AnandTech Storage Bench 2013

Our Storage Bench 2013 focuses on worst-case multitasking and IO consistency. Similar to our earlier Storage Benches, the test is still application trace based - we record all IO requests made to a test system and play them back on the drive we are testing and run statistical analysis on the drive's responses. There are 49.8 million IO operations in total with 1583.0GB of reads and 875.6GB of writes. I'm not including the full description of the test for better readability, so make sure to read our Storage Bench 2013 introduction for the full details.

AnandTech Storage Bench 2013 - The Destroyer
Workload Description Applications Used
Photo Sync/Editing Import images, edit, export Adobe Photoshop CS6, Adobe Lightroom 4, Dropbox
Gaming Download/install games, play games Steam, Deus Ex, Skyrim, Starcraft 2, BioShock Infinite
Virtualization Run/manage VM, use general apps inside VM VirtualBox
General Productivity Browse the web, manage local email, copy files, encrypt/decrypt files, backup system, download content, virus/malware scan Chrome, IE10, Outlook, Windows 8, AxCrypt, uTorrent, AdAware
Video Playback Copy and watch movies Windows 8
Application Development Compile projects, check out code, download code samples Visual Studio 2012

We are reporting two primary metrics with the Destroyer: average data rate in MB/s and average service time in microseconds. The former gives you an idea of the throughput of the drive during the time that it was running the test workload. This can be a very good indication of overall performance. What average data rate doesn't do a good job of is taking into account response time of very bursty (read: high queue depth) IO. By reporting average service time we heavily weigh latency for queued IOs. You'll note that this is a metric we have been reporting in our enterprise benchmarks for a while now. With the client tests maturing, the time was right for a little convergence.

Storage Bench 2013 - The Destroyer (Data Rate)

Thanks to the excellent IO consistency, the 850 Pro dominates our 2013 Storage Bench. At the 1TB capacity point, the 850 Pro is over 15% faster than any drive when looking at the average data rate. That is huge because the 850 Pro has less over-provisioning than most of today's high-end drives and the 2013 Storage Bench tends to reward drives that have more over-provisioning because it essentially pushes drives to steady-state. The 256GB model does not do as well as the 1TB one but it is still one of the fastest drives in its  class. I wonder if the lesser amount of over-provisioning is the reason or perhaps the Extreme Pro is just so well optimized for mixed workloads.

Storage Bench 2013 - The Destroyer (Service Time)

Performance Consistency AnandTech Storage Bench 2011
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  • GTVic - Tuesday, July 1, 2014 - link

    Wondering if the 3D V-NAND has an effect on heat produced by each chip?
  • Laststop311 - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    If only this drive would of been a pci-e 3.0 x4 interface with nvme. We would of finally had a worthy upgrade. Yes it's performance is better than the 840 evo but you can get the 840 evo 1tb for 400 dollars even less if you catch it on sale. So you can get 2x 1tb 840 evo for almost the same price as 1 850 pro. If you compare an 840 evo with 25% OP to a regular 7% on the 850 the 840 evo looks just as good so 2x 825GB drives with 25% OP on each drive costs you 750-800 depending on the deal you get vs 700 for 1000GB. I would rather pay 800 for 1650GB than 700 for 1000GB with performance being nearly identical. I get an extra 650GB (which at 50 cents per GB is another 325 dollars worth of ssd) and tons of over provisioning to give the drive equal or better performance for only 100 dollars more (possibly less as the 840 evo has often sales)

    Sorry Samsung but 2x 1tb 840 evos with 25% provisioning gives me better or equal performance and a whole 650GB of extra storage for only 100 dollars more. At 50 cents per GB you get 325 dollars worth of more storage capacity for only 100 dollars more and thats with the 25% over provisioning which basically negates the performance increase of the new drives.

    The only way samsung could of made this drive worth that money is if they had the drive on a pci-e 3.0 x4 interface with nvme instructions. I'm sure there will be tons of idiots who just buy it cause it's the latest drive. But if you use your brain you can see the 840 evo is still the best SATA drive when the cost/performance ratio is taken into account. 2x 1tb evo's in 25% OP mode gives you 1650GB and costs u 100 dollars extra or less and gives you the same performance or even better compared to 7% 850 pro 1000GB especially when raid 0 is taken into account. I'll take 1650GB over 1000GB if it's only 100 more and performance is equal or better easy choice.
  • Laststop311 - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    Since samsung is stacking vertically now what they should of done is made a super huge 2tb drive to differentiate themselves from all these other drives. A 2tb drive for 1400 is a little more acceptable than 1tb for 700 simply because it's the only single drive with 2TB capacity.

    I can see great things happening with vertical stacked nand tho. When this process matures we should be seeing nand drives surpass spinning hard drives in capacity. When samsung has those 1tbit dies its planning for 2017 we should be able to have 8-12TB SSD's
  • althaz - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    It's a new product and it's priced highly. Eager early adopters who want to move on to the latest and greatest will buy now, value-concious people will buy the 840s. Inventory of the 840s will get eaten up and the 850s will drop in price.

    This is what happens whenever any product is released, basically ever.
  • asmian - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    Sorry, but neither this nor the EVO will get my money. Performance is all very well, even if only a tiny handful of users with extremely niche workloads will ever notice any difference, but all this extra reliability at a price premium means NOTHING without simple power loss protection. Restricting something so basic to "Enterprise" class products is the real gouging here by Samsung, not the price.

    If Crucial can provide that protection on the CHEAPEST drives in their class (M500/M550 and IIRC MX100 too) with performance that is not gimped as a balance, then there is no excuse for Samsung not to. This should be a no-compromise baseline for all SSDs going forward, and Anandtech should push hard for that - users should as well, by voting with their wallets and refusing to buy drives, however fast and powerful, that do not provide power loss protection as a basic feature.
  • bsd228 - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    Though I agree it is a highly useful feature, it is far less significant to those of us using a good UPS. So I can't agree that it's a no compromise feature.
  • romrunning - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    What you aren't taking into account is the fact that the 850 Pro has MUCH higher endurance, and it's also more consistent. Those two items bring it more into the Intel DC 3500/3700 series type of class. It's not just a sheer performance comparison.

    ...and if you thing the 850 Pro is expensive, price out the larger Intel DC S3700 drives.
  • FunBunny2 - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    "Real" Enterprise SSDs don't even have an MSRP. You negotiate with the vendor, and hope for the best. Now that Texas Memory is in IBM, and Fusion-io in SanDisk, with Violin likely to go somewhere. The conundrum is V.NAND's impact on flattening the curve between Enterprise and Commodity/Retail. At one time, a mainframe had bespoke 14" behemoth hard drive subsystems (in the case of IBM, run by the equivalent of a PDP-x). In due time, binned commodity 3.5" drives are now used.

    Samsung could well be the driving force to regularize solid state storage. The remaining issue is whether the file system hand waving will be dumped in favor of direct NVM persistence? Samsung, or whoever, likely couldn't care less.
  • romrunning - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    It's been enjoyable to see a lot of "new" flash memory storage vendors pop-up. More competition is always good in that enterprise space.

    I've been looking forward to having more SSDs options available to servers at much better pricing. Solid storage advances have a trickle-down effect. If I can put an array of these Samsung 850 Pros into a server and achieve near "enterprise" performance, then that forces Dell/HP/etc. to drop their own SSD pricing.
  • watersb - Wednesday, July 2, 2014 - link

    Fantastic detail of 3D NAND design and why it matters. Thanks very much!

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