Conclusion

The RC100 is Toshiba's contribution to the growing field of entry-level NVMe SSDs, and it is distinctive in several ways: the small form factor based on a BGA SSD, its use of the relatively rare NVMe Host Memory Buffer feature, and its fairly low maximum power draw. Unfortunately, the RC100's performance is nothing special, except when it's bad.

Under ideal conditions, the RC100 doesn't even need the NVMe Host Memory Buffer feature to offer competitive performance against other low-end NVMe SSDs. Leaving HMB on allows the 480GB RC100 to continue performing reasonably well even under adverse conditions like running tests on a completely full drive. From SATA SSDs, we're used to seeing those tougher tests clearly reveal the high latency cost of DRAMless SSDs. The NVMe HMB feature successfully eliminates that often acute weakness of DRAMless SSDs, making the 480GB RC100 a fairly well-rounded performer. HMB doesn't help with every workload, but it's definitely a valuable feature. DRAMless NVMe SSDs don't have to suffer all the problems that DRAMless SATA drives exhibit.

The 240GB RC100 didn't fare quite as well. On lighter workloads it trails the 480GB model by a fairly normal margin given the capacity difference, but the situation completely changes when the 240GB drive is full. In that case, write latency goes sky high and that leads to a fairly severe impact on read operations as well. The 240GB RC100 is clearly incapable of performing wear leveling and garbage collection at an acceptable speed when the drive is full; some of the results are not even clearly better than a mechanical hard drive. We would suspect a defective drive if it weren't for the other results continuing to look reasonable while the full-drive ATSB tests produced reproducible horrifying results.

This looks pretty likely to be an inherent flaw, and it is likely to be even more severe and easier to encounter on the 120GB model. Because while not filling a SSD is common and well-grounded advice, the reality is that these drives sometimes will be filled in day-to-day use, especially in the case of small drives where space is at a premium. Toshiba may be able to improve the garbage collection somewhat with firmware updates, but for now it is clear that those smaller two models should not be filled completely if at all possible. We have not determined how much manual overprovisioning is necessary to keep performance within a reasonable range, but users definitely should set aside some spare area with those models, and it's been a long time since we've felt the need to make that recommendation. Plenty of other recent low-end SSDs lose a lot of there performance when full, but there's a big difference between losing half the performance and losing 90%.

There aren't many options at the moment for other M.2 2242 SSDs, and most the alternatives are outdated M.2 SATA drives with planar MLC NAND—so they might offer better worst-case write speeds than the RC100, but they won't beat it on capacity or real-world performance. If anybody does try to challenge Toshiba in the M.2 2242 niche, the competition would be subject to the same constraints Toshiba has faced. Samsung could put their PM971 BGA SSD on a M.2 card and completely outclass the RC100's performance thanks to the inclusion of LPDDR4 in the PM971, but I doubt Samsung would bother making a retail product for this small of a market segment. The companies that do like to maintain a wide product selection with lots of form factors (ADATA, Transcend, Lite-On/Plextor) would have to use a DRAMless NVMe controller like the Phison E8T or Marvell 88NV1160 in order to have room for any actual NAND on the card, or else opt for more expensive packaging to stack the NAND on the controller and make it a BGA SSD. The options for this form factor will continue to be largely limited to the drives OEMs are shipping and a handful of retail derivatives of those same drives, so users looking to upgrade from an OEM drive will not be able to get much of a performance or capacity boost unless their system can accommodate the more common 80mm M.2 card length.

NVMe SSD Price Comparison
(2018-06-14)
  120-128GB 240-256GB 400-512GB 960-1200GB
Toshiba RC100 $59.99 (50¢/GB) $79.99 (33¢/GB) $154.99 (32¢/GB)  
MyDigitalSSD SBX $44.99 (35¢/GB) $69.99 (27¢/GB) $139.99 (27¢/GB) $299.99 (29¢/GB)
HP EX900 $56.99 (47¢/GB) $94.99 (38¢/GB) $174.99 (35¢/GB)  
ADATA XPG SX8200   $89.99 (37¢/GB) $169.99 (35¢/GB) $349.99 (36¢/GB)
HP EX920   $109.99 (43¢/GB) $179.99 (35¢/GB) $279.99 (27¢/GB)
Intel SSD 760p $82.96 (65¢/GB) $115.20 (45¢/GB) $217.35 (42¢/GB) $371.99 (36¢/GB)
Samsung 970 EVO   $106.01 (42¢/GB) $196.01 (39¢/GB) $396.01 (40¢/GB)
Western Digital WD Black (2D NAND)   $79.99 (31¢/GB) $149.95 (29¢/GB)  
Western Digital WD Black
(3D NAND)
  $109.90 (44¢/GB) $199.99 (40¢/GB) $399.99 (40¢/GB)
SATA Drives:        
Crucial MX500   $72.99 (29¢/GB) $109.99 (22¢/GB) $229.99 (23¢/GB)
Crucial BX300 $42.99 (36¢/GB) $74.91 (31¢/GB) $143.87 (30¢/GB)  
Samsung 860 EVO   $78.69 (31¢/GB) $126.94 (25¢/GB) $248.01 (25¢/GB)
WD Blue 3D NAND   $69.99 (28¢/GB) $117.53 (24¢/GB) $229.99 (23¢/GB)

Toshiba's introductory pricing for the RC100 isn't too bad, but it will need to come down a bit to beat the Phison-based MyDigitalSSD SBX, the current price leader among NVMe SSDs. The Toshiba RC100 does score several performance wins against the SBX, but the overall picture doesn't justify a significant price premium.

The 120GB RC100 should be ignored. At this capacity, the NAND flash will almost always be the bottleneck so there's no reason to prefer a NVMe drive over a SATA drive. The Crucial BX300 with 3D MLC (albeit an older generation) is still available for those who really need a cheap, small SSD. For most users, jumping up to at least 240GB makes the most sense, even if it means sticking with SATA for now. Unlike the 120GB capacity class, there's tons of competition for 240GB and larger drives. The 240GB Toshiba RC100 has a very small price premium over mainstream SATA drives, and the RC100 does outperform them on typical workloads. But those mainstream SATA drives are equipped with on-board DRAM that helps them perform well on the heaviest workloads and retain much better performance when filled up. The abysmal full-drive performance of the 240GB RC100 combined with the likelihood of getting a drive that size close to full means many users should avoid that model.

The 480GB RC100 is a safer buy with less crippling full-drive performance and a much lower likelihood of ending up full from ordinary desktop usage. A large video or game library could still cause it some trouble, but for most users that's a minor and avoidable concern. Unfortunately, 480GB is also the point at which the SATA drives start having a serious price advantage over even the cheapest NVMe SSDs.

Some users will value the RC100 for its unique features such as the M.2 2242 form factor. Most users simply want to know if low-cost NVMe drives like the RC100 mean that NVMe is ready to push SATA out of the mainstream SSD market. The answer there is still clearly "no", but we are getting closer to having NVMe drives that can beat SATA on both price and performance.

Power Management
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  • Mikewind Dale - Thursday, June 14, 2018 - link

    Interesting review. Thanks.

    I'm hoping that smaller, 11" and 13" laptops will start offering M.2 2242 instead of eMMC. I've been wary of purchasing a smaller laptop because I'm afraid that if the NAND ever reaches its lifespan, the laptop will be dead, with no way to replace the storage. An M.2 2242 would solve that problem.
  • PeachNCream - Thursday, June 14, 2018 - link

    Boot options in the BIOS may allow you to select USB or SD as an option in the event that a modern eMMC system suffers from a soldered on drive failure. In that case, it's still possible to boot from an OS and use the computer. In that case, I'd go for some sort of lightweight Linux OS for performance reasons, but even a full distro works okay on USB 3.0 and up. SD is a slower option, but you may not want your OS drive to protrude from the side of the computer. Admittedly, that's a sort of cumbersome solution to keeping a low-budget PC alive when replacement costs aren't usually that high.
  • peevee - Thursday, June 14, 2018 - link

    "but this is only on platforms with properly working PCIe power management, which doesn't include most desktops"

    Billy, could you please elaborate on this?
  • artifex - Thursday, June 14, 2018 - link

    Yeah, I'd also like to hear more about this.
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, June 14, 2018 - link

    I've never encountered a desktop motherboard that had PCIe ASPM on by default, so at most it's a feature for power users and OEMs that actually care about power management. I've seen numerous motherboards that didn't even have the option of enabling PCIe ASPM, but the trend from more recent products seems to be toward exposing the necessary controls. Among boards that do let you fully enable ASPM, it's still possible for using it to expose bugs with peripherals that breaks things—sometimes the peripheral in question is a SSD. The only way I'm able to get low-power idle measurements out of PCIe SSDs on the current testbed is to tell Linux to ignore what the motherboard firmware says and force PCIe ASPM on, but this doesn't work for everything. Without some pretty sensitive power measurement equipment, it's almost impossible for an ordinary desktop user to know if their PCIe SSD is actually achieving the <10mW idle power that most drives advertise.
  • peevee - Thursday, June 14, 2018 - link

    So by "properly working" you mean "on by default in BIOS"? Or there are actual implementation bugs in some Intel or AMD CPUs or chipsets?
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, June 14, 2018 - link

    Implementation bugs seem to be primarily a problem with peripheral devices (including peripherals integrated on the motherboard), which is why motherboard manufacturers are often justified in having ASPM off by default or entirely unavailable.
  • AdditionalPylons - Thursday, June 14, 2018 - link

    That's very interesting. And thanks Billy for a nice review! I too appreciate you doing something different. There will unfortunately always be someone angry on the Internet.
  • Kwarkon - Friday, June 15, 2018 - link

    L1.2 is a special PCIe link state that requires hardware CLREQ signal. When L1.2 is active all communication on PCIe is down thus both host and NVME device do not have to listen for data.
    Desktops don't have this signal ( it is grounded), so even if you tell the SSD (NVME admin commands) that L1.2 support is enabled it will still not be able to negotiate it.

    In most cases m.2 NVME require certain PCIe link state to get lowest power for their Power State.
    The PS x are just states that if all conditions are met than the SSD will get its power down to somewhere around stated value.

    You can always check tech specs of the NVME. If in fact low power is supported than the lowest power will be stated as "deep sleep L1.2 " or similar.
  • Death666Angel - Saturday, June 16, 2018 - link

    Prices in Germany do not line up one bit with the last chart. :D The HP EX920 1TB is 335€ and the ADATA SX8200 960GB is 290€. The SBX just has a weird amazon.de reseller who sells the 512GB version for 200€. The 970 Evo 1TB is 330€ and the Intel 760p 1TB is 352€. And for completeness, the WD Black 1TB is 365€. Even when accounting for exchange rates and VAT, the relative prices are nowhere near the US ones. :)

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