Intel on Tuesday introduced its new form-factor for server-class SSDs. The new "ruler" design is based on the in-development Enterprise & Datacenter Storage Form Factor (EDSFF), and is intended to enable server makers to install up to 1 PB of storage into 1U machines while supporting all enterprise-grade features. The first SSDs in the ruler form-factor will be available “in the near future” and the form-factor itself is here for a long run: it is expandable in terms of interface performance, power, density and even dimensions.

For many years SSDs relied on form-factors originally designed for HDDs to ensure compatibility between different types of storage devices in PCs and servers. Meanwhile, the 2.5” and the 3.5” form-factors are not always optimal for SSDs in terms of storage density, cooling, and other aspects. To better address client computers and some types of servers, Intel developed the M.2 form-factor for modular SSDs several years ago. While such drives have a lot of advantages when it comes to storage density, they were not designed to support such functionality as hot-plugging, whereas their cooling is a yet another concern. By contrast, the ruler form-factor was developed specifically for server drives and is tailored for requirements of datacenters. As Intel puts it, the ruler form-factor “delivers the most storage capacity for a server, with the lowest required cooling and power needs”.

From technical point of view, each ruler SSD is a long hot-swappable module that can accommodate tens of NAND flash or 3D XPoint chips, and thus offer capacities and performance levels that easily exceed those of M.2 modules.

The initial ruler SSDs will use the SFF-TA-1002 "Gen-Z" connector, supporting PCIe 3.1 x4 and x8 interfaces with a maximum theoretical bandwidth of around 3.94 GB/s and 7.88 GB/s in both directions. Eventually, the modules could gain an x16 interface featuring 8 GT/s, 16 GT/s (PCIe Gen 4) or even 25 - 32 GT/s (PCIe Gen 5) data transfer rate (should the industry need SSDs with ~50 - 63 GB/s throughput). In fact, connectors are ready for PCIe Gen 5 speeds even now, but there are no hosts to support the interface.

One of the key things about the ruler form-factor is that it was designed specifically for server-grade SSDs and therefore offers a lot more than standards for client systems. For example, when compared to the consumer-grade M.2, a PCIe 3.1 x4-based EDSFF ruler SSD has extra SMBus pins for NVMe management, additional pins to charge power loss protection capacitors separately from the drive itself (thus enabling passive backplanes and lowering their costs). The standard is set to use +12 V lane to power the ruler SSDs and Intel expects the most powerful drives to consume 50 W or more.

Servers and backplanes compatible with the rulers will be incompatible with DFF SSDs and HDDs, as well as with other proprietary form-factors (so, think of flash-only machines). EDSFF itself has yet to be formalized as a standard, however the working group for the standard already counts Dell, Lenovo, HPE, and Samsung as among its promotors, and Western Digital as one of several contributors.

 

It is also noteworthy that Intel has been shipping ruler SSDs based on planar MLC NAND to select partners (think of the usual suspects - large makers of servers as well as owners of huge datacenters) for about eight months now. While the drives did not really use all the advantages of the proposed standard – and I'd be surprised if they were even compliant with the final standard – they helped the EDSFF working group members prepare for the future. Moreover, some of Intel's partners have even added their features to the upcoming EDSFF standard, and still other partners are looking at using the form factor for GPU and FPGA accelerator devices. So it's clear that there's already a lot of industry interest and now growing support for the ruler/EDSFF concept.

Finally, one of the first drives to be offered in the ruler form-factor will be Intel’s DC P4500-series SSDs, which feature Intel’s enterprise-grade 3D NAND memory and a proprietary controller. Intel does not disclose maximum capacities offered by the DC P4500 rulers, but expect them to be significant. Over time Intel also plans to introduce 3D XPoint-based Optane SSDs in the ruler form-factor.

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Source: Intel

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  • Brian Flores - Wednesday, August 9, 2017 - link

    Drool...
  • ddriver - Wednesday, August 9, 2017 - link

    Intel may not have heard of that, but there are other SSD vendors out there, and they are already pushing 16 TB and up in 2.5" form factor.
  • thesandbenders - Wednesday, August 9, 2017 - link

    This form factor isn't just about capacity, it's also about managing the heat generated by 16TB+ of flash and (more importantly) a controller that can handle NVMe speeds into a small form factor. One slide that AnandTech left out compared the thermal load of 4TB P4500 in a 2.5 15mm form factor vs the ruler form factor. A cdillion pointed out below, the ruler also has a serviceability advantage because use can use the length of the chassis without having to pull the chassis out of the rack like you'd have to with multiple ranks of 2.5" drives.
  • HStewart - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    I would say that Intel Ruler solution will be cheaper and 256TB 2.5 in will not fit in 1U drive rack. At $5000 to $7000 per 16TB 2.5 drive it would cost between $80,000 and $112,000

    That is assuming you can even fit 16 drives in 1U rack - I saw one with 10 drivers but not sure it is 1U.

    The heat from that many 2.5 in drives would also be a factor
  • wolrah - Sunday, August 13, 2017 - link

    "That is assuming you can even fit 16 drives in 1U rack - I saw one with 10 drivers but not sure it is 1U."

    Supermicro offers a system with 20x 2.5" bays intended for NVMe SSDs, though they won't sell that chassis standalone, just as a prebuilt. They do also have a 10 bay unit intended for DIY.
  • yomamafor1 - Wednesday, August 16, 2017 - link

    Yeh, that sounds like a massive fire hazard.
  • Deicidium369 - Tuesday, June 23, 2020 - link

    The ruler format is an Intel design, and they have 8TB U.2 2.5" drives. Samsung has 30TB 2.5" SSDs - So capacity isn't everything.
  • Samus - Wednesday, August 9, 2017 - link

    Seriously this article should be on pornhub. I know what I'm looking at later tonight...
  • SharpEars - Thursday, August 10, 2017 - link

    +25!
  • DanNeely - Wednesday, August 9, 2017 - link

    I don't think that rack density comparison is fair. The ruler drives are going most of the way back, the 2.5" drive chassis only has a single row at the front. A high density storage server would be drives most of the way back.

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