Conclusion

The system administrators with high-end, ultra mission critical applications will still look down their nose at the Intel X25-E Extreme SLC drive: it is not dual ported (SATA interface) and it does not have a "super capacitor" to allow the controller to write its 16MB cache to the flash array in the event of a sudden power outage. For those people, the Enterprise Flash Drives (EFD) of EMC make sense with capacities up to 400GB but prices ten times as high as the Intel X25-E SLC drive.

For the rest of us, probably 90% of the market, the Intel X25-E is nothing short of amazing: it offers at least 3 to 13 times better OLTP performance at less than a tenth of the power consumption of the classical SAS drives. We frankly see no reason any more to buy SAS or FC drives for performance critical OLTP databases unless the database sizes are really huge. From the moment you are using lots of spindles and most of your hard disks are empty, Intel's SLC SSDs make a lot more sense.

However, be aware that these ultra fast storage devices cause bottlenecks higher in the storage hierarchy. The current storage processors seem to have to trouble scaling well from four to eight drives. We have witnessed negative scaling only in some extreme cases, 100% random writes in RAID 5 for example. It is unlikely that you will witness this kind of behavior in the real world. Still, the trend is clear: scaling will be poor if you attach 16 or more SLC SSDs on products like the Adaptec 51645, 51645, and especially the 52445. Those RAID controllers allow you to attach up to 24 drives, but the available storage processor is the same as our Adaptec 5805 (IOP348 at 1.2GHz). We think it is best to attach no more than eight SLC drives per IOP348, especially if you are planning to use the more processor intensive RAID levels like RAID 5 and 6. Intel and others had better come up with faster storage processors soon, because these fast SLC drives make the limits of the current generation of storage processors painfully clear.

Our testing also shows that choosing the "cheaper but more SATA spindles" strategy only makes sense for applications that perform mostly sequential accesses. Once random access comes into play, you need two to three times more SATA drives - and there are limits to how far you can improve performance by adding spindles. Finally, to get the best performance out of your transactional applications, RAID 10 is still king, especially with the Intel X25-E.

References

[1] Dave Fellinger, "Architecting Storage for Petascale Clusters". http://www.ccs.ornl.gov/workshops/FallCreek07/presentations/fellinger.pdf

[2] US Department of Energy. Average retail price of electricity to ultimate customers by end-use sector, by state. http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epm/table5_6_a.html

Energy Consumption
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  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    If you happen to find out more, please mail me (johan@anandtech.com). I think this might have to do something with the inner working of SATA being sligthly less efficient than the SAS protocol and the Adaptec firmware, but we have to do a bit of research on this.

    Thanks for sharing.
  • supremelaw - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    Found this searching for "SAS is bi-directional" --

    http://www.sbsarchive.com/search.php?search=parago...">http://www.sbsarchive.com/search.php?se...&src...


    quoting:

    > Remember, one of the main differences between (true) SAS and SATA is
    > that in the interface, SAS is bi-directional, while SATA can only
    > send Data in one direction at a time... More of a bottle-neck than
    > often thought.


    Thus, even though an x1 PCI-E lane has a theoretical
    bandwidth of 250MB/sec IN EACH DIRECTION, the SATA
    protocol may be preventing simultanous transmission
    in both directions.


    I hope this helps.


    MRFS
  • supremelaw - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    NOW!

    http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=14630">http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=14630

    [begin quoteS]

    Among the offerings are a 16GB RIMM module and an 8GB RDIMM module. The company introduced 50nm 2Gb DDR3 for PC applications last September. The 16GB modules operate at 1066Mbps and allow for a total memory density of 192GB in a dual socket server.

    ...

    In late January 2009, Samsung announced an even higher density DRAM chip at 4Gb that needs 1.35 volts to operate and will be used in 16GB RDIMM modules as well as other applications for desktop and notebook computers in the future. The higher density 4Gb chips can run at 1.6Gbps with the same power requirements as the 2Gb version running at 1066Mbps.

    [end quote]
  • supremelaw - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    http://techreport.com/articles.x/16255">http://techreport.com/articles.x/16255


    The ACARD ANS-9010 can be populated with 8 x 2GB DDR2 DIMMS;
    and, higher density SDRAM DIMMS should be forthcoming from
    companies like Samsung in the coming months (not coming years).

    4GB DDR2 DIMMs are currently available from G.SKILL, Kingston
    et al. e.g.:

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N8...">http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.a...tem=N82E...



    I would like to see a head-to-head comparison of Intel's SSDs
    with various permutations of ACARD's ANS-9010, particularly
    now that DDR2 is so cheap.

    Lifetime warranties anybody? No degradation in performance either,
    after high-volume continuous WRITEs.

    Random access anybody? You have heard of the Core i7's triple-
    channel memory subsystems, yes? starting at 25,000 MB/second!!


    Yes, I fully realize that SDRAM is volatile, and flash SSDs are not:
    there are solutions for that problem, some of which are cheap
    and practical e.g. dedicate an AT-style PSU and battery backup
    unit to power otherwise volatile DDR2 DIMMs.

    Heck, if the IT community cannot guarantee continuous
    AC input power, where are we after all these years?


    Another alternative is to bulk up on the server's memory
    subsystem, e.g. use 16GB DIMMs from MetaRAM, and implement
    a smart database cache using SuperCache from SuperSpeed LLC:

    http://www.superspeed.com/servers/supercache.php">http://www.superspeed.com/servers/supercache.php


    Samsung has recently announced larger density SDRAM chips,
    not only for servers but also for workstations and desktops.
    I predict that these higher density modules will also
    show up in laptop SO-DIMMs, before too long. There are a
    lot of laptop computers in the world presently!


    After investigating the potential of ramdisks for myself
    and the entire industry, I do feel it is time that their
    potential be taken much more seriously and NOT confined
    to the "bleeding edge" where us "wild enthusiasts"
    tend to spend a lot of our time.


    And, sadly, when I attempted to share some original ideas and
    drawings with Anand himself, AT THE VERY SAME TIME
    an attempt was made to defame me on the Internet --
    by blaming me for some hacker who had penetrated
    the homepage of our website. Because I don't know
    JAVASCRIPT, it took me a few days to isolate that
    problem, but it was fixed as soon as it was identified.

    Now, Anand has returned those drawings, and we're
    back where we started before we approached him
    with our ideas.

    I conclude that some anonymous person(s) did NOT
    want Anand seeing what we had to share with him.


    Your comments are most appreciated!


    Paul A. Mitchell, B.A., M.S.
    dba MRFS (Memory-Resident File Systems)
  • masterbm - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    Still looks like their is bottleneck in raid controller in 66% read and 33% write test. The one ssd two ssd comperseion
  • mcnabney - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    The article does seem to skew at the end. The modeled database had to fit in a limited size for the SSD solution to really shine.

    So the database size that works well with SSD is one that requires more space than can fit into RAM and less than 500GB when the controllers top-out. That is a pretty tight margin and potentially can run into capacity issues as databases grow.

    Also, in the closing cost chart there is no cost per GB per year line. The conclusion indicates that you can save a couple thousand with a 500GB eight SSD solution versus a twenty SAS solution, but how money eight SSD servers will you need to buy to equal the capacity and functionality of one SAS server.

    I would have liked to see the performance/cost of a server that could hold the same size database in RAM.
  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    "So the database size that works well with SSD is one that requires more space than can fit into RAM and less than 500GB when the controllers top-out. That is a pretty tight margin and potentially can run into capacity issues as databases grow. "

    That is good and pretty astute observation, but a few remarks. First of all, EMC and others use Xeons as storage processor. Nothing is going to stop the industry from using more powerful storage processors for the SLC drives than the popular IOP348.

    Secondly, 100 GB SLC (and more) drives are only a few months away.

    Thirdly, AFAIK keeping the database in RAM does not mean that a transactional database does not have to write to the storage system, if you want a fully ACID compliant database.

  • mikeblas - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    I can't seem to find anything about the hardware where the tests were run. We're told the database is 23 gigs, but we don't know the working set size of the data that the benchmark touches. Is the server running this test already caching a lot in memory? How much?

    A system that can hold the data in memory is great--when the data is in memory. When the cache is cold, then it's not doing you any good and you still need to rely on IOPS to get you through.
  • JohanAnandtech - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    http://it.anandtech.com/IT/showdoc.aspx?i=3532&...">http://it.anandtech.com/IT/showdoc.aspx?i=3532&...

    Did you miss the info about the bufferpool being 1 GB large? I can try to get you the exact hitrate, but I can tell you AFAIK the test goes over the complete database (23 GB thus), so the hitrate of the 1 GB database will be pretty low.

    Also look at the scaling of the SAS drives: from 1 SAS to 8, we get 4 times better performance. That would not be possible if the database was running from RAM.
  • mikeblas - Friday, March 20, 2009 - link

    I read it, but it doesn't tell the whole story. The scalability you see in the results would be attainable if a large cache were not being filled, or if the cache was being dumped within the test.

    The graphs show transactions per second, which tell us how well the database is performing. The charts don't show us how well the drives are performing; to understand that, we'd need to see IOPS, among some other information. I'd expect that the maximum IOPS in the test is not nearly the maximum IOPS of the drive array. Since the test wasn't run for any sustained time, the weaknesses of the drive are not being exposed.

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