Intel's Optane Memory H10 SSD will begin shipping soon in pre-built systems from major OEMs, so Intel's ready to unveil more detailed information about the drive first previewed earlier this year at CES. The Optane Memory H10 is a significant change from the existing Optane Memory family of products, and is a unique 2-in-1 SSD combining 3D XPoint memory and QLC NAND flash memory on a single M.2 module. The H10 is essentially a consolidation of the existing Optane Memory M10 module and the Intel 660p QLC SSD onto a single drive. The Optane portion of the drive is intended to be used as a cache for the QLC portion of the drive, using the Optane Memory caching drivers for Windows that Intel has previously pitched for using with standalone Optane Memory M.2 modules and mechanical hard drives. Until now, Optane products have been difficult to fit into ultrabooks where two M.2 slots may be challenging and a 2.5" hard drive is out of the question.

The Optane Memory H10 will come in three varieties, with QLC NAND capacities ranging from 256GB to 1TB. The 256GB model will have 16GB of Optane storage while the 512GB and 1TB will both have 32GB of Optane storage. All three capacities are implemented as single-sided M.2 modules, with approximately half of the card dedicated to the Optane controller, media and PMIC, while the other half contains the Silicon Motion SM2263 controller, DRAM and QLC NAND. The card as a whole has a PCIe 3.0 x4 interface, but each of the two SSD controllers gets just two PCIe lanes. Intel's caching software will support reading and writing data from both Optane and QLC simultaneously, so they rate the H10 for up to 2.4GB/s sequential reads even though neither half can exceed 2GB/s on its own.

Intel Optane Memory H10
Specifications
Advertised Capacity 256 GB 512 GB 1TB
Form Factor single-sided M.2 2280
NAND Controller Silicon Motion SM2263
NAND Flash Intel 512Gb 64L 3D QLC
Optane Controller Intel SLL3D
Optane Media Intel 128Gb 3D XPoint
QLC NAND Capacity 256 GB 512 GB 1024 GB
Optane Capacity 16 GB 32 GB 32 GB
Sequential Read up to 2400 MB/s
Sequential Write up to 1800 MB/s
4kB Random Read QD1 32k IOPS
QD2 55k IOPS
4kB Random Write QD1 30k IOPS
QD2 55k IOPS
L1.2 Idle Power < 15 mW
Warranty 5 years
Write Endurance     300 TB

For random I/O, Intel rates the H10 for 32k random read IOPS and 30k random write IOPS at queue depth 1, and 55k IOPS for both at QD2. The random read ratings are significantly higher than we've measured from the Intel 660p QLC SSD, but are only a fraction of what the 32GB Optane Memory is capable of on its own, so Intel's clearly trying to provide a more realistic composite that reflects how real-world usage won't be able to entirely stay within the Optane cache.

Idle power is rated to be under 15mW total, the result of both SSD controllers aboard the H10 being able to hit single-digit mW power when PCIe L1.2 sleep states are used.

Write endurance ratings will go up to 300 TB on the 1TB capacity, a 50% increase over the QLC-only Intel 660p. The QLC portion of the Optane Memory H10 will still be using SLC write caching, but the high-endurance Optane cache will take a lot of write pressure off the NAND flash. The warranty period is the same 5 years that the Optane Memory M10 and Intel 660p carry individually.

System Requirements

The Optane Memory H10 has narrower system requirements than previous Optane Memory products. Intel has always required a Kaby Lake or later system to use their Optane Memory caching drivers, but the previous Optane Memory drives were still plain NVMe SSDs at heart and could be used as either standalone drives or with third-party caching software in any machine supporting NVMe SSDs. Since the H10 bundles two drives on one card, it will require a host slot that provides all four PCIe lanes and supports operating them as two ports of two lanes each. Intel's caching functionality for the Optane Memory H10 requires their RST version 17.2 drivers, the first release series to enable Optane Memory caching of NVMe SSDs instead of just SATA drives. (Also the first release series to support Pentium and Celeron branded processors.)

Officially, Intel is requiring the H10 to be used with a 300-series PCH and an 8th Gen Core U-series mobile processor, but that mostly reflects which platforms will be offering the H10 at launch. Intel has not yet committed to bringing the H10 to the retail market for use in desktop systems, but they have been laying the groundwork and many 300-series motherboards have firmware updates available to enable booting from the H10. (The first public leak of the Optane Memory H10 product name came from motherboard manufacturers advertising support on 300-series desktop boards.) Desktops with 300-series chipsets and at least two M.2 slots can already achieve essentially the same setup as the H10 using an Intel 660p and Optane Memory M10 module, so there isn't strong pressure for a retail release of the H10. The hardware features Intel relies on for Optane Memory caching and NVMe RAID on consumer platforms have been present since Skylake 100-series chipsets, but Intel has shown little interest in rolling out firmware support to older platforms.

Our Optane Memory H10 review sample is arriving today, and we will have a full review out later this month.

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  • Billy Tallis - Thursday, April 11, 2019 - link

    The NVMe standard has enough features that it would actually be possible to implement cache configuration and system awareness with standard commands, while still presenting a single pool of storage for systems that don't care. The main downside to the fully-integrated approach is that Intel would have to get back into the business of designing SSD controllers for the consumer market.
  • sor - Thursday, April 11, 2019 - link

    Yeah, you’d also get full bandwidth out of the device rather than the relatively silly ferrying of data the cpu would be doing back and forth to the same card.

    This is nothing more than a very low effort product that squeezes the existing two device model onto one physical slot. A coherent product where the cache is integrated at the hardware would have been a much better device, but that wasn’t the design goal.
  • Anonymous Blowhard - Sunday, April 21, 2019 - link

    I'm of two minds. A unified solution would let it be installed into any system with a PCIe M.2 slot, but Intel might then require some particular chipset validation or similar tomfoolery in order for it to work at all. It's also then locked into whatever method of caching/etc that Intel sees fit to provide.

    With it being two separate devices, provided your M.2 slot supports bifurcation you can use any third-party caching product including on a non-Intel or non-Windows system.

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