Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Doing data base work and/or loading up ass tons of VMs? Then it might pay to get the faster NVME drive.
/usr/lib/postgresql/9.5/bin/pg_test_fsync
Nope,
My old Intel 320 beats the crap out of Samsung 950 Pro or 960 for database workloads.
You can easily test this with Ubuntu and PostgreSQL by running the following command:
Code:/usr/lib/postgresql/9.5/bin/pg_test_fsync
Intel 320 gets between 2000-4000 IOPS.
Intel S3700 should get 3000-5000 IOPS.
My old Intel 320 beats the crap out of Samsung 950 Pro or 960 for database workloads.
Phoronix has tested Samsung 950 and 960.
SQLite performance is crap, because of horrible sync write performance. Just as I said.
http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=samsung-960-evo&num=2
Thats why I held off on the NVMe versions, the speed difference is not hugely noticeable in day to day operations.I have a 950 pro (NvMe) in my current build. My old build had an 850 evo (sata). And to be totally honest, I can't tell a damned difference in loading times for anything I usually do. SOOO... do I regret my 950 pro? no, but in hindsight, I might have gotten an bigger evo for the same price.
I have a 950 pro (NvMe) in my current build. My old build had an 850 evo (sata). And to be totally honest, I can't tell a damned difference in loading times for anything I usually do. SOOO... do I regret my 950 pro? no, but in hindsight, I might have gotten an bigger evo for the same price.
Thats why I held off on the NVMe versions, the speed difference is not hugely noticeable in day to day operations.
Game load times and Windows boot times are identical to a good SATA III SSD. Found that out for myself after getting a 512GB 950 Pro and an expensive PCIE adapter with passive heatsink, and wished I had just stayed with my 850 EVO.
Maybe I'm reading it wrong - those results show MB/s, not IOPS as you previously listed.
EDIT: Page 4 has that same PostgreSQL pgbench (version 9.4.3), but shows TPS not IOPS. So I've no real way of converting that, do I?
Edit 2: Post up your results! From the articles end - "Those wishing to compare their own system's performance to the results in this article can simply install the Phoronix Test Suite and run phoronix-test-suite benchmark 1612151-TA-SAMSUNG9644 for a fully-automated, side-by-side comparison to the data in this article."
I don't run linux, nor do I do any database work - so I'll let others have fun with that.