Checking Intel's Numbers

The product brief for the Optane SSD DC P4800X provides a limited set of performance specifications, entirely omitting any standards for sequential throughput. Some latency and throughput targets are provided for 4kB random reads, writes, and a 70/30 mix of reads and writes.

This section has our results for how the Optane SSD measures up to Intel's advertised specifications and how the flash SSDs fare on the same tests. The rest of this review provides deeper analysis of how these drives perform across a range of queue depths, transfer sizes, and read/write mixes.

4kB Random Read at a Queue Depth of 1 (QD1)
Drive Throughput Latency (µs)
MB/s IOPS Mean Median 99th 99.999th
Intel Optane SSD DC P4800X 375GB 413.0 108.3k 8.9 9 10 37
Intel SSD DC P3700 800GB 48.7 12.8k 77.9 76 96 2768
Micron 9100 MAX 2.4TB 35.3 9.2k 107.7 104 117 306

Intel's queue depth 1 specifications are expressed in terms of latency, and at a throughput specification at QD1 would be redundant. Intel specifies a "typical" latency of less than 10µs, and most QD1 random reads on the Optane SSD take 8 or 9µs; even the 99th percentile latency is still 10µs.

The 99.999th percentile target is less than 60µs, which the Optane SSD beats by a wide margin. Overall, the Optane SSD passes with ease. The flash SSDs are 8-12x slower on average, and the 99.999th percentile latency of the Intel P3700 is far worse, at around 75x slower.

4kB Random Read at a Queue Depth of 16 (QD16)
Drive Throughput Latency (µs)
MB/s IOPS Mean Median 99th 99.999th
Intel Optane SSD DC P4800X 375GB 2231.0 584.8k 25.5 25 41 81
Intel SSD DC P3700 800GB 637.9 167.2k 93.9 91 163 2320
Micron 9100 MAX 2.4TB 517.5 135.7k 116.2 114 205 1560

Intel's QD16 random read result is 584.8k IOPS for throughput, which is above the official specification of 550k IOPS by a few percent. The 99.999th percentile latency scores 81µs, significantly under the target of less than 150µs. The flash SSDs are 3-5x slower on most metrics, but 20-30 times slower at the 99.999th percentile for latency.

4kB Random Write at a Queue Depth of 1 (QD1)
Drive Throughput Latency (µs)
MB/s IOPS Mean Median 99th 99.999th
Intel Optane SSD DC P4800X 375GB 360.6 94.5k 8.9 9 10 64
Intel SSD DC P3700 800GB 350.6 91.9k 9.2 9 18 81
Micron 9100 MAX 2.4TB 160.9 42.2k 22.2 22 24 76

In the specifications, the QD1 random write specifications are 10µs on latency, while the 99.999th percentile for latency is relaxed from 60µs to 100µs. In our results, the QD1 random write throughput (360.6 MB/s) of the Optane SSD is a bit lower than the QD1 random read throughput (413.0 MB/s), but the latency is roughly the same (8.9µs mean, 10µs on 99th).

However it is worth noting that the Optane SSD only manages a passing score when the application uses asynchronous I/O APIs. Using simple synchronous write() system calls pushes the average latency up to 11-12µs.

Also, due to the capacitor-backed DRAM caches, the flash SSDs also handle QD1 random writes very well. The Intel P3700 also manages to keep latency mostly below 10µs, and all three drives have 99.999th percentile latency below Intel's 100µs standard for the Optane SSD.

4kB Random Write at a Queue Depth of 16 (QD16)
Drive Throughput Latency (µs)
MB/s IOPS Mean Median 99th 99.999th
Intel Optane SSD DC P4800X 375GB 2122.5 556.4 27.0 23 65 147
Intel SSD DC P3700 800GB 446.3 117.0 134.8 43 1336 9536
Micron 9100 MAX 2.4TB 1144.4 300.0 51.6 34 620 3504

The Optane SSD DC P4800X is specified for 500k random write IOPS using four threads to provide a total queue depth of 16. In our tests, the Optane SSD scored 556.4k IOPs, exceeding the specification by more than 11%. This equates to a random write throughput of more than 2GB/s.

The flash SSDs are more dependent on the parallelism benefits of higher capacities, and as a result can be slow at the same capacity. Hence in this case the 2.4TB Micron 9100 fares much better than the 800GB Intel P3700. The Micron 9100 hits its own specification right on the nose with 300k IOPS and the Intel P3700 comfortably exceeds its own 90k IOPS specification, although remaining the slowest of the three by far. The Optane SSD stays well below its 200µs limit for 99.999th percentile latency by scoring 147µs, while the flash SSDs have outliers of several milliseconds. Even at the 99th percentile the flash SSDs are 10-20x slower than Optane.

4kB Random Mixed 70/30 Read/Write Queue Depth 16
Drive Throughput Latency (µs)
MB/s IOPS Mean Median 99th 99.999th
Intel Optane SSD DC P4800X 375GB 1929.7 505.9 29.7 28 65 107
Intel SSD DC P3700 800GB 519.9 136.3 115.5 79 1672 5536
Micron 9100 MAX 2.4TB 518.0 135.8 116.0 105 1112 3152

On a 70/30 read/write mix, the Optane SSD DC P4800X scores 505.9k IOPS, which beats the specification of 500k IOPS by 1%. Both of the flash SSDs deliver roughly the same throughput, a little over a quarter of the speed of the Optane SSD. Intel doesn't provide a latency specification for this workload, but the measurements unsurprisingly fall in between the random read and random write results. While low-end consumer SSDs sometimes perform dramatically worse on mixed workloads than on pure read or write workloads, none of these drives have that problem due to their market positioning and capabilities therein.

Test Configurations Random Access Performance
Comments Locked

117 Comments

View All Comments

  • haukionkannel - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    I agree. A very good product!
  • ddriver - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    Hypetane is based on very mature technology, only the storage medium is allegedly new. And it has gone through at least 3 refinements since first taped out.

    Which explains why gen1 is so "good" and also that gen2 will be barely incremental, because there is nothing much to improve upon, the only performance increase can come from more parallelism (which can be implemented with gen1 tech just as well) or improved controller.
  • mtroute - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    First, wrong, just completely wrong. Second, cite your source.
  • tuxRoller - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    What's better?
    Who has better cpus?
  • tat tvam asi - Monday, April 24, 2017 - link

    You contribute nothing to this discussion, Chaitanya. Just bile
  • DanNeely - Thursday, April 20, 2017 - link

    I'm impressed. If money is no object it's a flash killer. Unfortunately it's also way more expensive than I can afford even if I wouldn't need a new CPU/Mobo/Ram to use it. I'm really interested in seeing if the consumer focused little optane cache drives can actually make a significant difference in real world use. Tiny cache SSDs looked decent in benchmarks, but real world use patterns were sufficiently random to undermine them unless you were up to a "real SSD sized" cache of 120ish MB vs the 16/32GB of the cheap cache drives. And 120SSD + HDD was pricey enough and niche enough at the time that outside of Apple AFAIK no OEM offered it as a pre-build cache setup; and the enthusiasts who were willing to pay the price premium (myself among them) were able to just configure out boxes to keep music/images/video on the HDD and use the SSD for almost everything else.
  • ddriver - Friday, April 21, 2017 - link

    Money IS NO object. It is an abstract concept. Paper bills are only symbolic representation of money, 99% of the money don't even exist in paper form, they are just some imaginary numbers.
  • Leosch - Sunday, April 23, 2017 - link

    Aren't you a clever one. Seriously you make some good points in other comments and you are technically right in this one as well, but goddamn you're such an ass.
  • ddriver - Sunday, April 23, 2017 - link

    It is impossible to be smart and considered not an ass in a world, swarming with dummies. I'd rather be an ass than dumb. Playing dumb is not an option, because it eventually gets you. Fitting in with the dummies is not really worth it.
  • Leosch - Thursday, April 27, 2017 - link

    It is possible, you are just unable, because you're not as great as you think

Log in

Don't have an account? Sign up now