,
> and with a looping script, write 1KB of 1's to the remainder of the
> SD, erase the "bits," then 1KB of 0's, erase the "bits", and so on;
> the SD card will fail within hours to a few days, (with luck-note that
> MTBF is mean time between failures, meaning that by MTBF, half will
> have failed, half still running; its a stochastic/probability issue;
> it does NOT mean that all are expected to last at least 6K writes.)
> 
> Doing the same test without filling to the last 1 KB, and the SD card
> will last a very long time, (about 16 million total writes.)

Are you suggesting that the microcontroller of the SD card is capable of
decoding filesystem data structures to find out which sectors are
unused?

I find it rather surprising.

That implies a SD card could discard data from deleted file, defeating
recovery tools and steganography.

If find it highly doubtful.

Regards,

-- 
  Nicolas George

Attachment: signature.asc
Description: PGP signature

Reply via email to