Performance Consistency

In our Intel SSD DC S3700 review Anand introduced a new method of characterizing performance: looking at the latency of individual operations over time. The S3700 promised a level of performance consistency that was unmatched in the industry, and as a result needed some additional testing to show that. The reason we don't have consistent IO latency with SSDs is because inevitably all controllers have to do some amount of defragmentation or garbage collection in order to continue operating at high speeds. When and how an SSD decides to run its defrag and cleanup routines directly impacts the user experience. Frequent (borderline aggressive) cleanup generally results in more stable performance, while delaying that can result in higher peak performance at the expense of much lower worst-case performance. The graphs below tell us a lot about the architecture of these SSDs and how they handle internal defragmentation.

To generate the data below we take a freshly secure erased SSD and fill it with sequential data. This ensures that all user accessible LBAs have data associated with them. Next we kick off a 4KB random write workload across all LBAs at a queue depth of 32 using incompressible data. We run the test for just over half an hour, nowhere near what we run our steady state tests for but enough to give a good look at drive behavior once all spare area fills up.

We record instantaneous IOPS every second for the duration of the test and then plot IOPS vs. time and generate the scatter plots below. Each set of graphs features the same scale. The first two sets use a log scale for easy comparison, while the last set of graphs uses a linear scale that tops out at 40K IOPS for better visualization of differences between drives.

The high level testing methodology remains unchanged from our S3700 review. Unlike in previous reviews however, we vary the percentage of the drive that gets filled/tested depending on the amount of spare area we're trying to simulate. The buttons are labeled with the advertised user capacity had the SSD vendor decided to use that specific amount of spare area. If you want to replicate this on your own all you need to do is create a partition smaller than the total capacity of the drive and leave the remaining space unused to simulate a larger amount of spare area. The partitioning step isn't absolutely necessary in every case but it's an easy way to make sure you never exceed your allocated spare area. It's a good idea to do this from the start (e.g. secure erase, partition, then install Windows), but if you are working backwards you can always create the spare area partition, format it to TRIM it, then delete the partition. Finally, this method of creating spare area works on the drives we've tested here but not all controllers are guaranteed to behave the same way.

The first set of graphs shows the performance data over the entire 2000 second test period. In these charts you'll notice an early period of very high performance followed by a sharp dropoff. What you're seeing in that case is the drive allocating new blocks from its spare area, then eventually using up all free blocks and having to perform a read-modify-write for all subsequent writes (write amplification goes up, performance goes down).

The second set of graphs zooms in to the beginning of steady state operation for the drive (t=1400s). The third set also looks at the beginning of steady state operation but on a linear performance scale. Click the buttons below each graph to switch source data.

  OCZ Vector 150 240GB OCZ Vector 256GB Corsair Neutron 240GB Sandisk Extreme II 480GB Samsung SSD 840 Pro 256GB
Default
25% OP

Performance consistency is simply outstanding. OCZ told us that they focused heavily on IO consistency in the Vector 150 and the results speak for themselves. Obviously the added over-provisioning helps but if you compare it to the Corsair Neutron with the same ~12% over-provisioning, the Vector 150 wins. The Neutron and other LAMD based SSDs have been one of the most consistent SSDs to date, so the Vector 150 beating the Neutron is certainly an honorable milestone for OCZ. However if you increase the over-provisioning to 25%, the Vector 150's advantage doesn't scale. In fact, the original Vector is slightly more consistent with 25% over-provisioning than the Vector 150 but both are definitely among the most consistent.

  OCZ Vector 150 240GB OCZ Vector 256GB Corsair Neutron 240GB SanDisk Extreme II 480GB Samsung SSD 840 Pro 256GB
Default
25% OP

 

  OCZ Vector 150 240GB OCZ Vector 256GB Corsair Neutron 240GB SanDisk Extreme II 480GB Samsung SSD 840 Pro 256GB
Default
25% OP

 

TRIM Validation

Above is an HD Tach graph I ran on a secure erased drive to get the baseline performance. The graph below is from a run that I ran after our performance consistency test (first filled with sequential data and then hammered with 4KB random writes at queue depth of 32 for 2000 seconds):

And as always, performance degrades, although the Vector 150 does pretty good with recovering the performance if you write sequential data to the drive. Finally I TRIM'ed the entire volume and reran HD Tach to make sure TRIM is functional.

It is. You can also see the impact of OCZ's "performance mode" in the graphs. Once 50% of the LBAs have been filled, the drive will reorganize the data, which causes the performance degradation. If you leave the drive idling after filling over half of it, the performance will return close to brand new state within minutes. Our internal tests with the original Vector have shown that the data reorganization takes less than 10 minutes, so it's nothing to be concerned about. The HD Tach graphs give a much worse picture of the situation than it really is.

Introduction & The Drive AnandTech Storage Bench 2013
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  • ssdpro - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    Looks pretty good. I like that it is certified for 50GB/day - much higher than the original which makes me think the nand is better. Price will need to get down to 120 or so though, that 1GB/$1 is critical.
  • Solid State Brain - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    OCZ indeed have managed fooling people that these drives are much better than the old ones.
    Any drive with 3k P/E writes MLC NAND from 128 GB and up, write endurance wise should be able to support at the very least 50 GB of writes per day for 5 years, even taking into account a rather high write amplification of 4.5-5.

    It's all mostly about how much manufacturers are willing to risk cannibalizing their enterprise lineup. I don't think OCZ has much left to lose at this point.
  • Guspaz - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    When a company with a reputation for terrible reliability has their review sample fail, that's a pretty good sign that their reliability is still terrible.
  • romrunning - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice... or 3 times... or 4 times...
  • geniekid - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    Fool me once, strike one. Fool me twice, strike...three.
  • Guspaz - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    Sadly, this was the experience of a friend who made the mistake of buying an OCZ drive. It failed, so he RMA'd it. The replacement failed. So he RMA'd that. THAT replacement failed... Eventually he gave up and bought an Intel drive, which... didn't fail.
  • Samus - Friday, November 8, 2013 - link

    My last OCZ drive that failed was RMA'ed and the replacement eBayed. Learned my lesson. That was a few years ago, but at the time, NO other drives were failing in OCZ fashion.

    Kingston SSDNOW, Crucial C300, Intel X25-M/320, Samsung 700-series...they weren't as fast, but they also rarely failed.
  • deeps6x - Friday, November 8, 2013 - link

    Yep, NEVER AGAIN for me.

    Much cheaper EVO looks like the bang for the buck winner still. Every six months there is something significantly better for less cost anyway. Why pay premium prices for such a short amount of time at the 'top'? Buy the best 'bang for the buck' products as much as possible.
  • djscrew - Saturday, November 9, 2013 - link

    my 2nd gen OCZ Revodrive 128 gb has been going strong for 3 yrs
  • Senti - Thursday, November 7, 2013 - link

    Buying OCZ SSD is suicide. Even with impressive hardware it's just not worth the problems. I can tell as the user of quite a premium drive from them: Revodrive 3. No TRIM support, drivers only for Win7 (and not even planned for anything else), horrible boot times (due to its bios insisting on showing some useless information, you can even press Space to reduce this time that proves that it would be easy to improve the situation if the company was willing to improve things as users asked).

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