Fusion io one billion iops – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
Skip to main content

Fusion-io passes one billion IOPS barrier thanks to better software, not hardware

Fusion-io has developed new software, dubbed Auto Commit Memory, which has allowed it to break the one billion IOPS mark using existing hardware.

Fusion-io has developed new software, dubbed Auto Commit Memory, which has allowed it to break the one billion IOPS mark using existing hardware.

At the DEMO Enterprise Disruption event yesterday, Fusion-io had a big announcement — it’s broken the one billion IOPS mark, having reached one million less than two years ago. IOPS are Input / Output Operations per second, a measure of computer storage access speeds based on the number of read / write operations that can be completed per second.

This massive performance boost comes courtesy of a new way of using NAND flash as a non-volatile memory solution, known as Auto Commit Memory. ACM is a software layer which allows developers to send and receive data stored on Fusion-io’s ioDrive cards directly to and from the CPU, rather than relying upon the operating system. Because of this, massive applications and databases can run with much lower latency — crucial for the cloud-based world we’re heading towards.

To prove the achievement, Fusion-io co-founders Steve Wozniak, David Flynn, and Rick White took to the stage alongside a rack of eight HP servers, each toting eight ioDrive2 Duos. To prove their point, the team showed a meter constantly maxing at one billion IOPS when transferring 64-byte packets of data, with White saying “I just wish [the needle] was bobbing more.” In contrast, the fastest consumer-grade SSDs achieve IOPS scores below 100,000 (random read), with many drives scoring far lower. ACM is still in the tech preview stage, but Fusion-io says it is working alongside software developers to make best use of the speed improvements.


Follow topics and authors from this story to see more like this in your personalized homepage feed and to receive email updates.