this post was submitted on 13 Mar 2024
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That's exactly why. When writing to a drive the OS waits until the disk says "done" and then goes about it's business.
If the drive then takes an extra bit of time internally to write to permanent storage that's none of the OS's business as long as it can pull that written data from "somewhere" and deliver it to the OS if asked.
But it gets "done" immediately when you have write caching enabled and the file fits in ram. Which is on by default for non removable storage. It's only benchmarks which disable write caching in order to separate PC performance from the drive being tested.