AnandTech Storage Bench - Light

The Light trace is designed to be an accurate illustration of basic usage. It's basically a subset of the Heavy trace, but we've left out some workloads to reduce the writes and make it more read intensive in general. Please refer to this article for full details of the test.

AnandTech Storage Bench - Light (Data Rate)

Under light workloads the NVMe version manages to pull a bigger lead with close to 20% reduction in average latency and 10% increase in average data rate. This is also the benchmark where the SM951 really shows its client focus because the SSD 750 is considerably slower in both data rate and latency.

AnandTech Storage Bench - Light (Latency)

AnandTech Storage Bench - Light (Latency)

AnandTech Storage Bench - Heavy Random Performance
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  • bill.rookard - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    CentOS (Actually, RH6.5 and newer) are supposed to have in the box storage drivers for NVME. It apparently doesn't follow the same naming convention (/dev/sdx) since it doesn't utilize the SCSI protocols, but the NVME protocols.

    So - to check before you buy?

    #modinfo nvme - should list if your kernel has built in nvme support.

    if you have a drive in, check if an nvme drive is in there and is recognized

    #lspci | grep nvme
  • SofS - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    Indeed, but my point was about their quality and how they compare between each other.
  • der - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    10th comment!
  • bernstein - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    i guess the 1tb 840 msata had either too slim margins or wasn't popular enough...
    still waiting for a 1tb M2 NVMe drive...
  • foxtrot1_1 - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    See you in December 2016, then.
  • bernstein - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    obviously i was wrong since there also is an 1tb msata 850 evo.... now i am very curious as to why samsung doesn't have a 1tb M2 ssd!!!
  • Kristian Vättö - Friday, June 26, 2015 - link

    Because all the PCIe drives use MLC NAND, which is a lower capacity die.
  • kspirit - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    The connector looks the same as that on the old SATA SSDs found in most laptops. I've got a 2280 sized Intel 1500 SSD in my HP Folio (Haswell). Would this give me PCIe speeds?
  • foxtrot1_1 - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    No.
  • Metaluna - Thursday, June 25, 2015 - link

    Depends on whether HP hooked up the PCIe lanes on their M.2 connector, which I wouldn't assume without checking into it. The BIOS also needs to have NVMe support. In the most common configurations (i.e. the "B" and "M" keyings), M.2 is required to carry both SATA and 2-4 PCIe lanes, but some motherboard vendors routinely violate this and leave out one or the other. Asus drops the SATA on some of their higher-end Z97 motherboards, for example, so you can't rule out that someone else may have made the opposite tradeoff.

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