http://www.romexsoftware.com/en-us/prim ... -disk.html
http://www.romexsoftware.com/en-us/prim ... -disk.html
At disk creation I can select "SCSCI" or "Direct-IO.
Direct IO is faster, so obviously that's what has my preference
Question, how can I know "Direct-IO" works for the software that's going to use that disk?
I'll put a database on the RAMdisk. Does that usually work on a direct IO disk?
I guess, it's just "Try and see" but in general, does a database benefit from Direct IO? The speed increase on 4k acces is large.
SCSI vs Direct IO
Re: SCSI vs Direct IO
I have to say that it's just "try and see" stuff as you said...Generally, yes, a database will benefit from Direct-IO ramdisks.
Re: SCSI vs Direct IO
Just a comment on your test results - CrystalDiskMark is up to version 6. To get more useful numbers an upgrade might help. I typically only use old versions to compare different hardware with older benches.
Re: SCSI vs Direct IO
Those are not my test results.
I just linked to pictures of an old thread by Romex on io.
I just linked to pictures of an old thread by Romex on io.
Re: SCSI vs Direct IO
Ahh, that's why.
As a sidenote - I've noticed some odd speed results in recent testing with RAMdisk. Some of the results with CDM are higher than a L1 on a NVMe, and some are slower than the L1. For certain things it appears the RAMdisk is better, and some it is slower than a Primocache cache task.
As a sidenote - I've noticed some odd speed results in recent testing with RAMdisk. Some of the results with CDM are higher than a L1 on a NVMe, and some are slower than the L1. For certain things it appears the RAMdisk is better, and some it is slower than a Primocache cache task.