Showing posts with label SSD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SSD. Show all posts

11/23/2009

OCZ Colossus SSD










more detail - http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=821&type=expert&pid=1

Fusion-io’s SSD Setup Reaches 1TB/s Aggregate Bandwidth.



Fusion-io, a designer of high-end solid-state drive (SSD) solutions, announced this week that it would deploy custom installations based on its ioMemory technology at two presently undisclosed government organizations. Each deployment consists of hundreds of terabytes of solid-state storage capacity and is capable of sustaining over 1TB/s of aggregate bandwidth with access latencies under 50ms.
The extreme performance achievements were made possible by Fusion-io’s development of the ioDrive Octal card, a custom PCI Express card. The device holds eight ioMemory Modules – putting the equivalent capacity and performance of eight ioDrives into a single card. The ioDrive Octal fits any PCI Express 2.0 x16 double-wide slot, the same as those used for high performance graphics cards, and it is capable of saturating the full performance of that slot. The ioDrive Octal again demonstrates the flexibility, performance and scalability of Fusion’s ioMemory architecture, the core technology that powers all the company’s enterprise products.
Achieving a 1TB/s sustained bandwidth with existing storage technologies requires close to 55 440 disk drives, 396 SAN controllers, 792 I/O servers and 132 racks of equipment. Fusion-io can achieve this same bandwidth with a mere 220 ioDrive Octal cards, housed in Infiniband-attached I/O servers running the Lustre parallel file system. This 1TB/s Fusion-io based solution requires six racks or less than 1/20th the rack space of an equivalent, high-performance, hard disk drive-based storage system.
“We were eager to take on the challenge of creating a device that meets the intense demands of high performance computing. With this architecture, IOPS are easy. We achieved over a hundred million IOPS, more than enough performance to meet our customer’s requirements. The real power in our architecture was the ability to also scale bandwidth. We look forward to productizing the ioDrive Octal in the future, and bringing the power of this solid-state storage technology from the world of HPC to the enterprise,” said Steve Wozniak, chief scientist at Fusion-io.
Specifications of ioDrive Octal look as follows:
  • 800,000 IOPS (4k packet size);
  • 6 GB/s bandwidth;
  • 5 TB maximum capacity;
  • PCIe x16 2.0 double-wide PCI Express form factor.
“Innovative technology, like Fusion's ioMemory, will fundamentally change the way the industry architects high performance computing facilities in the future. Technologies like these will drive new and emerging HPC systems as they continue their exponential growth in performance. Only improvements in storage bandwidth at this order of magnitude can keep the floor space and power consumption requirements from becoming unmanageable and unsustainable,” said Mark Seager, manager of the platforms program for the advanced simulation and computing (ASCI) program at Lawrence Livermore.


11/18/2009

OCZ officially unveils the Colossus 3.5-inch SSDs

Almost six months after their first sighting, the Colossus 3.5-inch solid state drives from OCZ have finally been announced. The 120GB, 250GB, 500GB and 1TB drives have an aluminum casing and feature MLC (multi-level cell) NAND flash memory chips, internal RAID, two controllers and 128MB of cache memory, a SATA 3.0 Gbps interface, a MTBF (mean time before failure) of 1.5 million hours, and deliver read and write speeds of up to 260 MB/s.

"The new Colossus Series is designed to boost desktop and workstation performance and is for high power users that put a premium on speed, reliability and maximum storage capacity," said Eugene Chang, VP of Product Management at the OCZ Technology Group. "The Colossus core-architecture is also available to enterprise clients with locked BOMs (build of materials) and customized firmware to match their unique applications."

The Colossus SSDs are backed by a three-year warranty and are said to start off at $300.




http://www.tcmagazine.com/comments.php?shownews=30976&catid=2

9/03/2009

OCZ Z-Drive 1TB SSD

OCZ showcased its Z-Drive at CeBIT 2009, which was said to be a MLC-based SSD with 256MB of local cache. With decent transfer speed, it sounds like a good option. The company has now revealed the final shape of the drive. As we can see below, they look neater and more adorable.

Backed by a two-year warranty, the Z-Drive SSDs require extra power via a 4-pin MOLEX connector. Delivering maximum read/write speed of 878/781MB, 878/761MB and 774/646MB per second, the OCZ Z-Drive 1TB, 500GB and 250GB models are available for $3368.99, $2450.5 and $1561.3 respectively.


http://en.expreview.com/2009/09/04/ocz-spruces-up-its-z-drive-ssds.html