- Aug 17, 2001
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For giggles I elected to do a test. I tried two different caching software programs, only to find that one only worked. I may try primocache also and post results once I check into that program a little more.
Between each benchmark, a trim command was sent to the drive. I had also tested using a larger cache size, but it made no difference between 4GB and 10GB due to the nature of some of these benchmark tests using relatively small data sets for testing.
First up...and stock 830, fresh trim, 25% OP 128GB drive.
Now a 830 with O&O clever cache installed.
Note, the ram usage never really increase. The cache size was showing a meager 150MB. I believe this program to operate more like superfetch or such and really isn't too aggressive on what it caches.
Now an 830 with SuperSpeed supercache V5. Cache size was set to 4GB to mimic the limitation of samsung rapid. No lazy write.
Now we start to see a caching software start to mimic the results of Samsungs Rapid. But the writes aren't looking to great. Lets see if a 5 second lazy write can increase that. Interestingly the AIDA read test suite never improved.
830 samsung with lazy write enabled
An increase in write speed in general, albeit at the risk of data loss in an event of power outage.
But what about regular HDD, can they be improved with this type of software
An old WD 640 black. No lazy write on first test
Now with lazy write enabled.
Now the 840 Pro 256GB. Stock, Rapid, SSLW
edit 2 new notes
After some investigation to rapid mode and lazy writes I'm at the opinion currently that they are of little benefit (writes) and in fact have some drawbacks that I feel outweigh the benefits. Whether or not they can improve the avg write speed to a drive is debatable and I'm still trying to wrap my head around how to even possibly test this. On the other hand, due to the delay that is introduced a lot of times the overall transfer time may be greater than if the feature was turned off entirely. More testing is needed to determine if there are indeed any real world benefits to write caching.
I started to play with primocache and it has some of its own quirks. Immediately I noticed in benchmark testing if write caching is not enabled it is very wild in throughput....5mb-155mb transfer....but this was in AS-SSD. With write and read cache enabled, everything seemed to smooth out...I need more time to see whats going on for sure. I was playing with the setup on the WD 640 caviar HDD I benched above....with primocache it anvil suite, it actually out scored my 840 pro with RAPID enabled. Looks promising....I also want to stick the 830 in as level 2 cache and see how well it works before I invest in my replacement 4TB drive.
I'm due to switch over to an intel system this week or next...which will be another set of tests. My stock 830/840 pro scores haven't exactly been the highest and I think a lot of that has to do with the amd chipset. Will be interesting to see what improvements the newer intel chipset will bring.
Between each benchmark, a trim command was sent to the drive. I had also tested using a larger cache size, but it made no difference between 4GB and 10GB due to the nature of some of these benchmark tests using relatively small data sets for testing.
First up...and stock 830, fresh trim, 25% OP 128GB drive.

Now a 830 with O&O clever cache installed.

Note, the ram usage never really increase. The cache size was showing a meager 150MB. I believe this program to operate more like superfetch or such and really isn't too aggressive on what it caches.
Now an 830 with SuperSpeed supercache V5. Cache size was set to 4GB to mimic the limitation of samsung rapid. No lazy write.

Now we start to see a caching software start to mimic the results of Samsungs Rapid. But the writes aren't looking to great. Lets see if a 5 second lazy write can increase that. Interestingly the AIDA read test suite never improved.
830 samsung with lazy write enabled

An increase in write speed in general, albeit at the risk of data loss in an event of power outage.
But what about regular HDD, can they be improved with this type of software
An old WD 640 black. No lazy write on first test

Now with lazy write enabled.

Now the 840 Pro 256GB. Stock, Rapid, SSLW



edit 2 new notes
After some investigation to rapid mode and lazy writes I'm at the opinion currently that they are of little benefit (writes) and in fact have some drawbacks that I feel outweigh the benefits. Whether or not they can improve the avg write speed to a drive is debatable and I'm still trying to wrap my head around how to even possibly test this. On the other hand, due to the delay that is introduced a lot of times the overall transfer time may be greater than if the feature was turned off entirely. More testing is needed to determine if there are indeed any real world benefits to write caching.
I started to play with primocache and it has some of its own quirks. Immediately I noticed in benchmark testing if write caching is not enabled it is very wild in throughput....5mb-155mb transfer....but this was in AS-SSD. With write and read cache enabled, everything seemed to smooth out...I need more time to see whats going on for sure. I was playing with the setup on the WD 640 caviar HDD I benched above....with primocache it anvil suite, it actually out scored my 840 pro with RAPID enabled. Looks promising....I also want to stick the 830 in as level 2 cache and see how well it works before I invest in my replacement 4TB drive.
I'm due to switch over to an intel system this week or next...which will be another set of tests. My stock 830/840 pro scores haven't exactly been the highest and I think a lot of that has to do with the amd chipset. Will be interesting to see what improvements the newer intel chipset will bring.
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