Test Configurations

So while the Intel SSD DC P4800X is technically launching today, 3D XPoint memory is still in short supply. Only the 375GB add-in card model has been shipped, and only as part of an early limited release program. The U.2 version of the 375GB model and the add-in card 750GB model are planned for a Q2 release, and the U.2 750GB model and the 1.5TB model are expected in the second half of 2017. Intel's biggest enterprise customers, such as the Super Seven, have had access to Optane devices throughout the development process, but broad retail availability is still a little ways off.

Citing the current limited supply, Intel has taken a different approach to review sampling for this product. Their general desire for secrecy regarding the low-level details of 3D XPoint has also likely been a factor. Instead of shipping us the Optane SSD DC P4800X to test on our own system, as is normally the case with our storage testing, this time around Intel has only provided us with remote access to a DC P4800X system housed in their data center. Their Non-Volatile Memory Solutions Group maintains a pool of servers to provide partners and customers with access to the latest storage technologies and their software partners have been using these systems for months to develop and optimize applications to take advantage of Optane SSDs.

Intel provisioned one of these servers for our exclusive use during the testing period, and equipped it with a 375GB Optane SSD DC P4800X and a 800GB SSD DC P3700 for comparison. The P3700 was the U.2 version of the drive and was connected through a PLX PEX 9733 PCIe switch. The Optane SSD under test was initially going to be a U.2 version connected to the same backplane, but Intel found that the PCIe switch was introducing some inconsistency in the access latency on the order of a microsecond or two, which is a problem when trying to benchmark a drive with ~8µs best case latency. Intel swapped out the U.2 Optane SSD for an add-in card version that uses PCIe lanes direct from the processor, but the P3700 was still potentially subject to whatever problems the PCIe switch may have caused. Clearly, there's some work to be done to ensure the ecosystem is ready to take full advantage of the performance promised by Optane SSDs, but debugging such issues is beyond the scope of this review.

Intel NSG Marketing Test Server
CPU 2x Intel Xeon E5 2699 v4
Motherboard Intel S2600WTR2
Chipset Intel C612
Memory 256GB total, Kingston DDR4-2133 CL11 16GB modules
OS Ubuntu Linux 16.10, kernel 4.8.0-22

The system was running a clean installation of Ubuntu 16.10, with no Intel or Optane-specific software or drivers installed, and the rest of the system configuration was as expected. We had full administrative access to tweak the software to our liking, but chose to leave it mostly in its default state.

Our benchmarking is a variety of synthetic workloads generated and measured using fio version 2.19. There are quite a few operating system and fio options that can be tuned, but we generally ignored them: for example the NVMe driver wasn't manually switched to polling mode, or the CPU affinity was not manually set, and nothing was tweaked about power management or CPU clock speed turbo. There is work underway to switch fio over to using nanosecond-precision time measurement, but it has not reached a usable state yet. Our tests only record latencies in microsecond increments, and mean latencies that report fractional microseconds are just weighted averages of eg. how many operations were closer to 8µs than 9µs.

All tests were run directly on the SSD with no intervening filesystem. Real-world applications will almost always be accessing the drive through a filesystem, but will also be benefiting from the operating system's cache in main RAM, which is bypassed with this testing methodology.

To provide an extra point of comparison, we also tested the Micron 9100 MAX 2.4TB on one of our systems, using a Xeon E3 1240 v5 processor. In order to not unfairly disadvantage the Micron 9100, most of the tests  were limited to use at most 4 threads. Our test system was running the same Linux kernel as the Intel NSG marketing test server and used a comparable configuration with the Micron 9100 connected directly to the CPU's PCIe lanes rather than through the PCH.

AnandTech Enterprise SSD Testbed
CPU Intel Xeon E3 1240 v5
Motherboard ASRock Fatal1ty E3V5 Performance Gaming/OC
Chipset Intel C232
Memory 4x 8GB G.SKILL Ripjaws DDR4-2400 CL15
OS Ubuntu Linux 16.10, kernel 4.8.0-22

Because this was not a hands-on test of the Optane SSD on our own equipment, we were unable to conduct any power consumption measurements. Due to the limited time available for testing, we were unable to make any systematic test of write endurance or the impact of extra overprovisioning on performance. We hope to have the opportunity to conduct a full hands-on review later in the year to address these topics.

Due to time, we were unable to cover Intel's new Memory Drive Technology software. This is an optional software add-on that can be purchased with the Optane SSD. The Memory Drive Technology software is a minimal virtualization system that allows software to pretend that their Optane SSD is RAM. The hypervisor will present to the guest OS a pool of memory equal to the amount of available DRAM plus up to 320GB of the Optane SSD's 375GB capacity. The hypervisor manages the placement of data to automatically cache hot data in DRAM, such that applications or the guest OS cannot explicitly address or allocate Optane storage. We may get a chance to look at this in the future, as it offers an interesting aspect of the new ways multi-tiered storage will be affecting the Enterprise market over the next few years.

3D XPoint Refresher Checking Intel's Numbers
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  • Billy Tallis - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    I said the NVMe driver wasn't manually switched into polling mode; I left it with the default behavior which on 4.8 seems to be not polling unless the application requests. I'm certainly not seeing the 100% CPU usage that would be likely if it was polling.

    If I'd had more time, I would have experimented with the latest kernel versions and the various tricks to get even lower latency.
  • tuxRoller - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    I wasn't claiming that you disabled polling only that polling was disabled since it should be on be default for this device.
    Assuming you were looking at the sysfs interface, was the key that was set to 0 called io_poll or io_poll_delay? The later set to 0 enables hybrid polling, so the cpu wouldn't be pegged.
    Either way, you wouldn't need a new kernel, just to enable a feature the kernel has had since 4.4 for these low latency devices.
    Also, did you disable the pagecache (direct=1) in your fio commands? If you didn't, that would explain why aio was faster since it uses dio.
    Btw, it's not my intent to unnecessarily criticize you because i realize the tests were performed under constrained circumstances. I just would've appreciated some comment in the article about a critical feature for this hardware was not enabled in the kernel.
  • yankeeDDL - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    Optane was supposed to be 1000x faster, have 1000X endurance and be 10x denser than NAND (http://hothardware.com/ContentImages/NewsItem/4020...
    I realize this is the first product, but saying that it fell short of expectation is an understatement.
    It has lower endurance, lower density and it is measurably faster, but certainly nowhere close 1000X.
    Oh, did I mention it is 5-10X more expensive?

    I am quite disappointed, to be honest. It will get better, but @not ready@ is something that comes to ind reading the article.
  • Billy Tallis - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    3D XPoint memory was supposed to be 1000x faster than NAND, 1000x more durable than NAND, and 10x denser than DRAM. Those claims were about the 3D XPoint memory itself, not the Optane SSD built around that memory.
  • ddriver - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    It is probably as good as they said... if you compare it to the shittiest SD card from 10 years ago. Still technically NAND ;)
  • yankeeDDL - Monday, April 24, 2017 - link

    I disagree. I can agree that the speed may be limited by the drive, but even so, it falls short by a large factor. The durability and the density, however, are pretty much platform independent and they are not there by a very, very long shot. Intel itself demonstrated that it is only 2.4-3X faster (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3D_XPoint).

    It clearly has a future, especially as the NAND is approaching the end of its scalability. Engineering wise is interesting, but today, it makes really little sense, while it should have been a slam dunk. I mean, who would have thought twice before buying a 500GB drive that maxes out the SATA for $20-30? But this one ... not so much.
  • zodiacfml - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    It will perform better in DIMM.
  • factual - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    I don't see xpoint replacing dram due to both latency and endurance not being up to par , but It's going to disrupt the ssd market and as the technology matures and prices come down, I can see xpoint revolutionizing the storage market as ssd did years ago.

    Competition is clearly worried since seems like paid trolls are trying to spread falsehoods and bs here and elsewhere on the web.
  • ddriver - Saturday, April 22, 2017 - link

    I just bet it will be highly disturbing to the SSD market LOL. With its inflated price, limited capacity and pretty much unnecessary advantages I can just see people lining up to buy that and leaving SSDs on the shelves.
  • factual - Saturday, April 22, 2017 - link

    You are either extremely ignorant or a paid troll !!! anyone who understands technology knows that new tech is always expensive. When SSDs came to the market, they were much more expensive and had a lot less capacity than HDDs but they closed the gap and disrupted the market. The same is bound to happen for Xpoint which performs better than NAND by orders of magnitude.

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