MMM
Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12
Results 26 to 42 of 42

Thread: SandForce Using Intel 25nm MLC Flash On SSDs

  1. #26
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Toronto, ON
    Posts
    517
    If Intel decides to add compression to their G3 (or G4) SSD what will you think then?

    Innovation from smaller companies drives the larger companies back to competition. Intel got comfortable with the performance of the X25-M first gen, and look what happened to the G2 - they had a firmware update increase the artificially capped write speeds.
    i7 3770k - p8z77-v pro - 4x4gb - gtx680 - vertex 4 256gb - ax750
    i5 3570k - z77-pro3 - 2x4gb - arc-1231ml - 12x2tb wdgp r6 - cx400
    heatware

  2. #27
    Banned
    Join Date
    Aug 2010
    Posts
    38
    Quote Originally Posted by HKPolice View Post
    Snip...
    Don't be so brand sensitive, I'm a happy G2 owner, but it's obvious sandforce 'currently' has a far superior controller than Intel.

    I hope G3 get's a serious boost because upgrading from a G1 to G2 was a waste of time, I wil certainly think twice before listening to Anands Intel hype again.

  3. #28
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    NYC
    Posts
    1,592
    ^ not sure what you expected, latency was the same, read / write speeds were nearly the same. If something isn't at least 20% faster in the things you are most affected by (IMO) its not worth upgrading to.

    Even if a drive like the C300 is faster at reading and writing large sequential files, where it matters is at the 4-512kb file size and latency/IOPs unless you regularly work with large files in which case you'd likely be better served by a conventional disk :p

    The C300 does happen to be significantly faster at the 4k file sizes than the intel drives though and I would like to swap out my 2x vertex 120's for a pair and retire these to another role

  4. #29
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Toronto, ON
    Posts
    517



    http://www.anandtech.com/show/2899/13

    The Sandforce (Vertex 2) results don't look "UGLY" to me.

    Quote Originally Posted by HKPolice View Post
    I don't like the sandforce compression crap. It's smart, but it kills performance if you need to read/write incompressible data (IE compressed RARs). All current benches on them are misleading because 99% of them are done with highly compressible data (IE OS files or synthetic bench data).

    Anandtech has an article up a while ago where they used an incompressible data file for IOmeter and the results were UGLY. The lack of a buffer really shows.
    i7 3770k - p8z77-v pro - 4x4gb - gtx680 - vertex 4 256gb - ax750
    i5 3570k - z77-pro3 - 2x4gb - arc-1231ml - 12x2tb wdgp r6 - cx400
    heatware

  5. #30
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Virginia
    Posts
    179
    so since we're talking about sandforce compression.

    I read that the sandforce controllers are able to achieve a write amplification of as high as 0.5.

    Does this have to do with the compression?

  6. #31
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    1,820
    The SF results are artificial, since IOMeter data is compressible and thus IOMeter gives higher results.
    That does not mean it's bad with non-compressible data, just not impressive like C300.

    Quote Originally Posted by zoob View Post
    http://www.anandtech.com/show/2899/13

    The Sandforce (Vertex 2) results don't look "UGLY" to me.


    P5E64_Evo/QX9650, 4x X25-E SSD - gimme speed..
    Quote Originally Posted by MR_SmartAss View Post
    Lately there has been a lot of BS(Dave_Graham where are you?)

  7. #32
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Location
    São Paulo, Brazil
    Posts
    317
    Quote Originally Posted by alfaunits View Post
    The SF results are artificial, since IOMeter data is compressible and thus IOMeter gives higher results.
    That does not mean it's bad with non-compressible data, just not impressive like C300.
    http://www.anandtech.com/show/3681/o...200-reviewed/4

  8. #33
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Posts
    2,597
    Something I don’t get with the Sandforce drives. They compress data so that less data is written to the drive. Although less data is written the OS records the uncompressed data size. So if a drive is showing up as full on the OS in reality it isn’t. So why could this unseen capacity not be used for over provisioning to cut down on the amount of nand being used?

  9. #34
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    42
    Perhaps that's their way of cutting down on wear.

  10. #35
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    1,820
    So?
    P5E64_Evo/QX9650, 4x X25-E SSD - gimme speed..
    Quote Originally Posted by MR_SmartAss View Post
    Lately there has been a lot of BS(Dave_Graham where are you?)

  11. #36
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Toronto, ON
    Posts
    517
    Quote Originally Posted by alfaunits View Post
    So?
    Did you read the article?

    Quote Originally Posted by Anand
    In our Agility 2 review I did what you all asked: used a newer build of Iometer to not only write data in a random pattern, but write data comprised of truly random bits in an effort to defeat SandForce’s data deduplication/compression algorithms.
    i7 3770k - p8z77-v pro - 4x4gb - gtx680 - vertex 4 256gb - ax750
    i5 3570k - z77-pro3 - 2x4gb - arc-1231ml - 12x2tb wdgp r6 - cx400
    heatware

  12. #37
    Xtreme Member
    Join Date
    Aug 2008
    Location
    SF bay area, CA
    Posts
    262
    Quote Originally Posted by Ao1 View Post
    Something I don’t get with the Sandforce drives. They compress data so that less data is written to the drive. Although less data is written the OS records the uncompressed data size. So if a drive is showing up as full on the OS in reality it isn’t. So why could this unseen capacity not be used for over provisioning to cut down on the amount of nand being used?
    Okay, what happens if you write 100% incompressible data to the drive?
    SSDs require overprovisioning to function properly and efficiently...
    Since Sandforce often has "extra overprovisioning" due to the data compression,
    this simply allows it to function that much more efficiently.

    Quote Originally Posted by Fuji View Post
    so since we're talking about sandforce compression.
    I read that the sandforce controllers are able to achieve a write amplification of as high as 0.5.
    Does this have to do with the compression?
    Well, the write amplification on all other drives is >1.0,
    the Sandforce gets as LOW as 0.5..
    that means some data written of 1GB uncompressed size is being compressed to (on average) 0.5GB.
    But Sandforce says they are seeing an average WA of 0.7 in most user cases.
    "Red Dwarf", SFF gaming PC
    Winner of the ASUS Xtreme Design Competition
    Sponsors...ASUS, Swiftech, Intel, Samsung, G.Skill, Antec, Razer
    Hardware..[Maximus III GENE, Core i7-860 @ 4.1Ghz, 4GB DDR3-2200, HD5870, 256GB SSD]
    Water.......[Apogee XT CPU, MCW60-R2 GPU, 2x 240mm radiators, MCP350 pump]

  13. #38
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Posts
    2,597
    Quote Originally Posted by zads View Post
    Okay, what happens if you write 100% incompressible data to the drive? SSDs require overprovisioning to function properly and efficiently...
    Since Sandforce often has "extra overprovisioning" due to the data compression, this simply allows it to function that much more efficiently.
    But the chance of that happening would be remote and if the drive was full you would only be reading from it anyway. Let’s say your drive is 80% full. How much of that 80% is actually written data? 40%? 60%?
    Quote Originally Posted by zoob View Post
    Did you read the article?
    You forgot to include the sentence that followed that quote.
    “What we saw was a dramatic reduction in performance”.

    “………..The takeaway? While SandForce’s controllers aren’t immune to performance degradation over time, we’re still talking about speeds over 100MB/s even in the worst case scenario and with TRIM the drive bounces back immediately.”

    Still good performance even in a worst case scenario, I guess the issue is that mileage can vary.

  14. #39
    Xtreme Enthusiast
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Toronto, ON
    Posts
    517
    Quote Originally Posted by Ao1 View Post
    You forgot to include the sentence that followed that quote.
    “What we saw was a dramatic reduction in performance”.

    “………..The takeaway? While SandForce’s controllers aren’t immune to performance degradation over time, we’re still talking about speeds over 100MB/s even in the worst case scenario and with TRIM the drive bounces back immediately.”

    Still good performance even in a worst case scenario, I guess the issue is that mileage can vary.
    The bolded text is exactly what I'm trying to get at - Even in the worst case scenario it can still outperform the Intel SSD in 4K Random writes. Even with an Agility 2 on random data on 4K random, it can outperform an Intel X25-M G2.
    i7 3770k - p8z77-v pro - 4x4gb - gtx680 - vertex 4 256gb - ax750
    i5 3570k - z77-pro3 - 2x4gb - arc-1231ml - 12x2tb wdgp r6 - cx400
    heatware

  15. #40
    Xtreme Mentor
    Join Date
    Feb 2009
    Posts
    2,597
    No doubt; compressed writes, both sequential and random are faster. Compressed reads are slower going by AS SSD Benchmarks; ~ 210 vs 250. In some instances the Sandforce is faster and in others it’s slower. Either way no difference to the majority of users. Both drives are fast.

  16. #41
    Registered User
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    42
    Regardless, they'll definitely serve their purpose as an OS drive. Longevity of these SandForce drives is what I'd worry about.

  17. #42
    Xtreme Addict
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Posts
    1,820
    So I said... it's not bad, just not as impressive as C300.
    It would be a hazard if it could not outperform an intentionally gimped >1yr old X25-M

    Quote Originally Posted by zoob View Post
    The bolded text is exactly what I'm trying to get at - Even in the worst case scenario it can still outperform the Intel SSD in 4K Random writes. Even with an Agility 2 on random data on 4K random, it can outperform an Intel X25-M G2.
    P5E64_Evo/QX9650, 4x X25-E SSD - gimme speed..
    Quote Originally Posted by MR_SmartAss View Post
    Lately there has been a lot of BS(Dave_Graham where are you?)

Page 2 of 2 FirstFirst 12

Tags for this Thread

Bookmarks

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •