Monday, December 8th 2014

Marvell Announces DRAM-less NVMe SSD Controller

Marvell, a worldwide leader in providing complete silicon solutions from mobile communications to storage, Internet of Things (IoT), cloud infrastructure, digital entertainment and in-home content delivery and Kinoma software enabling the "Smart Life and Smart Lifestyle," today announced the world's first DRAM-less NVMe (Non-Volatile Memory Express) solid state drive (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. Marvell's 88NV1140 and 88NV1120 enable small form factor SSD solutions with unparalleled performance for integration into low-z-height tablets, Chrome devices and the upcoming wave of new 2-in-1 hybrid/detachable mobile PC platforms.

"As mobile computing and cloud-based services become an integral part of our daily lives, fast, secure, reliable and cost effective storage solutions with a small form factor are the key to bringing the benefit of technology to the mass market. I believe our latest game-changing SSD controller will drive the fast deployment of a new wave of small form factor SSD solutions for the mass market mobile computing platforms," said Weili Dai, President and Co-Founder of Marvell. "I am very pleased to see Marvell's leadership and our long track record of invention and innovation including the world's first DRAM-less NVMe SSD controller and the industry's most advanced LDPC technology enabling the latest TLC and 3D NAND flash memory. I am very thankful for our global engineering teams who continuously raise the technology bar to move our industry forward faster."

The small form factor of Marvell's 88NV1140 and 88NV1120 at just 8x8mm per package allows SSD drives as small as M.2 2230 (30 mm in length). In addition, the new, leading-edge controllers can enable the development of an NVMe BGA or SATA BGA SSD running on embedded SRAM through multiple-chip-package (MCP) integration with NAND. Utilizing 28 nm low-power CMOS process node technology, the 88NV1140 and 88NV1120 controllers are best-in-class in active power while supporting all low power modes (L1.2 for PCIe and DevSlp for SATA devices). Both new solutions share Marvell's third-generation NANDEdge error-correction technology, as with the previously announced 88SS1093 PCIe Gen3x4 NVMe and 88SS1074 SATA SSD controllers. By developing single code for NANDEdge, SSD firmware developers are able to rapidly leverage one code to the other for the most advanced error-correcting technology for data integrity, endurance and reliability. In addition, Marvell's NANDEdge LDPC technology can support 15/16nm TLC and 3D NAND, resulting in low enabling cost of TLC and 3D NAND. The NVMe design has passed in-house SSD validation and third-party operating system and platform compatibility testing.

Key features of Marvell's new 88NV1140 and 88NV1120 include:
  • 88NV1140: AHCI and NVMe support over PCIe Gen3x1
    o Fully hardware automated NVMe 1.1b support
    o Low power management (L1.2) design
  • 88NV1120: SATA 6Gb/s support
    o SATA DevSlp support
  • 88NV1140 and 88NV1120 both share:
    o Powerful Dual core Cortex R5 CPU's
    o Embedded SRAM with hardware accelerators to optimize IOPS performance
    o ONFI3 and Toggle2 NAND support
    o NANDEdge error-correction: 15nm TLC and 3D NAND support using LDPC technology to boost endurance and reliability
    o BGA SSD and M.2/2.5 slim form factor support with thermal optimization and small package size
    o 28 nm low power CMOS process
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2 Comments on Marvell Announces DRAM-less NVMe SSD Controller

#1
Brusfantomet
So in 6 to 9 months we will see some proper M.2 PCIe drives and not this bullshit S-ATA stuff? And with NVMe too boot? Nice

Now we just need a company to make it as a performance consumer drive, and not a server drive.
Posted on Reply
#2
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
SRAM in place of DRAM? Jeez, I wonder how much that will cost. SRAM is definitely faster (think L1, L2, and L3 cache) but it also takes more hardware and is more costly to produce. I wonder how much this will actually improve performance versus how much it will "improve" the price. The only way I can see this being useful is if NAND flash is starting to perform as quickly as DRAM, which I'm skeptical to believe.
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Dec 22nd, 2024 06:35 EST change timezone

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