Description
HighPoint SSD7120 NVMe RAID Controller
Unlock the full potential of NVMe storage with the HighPoint SSD7120 NVMe RAID Controller. Designed as a dedicated, stand-alone RAID engine, this PCIe 3.0 x16 card delivers independent, high-bandwidth performance across four U.2 NVMe ports each equipped with its own PCIe 3.0 x4 bandwidth. By removing storage from system-level bottlenecks, the SSD7120 offers blazing-fast, scalable storage for demanding workloads such as databases, virtualization, AI-ready pipelines, and data analytics. Its flexible 2.5" U.2 form factor makes it simple to integrate into existing server or rackmount chassis, while delivering enterprise-grade reliability and configurable redundancy that companies rely on for mission-critical data.
Built for speed and simplicity, the SSD7120 acts as a self-contained RAID solution. It provides a robust, hardware-accelerated RAID engine that manages all four NVMe drives internally, independent of host CPU and memory resources. This means sustained I/O throughput stays high under sustained load, and storage performance remains predictable even as workloads scale. The controller is designed to work in tandem with a wide range of NVMe SSDs in U.2 form factor, empowering systems to optimize capacity utilization and fault tolerance without sacrificing speed.
- Dedicated PCIe 3.0 x16 host interface: The SSD7120 uses a high-bandwidth PCIe connection to your motherboard, ensuring a clear, fast path from the host to the storage controller with minimal contention.
- Four independent U.2 NVMe ports: Each NVMe drive connects to a dedicated PCIe 3.0 x4 lane, enabling true parallelism and maximum sequential and random I/O across all drives.
- Independent, stand-alone NVMe RAID engine: A self-contained RAID controller that manages arrays directly, reducing CPU overhead and eliminating bottlenecks from the host system.
- Flexible 2.5" U.2 form factor: A compact, easily integrated design that fits into most standard servers and rackmount chassis with available U.2 drive bays.
- Wide RAID configuration support: Includes popular levels such as 0, 1, 5, 6, and 10 to balance performance, redundancy, and capacity according to workload needs.
Technical Details of HighPoint SSD7120 NVMe RAID Controller
- Bus interface: PCIe 3.0 x16 host connection for maximum data throughput to the server.
- Drive interface and ports: 4 x U.2 NVMe ports, each with PCIe 3.0 x4 bandwidth, providing isolated bandwidth per drive.
- Form factor: 2.5" U.2 card, designed for easy installation in standard 1U–2U servers with NVMe backplanes.
- Raid levels supported: 0, 1, 5, 6, 10 for flexible performance and fault tolerance configurations.
- Drive compatibility: NVMe SSDs in the 2.5" U.2 form factor; supports a wide range of consumer and enterprise NVMe drives that fit U.2 interfaces.
- Management and configuration: Hardware RAID engine with boot-time BIOS/UEFI configuration utility and optional software tools for monitoring and maintenance.
- Operating system compatibility: Broad support across Windows and Linux-based servers, with drivers and integration guidance for virtualized environments (e.g., ESXi/vSphere).
- Performance characteristics: Independent, high-bandwidth NVMe arrays designed to deliver low latency and sustained throughput across multiple drives under load.
- Independent operation: The controller operates as a stand-alone RAID solution, minimizing CPU overhead on the host and preserving system resources for applications.
how to install HighPoint SSD7120 NVMe RAID Controller
- Power down the server, disconnect all power sources, and remove the chassis cover to access the PCIe slots.
- Install the SSD7120 card into a compatible PCIe x16 slot and secure it with a panel screw to ensure a stable connection.
- Connect up to four NVMe drives in U.2 form factor to the four dedicated ports on the SSD7120. Use the appropriate U.2 cables or backplane connections as required by your chassis design.
- Power on the server and watch for the RAID configuration utility prompt during POST. Enter the built-in SSD7120 RAID BIOS/utility to configure arrays.
- In the RAID utility, create the desired array(s) by selecting the appropriate RAID level (0/1/5/6/10), designate member drives, and initialize the array. Save the configuration and exit the utility.
- Boot into the operating system or install the OS onto the newly created RAID volume as needed. Install any required drivers or management software to monitor the array and drive health from within the OS or via a web-based interface.
Frequently asked questions
- Q: How many NVMe drives can the SSD7120 support? A: The SSD7120 supports up to four NVMe drives connected through four separate U.2 ports, with each drive receiving its own PCIe 3.0 x4 bandwidth for optimal parallelism.
- Q: Can I boot the operating system from a RAID volume created on the SSD7120? A: In many configurations, you can boot the OS from a RAID volume if the motherboard and BIOS support NVMe RAID boot through the SSD7120. Check your server BIOS/UEFI and motherboard compatibility for the chosen RAID level and drive configuration.
- Q: What workloads benefit most from the SSD7120? A: High-demand workloads such as online transaction processing databases, virtualized environments, AI/ML data pipelines, large-scale analytics, and media workflows that require high I/O throughput and low latency.
- Q: Are consumer NVMe drives compatible with the SSD7120? A: Yes, the SSD7120 supports NVMe drives in the U.2 format. Ensure the drives physically fit the 2.5" U.2 bays and that your OS and firmware are up to date for best compatibility.
- Q: Does the SSD7120 relieve CPU load? A: Yes. As a stand-alone RAID engine, the SSD7120 handles RAID operations independently of the host CPU, reducing CPU overhead and preserving server performance for applications.
- Q: Is there a specific OS or driver requirement? A: The SSD7120 supports common server OS families (Windows, Linux) with compatible drivers or drivers provided by the vendor, plus optional management software to monitor health and performance.
- Q: Can I mix drive capacities in a RAID array? A: Mixed-capacity NVMe drives can be used in certain RAID configurations, but for predictable performance and optimal utilization, matching drive sizes across the array is recommended.
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