Features & Specifications

Intel's Optane Memory is finally shipping, but many can't get past the idea of cache in a high-performance computer, or the steep system requirements. Optane Memory delivers SSD-like performance when you pair it with a hard disk drive, and for some tasks, it offers better performance than a low-cost SSD. Still, some users just want the fastest possible storage system, and caching isn't the best option. Today we examine one option that combines three Optane Memory SSDs together in a RAID 0 array to create a large volume for installing an operating system and a few programs.

After our initial article, I've read many reader comments about Optane Memory. It's obvious the name alone causes confusion. Optane "Memory" is actually a storage device. It gets confusing when you add in the fact that the Optane product family has two consumer cache devices and an enterprise-focused add-in card SSD, and then the terminology associated with building an Optane Memory (cache) array on your 200-series chipset. I'm confused, and I wrote it.

For this article, we're not worried about creating the caching array that preloads the high-speed device with frequently-accessed data. We are simply using three Optane devices together, forgoing the special software, and just muscling through the workloads with brute force.

Optane's 3D XPoint (the physical chips) are all muscle. We can summarize the comments in our first Optane article by simply saying the caching product is only slightly faster than a high-performance SSD. That's kind of true, but it's a sandbagged product. The Optane Memory SSD with 32GB and 16GB of capacity uses either one or two channels. I suspect it's a single-channel device, but Intel will neither confirm nor deny the controller specifications. If we go with my theory, this Intel single-channel controller beats your 8-channel NAND-based SSDs easily. Over time, we'll see more of Optane's capabilities, but for now, we should think of it as a whole new class of memory.

You may not see it now, but Intel will soon have an advantage in the SSD game. For the last several years, all the SSD companies have played catch up with Samsung. Samsung currently has the most advanced NAND flash, and the advantage is so great that its TLC NAND often outperforms competing MLC NAND. Samsung's 3D NAND is like a college football team playing a high school football team. If that's the analogy, then Intel's Optane Technology is NFL caliber.

I think Optane is off to a great start. We should all remember that the early SLC-based prosumer SSDs were slower than a modern SD card when they first came to market. Over time Optane will get faster, larger, and cheaper. What we want is for Intel to mass produce it, make it cheap, and then give us the highest performing devices at an affordable price. If you think that's going to happen soon, then you don't know Intel. Don't look for low-cost consumer Optane-based SSDs anytime soon, but RAID allows you to game the system if you take on a little risk.

Modern SSDs use a form of internal RAID to increase performance. A single NAND die is fast, but it takes many working together to reach the high levels of performance we associate with SSDs. Larger capacities increase the likelihood of more parallel transactions (to a limit). This has both positive and negative side effects. Over time, the capacity of the NAND die increased, and the number of physical chips in the SSDs decreased. That's why many modern SSDs are slower than older models with the same capacity. Optane changes the game entirely. Intel hasn't given us an affordable prosumer Optane SSD, yet, so we're going to make one using a combination of hardware and software you may already have.

Specifications

Intel Optane Memory 16GB

Intel Optane Memory 32GB

Not every Intel chipset supports RAID. PCIe RAID falls to an even more exclusive tier because you need the ability to divert the PCIe lanes directly to the PCH chipset. To enable that feature, you need a 100 or 200 series chipset that supports Rapid Storage Technology (RST). The restrictions are not as severe as enabling Optane Memory caching (7th Series Core processor and 200-Series Chipset), but the bar is still very high.

We used an Asrock Z170 Extreme7+ motherboard for our three-drive RAID 0 array. The board features three M.2 slots with PCIe 3.0 x4 connectivity and all the slots route through the PCH for Rapid Storage Technology. There are only a few motherboards with three M.2 sockets, and there are several with two M.2 sockets and a PCIe slot that has a PCH route option.

You can't boot to a true software RAID built with Microsoft Storage Spaces, but you can boot from a RAID 0 array using Rapid Storage Technology. The array gives us approximately 82GB of usable capacity, or around twice the requirement for a Windows 10 Pro installation with all the updates along with the Office software suite. It's not a lot of space, but in this situation, we're looking for quality over quantity.

The Optane Memory NVMe SSDs achieve less peak bandwidth than some SSDs, but it's all about where it provides higher performance. Optane memory is faster than NAND at low queue depths. Some have been hung up on Intel's initial claims that the media offers 100x the performance of NAND, but the device-level performance is closer to 10x. We didn't even hit that mark with Optane Memory (the official cache system). If you've ever read an SSD review before, then you understand that we've examined products with a 10% to 20% difference between the best and average products. The Optane memory advantage in your desktop may not be a full 10x improvement, but it’s a lot faster than what we've ever tested before (without losing all the data on a reboot).

Pricing, Warranty & Endurance

Intel's Optane Memory pricing hasn't changed since our first review. The 16GB drives still retail for between $45 and $50, and stacking up the smaller drives doesn't give you a lot of storage capacity. If you go the Optane RAID route, we suggest using the 32GB drives. Pricing fluctuates between $75 and $80 for each 32GB device, depending on the seller.

The 32GB Optane drives took longer to come to market than the smaller model. Newegg and Amazon both carry the 32GB now, and Intel hasn't said anything about an Optane shortage. Newegg limits the number of drives you can order at one time, so you have to place separate orders to buy three of them. Amazon doesn't have the same limit, but it keeps selling out.

Intel backs the Optane Memory SSDs with a 5-year limited warranty that covers up to 182.5 TB of write endurance.

A Closer Look

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The Optane Memory module comes in an industry-standard single-sided M.2 2280 form factor. 3D XPoint memory is fast enough to achieve high performance rates while reading and writing to a single die (and remember, that's without requiring a DRAM buffer). The mysterious controller is smaller than most NAND-based SSD controllers, and it appears to be purpose-built for Optane Memory.

We armed our Asrock Z170 Extreme7+ motherboard with three Optane Memory 32GB M.2 modules in RAID 0 for this test.

Intel Rapid Storage Technology RAID

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We tested the Optane Memory RAID array as a secondary volume. This allows us to measure performance without any additional IO coming from the operating system or the measurement software. With the operating system already installed, we used Intel's Rapid Storage Technology interface to build the three-drive array using RAID 0. After our first round of tests, we cleared the data and installed Windows 10 Pro on the array to run BAPCo's SYSmark 2014 SE.

It's tempting to adjust the cache mode policy, but we advise against it. The write-back and write-through settings caused the system to lock up during heavy workloads. We didn't try the read-only setting. Of the three settings we used, "off" provided the best results and system stability.



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