About Me

Simon Hunt

Simon Hunt
Chief Technology Officer, Endpoint and Innovation

VP and CTO, Endpoint Security Simon Hunt has more than 20 years experience in software development, design and ...

Read More

Corporate Blogs

Feeds & Podcasts

Meet the Bloggers

Archive

Tags

12 Scams of Christmas, 2012 Virtual Sales Kickoff, Accredited Channel Engineer, ACE, ACE certification partner, Acquisition, Alex Thurber, Annual Partner Survey, Apple, ASIC, attacks, Australia, automobile, automotive, award, awards, beyond the PC, Biological Computer, Blackhat, C-SAVE program, Change Control, channel partner, Channel Partners, Channel Partner Town Hall, Channel Program, Channels Town Hall, chromebook, CIO Insomnia Project, Citrix, Civil War, cloud, Cloud computing, cloud security, Commercial/SMB, Commercial and Enterprise Deal Registration, Compliance, Consumer, consumerization, consumerization of IT, Continuing Education, Corporate Responsibility, critical infrastructure, cyberattacks, Cybercrime, Cyber risks, cybersafety, cybersecurity, cyber security awareness, Cyber Security Mom, cyberthreats, Database, database security, data breach, data center, data center security, Data Loss Prevention, Data Protection, Dave DeWalt, Dave Marcus, David Small, Deal Registration, Deep Command, DeepDefender, Deep Defender, DeepSAFE, DLP, Dmitri Alperovitch, education, Email & Web Security, Email Protection, embedded, EMEA, encryption, Endpoint Protection, Endpoint security suite upgrade, Enhanced Deal Registration, enterprise, epo, ePO DeepCommand, ePolicy Orchestrator, Family Safety, Focus, Focus11, FOCUS 2011, Foundstone, France, France Law, French Law, Gartner, Gavin Struthers, George Kurtz, Global Risk 2012 report, global threat intelligence, gold software support, google, government, GTI, Hackers, heidi klum, identity fraud, identity protection, IDF 2011, Incumbency Advantage Program, India, Initiative to Fight Cybercrime, innovation, integration, intel, intellectual property, intrusion prevention, iPad, IPv6, I Series, IT as a Service, IT Security market, Joe Sexton, julian Assange, kurtz, labs, law, LCEN, mac, Mac OS X, malware, Marc Olesen, mcaf.ee, McAfee, McAfee Application Control, McAfee Channel, McAfee Channel Partner, McAfee Cloud Security Platform, McAfee Data Loss Prevention, McAfee Employees, McAfee Firewall Enterprise, McAfee FOCUS, McAfee Identity Protection, McAfee Initiative to Fight Cybercrime, McAfee Labs, McAfee Labs Q3 Threat Report, McAfee Network Security Platform, McAfee Network Threat Response, McAfee Partner, McAfee Partner Learning Center, McAfee Partner of the Year Award, McAfee Partner Program, McAfee Partner Summit, McAfee Rewards, McAfee Security Management, mcafee total protection, McAfee Vulnerability Manager, Microsoft, Microsoft Security Bulletin, Mid-Market, Middle East, Mike Decesare, Mike Fey, Mobile, mobile applications, Mobile Data Protection, mobile malware, mobile security, MS12-020, M Series, national cybersecurity awareness month, National Cyber Security Awareness Week, NCSA, Network Security, Next Generation, next generation data center, Night Dragon, NitroSecurity, Nitro Security, north america, OCTO, Operation Aurora, Operation Shady RAT, PARC, Partner Acceleration Resource Center, Partner Care, partners, Partner Summit, Patch Tuesday, Paul Otellini, PCI, PCI DSS, Pemberton, peter king, policies, president obama, privacy, Products, promotion, Public Sector, quarterly threat report, regulation, regulations, Renee James, risk, risk and, Risk and Compliance, Risk Management, Riverbed, ROI, RSA, RSA 2010, s, SaaS, SaaS Monthly Specialization, safe, SAIC, Saudi Arabia, SCADA, scareware, security, Security-as-a-Service, Security Connected, security management, short url, SIEM, Small Business, Smart Grid, smartphones, SMB, SMB Advisor Tool, SMB Extravaganza, SMB Specialization, social media, social networking, social networks, social responsibility, solid state drive, spam, Steve Jobs, Stop.Think.Connect, Support, targeted attacks, TCO, Tech Data, technology trends, Telecommunications, The VARGuy, threat reduction, thurber, Todd Gebhart, Trust and Safety, twitter, UAE, Ultrabook, Underground Economies, United Arab Emirates, Vanity Fair, Virtualization, Virtual Sales Kickoff 2012, virus, VMworld 2011, WAN, Web 2.0, web security, wikileaks

Improving Security On Solid State Drives

Tuesday, March 8, 2011 at 2:04pm by Simon Hunt
Simon Hunt

Well, One week into the Intel/McAfee relationship and I am pleased to say it’s already bearing fruit. Over the last few days I’ve been reaching out to all my Intel peers, making the connections with people which were simply impossible while the deal was going through all the evaluations.

I had an interesting discussion with Knut Grimsrud in the Intel storage division today about “clever” things we can do to improve performance and security on the Intel SSD hard disks.

Typically, Encryption and SSD’s are not pleasant bedfellows. Sure, it works, but as most have found, an SSD which has been encrypted performs slower than one which has not. This is due to a few factors, but mostly because encryption at the sector level writes a capacity-worth of data to the SSD, giving it little “free space” to work with afterwards.

Data stored on SSDs is not arranged like sectors on a magnetic disk – in fact, you can imagine it  more like tape storage. New writes are written to fresh pieces of tape, it’s not until you reach the end of the tape, that the disk starts overwriting earlier  deleted or unused areas.

This is done because the NAND storage in an SSD, again like magnetic tape, has a finite number of write cycles it can go through before it starts degrading. By spreading the writes into new areas of “tape”, and overwriting as little as possible, the drive can extend its useful life far beyond the 10,000 or so write cycles any particular block is good for.

So, doing a full encryption on an SSD obviously has some consequences – all that beautiful fresh tape gets used up, and the drive starts going and filling in gaps and deleted areas – and, to add insult to the process, overwriting a bit of NAND storage takes significantly longer than writing a fresh or unused piece. The final nail in the performance coffin is the drive is challenged in determining areas occupied by real files, and areas that are just overwritten by the encryption routine – thus the internal “garbage collection” routines which go looking for reusable areas of storage are working overdrive to find somewhere to write to.

So, how to solve this performance problem? Well, lucky for us Intel already made a tool available to do exactly that, though it was intended for other purposes. Let me introduce you to the Intel SSD Toolbox, in particular, the Intel SSD Optimizer.

The Optimizer is designed to go through your smart little SSD, and work out what storage is in use by current files, and what is free – either never used, or was in use at one stage, but the file’s been deleted. The Optimizer then tells the SSD using a special command called “Trim” that certain blocks of space can be considered free.

So, your slow encrypted 160GB drive with 40GB of data on it and  120GB of mysterious encryption remnants goes back to having 120GB of nice fresh free space, and blistering performance to match.  

You can run the optimizer once after encryption, but as Intel recommends, it’s good to run it regularly to keep your drive in top performance.

To close, people have asked why we don’t just ignore all the unused space on the SSD to start with. The challenge is, that writes on the SSD get scattered all over the place – there’s no way of tracking them down, and remember, when you overwrite a sector on an SSD, you are in fact writing a new sector somewhere else. Since we want to make sure that any data on the drive prior to encryption is also protected, we have to make sure we touch all the storage. We don’t want someone to be able to disassemble the SSD, dump the memory and find a copy of some very sensitive data on your encrypted drive.

Simon

Bookmark and Share

Tags: , , , , , ,

Comments are temporarily suspended due to blog maintenance, comments will be available again from Monday 21st May.