Although the autopsy showed that it contains two FPGAs (programmable, logical integrated circuit) Virtex-5, manufactured byīearing in mind that this drive contains 2 controllers and accordingly is defined as 2 different disks, I really wanted to find in it the possibility of creating a RAID array of levels 1 and 0, but. (and some Western colleagues on their own failed to cope with this task and contacted the manufacturer’s support).Īnd here is our hero, in all its glory, so to speak.īut all these shortcomings could be forgiven him if he showed himself in work, because the manufacturer promises us amazing speed characteristics:Īs can be seen from the table, our model 1.28 TB uses MLC memory (manufactured by Samsung), but which one the controller is installed in it, for some reason the manufacturer kept silent.
![hp fusion io driver support hp fusion io driver support](https://www.manualsdir.com/manuals/396941/37/hp-fusion-iofx-410gb-pcie-accelerator-page37.png)
So, 1.5 hours have been spent, but so far we have not managed to get this thing to work and see the disk.
#Hp fusion io driver support registration#
Fortunately, the second minus was not long in coming: in addition to the driver, which was found on the manufacturer’s website only after a long registration form, we needed firmware compatible with the version of this particular driver, as well as a separate utility Dell IO Manager (why Dell, for me personally, remains a mystery, because IO Data supplies its models for both Dell and HP, and our copy was exactly HP), to manage and maintain this drive (by the way, with rather meager functionality). Quietly determined motherboard and can be used as a boot. The first minus "opened" in the first minutes after installation - this drive is not detected by the motherboard at all, that is, it cannot be bootable, and it is impossible to put the system on it, but you can use it only as an additional storage for data. So why is this thing so good, and why were there so many enthusiastic screams in the IT press about the fastest SSD (which it certainly was 3 years ago)? Let's take a look at her today. Of course, this is already quite an old model, which appeared on the market back in 2009, but it can still be found on sale.
![hp fusion io driver support hp fusion io driver support](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/iis/get-started/case-studies/case-study-iis-80-scaling-on-an-hp-proliant-dl980-g7-8-processor-socket-system/_static/image13.png)
We are already accustomed to the fact that everyone is talking about the advantages of SSDs (just remembering to intimidate them with faults in terms of fault tolerance), and we are used to the fact that SSDs are "fast but expensive." So, one of these days just one of such expensive models of SSD fell into my hands, in particular