▲ | jamesblonde 5 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
Had a look - Baseline disk throughput is 78.12 MB/s. Max throughput (30 mins/day) is 1250 MB/s. NVMe i bought for 150 dollars with 4 TBs capacity gives me 6000 MB/s sustained https://docs.aws.amazon.com/ec2/latest/instancetypes/so.html | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | sgarland 5 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
That’s on the smallest instance. I’m sure there’s a reason they offer it, but I can’t think of why. On the largest instance (which IME is what people use with these), it’s 5000 MBps. The newer i7ie max out at 7500 MBps. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | __turbobrew__ 5 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
You are incorrect, the numbers you are quoted is EBS volume performance. iX instances have directly attached NVME volumes which are separate from EBS. > NVMe i bought for 150 dollars Sure, now cost out the rest of the server, the racks, the colocation space for racks, power, multiple AZ redundancy, a clos network fabric, network peering, the spare hardware for failures, off site backups, supply chain management, a team of engineers to design the system, a team of staff to physically rack new hardware and unrack it, a team of engineers to manage the network, on call rotations for all those teams. Sure the NVME is just $150 bro. | |||||||||||||||||
|