Testing PCIe 4.0

It's been over a year since the first consumer CPUs and SSDs supporting PCIe 4.0 hit the market, so we're a bit overdue for a testbed upgrade. Our Skylake system was adequate for even the fastest PCIe gen3 drives, but is finally a serious bottleneck.

We have years of archived results from the old testbed, which are still relevant to the vast majority of SSDs and computers out there that do not yet support PCIe gen4. We're not ready to throw out all that work quite yet; we will still be adding new test results measured on the old system until PCIe gen4 support is more widespread, or my office gets too crowded with computers—whichever happens first. (Side note: some rackmount cases for all these test systems would be greatly appreciated.)

AnandTech 2017-2020 Skylake Consumer SSD Testbed
CPU Intel Xeon E3 1240 v5
Motherboard ASRock Fatal1ty E3V5 Performance Gaming/OC
Chipset Intel C232
Memory 4x 8GB G.SKILL Ripjaws DDR4-2400 CL15
Software Windows 10 x64, version 1709
Linux kernel version 4.14, fio version 3.6
Spectre/Meltdown microcode and OS patches current as of May 2018

Since introducing the Skylake SSD testbed in 2017, we have made few changes to our testing configurations and procedures. In December 2017, we started using a Quarch XLC programmable power module (PPM), providing far more detailed and accurate power measurements than our old multimeter setup. In May 2019, we upgraded to a Quarch HD PPM, which can automatically compensate for voltage drop along the power cable to the drive. This allowed us to more directly measure M.2 PCIe SSD power: these drives can pull well over 2A from the 3.3V supply which can easily lead to more than the 5% supply voltage drop that drives are supposed to tolerate. At the same time, we introduced a new set of idle power measurements conducted on a newer Coffee Lake system. This is our first (and for the moment, only) SSD testbed that is capable of using the full range of PCIe power management features without crashing or other bugs. This allowed us to start reporting idle power levels for typical desktop and best-case laptop configurations.

Coffee Lake SSD Testbed for Idle Power
CPU Intel Core i7-8700K
Motherboard Gigabyte Aorus H370 Gaming 3 WiFi
Memory 2x 8GB Kingston DDR4-2666

On the software side, the disclosure of the Meltdown and Spectre CPU vulnerabilities at the beginning of 2018 led to numerous mitigations that affected overall system performance. The most severe effects were to system call overhead, which has a measurable impact on high-IOPS synthetic benchmarks. In May 2018, after the dust started to settle from the first round of vulnerability disclosures, we updated the firmware, microcode and operating systems on our testbed and took the opportunity to slightly tweak some of our synthetic benchmarks. Our pre-Spectre results are archived in the SSD 2017 section of our Bench database while the current post-Spectre results are in the SSD 2018 section. Of course, since May 2018 there have been many further related CPU security vulnerabilities found, and many changes to the mitigation techniques. Our SSD testing has not been tracking those software and microcode updates to avoid again invalidating previous scores. However, our new gen4-capable Ryzen test system is fully up to date with the latest firmware, microcode and OS versions.

AnandTech Ryzen PCIe 4.0 Consumer SSD Testbed
CPU AMD Ryzen 5 3600X
Motherboard ASRock B550 Pro
Memory 2x 16GB Mushkin DDR4-3600
Software Linux kernel version 5.8, fio version 3.23

Our new PCIe 4 test system uses an AMD Ryzen 5 3600X processor and an ASRock B550 motherboard. This provides PCIe 4 lanes from the CPU but not from the chipset. Whenever possible, we test NVMe SSDs with CPU-provided PCIe lanes rather than going through the chipset, so the lack of PCIe gen4 from the chipset isn't an issue. (We had a similar situation back when we were using a Haswell system that supported gen3 on the CPU lanes but only gen2 on the chipset.) Going with B550 instead of X570 also avoids the potential noise of a chipset fan. The DDR4-3600 is a big jump compared to our previous testbed, but is a fairly typical speed for current desktop builds and is a reasonable overclock. We're using the stock Wraith Spire 2 cooler; our current SSD tests are mostly single-threaded, so there's no need for a bigger heatsink.

For now, we are still using the same test scripts to generate the same workloads as on our older Skylake testbed. We haven't tried to control for all possible factors that could lead to different scores between the two testbeds. For this review, we have re-tested several drives on the new testbed to illustrate the scale of these effects. In future reviews, we will be rolling out new synthetic benchmarks that will not be directly comparable to the tests in this review and past reviews. Several of our older benchmarks do a poor job of capturing the behavior of the increasingly common QLC SSDs, but that's not important for today's review. The performance differences between new and old testbeds should be minor, except where the CPU speed is a bottleneck. This mostly happens when testing random IO at high queue depths.

More important for today is the fact that our old benchmarks only test queue depths up to 32 (the limit for SATA drives), and that's not always enough to use the full theoretical performance of a high-end NVMe drive—especially since our old tests only use one CPU core to stress the SSD. We'll be introducing a few new tests to better show these theoretical limits, but unfortunately the changes required to measure those advertised speeds also make the tests much less realistic for the context of desktop workloads, so we'll continue to emphasize the more relevant low queue depth performance.

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  • msroadkill612 - Tuesday, October 13, 2020 - link

    Yep. I find the raw sequential speeds exciting too - its not just about IOPS :)

    This processor load balancing coincides w/ some very handy advances in mainstream system memory - typically? 64GB (2x 32GB 3200 cl16 ~$220 atm) w/ speeds to ~45-50GB/s on AM4?,

    a PCIE 4 GPU w/ a 32GB/s link vs the former 16GB/s. Its little mentioned, but seems an important plateau - ~64GB at 32GB/s seems a pretty usable supplemental tier of cache for the gpu?

    quite possibly, nvme ports on the GPU's Infinity Fabric bus on ~BigNavi to bypass a potentially bottlenecked pcie bus - AMD did it before with a pro Vega card - an nvme raid array on the gpu.

    individually they are increments in currently usable gaming memory & bandwidth (if not IOPS), but collectively they could be a force which affects gaming?

    Games are what they are due to the restrictions of yore. Of course they are coded to isolate within gpu resources.. it was the only way to run fast enough. Reduce the restrictions tho, & add new usable resources, & games change to provide new & richer experiences.

    MS FS is perhaps a forerunner of this new mindset - it likes massive memory, but is fun at 30FPS.
  • crabperson - Tuesday, September 22, 2020 - link

    Thanks for the comparison to the PM1725a, I didn't realize how the lack of an SLC cache hurt it so much! I got a used 3.2 TB 'b version for a song, still holding out on Haswell here and probably won't upgrade until next year (Zen 3 may convince me otherwise).
    Looking forward to Phison's updated controllers and 2TB+ drives next year. Definitely don't need to waste money on the Pro line anymore.
  • Billy Tallis - Tuesday, September 22, 2020 - link

    I was actually surprised how poorly the PM1725a fared on the consumer tests. I knew that the lack of SLC caching would hurt its writes, but it also appears to be heavily optimized for high queue depths at the expense of low queue depth performance.

    I'm planning to have some overlap between the enterprise and consumer synthetic benchmarks going forward, so there should be more opportunities to notice stuff like this.
  • ZeDestructor - Tuesday, September 22, 2020 - link

    Any particular reson for not running the 3 desktop loads as well? I'm curious how the drives perform in more "real-world" desktop workloads too
  • Billy Tallis - Tuesday, September 22, 2020 - link

    Time constraints, mostly. I grabbed the PM1725a because of its potential to show similar peak throughput, and it takes less than two hours to run the synthetic tests. A full set of ATSB results is a minimum of 12 hours plus however long it takes to fill the drive twice.
  • ZeDestructor - Wednesday, September 23, 2020 - link

    Couldn't you do it during downtime and then lump the results directly into bench? I'm not particularly fussed about having the results in this particular review, but they would be very nice to have around eventually™ for weirdos like me who buy used server drives for cheap and stick em into the desktop.
  • PopinFRESH007 - Tuesday, September 22, 2020 - link

    The Rocket 4 Plus was already announced and should be shipping this year with what looks to be better performance than this. Will be interesting to see what the price will be. The E18 also supports NVMe 1.4 rather than 1.3c on the 980 Pro.
  • ToTTenTranz - Tuesday, September 22, 2020 - link

    So.. is this a SSD that can go into the PS5 as expandable storage?
  • Billy Tallis - Tuesday, September 22, 2020 - link

    Probably. Sony hasn't put out their list of officially approved/tested SSDs yet, but this one should qualify and then some.
  • UltraWide - Tuesday, September 22, 2020 - link

    The RANDOM R/W scores are average. It looks like the SK Hynix is a better SSD for real world use.

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