NVMe Recap

Before diving into our results, I want to spend a bit of time talking about NVMe (Non-Volatile Memory Express) as a command set for PCIe-based storage first. NVMe has been in the OEM and enterprise space for over a year, but it's still very much a new thing in the end-user system builder space due to the fact that NVMe drives were not available through regular retail channels until now. So let's start things by spending a moment to recap what NVMe is, how it works, and why it is such an important improvement over AHCI for SSDs.

Traditional SATA drives, such as mechanical hard drives or SSDs, are connected to the system through a controller sometimes referred to as a Host Bus Adapter (HBA) or Host Controller. This is powered through the south bridge of the system, which hosts the input/output and talks to the main processor. On the "upstream" side of the HBA to the main processor is a PCI Express-like connection, and on the downstream side from the chipset to the drives are SATA links. Almost all SATA controllers, including the ones built in to the chipsets on motherboards, adhere to the Advanced Host Controller Interface (AHCI) standard, which allows them to all work with the same class driver. SATA drives connected through such controllers are accessed using the ATA command set, which maintains a standard language for all drives to use.

Early PCIe SSDs on the other hand either implemented proprietary interfaces requiring custom drivers, or they implemented older AHCI and ATA command set and as such appeared to the OS to be a SATA drive in every way (except for the 6Gb/s speed limit). As a transition mechanism to help smooth out the rollout of PCIe SSDs, using AHCI over PCIe was a reasonable short-term solution, however over time AHCI itself became a bottleneck to what the PCIe interface and newer SSDs were capable of.

  NVMe AHCI
Latency 2.8 µs 6.0 µs
Maximum Queue Depth Up to 64K queues with
64K commands each
Up to 1 queue with
32 commands each
Multicore Support Yes Limited
4KB Efficiency One 64B fetch Two serialized host
DRAM fetches required

To allow SSDs to better take advantage of the performance possible through PCI Express, a new host controller interface and command set called NVMe was developed and standardized. NVMe's chief advantages are lower latency communication between the SSD and the CPU, and lower CPU usage when communicating with the SSD (though the latter usually only matters in enterprise scenarios). The big downside is that it's not backwards-compatible: in order to use an NVMe SSD you need an NVMe driver, and in order to boot from an NVMe drive your motherboard's firmware needs NVMe support. The NVMe standard has now been around long enough that virtually every consumer device with an M.2 slot providing PCIe lanes should have NVMe support or a firmware update available to add it, so booting off the 950 Pro poses no particular trouble (as odd as it sounds, some older enterprise/workstation systems may not have an NVMe update, and users should check with their system manufacturer).

Meanwhile on the software side of matters, starting with Windows 8.1 and Windows 10, Windows has a built-in NVMe driver that implements all the basic functionality necessary of NVMe for everyday use. But basic is it; the default NVMe class driver is missing some features necessary for things like updating drive firmware and accessing some diagnostic information. For that reason, and to accommodate users who can't update to a version of Windows that has an NVMe driver available from Microsoft, most vendors are providing a custom NVMe driver. Samsung provided a beta version of their driver, as well as a beta of their SSD Magician software that now supports the 950 Pro (but not their previous M.2 drives for OEMs). Almost all of the features of SSD Magician require Samsung's NVMe driver for use with the 950 Pro.

Finally, some of our benchmarking tools are affected by the switch to NVMe. Between most of our tests, we wipe the drive back to a clean state. For SATA drives and PCIe drives using AHCI, this is accomplished using the ATA security features. The NVMe command set has a format command that can be specified to perform a secure erase, producing the same result but requiring a different tool to issue the necessary commands. Likewise, our usual tools for recording drive performance during the AnandTech Storage Bench tests don't work with NVMe, so we're using a different tool to capture that data, but the same tools to process and analyze it.

Measuring PCIe SSD Power Consumption

Our SSD testbed is now equipped to measure power consumption of PCIe cards, and we're using an adapter to extend that capability to PCIe M.2 drives. M.2 drives run on 3.3V where most SATA devices use 5V, but we account for that difference by using reporting power draw in Watts or milliWatts. This review is our first look at the power draw behavior of a PCIe drive and our first opportunity to explore the power management capabilities of PCIe drives. To offer some points of comparison, we're re-testing our samples of the Samsung SM951 and XP941, earlier PCIe M.2 drives that were sold to OEMs but not offered in the retail channel.

This analysis has turned up some surprises. For starters, the 950 Pro's power consumption noticeably increases as it heats up - indicating that the heat/leakage effect is enough of a factor to be measurable here - and I've seen its idle power climb by as much as 4.5% from power on to equilibrium. Pointing a fan at the drive quickly brings the power back down. For this review, I made no special effort to cool the 950 Pro. Samsung ships it without a heatsink and assures us that it has built-in thermal management capabilities, so I tested it as-is in our standard case scenario with the side panel removed.

It appears that Samsung's NVMe drives have much higher idle power consumption than the AHCI drives, even when using the same UBX controller. It's clear that our system configuration is not putting the 950 Pro or the SM951 with NVMe into a low power state when idle, but the cause for what that happens is not clear. The power levels reported in the graph below are all attainable even before the operating system has loaded and they don't improve any once Samsung's NVMe driver loads, which points to an issue with either the drive firmware or the motherboard firmware.

M.2 PCIe Drives Idle Power

Furthermore, we have a clear indication of at least one motherboard bug. PCI Express Active State Power Management (ASPM) is a feature that allows a PCIe link to be slowed down to save power, something that is quite useful for a SSD that experiences long idle periods. ASPM can be activated in just the downstream direction (CPU to device) or in both directions. The latter is what offers significant power savings for a SSD. Our testbed motherboard offers options to configure ASPM, but when enabling the more aggressive bidirectional ASPM level, it locks up very frequently. I tried to test ASPM on my personal Haswell-based machine with a different motherboard from a different vendor, but it didn't offer any option to enable ASPM.

Using a slightly older Ivy Bridge machine with an Intel motherboard, I was able to confirm that the 950 Pro doesn't have any issues with ASPM, and that it does offer significant power savings. However, I wasn't able to dig for further power savings on that system, and all of the power measurements reported with the performance benchmarks in this review were performed on our usual testbed with ASPM off, as it has been for all previous reviews.

Motherboard power management bugs are tragically common in the desktop space, and devices that incorrectly implement ASPM are common enough that it is seldom enabled by default. As PCIe peripherals of all kinds become more common, the industry is going to have to shape up in this department, but for now consumers should not assume that ASPM will work correctly out of the box.

Introduction Performance Consistency
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  • ElBerryKM13 - Saturday, November 14, 2015 - link

    If you had $1000 to spend which one would you get? this 950 pro m.2 or intel 1.2TB m.2?
  • srieppo - Monday, December 21, 2015 - link

    Get two 950 in RAID 0. I'm currently running that and it's amazing. What you should put money on depends on your needs though. For gaming SSD is not very important. But I already run 6700k with fast memory and 980TI SLI so was a logical next step.

    1TB of superfast SSD is the last bit. HDD for storage, power options to shut the HDD down when idle (silent) and online backup for important data is the way I like...
  • mapesdhs - Monday, December 14, 2015 - link

    Typo on pp. 9, the word "duplicating" is shown twice, or was that a really late April Fool? :D
  • mapesdhs - Tuesday, December 15, 2015 - link

    Pondering whether to get a 950 Pro 256GB for a SkyLake laptop (MSI GE72 6QF). Despite the glowing benchmark results, it looks as if there would be little gain for real world usage compared to, say, an 850 EVO M.2 which is way cheaper (132 UKP for 500GB, vs. 147 UKP for 950 Pro 256GB), uses less power and thus would afford longer battery life. Edging towards the 850 EVO despite my nerdy addiction to speed...
  • Killerkicker2011 - Wednesday, December 30, 2015 - link

    Would the 950 pro work with my Macbook Pro Late 2013?
  • Quarysma - Saturday, January 16, 2016 - link

    I bought 950 pro but i having trouble rate. My system test results as follows:836 / 806 MB/s read/write.
    My system: Asus Z97m plus, 2*8 Corsair 2400 Mhz. i5-4690K, Corsair h110i, 1000W PSU.

    I wonder why I'm having problems ?

    Thanks for all...
  • robitlgnaz - Tuesday, February 2, 2016 - link

    I have Asus Z97 deluxe with m.2 slot, but supporting only x4 PCI 2.0 (instead of x4 PCi 3.0).
    So on my mobo and yours too this m.2 support only 1.0Gbit or 1.000MB.;(

    I think (and asking) that with PCIe adapter i and you can put that in x8 lanes of PCI 2.0 and get full spedd with that? I have only one graphics card so this is the only way, or?
  • Quarysma - Friday, February 26, 2016 - link

    Either we get PCI-e card or will switch to the DDR4 system. I moved to a DDR4 system.

    I'm ordered DDR4 system and waiting for the parts.
  • yury2808 - Tuesday, April 12, 2016 - link

    Beware! This drive (950 Pro / 512 GB) is terribly slow, if you set your disk to be "compressed" in Win7/10. I used it save my vmware space for years with other SSD drives (intel/samsung/ocz) and never had an issue.
    But yesterday, we got 2x nvme 950 pro and found, that speed is dropping almost immediately to ... 3 MB/s with huge latency.

    I don't know, how their firmware goes around benchmarks (which are all cool for 'incompressible' data) but for real life - this drive get a HUGE hit when OS compress data.

    ps. sure, I have plenty CPU for it, so it's not the case.
  • Redstorm - Saturday, April 23, 2016 - link

    Be aware the new Samsung NVMe driver 1.1 drops performance by about 10% across the board. They should update the article with new perf numbers as its giving a false impression ATM.

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