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The SSD Anthology: Understanding SSDs and New Drives from OCZ
The SSD Anthology: Understanding SSDs and New Drives from OCZ
Date: March 18th, 2009
Topic: Storage
Manufacturer: Various
Author: Anand Lal Shimpi
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Random Read/Write Performance

Arguably much more important to any PC user than sequential read/write performance is random access performance. It's not often that you're writing large files sequentially to your disk, but you do encounter tons of small file reads/writes as you use your PC.

To measure random read/write performance I created an iometer script that peppered the drive with random requests, with an IO queue depth of 3 (to add some multitasking spice to the test). The write test was performed over an 8GB range on the drive, while the read test was performed across the whole drive. I ran the test for 3 minutes.

The three hard drives all posted scores below 1MB/s and thus aren't visible on our graph above. This is where SSDs shine and no hard drive, regardless of how many you RAID together, can come close.

The two Intel drives top the charts and maintain a huge lead. The OCZ Vertex actually beats out the more expensive (and unreleased) Summit drive with a respectable 32MB/s transfer rate here. Note that the Vertex is also faster than last year's Samsung SLC drive that everyone was selling for $1000. Even the JMicron drives do just fine here.

If we look at latency instead of transfer rate it helps put things in perspective:

Read latencies for hard drives have always been measured in several ms, but every single SSD here manages to complete random reads in less than 1ms under load.

Random write speed is where we can thin the SSD flock:

Only the Intel drives and to an extent, the OCZ Vertex, post numbers visible on this scale. Let's go to a table to see everything in greater detail:

4KB Random Write Speed  
Intel X25-E 31.7 MB/s
Intel X25-M 23.1 MB/s
JMicron JMF602B MLC 0.02 MB/s
JMicron JMF602Bx2 MLC 0.03 MB/s
OCZ Summit 0.77 MB/s
OCZ Vertex 2.41 MB/s
Samsung SLC 0.53 MB/s
Seagate Momentus 5400.6 0.81 MB/s
Western Digital Caviar SE16 1.26 MB/s
Western Digital VelociRaptor 1.63 MB/s

Every single drive other than the Intel X25-E, X25-M and OCZ's Vertex is slower than the 2.5" Seagate Momentus 5400.6 hard drive in this test. The Vertex, thanks to OCZ's tweaks, is now 48% faster than the VelociRaptor.

The Intel drives are of course architected for the type of performance needed on a desktop/notebook and thus they deliver very high random write performance.

Random write performance is merely one corner of the performance world. A drive needs good sequential read, sequential write, random read and random write performance. The fatal mistake is that most vendors ignore random write performance and simply try to post the best sequential read/write speeds; doing so simply produces a drive that's undesirable.

While the Vertex is slower than Intel's X25-M, it's also about half the price per GB. And note that the Vertex is still 48% faster than the VelociRaptor here, and multiple times faster in the other tests.

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233 Comments - Last by rree, 34 days ago
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Excellent article by FishTankX, 328 days ago
Good info. However, I noticed one mistake.

Second page
Samsung had a MLC controller at the time but it was too expensive than what SuperTalent was shooting for.

Reply
RE: Excellent article by FishTankX, 328 days ago
That should have bolded "too"

Reply
RE: Excellent article by FishTankX, 328 days ago
Also, I think the velociraptor vs X-25 figures are swapped. 6 odd ms for the intel drive and 0.11ms for the velociraptor..

Reply
RE: Excellent article by Natfly, 328 days ago
RE: Excellent article by Spoelie, 328 days ago
Second page as well:

missing charts before and after this paragraph:

"The chart above shows how much faster these affordable MLC SSDs were than the fastest 3.5” hard drive in sequential transfers. But now look at random write performance:"

Reply
RE: Excellent article by Spoelie, 328 days ago
third page, first table, first column: SSD and HDD entries are switched

Reply
RE: Excellent article by Spoelie, 328 days ago
page 19: I’d never reviewed it
'd & -ed?

Reply
RE: Excellent article by HolyFire, 328 days ago
"I'd never reviewed it" is correct. "I'd" here means "I had", it's Past Perfect tense.

Reply
RE: Excellent article by Spoelie, 328 days ago
chart 1 on page 2 now shows sequential read but the paragraph is changed to mention random read ;)

page 21: As far as I know, this is THE one of THE only reviews

Some very surprising benchmark results for the ocz vertex, I thought the new firmware tanked sequential read speeds (to 80-90) based on the explanation beforehand, but not according to the actual graphs.

Reply
RE: Excellent article by jay401, 328 days ago
yeah, he wants "more expensive than" or "too expensive for".

Reply
Comments Page 1 of 24

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