Storage vendors have dragged some hefty baggage into the 21st
century. The basic IDE interface, for example, is more than 20
years old; SCSI traces its roots back to Shugart Associates' SASI
interface, introduced in 1979.
Perhaps most onerous is the medium itself: A rotating magnetized
disk that can cause major headaches under the best data center
conditions. Failure of a single drive—or more
catastrophically, an entire array—and it's twilight time for
your data.
Fortunately, that's changing.
SSDs, or solid-state drives, sometimes referred to as flash
drives, use no moving parts. They consist of large quantities of
RAM attached to an appropriate interface. Once packaged, the drives
are no different from their spinning platter-based brethren as far
as interface controllers on host systems or, for example, large NAS
arrays, are concerned. The key difference is the lack of moving
parts. Instead of a motor and series of heads, controllers manage
data flow from each bank of RAM, passing information to the
attached drive controller, which in turn passes it to the host
system. Data access is near instantaneous.
Not only do transfer speeds outstrip platter-based disk systems,
the power needs of SSDs are considerably lower. For example,
Samsung's 32-GB notebook, with its 2.5-inch SSD, consumes 95
percent less power than comparable disk-based drives, with three
times the average disk-access speed on a lowly UATA-33 bus. Another
advantage SSDs have over their magnetic kin is noise
reduction—we've worked with new SATA-3 platter-based drives
that sound like boxes of rocks.
So what's the downside? Currently, the per-gigabyte cost of SSD
storage for, as an example, a 2.5-inch notebook drive is $10.95,
based on a 2.5-inch SATA SSD offering from SanDisk. That sounds
expensive. Yet, compare that to just a year ago, when a 32-GB
2.5-inch SATA SSD from Advanced Media cost a whopping $31.25 per
gigabyte. This rapid drop in price means that SSDs may become a
more viable alternative for end users and data centers alike.
Still, the price for rotating media continues to fall as well. In
2006, the price-per-gigabyte of a platter-based drive of a similar
interface to the Advanced Media SSD was roughly $0.30 per gigabyte.
Clearly, SSD has quite a ways to go before it's practical to dump
magnetic media altogether.
A station on the road toward SSDs is the hybrid drive. These
devices bridge the gap between platter drives and SSDs by using not
only rotating media but also a bank of RAM (128 MB to 512 MB, in
most cases) to cache frequently accessed data. This caching means
that systems using these hybrid drives can enjoy the same
"instant-on" capabilities (or in the case of enterprise, instant
data access) of SSD-based systems without the price overhead. At
about $1.02 per gigabyte, hybrid drives come in at attractive
price, comparatively, and offer some of the advantages of SSDs.
Then there's the millions of dollars spent every year on data
center heat management. Platter-based drive motors produce
significant heat that must be dissipated. While SSDs do get warm,
they run much cooler than platter-based drives.
The Magic Touch
As noted, the robustness of SSDs compared with disk systems is a
huge draw. Currently, NASA employs SSDs in quite literally
mission-critical applications. For example, flight data recorders
on the space shuttle fleet are largely turned over to SSDs. While
the best disk drive can absorb G loads in the high double digits,
SanDisk offers a 320-GB Ultra320 Wide-SCSI SSD drive that can
withstand 1,500 Gs of impact for .5 millisecond. The most violent
takeoff and landing impacts rarely exceed 9 Gs. Clearly, the
advantage goes to SSDs once again.
NASA isn't the only government agency using SSDs. The Land
Warrior system currently undergoing development for the Army and
Marines, and its eventual replacement, Future Warrior, will
incorporate an ARM X-Scale-based computer in the computer subsystem
used for targeting, GPS navigation, command/control/communications
and information—and all of these items will be tied into an
SSD for storage of critical data. These two systems are designed to
give commanders total battlefield integration capabilities, from
real-time man-to-man targeting data all the way to health status
and precise location of individual soldiers, both of which will
hopefully give individual soldiers equipped with Land Warrior or
Future Warrior a clearer picture of the disposition of their
comrades, the battlefield and opponents as events unfold around
them.
It Isn't Right
Still, no matter how attractive, quiet, low-power, low-heat, and
ultra-durable SSDs may be, if the price isn't right, they won't
find their way into most workstation and server applications. The
issue of price doesn't appear to be wholly the result of lagging
technology, either. As we were preparing this article, we
discovered that both the U.S. and Canadian Departments of Justice
have leveled their guns at the big NAND/SSD manufacturers: Samsung
and SanDisk are both facing investigations for violation of
antitrust laws. The litigation may spread to other manufacturers of
RAM storage devices, including Hitachi, Lexar, Micron and Toshiba.
While it is impossible to tell what overall effect this may have on
the price of diskless storage, and SSDs in particular, the fallout
could benefit not only corporate users but end users, if the
companies swept up in the litigation are driven to allow greater
access to the technologies behind SSD. This investigation is
focusing on anticompetitive price-fixing and collusion between
manufacturers.
SSDs will eventually replace the platter drive in all aspects.
The bottleneck isn't technology, merely price. Soon, data centers
will be quieter, cooler, more robust and, above all, faster.
TIMELINE
1985: Santa Clara Systems begins shipping SSD devices in the
form of BatRam: battery backed-up storage devices for desktop
systems
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1988: SanDisk is founded by Dr. Eli Harari and begins to work
toward solid-state storage solutions
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1995: MSystem introduces flash RAM-based SSDs
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2000: Card Flash to IDE adapters become widely available, allowing
CF RAM cards to be used as substitute IDE devices
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2006: SanDisk buys MSystem
(The author is an IT professional specializing in
desktop-to-server workstation connectivity and enterprise
solutions. He has worked for NASA, Advanced System Technologies and
STAR Systems and is a freelance columnist for InformationWeek.
Write to him at bsilvey@gmail.com
)