Conclusions

Advanced storage configurations involving multiple drives and intelligent storage management software have never quite been able to catch on as a mainstream solution. Simple single-drive configurations remain the default for the overwhelming majority of PCs, and where two or more drives are used, they are often treated as separate volumes with data placement handled manually by the user. The allure of more advanced storage systems with caching or tiering functionality is that they can mix fast and expensive storage with slow cheap storage, in the hopes of providing the best of both worlds—and manage it automatically.

Intel and Enmotus are two of the many vendors who have been pursuing those goals for years. Their latest solutions are adapted to a PC market dominated by notebooks and no longer willing to accept mechanical hard drives in those notebooks. With so many systems now offering just a single M.2 slot, these companies had to get creative in order to fit two dissimilar drives into the system.

For both the Intel Optane Memory H20 and the Enmotus FuzeDrive SSD, the big, slow, cheap storage technology of choice is now QLC NAND. On its own, QLC NAND can make for a decent entry-level drive that offers adequate performance and endurance for most PC use cases. The challenge for these more advanced solutions is to offer a meaningful improvement over baseline QLC SSDs, while not introducing too many new downsides in cost and complexity.

Intel's solution features a morsel of their 3D XPoint memory, providing unbeatable random read performance but unimpressive write speeds. It's nice to see that they've slightly improved the cache performance and they're no longer trying to present a mere 16GB as an adequate cache size, but even the 32GB offered in both capacities of the Optane Memory H20 is rather limited. A clean OS installation and just a handful of applications quickly outgrows this cache size, so every user will have to contend with a significant portion of their workload being uncached or causing cache thrashing. Since QLC NAND is still much faster than a mechanical hard drive, the consequences of a tiny cache aren't a showstopper, and in practice the cache does provide real performance benefits, accelerating many aspects of everyday usage beyond the performance that a single high-end NAND flash SSD can offer.

Enmotus is a software company, so they don't have any special hardware technology like Optane to use. Their FuzeDrive SSD is a clever re-purposing of mundane hardware: transforming a 2TB QLC SSD into a ~1.6TB device with a dedicated 128GB of SLC NAND. That SLC may not have latency as low as Intel's 3D XPoint memory, but having four times the quantity gives Enmotus a lot more flexibility in how to use the fast storage. That fits well with their software's strategy of tiering rather than caching, allowing hot data to be more or less permanently resident in the fast storage. While the FuzeDrive SSD can't match all the performance benefits of Intel's Optane caching, their solution probably provides more improvement to write endurance, and it too provides a real step up from QLC performance.

Since both the SLC and QLC in the FuzeDrive SSD are managed by the same controller ASIC, Enmotus also avoids the awkward bottlenecks of the Optane Memory H20's more literal split between the two halves of the drive. Aside from a tiny bit of driver overhead, there's hardly any performance downside for the FuzeDrive relative to an ordinary QLC SSD.

 

Not only do the Intel and Enmotus solutions differ in their technological approach, they also have different business models for targeting consumers. Intel's Optane Memory H20 is an OEM-only drive; it can only be acquired pre-installed in a new PC (usually a notebook). This ensures that the software portion of the storage solution will be delivered to end users pre-configured, removing the most significant barrier to adoption. It's always hard to get clear price signals for OEM drives, but systems similar to our HP review unit are currently offering the older Optane Memory H10 as build-to-order options for the same price as a pure NAND-based SSD of the same capacity (presumably using TLC NAND). Assuming the Optane Memory H20 replaces the H10 without raising those prices, that's very competitive—at least, by the standards of PC OEM storage upgrades.

Enmotus has been pursuing OEM deals as well, but they're also selling the FuzeDrive SSD through retail channels to consumers for aftermarket storage upgrades and PC building. Their current pricing is in line with top of the line consumer SSDs, which sounds like an awful lot for what is basically entry-level hardware. The clever software and firmware make it into a better storage product, but also reduce the usable capacity by 22% compared to a 2TB QLC drive. Since write endurance concerns for consumer storage are usually overblown and the performance benefits are not enough to clearly put the drive into high-end flagship territory, I don't think the FuzeDrive SSD is a good buy. Fortunately, Enmotus has a PCIe Gen4 successor on the way. That should be better able to compete against high-end TLC drives on raw peak throughput, making high-end pricing a more reasonable proposition.

Measuring The Building Blocks: Advanced 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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