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Intel SSD DC S3500 Series Workload 
Characterization in RAID Configurations 
White Paper 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  December 2013 
329903-001US                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                                                    INFORMATION IN THIS DOCUMENT IS PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH INTEL PRODUCTS. NO LICENSE, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, BY ESTOPPEL OR  OTHERWISE, TO ANY INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS IS GRANTED BY THIS DOCUMENT. EXCEPT AS PROVIDED IN INTEL'S TERMS AND  CONDITIONS OF SALE FOR SUCH PRODUCTS, INTEL ASSUMES NO LIABILITY WHATSOEVER AND INTEL DISCLAIMS ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED  WARRANTY, RELAT
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  Contents  1.0 Revision History ................................................................................................... 5  2.0 Supporting Documentation ................................................................................... 5  3.0 About This Guide .................................................................................................. 5  4.0 Overview .........................
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                   Tables  Table 1  Typical Mixed Workloads in Data Center Applications ....................................... 7  Figures  Figure 1 RAID 1 Random 100% Write @ 4KB Transfer Size with Average Latency ............ 11   Figure 2 RAID 1 Random 70% Read @ 4KB Transfer Size with Average Latency  ............. 11  Figure 3 RAID 1 Random 90% Read @ 4KB Transfer Size with Average Latency  ............. 12  Figure 4 RA
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  1.0 Revision History    Document  Revision  Description Revision Date  Number Number  December 2013  329903 001 Initial release     2.0 Supporting Documentation  For more information on Intel SSDs, see the corresponding documentation.  Document Document No./Location  ® Intel Solid-State Drive DC S3500 Series Product Specification 328860    3.0 About This Guide  ® This guide describes Intel SSD DC S3500 Serie
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  A selection of workloads that represent both best-case performance and real-world  performance are presented in this white paper. These scenarios give the IT professional  ® a better understanding of the capabilities of the Intel SSD DC S3500 Series drive when  used in conjunction with a hardware RAID controller. More importantly, it helps the IT  professional understand a variety of workloads and circumsta
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  4.2 Queue Depth and Latency  Latency – The amount of time needed to service one outstanding IO to the drive,  measured in milliseconds (ms) or, with SSDs, microseconds (µs).  ® The Intel SSD DC S3500 Series supports a maximum queue depth of 32 per drive. In a  RAID array, the queue depth is multiplied by the number of drives in the RAID set.  Example: In a RAID 5 set of 8 drives, the maximum total queue dept
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  mixes, read-intensive workloads are more prominent. In summary, it is important to  select the proper SSD for a particular workload.  The examples presented here use 100% write and 100% read workloads to show the  maximum performance in these areas. Also, 70%/30% read/write and 90%/10%  read/write are used in order to simulate typical workloads in the datacenter.  4.4 Drive Endurance  Drive endurance, or we
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  5.0 RAID 1  5.1 Test System Specifications¹  The system used for RAID 1 testing include the following:  ® • Intel R2208GZ4GC-IDD 2U rack mount server  ® • Intel S2600GZ server board  ® ® • 2x Intel Xeon E5-2690 8-core CPUs (2.9 GHz)  ® • Intel C602 chipset  • 192GB DDR3-1333 memory  • Microsoft Windows Server 2008 R2*, 64-bit  • LSI MegaRAID 9265-8i* controller card  ® • 2x up to 8x Intel SSD DC S3500 Series
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  ® 5.2 Intel SSD DC S3500 Series in RAID 1 Performance   Characterization Data   ® This section provides performance characterization data for the Intel SSD DC S3500  Series in RAID 1 configurations.  To establish baseline expectations for IOPS, the Intel SSD DC S3500 Series 480GB  drives were evaluated in RAID 1 sets of 2, 4, 6 & 8 drives. The data collected was based  on a different mix of read and write r
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                    Figure 1.  RAID 1 Random 100% Write @ 4KB Transfer Size with  Average Latency    Intel internal testing, October 2013  Notes:  Figure 1 - The write performance of the two drive RAID 1 set matches the write performance of a  ® single Intel DC S3500 drive. This indicates very low latency introduced by the RAID controller.   As more drives are added, the write performance scales linearly. At four drives, the 
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  Figure 3.  RAID 1 Random 90% Read @ 4KB Transfer Size with   Average Latency      Intel internal testing, October 2013  Figure 4.  RAID 1 Random 100% Read @ 4KB transfer size with  Average Latency      Intel internal testing, October 2013  Notes:  Figures 2, 3 - In mixed workloads, 70% read and 90% read, IOPS increase with additional drives  and show slightly exponential growth with deeper queues.   Figures
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  5.3 RAID 1 Consistency  Consistency behind a RAID controller is very important because the performance of any  RAID set is limited by the lowest performing drive. As a RAID set increases in number of  drives, the probability of any given drive performing poorly increases. Therefore, if the  model of drive used is inconsistent in its performance, the inconsistency increases with  the size of the RAID set.   ®
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  6.0 RAID 5  6.1 Test System Specifications  The system used for RAID 5 testing was identical to the system used for RAID 1 testing  except the following changes:  • 2x Intel Xeon E5-2680 8-core CPUs (2.7 GHz)  • 3x up to 8x Intel SSD DC S3500 Series 800GB drives  Note:  For this test, 800GB drives were used. The rated performance of the Intel SSD DC S3500   Series drive in 800GB, 600GB, and 480GB capacities
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  Figure 6.  RAID 5 Random 100% Write @ 4KB Transfer Size with  Average Latency     Intel internal testing, October 2013  NOTES:  There are gains in write performance as drives are added to the RAID 5 set. The change at queue  depth 1 from three drives to six drives is approximately 58% increase in IOPS. For eight drives,  the change is 97% increase in IOPS over the three drive set.   At a queue depth of 1, la
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  Figure 8. RAID 5 Random 90% Read @ 4KB Transfer Size with   Average Latency      Intel internal testing, October 2013  Figure 9. RAID 5 Random 100% Read @ 4KB Transfer Size with  Average Latency      Intel internal testing, October 2013  Notes:  Figures 7, 8, 9 - As the workloads become more read intensive, there is a steady increase in  performance both as drives are added and as the queue deepens.   Figur
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  Figure 10.  RAID 5 Maximum Latency for 3-drive and 8-drive  Configurations     Intel internal testing, October 2013  6.4 RAID 5 Performance Conclusions  The RAID 5 write performance data illustrates the additional processing power required  of the RAID controller to calculate parity and stripe data across multiple drives. There is  diminished performance gain be adding drives when compared to RAID 1. Intel’s
                    
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                            Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  7.0 Summary  ® The Intel SSD DC S3500 Series drive has proven itself in many applications where  speed and reliability are essential. The data in this paper shows that this drive is very  robust behind a RAID controller.   In RAID 1 configurations, write performance is as expected for this setup; that is, a two  drive set matches the single drive specification, and increases linearly as drives are  added to
                    
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                           Intel SSD DC S3500 Workload Characterization in RAID Configurations                  8.0 Appendix  8.1 RAID Levels  RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks), developed in 1988 to improve  performance, reliability and scalability of hard disk storage systems has become a  standard in datacenters because of these qualities. There are many types, or levels, of  RAID.   RAID 0 uses block level striping to span one or more drives. This does improve  performance, and increases capacity when mor