PCMark 10 Storage Benchmarks

The PCMark 10 Storage benchmarks are IO trace based tests similar to our own ATSB tests. For more details, please see the overview of our 2021 Consumer SSD Benchmark Suite.

PCMark 10 Storage Traces
Full System Drive Overall Score Average Bandwidth Average Latency
Quick System Drive Overall Score Average Bandwidth Average Latency
Data Drive Overall Score Average Bandwidth Average Latency

The Optane Memory H20 scores very well on all three of the PCMark 10 Storage tests, outperforming all the traditional NAND SSDs with the exception of the WD Black SN850 on the Data Drive test. These tests are fairly cache-friendly since PCMark 10 defaults to averaging results over three runs, and there's overlap between the three test types. But even knowing that these workloads are a good fit for caching behavior, it's still impressive to see the H20 beat a top of the line PCIe Gen4 SSD. For these tests that represent a range of ordinary desktop use cases, the latency advantages of the Optane cache outweigh the raw throughput that high-end NAND SSDs can provide. We would need a significantly more storage-intense workload with higher queue depths for the high-end NAND-based SSDs to gain a clear lead over the Optane caching configuration. Running that kind of workload on a notebook like this might hit CPU power limits before properly stressing the SSD.

The Enmotus FuzeDrive's performance doesn't come close to that of the Optane caching configuration, but on the Quick System Drive and Data Drive tests it turns in reasonable scores that are competitive with some of the slower TLC drives. On the Full System Drive the FuzeDrive struggles, and outperforms only the Phison QLC drive that doesn't have the advantage of a large static SLC region.

PCMark 10 Extended

The PCMark 10 Extended test is an application benchmark that encompasses a wide range of everyday workloads, with a detailed breakdown of sub-scores. Compared to the standard PCMark 10 application benchmark, the Extended test adds in the 3DMark Fire Strike (Direct X 11) test to represent gaming performance.

PCMark 10 scores
Subscore:

The only sub-test where the Optane Memory caching makes a dent in the otherwise highly uniform scores is the "Apps Start-up" category, and even that's only a 4% lead. Still, with so few difference between the drives, that advantage is enough to put the Optane cache configuration at the top of the charts for the aggregate scores.

We're still filling in comparison data on the older Whiskey Lake platform that doesn't get in the way of the Enmotus FuzeDrive software, so we don't yet have a clear picture of how it fares on this test.

SYSmark 25

BAPCo's SYSmark 25 is an application benchmark suite that uses well-known commercial software such as Microsoft Office and Adobe Creative Cloud—crippled with DRM and time-limited demo/trial licenses for each so that it isn't a one-stop shop for piracy. By using these commercial applications, the install size of this suite is significantly larger than PCMark 10 and the tests can more accurately represent real workloads. The downside is that the test suite takes significantly longer to run.

The SYSmark Overall score is derived from three subscores. The official descriptions for these are:

  • The Productivity scenario models office environment like usage including word processing (mail merge, document comparison, and PDF conversion), spreadsheet data manipulation (data modeling, financial forecasting), web browsing, email, presentation editing, software development (code compilation), application installation, and archiving files.
  • The Creativity scenario models editing digital photos (applying filters and creating HDR photos), cataloging digital photos (organizing catalog, use of facial detection to group people), and editing digital video (create a timeline from various source clips and transcoding the output).
  • The Responsiveness scenario is a combination of operations taken from the Productivity and Creativity scenarios. Such operations include application opens, file opens, file saves, and more. Please refer to the SYSmark 25 Whitepaper for more information on the SYSmark 25 scoring methodology.

The Creativity and Productivity scores seldom show any significant effect from changing storage configurations unless there's a mechanical hard drive involved. These scenarios tend to stress the CPU, GPU and RAM more, and one of those will almost always be a more significant bottleneck than storage performance. The Responsiveness scenario focuses more on latency-sensitive operations that hit the storage, so this is where we expect to see the most significant differences between configurations.

BAPCo SYSmark 25 - ProductivityBAPCo SYSmark 25 - CreativityBAPCo SYSmark 25 - ResponsivenessBAPCo SYSmark 25 - Overall Rating

Based on the limited set of drives we have been able to run through SYSmark 25 on the provided machine, the Optane Memory H20 doesn't seem to provide any big gains to these everyday use cases. The Responsiveness scores are a bit suspect since disabling the Optane Memory caching led to almost as high a score, while other drives that this same OS image was cloned to all fared significantly worse. The obvious suspect here is that the cloning operation left the other drives with a lot of background work (eg. SLC cache flushing) to handle, but between the idle time inherent to SYSmark and the fact that it does a complete run-through of all the tests before it starts recording performance for the actual scoring, there should be plenty of time for drives to get caught up. So we have to consider that some system and driver settings may have been reset as a consequence of the cloning process, because there's no reason why the QLC portion of the H20 should fare significantly better than a full 670p with all four PCIe lanes.

 

Idle Power

We normally try to thoroughly test the idle power management behavior of each SSD we review. Testing under Windows for this review means we don't have visibility or control over what drive power states are being used. Furthermore, the HP notebook Intel provided with the Optane H20 for this review has its M.2 slot oriented opposite to the usual for desktops: it has the side of the M.2 card with the SSD controller facing toward the motherboard instead of away. That orientation prevents us from using the Quarch power injection fixture to measure drive power on this notebook.

We instead used the older Whiskey Lake notebook from the Optane Memory H10 review for some informal idle power observations. At the Windows desktop on this machine, the Optane Memory H20 gets down to about 18mW during idle periods, and when the screen shuts off and the system goes to sleep, idle power drops to about 5mW. These are pretty good values, and indicate that having two NVMe SSD controllers on one card isn't creating a constant battery drain. However, we also observed that Windows is extremely bad about letting the drive stay idle for more than a second or two, even when there's nothing happening on screen and no Internet connection. When the H20 is woken up momentarily, power draw goes from milliwatts up to 2W and stays there for a short bit before things go back to sleep. A few tests of 30-second windows gave averages ranging from 130mW to 376mW—still not bad, and this is a problem that would affect any SSD running this software.

Compatibility Issues Measuring The Building Blocks: Synthetic Tests
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  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, May 20, 2021 - link

    It's a general property of caching that if your workload doesn't actually fit in the cache, then it will run at about the same speed as if that cache didn't exist. This is as true of storage caches as it is of a CPU's caches for RAM. Of course, defining whether your workload "fits" in a cache is a bit fuzzy, and depends on details of the workload's spatial and temporal locality, and the cache replacement policy.
  • scan80269 - Thursday, May 20, 2021 - link

    That Intel Optane Memory H20 stick may be the source of the "coil whine". Don't be so sure about this noise always coming from the main board. A colleague has been bothered by a periodic high-pitched noise from her laptop, up until the installed Optane Memory H10 stick was replaced by a regular m.2 NAND SSD. The noise can come from a capacitor or inductor in the switching regulator circuit on the m.2 stick.
  • scan80269 - Thursday, May 20, 2021 - link

    Oh, and Intel Optane Memory H20 is spec'ed at PCIe 3.0 x4 for the m.2 interface. I have the same HP Spectre x360 15.6" laptop with Tiger Lake CPU, and it happily runs the m.2 NVMe SSD at PCIe Gen4 speed, with a sequential read speed of over 6000 MB/s as measured by winsat disk. So this is the H20 not supporting PCIe Gen4 speed as opposed to the HP laptop lacking support of that speed.
  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, May 20, 2021 - link

    I tested the laptop with 10 different SSDs. The coil whine is not from the SSD.

    I tested the laptop with a PCIe gen4 SSD, and it did not operate at gen4 speed. I checked the lspci output in Linux and the host side of that link did not list 16 GT/s capability.

    Give me a little credit here, instead of accusing me of being wildly wrong about stuff that's trivially verifiable.
  • Polaris19832145 - Wednesday, September 22, 2021 - link

    What about using an Intel 660p Series M.2 2280 2TB PCIe NVMe 3.0 x4 3D2, QLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) SSDPEKNW020T8X1 extra CPU l2 or even l3 cache at 1-8TB going forward in a PCI-e 4.0 slot if intel and AMD will allow this to occur for getting rid of any GPU and HDD bottlenecking in the PCH and CPU lanes on the motherboard here? Is it even possible for this sort of additional cache allowed for the CPU to access by formatting the SSD to use for added l3 and l2 cache for speeding up the GPU on an APU or CPU using igpu or even for GPUs running in mgpu on AMD or sli on Nvidia to help kill the CPU bottlenecking issues here if they can mod one for this sort of thing here for the second m.2 PCI-e 4.0 SSD slot to use for additional CPU cache needs here?

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