I/O Meter Performance

IOMeter is an open source (originally developed by Intel) tool that can measure I/O performance in almost any way you can imagine. You can test random or sequential accesses (or a combination of the two), read or write operations (or a combination of the two), in blocks from a few KB to several MB. Whatever the goal, IOMeter can generate a workload and measure how fast the I/O system performs.

First, we evaluate the best scenario a magnetic disk can dream of: purely sequential access to a 20GB file. We are forced to use a relatively small file as our SLC SSD drives are only 32GB. Again, that's the best scenario imaginable for our magnetic disks, as we use only the outer tracks that have the most sectors and thus the highest sustained transfer rates.

IOMeter Sequential Read

The Intel SLC SSD delivers more than it promised: we measure 266 MB/s instead of the promised 250 MB/s. Still, purely sequential loads do not make the expensive and small SSD disks attractive: it takes only two SAS disks or four SATA disks to match one SLC SSD. As the SAS disks are 10 times larger and the SATA drives 30 times, it is unlikely that we'll see a video streaming fileserver using SSDs any time soon.

Our Adaptec controller is clearly not taking full advantage of the SLC SSD's bandwidth: we only see a very small improvement going from four to eight disks. We assume that this is a SATA related issue, as eight SAS disks have no trouble reaching almost 1GB/s. This is the first sign of a RAID controller bottleneck. However, you can hardly blame Adaptec for not focusing on reaching the highest transfer rates with RAID 0: it is a very rare scenario in a business environment. Few people use a completely unsafe eight drive RAID 0 set and it is only now that there are disks capable of transferring 250 MB/s and more.

The 16 SATA disks reach the highest transfer rate with two of our Adaptec controllers. To investigate the impact of the RAID controller a bit further, we attached four of our SLC drives to one Adaptec controller and four on another one. First is a picture of the setup, and then the results.


IOMeter Sequential Read, 2 versus 1 RAID controllers

The results are quite amazing: performance improves more than 60% with four SSDs on two controllers compared to eight X25-E SSDs on one controller. We end up with a RAID system that is capable of transferring 1.2GB/s.

IOMeter/SQLIO Software Setup I/O Meter Performance (Cont'd)
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  • marraco - Wednesday, March 25, 2009 - link

    The comparison is not fair, but can be fairer:

    If the RAID of SATA/SAS disks is restricted to the same storage capacity than the SSD, limiting the partition to the fastest external tracks/cilynders, the latency is significantly reduced, and average read/write speed is significantly increased, so

    PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE

    Repeat the benchmarcks, but with short stroking for magnetic disks.
  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, March 27, 2009 - link

    May I ask what the difference with the fact that we created a relatively small partition across our RAID-5 raidset? Also, you can imagine that our 23 GB database was at the outer tracks of the disks. I have to verify, but that seems logical.

    This kind of testing should give the same effects as short stroking. I personally think Short stroking can not be good for your actuator, while a small partition should be no problem.
  • marraco - Friday, March 27, 2009 - link

    See this link.
    http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/short-stroking...">http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/short-stroking...

    Clearly, you results are orders of magnitude than those showed on that benchmark.

    As I understand, short stroking increase actuator health, because reduces physical acceleration on the actuator.

    Anything necessary, is to use a small partition on the fastest external track.

    you utilized a raid 0 of 16 disks, with less than 1000 gb/second.

    On Tomshardware, a raid of only 4 disk achieved average (not maximun) 1400 to 1600 Mb/s. (of course, the test are not the same; for that reason, I ask for new test)

    About the RAID 5: I would love to see RAID 0.

    I are interesed on comparing a fast SSD as the intels, (or OCZ Vostro/Summit), with what can be achieved at the same cost, with magnetic media, if the partition size is restricted to the same total capacity than the SSD.

    Anyway, thanks for the article. Good work.

    So good, I want to see more :)
  • marraco - Sunday, April 5, 2009 - link

    Please, tell me you are preparing such article :)
  • JohanAnandtech - Tuesday, April 7, 2009 - link

    We are investigating the issue. I like to have some second opinions before I start heavy benchmarking on THG article. They tend to be sensational...
  • araczynski - Wednesday, March 25, 2009 - link

    wow, color me impressed. all the more reason to upgrade everything to gigabit and fiber.
  • BailoutBenny - Tuesday, March 24, 2009 - link

    Can we get any updates on the future of chalcogenide glass (phase change) based drive technologies? IBM's Millipede and other MEMS probe storage devices? Any word about Intel and STMicroelectronics' shipments of PRAM samples to customers that happened last year? What do the rumor mills say? Are these technologies proving viable? It is difficult to formulate a coherent picture for these technologies without being an industry insider.
  • Black Jacque - Tuesday, March 24, 2009 - link

    RAID 5 in Action

    ... However, it is rarely if ever used for any serious application.

    You are obviously not a SAN Admin or know too much about enterprise level storage.

    RAID 5 is the mainstay of block-level storage systems by companies like EMC.

    In addition, the article mentions STEC EFDs used by EMC. On the EMC CLARiiON line, those EFDs are provisioned in RAID 5 groups.


  • spikespiegal - Wednesday, March 25, 2009 - link

    [quote]RAID 5 is the mainstay of block-level storage systems by companies like EMC. [/quote]

    Which thus explains why in this day in age I see so many SANs blowing entire volumes and costing days of restoration when the room temp gets a few degrees above ambient.

    Corrupted RAID 5 arrays have cost me more lost enterprise data than all the non-RAID client side disks I've ever replaced; iSeries, all brands of x386, etc. EMC has a great script to account for this in which they always blame the drives first, then only when cornered by an enraged CIO will they admit it's their controllers. Been there...done that...for over a decade in many different industries.

    If you haven't been burned by RAID 5, or dare claim a drive controller in RAID 5 mode has a better MTBF than the drives it's hosting, then it's time to quite your day job at the call center in India. RAID 5 saves you the cost of one drive every four, which was logical in 1998 but not today. At least span across multiple redundant controllers in RAID 10 or something....
  • JohanAnandtech - Tuesday, March 24, 2009 - link

    I fear you misread that sentence:

    "RAID 0 is good way to see how adding more disks scales up your writing and reading performance. However, it is rarely if ever used for any serious application."

    So we are talking about RAID-0 not RAID-5.
    http://it.anandtech.com/IT/showdoc.aspx?i=3532&...">http://it.anandtech.com/IT/showdoc.aspx?i=3532&...

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