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by delusional
973 days ago
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That's not how you asses performance at all. Maybe you can saturate the NVMe link with AES in idea circumstances, but you may be killing memory mapping and churning I$. To say anything interesting about performance on these modern machines, you would have to benchmark some real workload. |
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https://calomel.org/aesni_ssl_performance.html
First gen Ryzen (similar age) does 8.2GB/s, which is faster than PCIe 4 NVMe drives.
https://www.vortez.net/articles_pages/amd_ryzen_7_1800x_revi...
Somewhat recent intel i7-12700H does 14.8GB/s, which is about the limit of PCIe 5 NVMe drives.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Intel-Core-i7-12700H-Processor...
Edit: here's a list of AES speeds via truecrypt. top of the charts is the Ryzen 9 7950X at 32GB/s.
https://www.notebookcheck.net/Benchmarks-and-Test-Results.14...