TRIM Support: Difference between revisions

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fstrim -v /somewhere
fstrim -v /somewhere
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The resulting amount of space trimmed may not be the same as the actual space freed on the disk
The resulting amount of space trimmed may not be the same as the actual space freed on the disk. It is safe to repeat this, for example in a cronjob.
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/: 3 GiB (3267461120 bytes) trimmed
/somewhere: 3 GiB (3267461120 bytes) trimmed
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A value of 0 means that it's not disabled, so that TRIM support is active.
A value of 0 means that it's not disabled, so that TRIM support is active.
You can manually trim a drive from PowerShell with:
<pre>
Optimize-Volume -DriveLetter C -ReTrim -Verbose
</pre>

Latest revision as of 16:20, 3 January 2024

ext4

TRIM support is available on ext4. It is activated by adding discard to the list of mount options. So in /etc/fstab it says something like:

/dev/sdx1        /somewhere               ext4        defaults,discard         1   1

You can also discard the unused blocks manually by using:

fstrim -v /somewhere

The resulting amount of space trimmed may not be the same as the actual space freed on the disk. It is safe to repeat this, for example in a cronjob.

/somewhere: 3 GiB (3267461120 bytes) trimmed

ntfs on windows

TRIM support is available on ntfs and refs. You can check if it's active by using the following command:

fsutil behavior query disabledeletenotify

The response will be like this:

NTFS DisableDeleteNotify = 0  (Disabled)
ReFS DisableDeleteNotify = 0  (Disabled)

A value of 0 means that it's not disabled, so that TRIM support is active.

You can manually trim a drive from PowerShell with:

Optimize-Volume -DriveLetter C -ReTrim -Verbose