Tuesday, January 5th 2016

Marvell Industry-Leading SSD Controller Tech Expands the NVMe HMB Ecosystem

Marvell, a world leader in storage, cloud infrastructure, Internet of Things (IoT), connectivity and multimedia semiconductor solutions, today announced expansion of its Non-Volatile Memory Express (NVMe) solid-state drive (SSD) controller technology to support Host Memory Buffer (HMB), an NVMe revision 1.2 feature enabling DRAM-less SSDs to use host memory and achieve performance comparable to SSD designs with embedded DRAM but at much lower cost and power consumption. Marvell's 88NV1140 marks the industry's first SSD controller that supports HMB. Furthermore Marvell is partnering with other leaders in the PC ecosystem to accelerate the adoption of HMB-enabled SSDs for a new generation of low power, small form factor mobile computing systems.

"As the world's leading SSD controller provider, Marvell has once again made a unique contribution to the storage industry by pioneering the integration of Host Memory Buffer technology into DRAM-less products," said David Chen, Vice President of SSD Business at Marvell. "The HMB feature greatly enhances system memory utilization, reduces total system cost, lowers power consumption and provides consumers with a new class of mobile computing devices. I am very pleased with our ongoing collaboration with leading ecosystem partners and look forward to the fast adoption of HMB in the broad consumer market."

"The NVM Express organization is pleased to see the first product ship that supports the Host Memory Buffer feature," said Amber Huffman, President, NVM Express, Inc. "This is an important step in developing the ecosystem to support use of NVM Express SSDs in low power and small form factor devices in mobile computing."

Marvell's 88NV1140 is the world's first DRAM-less NVMe SSD controller for mass market mobile computing solutions with industry-leading NANDEdge low-density parity check (LDPC) technology supporting triple-level cell (TLC) and 3D NAND. It enables small form factor SSD solutions with unparalleled performance for integration into low-z-height tablets, Chromebooks and new 2-in-1 hybrid/detachable mobile PC platforms. Additionally, Marvell's 88NV1140 has enabled the industry's first hardware to support the new NVMe HMB feature. By leveraging memory allocated from the host system, the DRAM-less based 88NV1140 is able to scale up performance without limitations of conventional DRAM-less architectures.

Key features and benefits of Marvell's 88NV1140 include:
  • Powerful dual-core ARM Cortex R5 CPUs
  • Embedded SRAM with hardware accelerators to optimize IOPS performance
  • DRAM-less SSD through NVMe interface leverages HMB to scale up performance and reduce total BOM cost
  • NANDEdge LDPC error-correction technology boosts SSD endurance and supports 15nm TLC and 3D NAND
  • Low power management (L1.2) design
  • 28 nm low power CMOS process
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5 Comments on Marvell Industry-Leading SSD Controller Tech Expands the NVMe HMB Ecosystem

#1
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
HMB is a fancy way of saying "it will eat your system RAM."
Posted on Reply
#2
Ferrum Master
btarunrHMB is a fancy way of saying "it will eat your system RAM."
Well like we don't have it plenty tough... but Marvell ain't that bad lately, I am actually doing fine with my Crucial M550, no complaints...
Posted on Reply
#3
koaschten
Well, it will just end in this two scenarios...
- people that know the technology will stay away from HBM SSDs
- people that buy budget will love their cheaper SSD and probably won't know and/or care about the impact.
Posted on Reply
#4
Hood
Ram is so cheap now (16GB DDR3 1600 for $63, 16GB DDR4 2133 for $70), almost anyone can afford the overkill of 16 GB, or even 32 GB. HMB will probably only use 1 or 2 GB of system RAM - should not be a problem unless you're running 4GB or less (and if so it's time to spend a whole $40 or $50 on an 8GB kit!). This might be a way to get SSD prices much lower, which is always a good trend. I'm waiting for $100/TB SSDs, then we'll truly be in a "solid state"...
Posted on Reply
#5
RejZoR
btarunrHMB is a fancy way of saying "it will eat your system RAM."
And bigger chance of data loss on power failure...
Posted on Reply
Apr 26th, 2024 21:40 EDT change timezone

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