by Jonathan Updated May 14, 2021 Published May 14, 2021 Raspberry Pi News
12g, 24g, 48g, adapter, backplane, benchmark, broadcom, Cables, card, chia, cm4, cm6, compute module, computers, computing, controller, cryptocurrency, elrond, enterprise, flash, gen 2, gen 4, hard drive, HDD, hot-plug, hot-swap, intel, io board, Jeff Geerling, kioxia, lanes, megaraid, nvme, pci express, pcie, performance, pm6, raid, raspberry pi, sas, servers, SFF-TA-1001, SFF-TA-1005, solid state drive, ssd, storage, surprise, surprise plug, test, tri-mode, u.2, u.3, u2, u3, ubm, universal backplane management
It took some convincing, but KIOXIA sent me two of their latest Enterprise SSDs, the PM6 SAS 24G drive, and the CM6 PCIe NVMe drive, and I test them using the MegaRAID card and ‘Elrond’ storage enclosure sent to me by Broadcom. How do the drives perform?...