Brendan wrote:Schol-R-LEA wrote:AFAICT, Optane accelerators are dedicated cache; you can't use them as stand-alone drives at all.
"optane SSD", which just plugs into a standard M.2 slot or PCIe slot, uses NVMe, doesn't need special motherboard support or special drivers, and (other than performance characteristics) are no different to any other SSD that uses NVMe. This is what was being used in the video (the "M.2 slot" version aimed at desktop, not the PCIe version aimed at enterprise).
Well... maybe, but that isn't what I've understood reports about it to be saying. They
are SSDs, yes, but my impression is that they can only be used as accelerators - they
won't show up as drives and you can't configure them for use as stand-alone drives, or at least, that was what I thought was the case. I am pretty sure Intel
said that it wouldn't when it was rolled out, but I imagine that even if they did lock it out like that, someone found a way to get around that lock-out.
This stands in contrast to SmartMI, which just uses standard NVMe NAND Flash SSDs, period.
The test in the video shows that the Optane accelerator does show as an SSD
on an AMD motherboard, but I had the impression that a) it doesn't show up as one on Intel boards, and b) it isn't supposed to work with AMD motherboards at all; but Intel didn't lock it down as far as they had meant to.
Why would they do something so mindless, you ask? Well...
Brendan wrote:Also note that (as far as I know) for the "optane M.2 SSDs" that are targeted at desktop users; currently Intel only has 2 sizes (16 GiB and 32 GiB). I wouldn't be surprised if this is the only reason Intel's marketing department decided to pretend that they're "accelerators" (to speed up larger drives) - otherwise almost nobody would buy them because they're too small for most people to use as stand-alone drives by themselves.
My impression is that the accelerator exists primarily as a) a stopgap to cover up the delays in getting the 3D XPoint NVRAM - the
actual product for which Optane (a name which only refers to the accelerator system, AFAIK, not the NVRAM or the SSDs themselves) is the preview - out the door; and b) to get people to pay for the privilege of beta-testing a new technology which is having more teething pains than they want to admit. The general consensus seems to be that they
never intended to make SSDs based on 3D XPoint; it was solely intended as an NVRAM implementation, as a drop in replacement for (again, IIUC) the
entire DRAM subsystem (they expected it to be fast enough for that by now, I guess).
The fact that they put out the 'accelerators' at all, and the way they are now hedging the issue of 'all-NV memory' by saying that it was
always meant to be paired with faster-but-volatile DRAM, is being interpreted as a sign that Crosspoint isn't quite working out according to plan, or that the leaks about it a few years back caught them off-guard and they hoped to have more time to get it working before announcing it, or more likely still, that another manufacturer's claims that their MRAM (another NVRAM implementation) would reach the market in 2016 (which wasn't true, it still isn't even close to ready and the company got a lot of flak for indicating that it would be) caused them to jump the gun.