Mixed Random Performance

Our test of mixed random reads and writes covers mixes varying from pure reads to pure writes at 10% increments. Each mix is tested for up to 1 minute or 32GB of data transferred. The test is conducted with a queue depth of 4, and is limited to a 64GB span of the drive. In between each mix, the drive is given idle time of up to one minute so that the overall duty cycle is 50%.

Mixed 4kB Random Read/Write

The 8TB Sabrent Rocket Q's performance on the mixed random IO test is much better than any of the other low-end NVMe drives; the DRAMless TLC drives are the slowest in this bunch, and the Intel 660p with its four-channel controller cannot keep up with the Rocket Q's 8-channel Phison E12. The 8TB Samsung 870 QVO is slower than most of the other SATA drives in this bunch, but still has a clear advantage over the 1TB model.

Sustained 4kB Mixed Random Read/Write (Power Efficiency)
Power Efficiency in MB/s/W Average Power in W

The high-end consumer NVMe drives and the Samsung 860 EVO TLC SATA drive top the power efficiency chart for the mixed random IO test. The Sabrent Rocket Q's efficiency is a significant step down from there, but still a bit better than any of the other low-end drives. The 8TB 870 QVO's efficiency score is worse than the 4TB model's, but clearly better than the 1TB model or either of the DRAMless TLC NVMe drives.

Both of the 8TB QLC drives show fairly typical performance curves for the mixed random IO test: little or no performance drop when writes are first added to the mix, and then increasing performance that accelerates toward the end of the test as write caching becomes more effective. The 8TB 870 QVO doesn't show the signs of a filled SLC cache that we see from the 1TB model, and neither 8TB QLC drive shows the nearly-flat performance exhibited by the two DRAMless TLC drives.

Mixed Sequential Performance

Our test of mixed sequential reads and writes differs from the mixed random I/O test by performing 128kB sequential accesses rather than 4kB accesses at random locations, and the sequential test is conducted at queue depth 1. The range of mixes tested is the same, and the timing and limits on data transfers are also the same as above.

Mixed 128kB Sequential Read/Write

The Sabrent Rocket Q's performance on the mixed sequential IO test is competitive with the high-end consumer TLC drives, and far better than the other low-end NVMe options. The 8TB Samsung 870 QVO has distinctly lower performance than the smaller capacities, but isn't quite the worst overall performer.

Sustained 128kB Mixed Sequential Read/Write (Power Efficiency)
Power Efficiency in MB/s/W Average Power in W

The good performance of the Rocket Q on the mixed sequential IO test comes at the cost of worse power efficiency than the DRAMless TLC competition, but its efficiency scores are still decent. The 8TB 870 QVO's efficiency scores are worse than any of the other consumer SSDs in this bunch.

As with several other synthetic tests in our suite, the mixed sequential IO test has the Sabrent Rocket Q showing rather variable performance, though fortunately without any severe drops. It performs a bit better during the more write-heavy half of the test.

The Samsung 870 QVO shows relatively flat and consistent performance throughout this test, but as is common for Samsung drives there's a bit of a decreasing performance trend during the read-heavy half of the test.

Sequential I/O Performance Power Management
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  • Kevin G - Friday, December 4, 2020 - link

    At 1 Gbit easily sure, but 2.5 Gbit is taking off in the consumer space and 10 Gbit has been here for awhile but at a price premium. There is also NIC bonding which can increase throughput further if the NAS has multiple active users.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Saturday, December 5, 2020 - link

    A single seagate ironwolf can push over 200MB/s read speeds. 2.5 Gbit will still bottleneck even the most basic raid 5 arrays.
  • heffeque - Friday, December 4, 2020 - link

    I want a silent NAS.
    Also SSD last longer than HDD.
    I'm hoping for a Synology DS620Slim but with AMD Zen inside (like the DS1621+), and I'll fill it up with 4TB QVO drives on SHD1 with BTRFS.
  • david87600 - Friday, December 4, 2020 - link

    Re: SSD lasts longer than HDD:

    Not necessarily. Especially with high volumes of writes. We've had more problems with our SSDs dying than our HDDs. We have several servers but the main application runs on an HDD. We replace our servers every four years but the old servers go into use as backup servers or as client machines. Some of those have been running their HDDs for 15 years now. None of our SSDs have lasted more than 2 years under load.
  • heffeque - Saturday, December 5, 2020 - link

    The Synology DS620Slim is not even near an enterprise server. Trust me, the SSDs won't die from high volume writes on a home user.
  • TheinsanegamerN - Saturday, December 5, 2020 - link

    Completely different use case. Home users fall under more of the WORM style of usage, they are not writing large data sets constantly.

    I also have no clue what you are doing to your poor SSDs. We have our SQL databases serving thousands of users reading and writing daily on SSDs for 3 years now without a single failure. Of course we have enterprise SSDs instead of consumer, so that makes a huge difference.
  • Deicidium369 - Saturday, December 5, 2020 - link

    I have far more dead HDDs than dead SSDs. The 1st SSD I bought was an OCZ midrange, 120GB - that drives has been used continuously for several years - about a year ago, wiped it and checked it - only a few worn cells. On the other hand - I had had terrible luck with anything over 8TB mechanical - out of the close to 300 14TB Seagates - over 10% failure rate - about half of those died during the 48 hour burn in - and the rest soon after.

    The Intel Optane U.2 we used in the Flash array have had no issues at all over the 3 year period - we had one that developed a power connector failure - but no issues with the actual media.

    as with most things tech YMMV
  • GeoffreyA - Sunday, December 6, 2020 - link

    Just a question. Between Seagate and WD, who would you say is worse when it comes to failures? Or are they about the same?
  • Deicidium369 - Sunday, December 6, 2020 - link

    I have not used WD in some time - so I can't comment I tend to use Backblaze failure rates - https://www.backblaze.com/blog/backblaze-hard-driv...
  • GeoffreyA - Monday, December 7, 2020 - link

    Thanks

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