WHAT IS READYBOOST PERF TEST WINDOWS 7
Windows 7 also supports the newer exFAT file system.
Windows 7 allows up to eight devices for a maximum of 256 GB of additional memory, with up to 32 GB on a single storage device.The removable media's capacity must be at least 256 MB (250 MB after formatting, Windows 7 reports in its Event Log a required minimum of 235 MB).Requirements įor a device to be compatible and useful, it must conform to these requirements: ReadyBoost compresses and encrypts all data that is placed on the flash device with AES-128 Microsoft has stated that a 2:1 compression ratio is typical, so a 4 GB cache would usually contain 8 GB of data. Windows Vista allows only one device to be used, while Windows 7 allows multiple caches, one per device, up to a total of 256 GB. In Windows 7 or later with NTFS or exFAT formatting, the maximum cache size is 32 GB per device. In Vista or with FAT32 formatting of the drive, the maximum is 4 GB. When a compatible device is plugged in, the Windows AutoPlay dialog offers an additional option to use the flash drive to speed up the system an additional ReadyBoost tab is added to the drive's properties dialog where the amount of space to be used can be configured.
USB flash devices typically are slower than a mechanical hard disk for sequential I/O, so, to maximize performance, ReadyBoost includes logic that recognizes large, sequential read requests and has the hard disk service these requests. This caching applies to all disk content, not just the page file or system DLLs. Using ReadyBoost-capable flash memory ( NAND memory devices) for caching allows Windows Vista and later to service random disk reads with better performance than without the cache.