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October 21, 2008 12:00 AM

Q. Should I defragment my solid state disk (SSD)?

Windows IT Pro
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A. With traditional hard drives, a majority of the time taken to read and write information is for the head articulator in the hard drive to move the read/write heads to the correct position, then wait for the platters to rotate to the correct position, so that data can be read or written. To improve performance, you want to minimize these seek operations and keep all data that relates to a particular file in a single place on the disk. This is what defragmenting the hard drive does: It takes all the fragments of files on a disk and moves them into a contiguous stream, thus speeding up disk operations.

An SSD has no moving parts, spinning platters, or read/write heads. Performance is the same whether data for a file is stored in continuous bits of memory or scattered throughout the memory.

Therefore, I recommend that you not defragment SSDs, as nothing would be gained and the defragment operations cause additional write cycles on the memory chips. These write cycles reduce an SSD’s lifetime, though not by much

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Comments
  • John
    3 years ago
    Jan 16, 2009

    I have found that is is necessary to dfragment free space in order to maintain SSD performance particularly with utilities which scan the whole disk array e.g. Cas[er, Perfect Disk

  • Sancre
    4 years ago
    Oct 21, 2008

    From what I've been reading elsewhere, SSD write performance is affected by free space fragmentation although read performance remains relatively unaffected. There is a whitepaper on the Diskeeper site that has performance figures for free space fragmented SSDs, and performance seems to degrade quite noticeably with free space fragmentation. Looks like SSDs are not totally immune from fragmentation related effects??

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