Anand reviews the OCZ Z-Drive R4 CM88 (1.6TB PCIe SSD) Review
http://www.anandtech.com/show/4879/ocz-zdrive-r4-cm88-16tb-pcie-ssd-review
It seems to me that there are only two issues with that: Cost and reliability.
I have no idea, having never bought anything from OCZ.What about service? Does OCZ treat the enterprise customers better than they do the peasants buying a few Z-Drives on the internet?
It would make an excellent cache drive to a 100TB+ array. I can only imagine how well that would perform, and reliability would be much less of an issue.
That was my question also. I care about RAID-1, not RAID-0.No mention of the other RAID levels?
If I'm spending other people's money, I'm doing the Intel 5xx series SSDs. If I'm spending my own, I'm doing OCZ Vertex/Revo.
Performance == Samsung 830 (256 GB)So where are we now, 3 months later? Which is the best performing, most reliable single SSD these days?
Which one, the 240GB 520?
Are the REVO drives TRIM enabled?
Performance == Samsung 830 (256 GB)
That, Handruin, is almost a dictionary definition of a mistake.
Have one coming now. I'll stick it in a DB VM and see how long it lasts. The last drive in that machine (480GB Corsair Force GT) kept disconnecting itself under really high IO.
I don't associate disconnection as a performance issue or a longevity problem rather isn't it more likely to be a design flaw that can be solved by picking a totally different design. Of course the 830 is totally different so good luck.The last drive in that machine (480GB Corsair Force GT) kept disconnecting itself under really high IO.
I'm more curious to know if that's a characteristic of the qualification methodology they use. The conventional wisdom still says to keep SSDs out of critical business stuff unless there are a bunch of other layers of redundancy available. Did anybody at Corsair even test that kind of workload?
If the usage is a database VM that has a significant amount of writing going on then the 710 might have been a better choice as an enterprise SSD designed for lots of writes rather than a consumer SSD that isn't. In reality, a server running a database that is written to a lot can wear out a consumer drive relatively quickly. That was the whole point of the article that was linked to for the Intel 710 -- How long different SSD's would last in a server database environment.