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The Icon Bar: News and features: How fast is Fast?
 

How fast is Fast?

In a week's time, you will be at the London Show (you know it makes sense). Chris Hall will be exhibiting and he has kindly written us an exclusive preview on the speed comparisons he has been running and will be showing you.

Background

There are several machines available now with fast storage. How do they compare?

First on the scene was the i-MX6 from R-Comp launched at the ROUGOL show in October 2014. This used SCSIfs with an on-board SATA socket. Next was Titanium from Elesaar in December 2015 (which saw a speed up from improved software in 2018). This used ADFS with an on-board SATA interface.

The Pinebook Pro was available from R-Comp from August 2020 which has an option for internal fitting of an NVMe drive for which drivers were made available in 2024.

In February 2023 RISC OS Bits were selling some 'FAST' hardware - a SATA adapter for the Raspberry Pi I/O board with an ADFS driver in ROM.

By 2024 this supported drives with 4k sectors. By 2024 RISC OS Bits and R-Comp had drivers available for M.2 NVMe drives fitted to various proprietary I/O boards and adapters including the DeskPi Mini (aka PiRO Qube), the Pi Foundation I/O board with a suitable adapter and the Waveshare Mini I/O board.

Test results

When comparing overall speed there are two principal components: processor speed and storage speed. Since the fastest machines are pretty much all using the Compute Module 4 (Pinebook Pro using NVMe not yet tested) the focus has to be on storage speed.

The formatting of a drive can make quite a difference: a small improvement in speed can be obtained by using a larger LFAU than the minimum for that partition size, at the expense of disc capacity for small files. This is probably not a good idea on partitons less than 240GB in size.

A significant improvement in speed can be obtained on an NVMe drive by switching its sector size from 512e to 4k.

A SATA drive formatted to 4k sectors shows a speed improvement for random access but the overall benefit is marginal for 'real world' tasks.

Conclusion

When formatting a drive, a small improvement in speed can be obtained by using a larger LFAU than the minimum for that partition size, at the expense of disc capacity for small files.

The minimum LFAU for 512b sectors is 4k for partitions up to 128GB and 8k for the largest partition size, 256GB. For drives with 4k sectors it is 16k for 512GB, 32k for 1TB and 64k for 2TB, the largest.

Formatting an NVMe drive to 4k sectors improves speed considerably. DOS partitions such as Loader are not supported on 4k discs by DOSFS and fat32fs but neither are they necessary. Further partitions can be added (provided that an MBR partition table is added to protect the filecore partition) but will only be seen by Linux.

At the London show I shall be demonstrating the 'fastest' machine. I think that it is a 'dead heat' between a DeskPi Mini IO board using an M.2 1TB NVMe drive running RISC OS Developments Block Drivers (6-Oct-2024) and a Pi Foundation IO board using a 1TB 'FAST' SATA drive running RISC OS Bits custom RISC OS rom (28-Jul-2024) with SATA support.

These all use a Compute Module 4 overclocked to 2000MHz or 2147MHz and 1TB drives formatted to 4k sectors. Formatting a drive to use 4k sectors can be done in RISC OS in the case of NVMe drives and most drives of 512GB and above seem to support this.

Formatting a SATA drive to 4k sectors requires Linux to do this and I have not yet managed to do this as a DIY task (the drives I have are 250GB or smaller and the Linux utility reports itself unable to set these to 4k sectors).

Benchmarks on my site have been updated. 

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The Icon Bar: News and features: How fast is Fast?

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