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Testing Continued -
IO Meter READ Performance
Once IO Meter prepared the drives for testing, the access
specification was setup with a 5 megabyte 512 kilobyte test pattern.
That pattern was used for all of the following tests on each of the
drives. Data was collected after the test had been allowed to run
for 15 minutes.
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When
the read pattern changes from sequential to random, hard drives seek
heads must be reposition several times during the read in order to
collect all of the data. The above charts show the decrease in data
read rate from sequential to random, except with the OCZ SSD. With
no moving parts, the SSD can logically retrieve all of the requested
data without mechanical latency.
Look at what
happens to the response times when require the data to be access
randomly. The seek times of the Toshiba drive were clearly the
longest at a little over 4 full seconds (4000 milliseconds = 1
second). Without the handicap of moving parts, the OCZ SSD was
able to respond in a mere 96 milliseconds. Just to put that into
perspective for you, it takes about 300-400 milliseconds to blink
your eyes.
IO Meter WRITE Performance
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The
proverbial chink in the armor for the SSD would be its general
writing performance. In a sequential write, the solid state drive
lagged far behind even the Toshiba notebook drive. Once the pattern
was shifted to a random order the SSD closed to within four
megabytes per second of the Toshiba drive.
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