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Computer data storage
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=== Performance === ; [[Latency (engineering)|Latency]]: The time it takes to access a particular location in storage. The relevant [[unit of measurement]] is typically [[nanosecond]] for primary storage, [[millisecond]] for secondary storage, and [[second]] for tertiary storage. It may make sense to separate read latency and write latency (especially for non-volatile memory) and in case of sequential access storage, minimum, maximum and average latency. ; [[Hard_ disk drive performance characteristics#Data transfer rate|Throughput]]: The rate at which information can be read from or written to the storage. In computer data storage, throughput is usually expressed in terms of megabytes per second (MB/s), though [[bit rate]] may also be used. As with latency, read rate and write rate may need to be differentiated. Also accessing media sequentially, as opposed to randomly, typically yields maximum throughput. ; Granularity: The size of the largest "chunk" of data that can be efficiently accessed as a single unit, e.g. without introducing additional latency. ;Reliability: The probability of spontaneous bit value change under various conditions, or overall [[failure rate]]. Utilities such as [[hdparm]] and [[sar (Unix)|sar]] can be used to measure IO performance in Linux.
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