Sootchucker
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Question please on NVME format protocols.
I recently purchased an 8TB Lexar NM790 NVME drive along with a OCW Express 1M2 external thunderbolt 4 enclosure, to act as a backup to my photos from my QNAP NAS.
Because originally I was going to use the drive between our Windows home PC and my MacBook pro / Mac Mini, I decided to format it as Ex-Fat so it was readable on both platforms. However after copying all the data across -about 6.5tb, (which took an age as my QNAP currently only has a 1Gbe NIC connection) I noticed when doing disk speed test (using Black Magic Disk Speed Test and AJA System test), I was getting abysmal read and write speeds from the external drive when connected to both my MBP/ Mac Mini and Windows 11 PC. It was slower than a traditional spinning HDD at about 150-175 MB/Sec write. I ran the rest multiple times on both platforms and whilst each test was slightly different, I was basically getting the same speeds time after time.
I then bit the bullet and decided to format the NVME as APFS, and then copied the same 6.5tb across again. Once done (which was quite a bit quicker), I again ran the speed tests, and on my 2022 MPB M1 Max, equipped with Thunderbolt 4 ports, and I was now getting over 3,000 mb/sec read and write (which is sort of what I expected from a 40mbps connection which has a maximum theoretical speed of 5,000 Mb/Sec ).
Does anyone know why APFS is so much faster than Ex-Fat ?
I recently purchased an 8TB Lexar NM790 NVME drive along with a OCW Express 1M2 external thunderbolt 4 enclosure, to act as a backup to my photos from my QNAP NAS.
Because originally I was going to use the drive between our Windows home PC and my MacBook pro / Mac Mini, I decided to format it as Ex-Fat so it was readable on both platforms. However after copying all the data across -about 6.5tb, (which took an age as my QNAP currently only has a 1Gbe NIC connection) I noticed when doing disk speed test (using Black Magic Disk Speed Test and AJA System test), I was getting abysmal read and write speeds from the external drive when connected to both my MBP/ Mac Mini and Windows 11 PC. It was slower than a traditional spinning HDD at about 150-175 MB/Sec write. I ran the rest multiple times on both platforms and whilst each test was slightly different, I was basically getting the same speeds time after time.
I then bit the bullet and decided to format the NVME as APFS, and then copied the same 6.5tb across again. Once done (which was quite a bit quicker), I again ran the speed tests, and on my 2022 MPB M1 Max, equipped with Thunderbolt 4 ports, and I was now getting over 3,000 mb/sec read and write (which is sort of what I expected from a 40mbps connection which has a maximum theoretical speed of 5,000 Mb/Sec ).
Does anyone know why APFS is so much faster than Ex-Fat ?
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