The University
of New Hampshire InterOperability Laboratory (UNH-IOL), an
independent provider of broad-based testing and standards conformance
services for the networking and storage industries, is accepting
founding members for the laboratory’s new Non-Volatile
Memory Express (NVMe) Consortium. The NVMe Consortium will
focus on developing an interoperability test suite for NVMe compliant
software and devices. Founding members will join industry leaders Dell,
EMC,
IDT,
Intel,
LSI
Corporation, NetApp,
Oracle
and SanDisk
to create new, innovative, high-performance storage solutions based on
the NVMe standard for PCIe SSDs.
NVMe is a standard interface for PCIe SSDs that will accelerate industry
adoption of those devices and enables optimized performance (latency and
throughput) for both client and enterprise applications. To develop a
robust ecosystem for PCIe SSDs, the NVMe Promoters Group turned to the
UNH-IOL to form the NVMe Consortium. The laboratory provides a vendor
neutral location for members to test conformance of their products to
the NVMe specification and to test interoperability of their
motherboards and drives utilizing the NVMe interface with other members.
As the first laboratory to offer testing for the performance-boosting
NVMe specification, the UNH-IOL gives members a first mover advantage in
preparing their products for market. Member companies have early
access to the lab’s NVMe test suite and custom test tools, and also have
the opportunity to provide input into the testing process. As an
independent organization, the UNH-IOL is committed to neutral testing of
open standards technology to ensure credible results.
“NVMe is focused on delivering an open architecture with unparalleled
performance and scalability. The NVMe Promoters are pleased to
collaborate with the UNH-IOL to ensure that a robust compliance and
interoperability program is available for all NVMe elements of PCIe SSD
based solutions. This will enable everyone involved in the development
of NVMe based products to deliver solutions that meet customers’
expectations of dependability, reliability and interoperability,” said
Don Walker, Systems Architect in the Dell Enterprise Office of the CTO,
on behalf of the NVMe Promoters Group.
The NVMe specification, developed cooperatively by more than 80
companies from across the industry, was released on March 1, 2011 by the NVMe
Work Group. The NVMe 1.0 specification defines an optimized register
interface, command set and feature set for PCIe SSDs utilized in both
enterprise and client systems. The NVMe specification is the only
interface specification optimized for PCIe SSDs that has been released
and is publicly available.
The UNH-IOL collaborative testing model distributes the cost of
performing trusted, independent testing and validation
through an annual membership. Subsystem vendors interested in
becoming a founding member or joining the NVMe Consortium as a
non-founding member should contact David Woolf at david@iol.unh.edu.
About the UNH-IOL
Founded in 1988, the UNH-IOL provides independent, broad-based
interoperability and standards conformance testing for data,
telecommunications and storage networking products and technologies.
Combining extensive staff experience, standards bodies’ participation
and a 32,000+ square foot facility, the UNH-IOL helps companies
efficiently and cost effectively deliver products to the market. For
more information, visit http://www.iol.unh.edu/,
or connect with the UNH-IOL on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/UNHIOL,
on Twitter at @UNH_IOL
and on LinkedIn at http://www.linkedin.com/company/unh-interoperability-lab.
