Coming with improved specs :
http://www.hardwareluxx.com/index.p...amsung-announces-new-sm961-pm961-m2-ssds.html


http://www.hardwareluxx.com/index.p...amsung-announces-new-sm961-pm961-m2-ssds.html
The read performance almost fully saturates a PCIe 3.0 x4 link...?
That didn't take long.
The read performance almost fully saturates a PCIe 3.0 x4 link...?
That didn't take long.
The Polaris controller has five cores and can access eight memory channels.
PCIe only has about 80% efficiency, so 3.2GB/s is pretty much the maximum that 3.0 x4 can reach.
I think that is more to do with very high queue depths used in these type of benchmark than any realistic workloads. I can see the value of high queue depth benchmarking for random read/write performance, but for sequential performance it is blatantly used as a tool for marketing by all companies.
In real world no one will run against the 3,000 MB/s bottleneck. Specially since most servers are bottlenecked by 10 gigabit ethernet (1250 MB/s) anyway. Or am I missing something obvious?
No coverage on Anandtech at all? Site keeps getting worse.
So this controller can access more memory channels than your typical Xeon. Desktop CPUs are worse, mostly stuck with 2 channels. Perhaps we will see some sort of HMB2 type solution in future Samsung controllers?!
Isn't efficiency improved greatly with 3.0 (thanks to 128b/130b encoding). If so, x4 should pull just a bit under 4GB/s.
SThere are other overheads and inefficiencies in addition to the encoding scheme, so in reality PCIe 3.0 x4 is good for about 3.2GB/s. Ryan confirmed this with a CUDA bandwidth test, which should max out the interface. I've heard that there are some BIOS settings that can be played around with to increase PCIe bandwidth, but by default it won't go above ~800MB/s per lane.
In real world no one will run against the 3,000 MB/s bottleneck. Specially since most servers are bottlenecked by 10 gigabit ethernet (1250 MB/s) anyway. Or am I missing something obvious?
Will these be OEM parts? So no warranty?
SM951 comes with a 3 year warranty from my usual vendor (EU). The new model might actually improve on that, since it's V-NAND based.You still get 2 years warranty In the EU. Assuming you can find one. Other places also got consumer laws to protect the customers.
Coming with improved specs :
http://www.hardwareluxx.com/index.p...amsung-announces-new-sm961-pm961-m2-ssds.html
Crap. Just bought a SM951 NVME 256 GB for 110 bucks.
I specifically got the AHCI model (thankfully) because I was installing Win7 64-bit on Skylake, which comes with it's own set of issues, and I wouldn't have been able to install a boot-time NVMe driver off of a USB stick at install time.