AnandTech Storage Bench - The Destroyer

The Destroyer is an extremely long test replicating the access patterns of very IO-intensive desktop usage. A detailed breakdown can be found in this article. Like real-world usage, the drives do get the occasional break that allows for some background garbage collection and flushing caches, but those idle times are limited to 25ms so that it doesn't take all week to run the test. These AnandTech Storage Bench (ATSB) tests do not involve running the actual applications that generated the workloads, so the scores are relatively insensitive to changes in CPU performance and RAM from our new testbed, but the jump to a newer version of Windows and the newer storage drivers can have an impact.

We quantify performance on this test by reporting the drive's average data throughput, the average latency of the I/O operations, and the total energy used by the drive over the course of the test.

ATSB - The Destroyer (Data Rate)

The 1TB models of the ADATA SX8200 Pro and HP EX950 go a long way toward catching up with other current high-end drives, but ultimately their overall performance on The Destroyer is inadequate. The 2TB EX950 doesn't even outperform last year's 1TB EX920.

ATSB - The Destroyer (Average Latency)ATSB - The Destroyer (99th Percentile Latency)

The average latency of the 1TB SM2262EN drives on The Destroyer is a significant improvement over their predecessors, but as with the average data rate it doesn't bring them up to the level of other recent high-end drives. The 99th percentile latency has actually regressed slightly from what the 1TB HP EX920 provided. The 2TB EX950 is slower in both metrics than the 1TB drives, but the 99th percentile latency score has improved from the pre-production firmware we tested last year.

ATSB - The Destroyer (Average Read Latency)ATSB - The Destroyer (Average Write Latency)

The 2TB HP EX950 has significantly worse average read latency than the 1TB models of the EX950 or EX920, but the average write latency is comparable to the 1TB EX950 and a clear improvement over the EX920. Regardless of capacity, the SM2262EN drives still have a lot of room for improving latency on The Destroyer.

ATSB - The Destroyer (99th Percentile Read Latency)ATSB - The Destroyer (99th Percentile Write Latency)

Overall, the 99th percentile read latency scores from the SM2262EN drives are closer to being competitive with other recent high-end drives than the 99th percentile write latencies, but both need to improve—especially the read QoS that has regressed slightly from the HP EX920. The SM2262 and SM2262EN drives have worse 99th percentile write latency on The Destroyer than the Crucial MX500, a SATA drive that is itself powered by a Silicon Motion controller.

For average latency, the 2TB EX950's weakness was on read operations, but when looking at 99th percentiles, it's writes that are a problem for the 2TB drive, though not as much as with the pre-production firmware.

ATSB - The Destroyer (Power)

The ADATA SX8200 Pro used significantly less power during The Destroyer than the HP EX950, putting the SX8200 Pro well ahead of the entire collection of SMI-based NVMe drives and close to the Phison E12-based Corsair MP510. WD and Toshiba remain the only ones to actually tie or surpass the power efficiency of SATA drives on this test. The 2TB EX950 unsurprisingly consumes a bit more energy than the 1TB model, thanks to having more memory to keep powered and due to firmware optimizations that are more ill-suited to this test than how the 1TB models behave.

SLC Cache Sizes & SYSmark 2018 AnandTech Storage Bench - Heavy
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  • cassiohui - Thursday, February 7, 2019 - link

    Hi Billy, just wondering, why is the 970 pro not in the graphs when even the 900p is?
  • Death666Angel - Thursday, February 7, 2019 - link

    They have stated on Twitter and in the comments before that they did not receive a 970 Pro review sample.
  • cassiohui - Thursday, February 7, 2019 - link

    960 pro maybe?
  • mapesdhs - Thursday, February 7, 2019 - link

    Pity they don't just buy them in themselves to do the tests anyway. I'd put more faith in data that
    hasn't come from free samples. :)
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, February 7, 2019 - link

    CPU, GPU and DRAM vendors can in theory sample chips that will overclock better than the average retail item, but there's no easy way for SSD vendors to cheat on performance with careful sampling. And the number of drives that don't survive my testing strongly suggests that they aren't doing any sort of extra QA before sending samples to me.
  • jahid - Thursday, February 7, 2019 - link

    Thanks for your valuable writing. HP some model availble in https://www.startech.com.bd/component/SSD-Hard-Dis...
  • ballsystemlord - Thursday, February 7, 2019 - link

    Well, I will not be purchasing an EX950. That is for sure. I'm bound to run the SLC down quite a bit and then performance will tank.
  • KAlmquist - Sunday, February 10, 2019 - link

    These drives are mostly of interest to people who need odd sized drives. For example, if you need a 600GB drive, you probably have to buy a 1TB drive and only use 600GB of it. Either of the 1TB drives should perform reasonably in this scenario. You might still have to tweak the power saving settings to avoid putting the drive to sleep too frequently (due to the huge wakeup time), but the active idle power is less that one watt.
  • dromoxen - Wednesday, February 20, 2019 - link

    For me , anything over 500Gb is going to be used for mass storage, so HDD rulez. But ssd would be better on speed, noise and (possibly) reliability. I dont need ultra speeds, just something cheap enough, and faster than HDD. A long way off, still .
    Why couldn't ADATA offer two versions of the drive, or at least two firmwares, one for Boy racers, one for commercial use? if you can get a chandelier on your ram sticks ....well?
  • upvts - Monday, July 29, 2019 - link

    How full is full? 100%? And is there a noticeable cliff in the performance, or is there a general decline? Or both (gradual decline in performance until the drives are filled to some threshold amount, after which the performance drops off a cliff)? If we were to leave enough space empty on the drive, could we avoid this hypothetical cliff?

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