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I'm actually not 100% what killed the drive. It could have been an issue with the drive wearing out, but my services didn't write much locally and it wasn't super old so I assume its a heat issue with a fanless micro system. I try to write everything important to my NASs so I don't have to worry about random hardware failures, but this one didn't have backups configured before it failed. Other than the drive issue its been solid for 1.5-2 years of near constant uptime.
Unless you are writing petabytes the nvme did not just burn "wear" out. Probably shouldn't do anything until you figured out what caused this failure
Consumer SSDs generally only have a 200-600TBW rating, not petabytes. Its pretty easy to wear one out in a few years installed in a server.
Yeah, I didnt think that was a realistic possibility. Given that it was a bitty fan less nuc style system, I'm leaning more to a heat death as I originally surmised.
E: though another person suggested a frigate misconfig could have worn the drive out early
Is the drive totally dead? Curious what SMART would report.
My gut feeling is that it's probably cheaper to buy a replacement m.2 than the hours of time to get netboot working but it could be a fun project!
I might be able to hook it up to a usb NVMe reader, but when I initially tried I barely got any recognition of the drive from the OS. My primary system is windows, so I might get more info from one of my linux systems, just haven't had the fucks to give to the dead drive. As for a replacement drive, funds are scarce and time/learning is (comparatively) free. Someone else suggested kubernetes, so I might look into that to see if that can accomplish what I'm looking for.
Modern minipc often place nvme near other elements that heats and that's what kills nvme since they need to be cooled too, you can try to place cooling pads and micro radiators here and there and try to isolate them from each other but many mini pc have this flaw nowadays
Yeah, pretty much what I guessed. The drive came with a cooling pad but it didn't do much at all