Performance Consistency

In our Intel SSD DC S3700 review Anand introduced a new method of characterizing performance: looking at the latency of individual operations over time. The S3700 promised a level of performance consistency that was unmatched in the industry, and as a result needed some additional testing to show that. The reason we don't have consistent IO latency with SSDs is because inevitably all controllers have to do some amount of defragmentation or garbage collection in order to continue operating at high speeds. When and how an SSD decides to run its defrag and cleanup routines directly impacts the user experience. Frequent (borderline aggressive) cleanup generally results in more stable performance, while delaying that can result in higher peak performance at the expense of much lower worst case performance. The graphs below tell us a lot about the architecture of these SSDs and how they handle internal defragmentation.

To generate the data below I took a freshly secure erased SSD and filled it with sequential data. This ensures that all user accessible LBAs have data associated with them. Next I kicked off a 4KB random write workload across all LBAs at a queue depth of 32 using incompressible data. I ran the test for just over half an hour, no where near what we run our steady state tests for but enough to give me a good look at drive behavior once all spare area filled up.

I recorded instantaneous IOPS every second for the duration of the test. I then plotted IOPS vs. time and generated the scatter plots below. Each set of graphs features the same scale. The first two sets use a log scale for easy comparison, while the last set of graphs uses a linear scale that tops out at 40K IOPS for better visualization of differences between drives.

The high level testing methodology remains unchanged from our S3700 review. Unlike in previous reviews however, I did vary the percentage of the drive that I filled/tested depending on the amount of spare area I was trying to simulate. The buttons are labeled with the advertised user capacity had the SSD vendor decided to use that specific amount of spare area.  If you want to replicate this on your own all you need to do is create a partition smaller than the total capacity of the drive and leave the remaining space unused to simulate a larger amount of spare area. The partitioning step isn't absolutely necessary in every case but it's an easy way to make sure you never exceed your allocated spare area. It's a good idea to do this from the start (e.g. secure erase, partition, then install Windows), but if you are working backwards you can always create the spare area partition, format it to TRIM it, then delete the partition. Finally, this method of creating spare area works on the drives we've tested here but not all controllers may behave the same way.

The first set of graphs shows the performance data over the entire 2000 second test period. In these charts you'll notice an early period of very high performance followed by a sharp dropoff. What you're seeing in that case is the drive allocating new blocks from its spare area, then eventually using up all free blocks and having to perform a read-modify-write for all subsequent writes (write amplification goes up, performance goes down).

The second set of graphs zooms in to the beginning of steady state operation for the drive (t=1400s). The third set also looks at the beginning of steady state operation but on a linear performance scale. Click the buttons below each graph to switch source data.

 

Impact of Spare Area
  Kingston SSDNow V300 240GB Intel SSD DC S3700 200GB Intel SSD 335 240GB Corsair Neutron 240GB OCZ Vector 256GB Samsung SSD 840 Pro 256GB

Default

25% Spare Area - -

IO consistency has always been good in SandForce based SSDs. The V300 actually behaves a bit differently from Intel SSD 335 as it takes longer for it to enter steady-state (1400s vs 800s) but on the other hand, the IOPS also drops more in steady-state compared to Intel. For consumer workloads, I believe pushing the steady-state back might not be a bad idea because it's unlikely that the SSD will even reach steady-state, so you'll get better performance at the state where the SSD will be used in. 

Impact of Spare Area
  Kingston SSDNow V300 240GB Intel SSD DC S3700 200GB Intel SSD 335 240GB Corsair Neutron 240GB OCZ Vector 256GB Samsung SSD 840 Pro 256GB
Default
25% Spare Area - -

The difference between V300 and SSD 335 is quite dramatic here. The IOPS of V300 drops to near zero in the worst cases, whereas for the SSD 335 it stays at over 7K at all times. What's surprising is that giving the V300 more OP doesn't actually help at all. I'm not sure why that's happening but SandForce has always behaved weirdly when it comes to steady-state due to the compression. 

Impact of Spare Area
  Kingston SSDNow V300 240GB Intel SSD DC S3700 200GB Intel SSD 335 240GB Corsair Neutron 240GB OCZ Vector 256GB Samsung SSD 840 Pro 256GB
Default
25% Spare Area - -

 

Performance vs. Transfer Size AnandTech Storage Bench 2011
Comments Locked

43 Comments

View All Comments

  • ericgl21 - Monday, May 6, 2013 - link

    How do you manually optimize it in Vista?
  • Raikku - Tuesday, June 11, 2013 - link

    I bought V300 120Gb, it's with 506 firmware and it doesn't work as it should. It's properly in SATA3-connecter(ASRock Ext4's Intel SATA3, not Marvel) and it give under 200Mb/s reading speeds, more precisely those speeds are around 180Mb/s.

    My other SSD, which is Vertex 4, give almost 500Mb/s in those same tests.
  • KevinWinters - Monday, August 4, 2014 - link

    I'd like to add this about the product. I have been volunteering my time and money to help my local catholic elementary school upgrade their technology, Let me tell you they, are on an amazingly small budget so anything goes, I even investigated refurbished Dell 755's just to get them onto Windows 7 because all their machines were windows XP.

    I came upon the idea of turning 30 windows XP laptops into Windows 7 laptops by adding a little memory and an SSD drive, I needed a very cheap SSD drive and did all my research via web reviews, I really hesitated on the Kingston 120 GB drive as almost all reviews were very angry about some NAND changes, but I noticed that each review was followed by a polite response from the vendor so I decided I liked the idea of the vendor keeping responsibility, so I gave it a try. So here is my review:

    For the price: a fantastic improvement over HDD, totally worth it, maybe some people who are totally into specs will show how bad it is in some ways, but it has saved the day in this poor, elementary school and I thank Kingston for their low price and significant improvement over a mechanical drive.

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now