Encryption and Storage Performance in Android 5.0 Lollipop
by Brandon Chester & Joshua Ho on November 20, 2014 8:00 AM ESTAs alluded to in our Nexus 6 review, our normal storage performance benchmark was no longer giving valid results as of Android 5.0. While Androbench was not a perfect benchmark by any stretch of the imagination, it was a reasonably accurate test of basic storage performance. However, with the Nexus 5 on Android’s developer preview, we saw anywhere between 2-10x improvement to Androbench’s storage performance results with no real basis in reality. It seems that this is because the way that the benchmark was written relied upon another function for timing, which has changed with Android 5.0.
While we haven’t talked too much about AndEBench, it has a fully functional storage test that we can compare to our Androbench results. While we’re unsure of the 256K sequential and random read results, it seems that the results are equivalent to Androbench on Android 4.4 when a 1.7x scaling factor is applied. However, AndEBench results should be trustworthy as we saw no difference in results when updating devices from 4.4 to 5.0. In addition, the benchmark itself uses low level operations that shouldn’t be affected by updates to Android.
Androbench Results - Valid vs. Faulty | ||
Nexus 5 Androbench Results on 4.4 KitKat | Nexus 5 Androbench Results on 5.0 Lollipop | |
Random Read | 10.06 MB/s | 27.70 MB/s |
Random Write | 0.75 MB/s | 13.09 MB/s |
Sequential Read | 76.29 MB/s | 182.78 MB/s |
Sequential Write | 15.00 MB/s | 47.10 MB/s |
As you can see, the results show a degree of improvement that is well beyond what could realistically be accomplished with any sort of software optimizations. The results for the random write test are the most notable, with a result that suggests the performance is over 17x faster on Android Lollipop, which could not be the case. This required further investigation, and it's one of the reasons why we were hesitant to post any storage benchmarks in the Nexus 6 review.
The other factor affecting the results of the benchmarks on the Nexus 6 specifically is Android Lollipop's Full Disk Encryption (FDE). Android has actually had this ability since Android 3.0 Honeycomb, but Lollipop is the first time it's being enabled by default on new devices. When FDE is enabled, all writes to disk have the information encrypted before it's committed, and all reads have the information decrypted before they're returned to the process. The key to decrypt is protected by the lockscreen password, which means that the data should be safe from anyone who takes possession of your device. However, unlike SSDs, which often have native encryption, eMMC has no such standard. In addition, most SoCs don't have the type of fixed-function blocks necessary to enable FDE with little to no performance penalty.
As a result, we've observed significant performance penalties caused by the use of FDE on the Nexus 6. Motorola was kind enough to reach out and provide a build with FDE disabled so we could compare performance, and we've put the results in the graphs below. For reference, the Nexus 5 (Lollipop) numbers are run using Andebench, while the original values are read out from Androbench on Android 4.4. The Nexus 5 is also running without FDE enabled, as it will not enable itself by default when updating to Lollipop via an OTA update.
As you can see, there's a very significant performance penalty that comes with enabling FDE, with a 62.9% drop in random read performance, a 50.5% drop in random write performance, and a staggering 80.7% drop in sequential read performance. This has serious negative implications for device performance in any situation where applications are reading or writing to disk. Google's move to enable FDE by default also may not be very helpful with real world security without a change in user behaviour, as much of the security comes from the use of a passcode. This poses a problem, because the users that don't use a passcode doesn't really benefit from FDE, but they're still subject to the penalties.
When the Nexus 6 review was published, I commented that there were performance issues that weren't present on the Nexus 5 running Android Lollipop. Many users commented that the FDE may have been to blame. Like I mentioned earlier, Motorola provided us with a build of Android with FDE disabled. Unfortunately, I haven't noticed any improvements to many of the areas where there are significant frame rate issues such as Messenger and Calendar. I speculated in the Nexus 6 review that the performance issues may simply be the result of insufficient GPU performance or memory bandwidth to drive the QHD display.
To me, the move to enable FDE by default in Lollipop seems like a reactionary move to combat the perception that Android is insecure or more prone to attack than iOS, even if that perception may not actually be accurate. While it's always good to improve the security of your platform, the current solution results in an unacceptable hit to performance. I hope Google will either reconsider their decision to enable FDE by default, or implement it in a way that doesn't have as significant of an impact on performance.
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jeffreii - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
http://forum.xda-developers.com/nexus-6/developmen...Nexus 6 thread to disable encryption.
toyotabedzrock - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
Could you test the Nexus 5 performance with encryption enabled? And do you know if the a15 used in the Nexus 10 has any encryption acceleration?I find it to be very short sighted of Google to not have an encryption accelerator. It would help even just for browsing on Google's web properties.
tuxRoller - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
I'd imagine they are expecting the arm-v8a cryptographic extensions to handle the problem.That's one of the reasons why I thought/hoped that the n6 would be aarch64.
m-p-3 - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
I flashed my Nexus 4 with the factory image (including a system wipe) and the encryption wasn't forced.i4mt3hwin - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
I'm sure it won't have much of an impact, but would you guys be able to run the battery tests again with encryption off? Kinda curious to see if it effects battery performance at all. (I doubt it would because it shouldn't be writing anything to disk during this time).Mbonus - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
"Unfortunately, I haven't noticed any improvements to many of the areas where there are significant frame rate issues such as Messenger and Calendar. I speculated in the Nexus 6 review that the performance issues may simply be the result of insufficient GPU performance or memory bandwidth to drive the QHD display. "Do you notice the same frame rate issues on other QHD devices using Snapdradon 805?
nevertell - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
Could you do a battery life test on a non FDE device as well, please ? I was shocked that the nexus 6 did that much worse than the nexus 5, this implementation of encryption in software must attribute towards lower power efficiency.Brandon Chester - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
I don't think it's going to have much of an impact but I'll run it now.Brandon Chester - Thursday, November 20, 2014 - link
https://twitter.com/nexusCFX/status/53557853945072...nevertell - Friday, November 21, 2014 - link
Sorry for misguiding you and thank you for your time. I really appreciate that.So the battery life is suboptimal because of the display.