Re: Testing Sandforce SSD

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 On 10-08-04 03:49 PM, Scott Carey wrote:
On Aug 2, 2010, at 7:26 AM, Merlin Moncure wrote:

On Fri, Jul 30, 2010 at 11:01 AM, Yeb Havinga<yebhavinga@xxxxxxxxx>  wrote:
After a week testing I think I can answer the question above: does it work
like it's supposed to under PostgreSQL?

YES

The drive I have tested is the $435,- 50GB OCZ Vertex 2 Pro,
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820227534

* it is safe to mount filesystems with barrier off, since it has a 'supercap
backed cache'. That data is not lost is confirmed by a dozen power switch
off tests while running either diskchecker.pl or pgbench.
* the above implies its also safe to use this SSD with barriers, though that
will perform less, since this drive obeys write trough commands.
* the highest pgbench tps number for the TPC-B test for a scale 300 database
(~5GB) I could get was over 6700. Judging from the iostat average util of
~40% on the xlog partition, I believe that this number is limited by other
factors than the SSD, like CPU, core count, core MHz, memory size/speed, 8.4
pgbench without threads. Unfortunately I don't have a faster/more core
machines available for testing right now.
* pgbench numbers for a larger than RAM database, read only was over 25000
tps (details are at the end of this post), during which iostat reported
~18500 read iops and 100% utilization.
* pgbench max reported latencies are 20% of comparable BBWC setups.
* how reliable it is over time, and how it performs over time I cannot say,
since I tested it only for a week.
Thank you very much for posting this analysis.  This has IMNSHO the
potential to be a game changer.  There are still some unanswered
questions in terms of how the drive wears, reliability, errors, and
lifespan but 6700 tps off of a single 400$ device with decent fault
tolerance is amazing (Intel, consider yourself upstaged).  Ever since
the first samsung SSD hit the market I've felt the days of the
spinning disk have been numbered.  Being able to build a 100k tps
server on relatively inexpensive hardware without an entire rack full
of drives is starting to look within reach.
Intel's next gen 'enterprise' SSD's are due out later this year.  I have heard from those with access to to test samples that they really like them -- these people rejected the previous versions because of the data loss on power failure.

So, hopefully there will be some interesting competition later this year in the medium price range enterprise ssd market.


I'll be doing some testing on Enterprise grade SSD's this year. I'll also be looking at some hybrid storage products that use as SSD's as accelerators mixed with lower cost storage.

--
Brad Nicholson  416-673-4106
Database Administrator, Afilias Canada Corp.



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