SSD versus Enterprise SAS and SATA disks
by Johan De Gelas on March 20, 2009 2:00 AM EST- Posted in
- IT Computing
SQLIO Performance
SQLIO is a tool provided by Microsoft that can determine the I/O capacity of a given disk subsystem. It should simulate somewhat how MS SQL 2000/2005 accesses the disk subsystem. The following tests are all done with RAID 0. We ran tests for as long as 1000 seconds but there was very little difference from our standard 120s testing. Thus, all tests run for 120 seconds.
There are no real surprises here: SQLIO confirms our findings with IOMeter.
Intel promised a 170 MB/s transfer rate when writing sequentially, and our measurements show that the drive is capable of delivering even more. Again, we see a RAID controller limitation pop up when we use eight drives. Let's look at the random read numbers.
While our IOMeter tests showed that the eight SAS drives could come close to a single SLC SSD drive when performing a mix of random reads and writes, this is no longer the case when we perform only random reads. This is clearly the best-case scenario for the SLC drive and it completely crushes any magnetic disk competition.
Random writes are slightly slower than random reads. Still, this kind of performance is nothing short of amazing as this used to be a weak point of SSDs.
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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&...