ATTO - Transfer Size vs Performance

I'm keeping our ATTO test around because it's a tool that can easily be run by anyone and it provides a quick look into performance scaling across multiple transfer sizes. I'm providing the results in a slightly different format because the line graphs didn't work well with multiple drives and creating the graphs was rather painful since the results had to be manually inserted cell be cell as ATTO doesn't provide a 'save as CSV' functionality.

Samsung SM951 NVMe

 

AS-SSD Incompressible Sequential Performance

I'm also keeping AS-SSD around as it's freeware like ATTO and can be used by our readers to confirm that their drives operate properly. AS-SSD uses incompressible data for all of its transfers, so it's also a valuable tool when testing SandForce based drives that perform worse with incompressible data.

Incompressible Sequential Read Performance

Incompressible Sequential Write Performance

Mixed Read/Write Performance Final Words
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  • Dasa2 - Monday, June 29, 2015 - link

    i would also like to know how cpu usage is affected
    it may not be of any significance with a 4790k but with a i3\i5nuc?
    i would also be interested to see if ram speed has any effect on such high speed ssd speed in a nuc since most people seem to buy 1600c11 sodimm for them
  • iwod - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    What is stopping us to getting a 32 Channel SSD Controller?
    Cost? Or we wait for 3D NAND to push to the max 3.2GB/s a PIC-E 3.0 x4 allows?
    What's next then? PCI-E 4.0 isn't even on the Cannonlake Roadmap.
    And even with the 4x PCI-E 4.0 it seems to be too little headroom for SSD.
    Where is the next bottleneck?
  • Kristian Vättö - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    There are some 32-channel controllers in the enterprise space, but as you suspected the reason why we don't see those in the client market is cost.

    Right now I would say the biggest bottleneck is software design because everything (except some enterprise applications) is still designed for high latency storage (i.e. load everything to RAM and as little disk access as possible, whereas by properly utilizing the low latency of SSDs applications performance could be improved.
  • stevae - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    OK, so a couple of things here. first, while windows 10 10130 is still a little buggy, i already have 10147 and it is rock solid. many improvements. next, i am running it on a samsung 951. boots very nice, there is no more error when restarting like there was in 10130, and things are smooth. however, it doesn't run at full speed. on crystal disk mark i get 1569 sequential read, and 1474 sequential write. and my sm951 is the ahci version. but this leads me to the BIG quesiton, since you guys said that the hardware is the same between the ahci and nvme versions, does that mean when the nvme version comes out and is sold widely, that i can download firmware to turn my ahci version into a nvme version?
  • yeeeeman - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    These SSDs are good for driving the performance up, especially for datacenters. In home usage, I swear that a Samsung 840 PRO is gonna satisfy all your hidden performance dreams. Period.
  • JKJK - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    You really didn't get the low-queue-depth-performance-and-low-latency-for-client-workloads-part, did you?
    I'm going to get me a few of these, as soon as they're available.
  • Shinzon - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    I just build new main desktop and added also a 951 AHCI version and the difference from my 840 pro to this is very noticeable, almost as from mechanic drive to a SSD all over again. I can even feel the difference from the 951 and to my 2 840 pros in raid 0. So that comment is not very professional :-)
  • Shinzon - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    @ Kristian Vättö

    As someone else already speculated, could we please research some more if the AHCI version can be re flashed to NVMe version ? Of course Samsung answer will be: not supported because it's OEM product, warranty void and the whole swada but I guess it's a question of getting a flash program that supports the controller EPROM they use and copy the NVMe firmware and then reflash the AHCI version. I think many would be interested in this.

    Tack för dina altid fina reviews :-)
  • dcaxax - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    Two words about Samsung SSD's. Never. Again.
  • stevae - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    yeah, why would you. they only lead the ssd world 95% of the time. sure, you go ahead and stick with that ocz crap.

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