access To read, write, or update information on some storage media, such as a disk.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "access To read, write, or update information on some storage media, such as a disk."

Transcription

1 GLOSSARY This Glossary includes an alphabetized listing and brief definition of the abbreviations, acronyms, Quantum-specific references, product-specific references, and other technical terms that are used in this manual and that may be unfamiliar to the reader. access To read, write, or update information on some storage media, such as a disk. access time The interval between a system request for data and the time the data is available from the drive. Access time includes the seek time, rotational latency, and servo and command processing overhead. It is usually given as the average time required to access data. See also seek, rotational latency, and overhead. active I/O process An I/O process that is currently in execution (not queued). actuator Also known as the positioner assembly. The internal mechanism that moves the read/write head to the proper track. There are two types of actuators: rotary voice coil and stepper motor. See rotary voice coil and stepper motor. allocation The process of assigning particular areas of the disk to particular files. See also allocation unit. allocation unit Also known as a cluster. A group of sectors on the disk that can be reserved for the use of a particular file. ANSI Abbreviation for American National Standards Institute ASCII Abbreviation for American Standard Code for Information Interchange average seek time The average time required for a read/write head to move between randomly located tracks. backup A copy of data on a separate storage device from the original, to be used if the original is accidentally erased, damaged, or destroyed. bad block A block (usually the size of a sector) that cannot reliably store data because of a media flaw or damaged format markings. Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual G 1

2 Banding A method of variable frequency recording on the media that attempts to keep the bit density constant, regardless of the track radius. Banding greatly increases capacity and data transfer rates. bezel Also known as the faceplate. A plastic panel that extends the face of a drive so that it covers a computer s drive bay opening. The bezel usually contains a drive-activity LED. bit Acronym for binary digit. The smallest unit of information recognized by a computer, a binary digit may have one of two values: 1 or 0. A bit is one of the logic 1 or logic 0 binary settings that make up a byte of data. See also byte. block The smallest discrete unit that a drive s controllers can read or write to in a single operation. By default, a block of data consists of 512 bytes. BPI Abbreviation for bits per inch. A measure of how densely data is packed on a storage medium. buffer An area of RAM used for temporary storage of data that is waiting to be transferred to a device that is not yet ready to receive it. bus The part of a chip, circuit board, or interface that conducts data, typically in parallel fashion. byte The basic unit of computer memory, large enough to hold one character of alphanumeric data. Normally, a byte is composed of eight bits. See also bit. cache RAM used as a buffer between the CPU and a hard disk. Information more likely to be read or changed is placed in the cache, where it can be accessed more quickly to speed up general data flow. See also prefetch. capacity The amount of information that can be stored on a disk drive. The data is stored in bytes, and capacity is usually expressed in megabytes, gigabytes or in data sectors. clean room An environmentally controlled, dust-free facility in which hard disk drives are assembled or serviced. CMOS Acronym for complementary metal oxide semiconductor. A low-power, low-heat, highdensity semiconductor. G 2 Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual

3 command queue The queue used to store I/O processes. connect The initiator function that selects a target to establish a nexus and to start an I/O process. The connection that results is an initial connection. connection An initial connection or reconnection that can occur only between one initiator and one target. contingent allegiance A condition generated by a CHECK CONDITION or COMMAND TERMINATED status during which execution of all tagged I/O processes (for the associated I_T_X nexus) are suspended until the condition is cleared. A target preserves an I_T_X nexus until it is cleared by a hard or soft reset, an abort message or another command for that I_T_X nexus. While the contingent allegiance condition exists, the target maintains sense data for the initiator. controller The circuitry that manages a device s physical data access operations, such as moving read/write heads and erasing tracks and sectors. controller card An adapter that holds the control electronics for a device, usually installed in a computer. CPU Abbreviation for central processing unit. The microprocessor chip that processes information and coordinates all computer functions. CRC Abbreviation for cyclic redundancy check. Another name for the 16-bit error detection code (EDC) that is recorded in each data sector. It is used to determine whether parts of a data string are missing or incorrect. cylinder An imaginary structure that is one track, on each of the disks, that is located at a given head position. The number of cylinders multiplied by the number of heads equals the number of tracks in the drive. dedicated servo A disk surface separate from a data surface that contains only timing and head positioning information. Generally considered to be obsolete technology. defect management A method that is implemented to ensure long-term data integrity. This is accomplished by scanning the disk drives at the factory for defective sectors, which are then reallocated prior to shipment. During regular use, the drive continues to scan and compensate for any new defective sectors on the disk. Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual G 3

4 differential termination One of two methods for terminating the SCSI bus, characterized by a two-line signal: a (+) signal and a ( ) signal. Used to improve noise resistance when long bus cables are required. See also single-ended termination. disk Any circular-shaped data storage media that stores data on the flat surface of the platter. The most common disk type is the magnetic disk, which stores data as magnetic patterns in a metal or metal-oxide coating. disk controller The chip or complete circuit that translates computer data and commands into a form suitable for use by the disk drive. DMA Abbreviation for direct memory access. A process by which data moves directly between a disk drive or other device and system memory without passing through the CPU. This allows the system to continue processing other tasks while the new data is being retrieved. drive Typically the short form of disk drive but can refer to a tape drive. drive electronics See electronics module drive geometry The functional dimensions of a drive: number of heads, cylinders, and sectors per track. See also low-level formatting. ECC Abbreviation for error correction code. An error detection and correction algorithm developed by Reed and Solomon for the verification and correction of stored data. EDC Abbreviation for error detection code. An end-to-end cyclic redundancy code that is used to protect data from errors that may be introduced by the connecting busses, the disk controller chip, the data cache, or the SCSI interface in a disk drive. See also, CRC. electronics module The printed circuit board containing the drive electronics. embedded servo A head positioning technique wherein composite digital and quadrature analog signals are placed in radial spokes on each track, on each disk surface. The signals are read and decoded and used to locate data sectors on the tracks and to center the read/write heads on the tracks. See also, servo spoke data. encoding Any technique in which a data format is changed to achieve a particular purpose such as error detection and correction or data compression. G 4 Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual

5 EPROM Acronym for erasable programmable read-only memory. Integrated circuit memory chip that can store programs and data in a nonvolatile state. These devices can be erased by ultraviolet light and reused. extended contingent allegiance A condition generated by a target and announced with a INITIATE RECOVERY message. The mode is used when multi-step extended error recovery procedures are required to prevent interference as from other initiators in a multi-initiator system. See also contingent allegiance false Refers to the logical-zero (or negated ) state of a binary number. See also, signal negation. fast SCSI The SCSI protocol that governs fast synchronous transfer. See also Synchronous Transfer. FCI Abbreviation for flux changes per inch. Used to describe the storage density on a magnetic surface. See also flux density. field A logically related group of one or more physically contiguous bits. file server A computer that provides network stations with controlled access to shared resources. firmware The program instructions and data stored in EPROM (read-only memory) for use by a processor. flux density The number of magnetic field patterns that can be stored in a given length of disk surface. The number is usually stated as flux changes per inch (FCI), with typical values in the thousands. flying height The distance between the read/write head and the disk surface. Smaller flying heights permit more dense data storage but require more precise mechanical design. form factor The platter size of a device as defined by industry standard. Popular form factors are 1.3- inch, 1.8 inch, 2.5 inch, 3.5 inch, and 5.25 inch. The trend is toward smaller sizes. format The format process writes the initial logical-to-physical mapping on the disk surface. This includes any bad-block slipping or revectoring. This information must exist on a disk before it can store any user data. Formatting erases any previously stored data. Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual G 5

6 formatted capacity The amount of room left to store data on a disk after the required space has been used to write sector headers, boundary definitions, and timing information generated by a format operation. full height Term used to describe a disk that occupies the vertical space (3.250 inches) of a full sized 5.25-inch drive. See also half height, low profile. GB See gigabyte. gigabyte (GB) 1,000,000,000. (10 9) bytes, as for disk capacity. See also megabyte. Glist Abbreviation. When the drive encounters a defective sector during regular use, it adds the address of the sector to the Grown Defect List (Glist). See also Plist. guide rails Plastic or metal strips attached to the sides of a disk drive so that the drive slides easily into place. half height Term used to describe a disk that occupies half the vertical space (1.625 inches) of a full sized 5.25-inch drive. See also full height, low profile. hard disk A storage media that retains data as magnetic patterns on a rigid disk, usually made of an iron oxide or alloy over a magnesium or aluminum platter. Because hard disks spin far more rapidly than floppy disks, and the head flies closer to the disk, hard disks can transfer data much faster and store a great deal more data in the same area. hard error A repeatable error in disk data that persists when the disk is re-read. It usually is caused by a tiny defect in the recording media surface. head assembly The tiny electromagnetic or magneto-resistive element used to write and read back the magnetic patterns of data on the recording media. See also Diamond Head. head disk assembly (HDA) The assembly made up of the spindle motor, spindle, head positioner (actuator), head preamp electronics, and magnetic disk assembly. high-level formatting Formatting performed by the operating system s format program. Among other things, the formatting program creates the root directory and file allocation tables. See also lowlevel formatting, format. G 6 Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual

7 host adapter The interface between a particular type of computer system bus and the disk drive, usually a plug-in board. An example is the SCSI Controller. interface A hardware or software protocol, contained in the electronics of the disk controller and disk drive, that manages the exchange of data between the drive and the computer. Also refers to the hardware required to connect the controller and drive. I/O process An I/O process consists of an initial connection (nexus) followed by zero or more reconnections, all pertaining to a single command or a group of linked commands. An I/O process normally ends with a BUS FREE phase following a COMMAND COMPLETE or a RELEASE RECOVERY message. jumper An electrical connector, contained in a small plastic enclosure, used to configure or select circuit board features or options. The jumper slips over two pins that protrude from a circuit board or pins of a connector to connect the two pins electrically. Sometimes called a shunt jumper. latency The delay between when the controller arrives on track and starts looking for a specific block of data on a track and when that block rotates around to where it can be accessed by the read/write head. On average, it is half the rotation time. LBA Abbreviation for Logical Block Address. A sequentially-numbered identity of a multibyte block of user data. It does not refer directly to the physical location of the data in a disk drive. logical format The logical drive geometry that appears to the computer system BIOS as defined by the drive tables and stored in CMOS. logical unit A physical or virtual peripheral device addressable through a target. low-level formatting Formatting maps logical blocks to physical blocks so the operating system can access the required areas for generating the file structure. See also high-level formatting, formatting. low profile Drives built to the 3.5-inch form factor but are only 1 inch high. The standard 3.5-inch form factor drives are inches high. See also half height, full height. magneto-resistive A unique characteristic of some metals, which, when combined, yields a variable electrical resistance to varying magnetic fluxes. The resistance varies directly with the strength of the flux, field, not simply to a change in flux as with magneto-inductance. Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual G 7

8 media The magnetic film that is deposited or coated on an aluminum substrate that forms a platter. The media is overcoated with a molecularly-thin lubricating surface to prevent damage to the heads or media during head take off and landing. The media is where the data is stored in the form of magnetic flux or magnetic polarity changes. megabit (Mb) 1,000,000 (10 6 ) bits. megabyte (MB) 1,000,000 (10 6 ) bytes for disk capacity or 2 20 bytes for RAM capacity. See also gigabyte. megahertz (MHz) A measurement of frequency in millions of cycles per second. MHz See megahertz. microprocessor The integrated circuit chip that performs the bulk of data processing and controls the operation of all the parts of the system. A disk drive also contains a microprocessor to handle all the internal functions of the drive and to support the embedded controller. MTBF Abbreviation for mean time before failure. Rates predict the reliability of a product, and is often expressed in power on hours (POH). nanosecond (ns) One billionth of a second ( second or 10-9 second). nexus A relationship between two devices that begins with the establishment of an initial connection and ends with the completion of an I/O process. A nexus relationship is further defined by the letters I (initiator), T (target), L (logical unit), R (target routine), x (either L or R), Q (queue tag), and x_y (either an x or a Q) ORCA Optimized Reordering Command Algorithm. A unique method for executing commands in a manner which minimizes the delay effects of seeking and rotational offset (latency). overhead The command processing time required by the controller, host adapter, or drive prior to any actual disk accesses. Overhead time for reading a sector can be defined as the sum of reading the gap, synchronization, header, EDC and ECC. overwrite To write data on top of existing data, erasing the original data. G 8 Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual

9 parity An error checking technique wherein the sum of the bits in a data byte is used to set or reset an extra parity bit, depending on whether the sum is an odd or an even number. A second parity check after the data is transferred to a new location checks that the new parity bit matches the transferred bit. Parity checking can only detect an odd number of bit errors (1,3,5, etc.). Parity is defined as odd or even, depending on which condition (odd or even) is used to set the parity bit. parking zone A position in a non-data area on a disk platter reserved for resting the heads when power is off. Using this area prevents the heads from touching the surface in data areas upon power down, adding to the data integrity and reliability of the disk drive. The parking zone is most often inside the disk s inner-most cylinder. partition A portion of a hard disk accessed as one logical volume by the system. Also refers to a band or notch. See Banding. performance A measure of drive speed during normal operation. Factors affecting drive performance are seek times, transfer rate, and command overhead. physical format The actual layout of cylinders, tracks, and data sectors on a disk drive. physical sector See sector, data. platter See hard disk.. POH Abbreviation for power-on hours. The unit of measurement for mean time between failures as expressed in the number of hours that power is applied to the device, regardless of the amount of actual data transferred. See MTBF. prefetch The technique of buffering data into cache RAM by reading subsequent blocks in advance to anticipate the next request for data. Prefetch speeds up disk accesses to sequential blocks of data. queue A prioritized list or set of processes. A queue may be a FIFO (first-in, first-out), LIFO (last-in, first -out) or a random-access entity. queue tag The value associated with an I/O process that uniquely identifies it from other queued I/O processes in the logical unit from the same initiator. queued I/O process An I/O process that is in the command queue. Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual G 9

10 RAM Acronym for random access memory. A type of memory media that allows information to be stored and retrieved rapidly by a microprocessor or controller. The information may be stored and retrieved in any order with no priorities given. RAM disk A phantom disk drive for which a section of system memory (RAM) is set aside to hold data, just as if it were an actual disk. Data access is extremely fast, but the data is lost when the system is reset or turned off unless time is allowed for storage on a bulk device before shutdown. read The function of detecting, processing and transmitting data that has been recorded (written) on a magnetic disk or some other media. read/write head The tiny transducer used to create and detect magnetic patterns on the disk that represent data. The head may be an electromagnetic coil and metal pole piece or a combination of a coil (for writing) and a magneto-resistive element (for reading). A disk has a single read/write head per side and usually (but not always) a head on both sides. reconnect The act of reviving a nexus to continue an I/O process. An initiator reconnects to a target using the SELECTION and MESSAGE OUT phases after winning arbitration. The target reconnects to the initiator using RESELECTION and MESSAGE IN phases after winning arbitration. reconnection The state which results from a reconnect. It exists from the assertion of BSY in the SELECTION or RESELECTION phase and lasts until the next BUS FREE phase. RLL Abbreviation for Run Length Limited. An advanced method used to encode (or compress) data for storage on a disk. RLL encoding stores almost 50 percent more data than MFM (Modified Frequency Modulation). RLL code improves MFM code by encoding data bits in groups rather than singly. Many encoding schemes are possible. The best achieve optimum values of code rates, clocking, power spectrum, error propagation and encoding complexity. A number pair (e.g., 1,7) is usually stated with RLL references. It refers to the minimum number of 0;s(1) and the maximum number of 0 s (7) that can separate data 1 s stored on the disk. ROM Acronym for read-only memory. Usually in the form of a PROM that contains data or programs that can be accessed and read but not modified by the system. rotary actuator The rotary actuator is a positioner assembly that has largely replaced the stepper motor. It allows closed-loop feedback positioning of the heads, which is far more accurate than stepper motors and has greater component longevity. See also stepper and voice coil. G 10 Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual

11 rotational latency The delay between when the controller starts looking for a specific block of data on a track and when that block rotates around to where it can be accessed by the read/write head. On average, it is half the time of a full disk rotation. SCA Single Connector Attachment. A drive connector that combines the signal and power connectors into one. Typically, SCA-type connectors are used in RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Devices) systems. SCA-2 An improved Single Connector Attachment that incorporates two electrostatic discharge (ESD) pins on either end of the connector to improve safety when making a connection. SCAM-1 SCSI Configured Automatically. A plug-and-play method used in some drives. SCSI Acronym for small computer system interface (pronounced scuzzy ), an American National Standards Institute (ANSI) standard protocol for the interface between a computer and up to 16 devices. SCSI is one of the most flexible and powerful interfaces available. SCSI 1 The first small computer system interface standard. SCSI 2 An enhanced small computer system interface as defined and published by ANSI in standard X One of the major features of SCSI 2 is integrating the controller into the peripheral device, making the device independent of the initiator. SCSI 3 A new set of related ANSI standards are currently under development by the X3T10 committee. The old SCSI 2 standard has been divided into a new set of standards for SCSI 3. Some of these [working draft] standards are : SAM (SCSI Architecture Model) for the architecture; SBC (SCSI Block Commands) for the disk drive specific command set. SPC (SCSI Primary Commands) for the primary command set; and SIP (SCSI Interlocked Protocol) for the protocol layer; SPI (SCSI Parallel Interface) for the physical layer; Layering the standards documents in this manner allows substitution of parts of the structure as new technology arrives. SCSI address The unique address assigned to a SCSI bus device. Normally, the address is assigned and set during system installation with priority being a consideration. A SCSI address is a value of 0 to 7 (or 0 to 15 for wide SCSI). SCSI bus A multi-signal parallel bus that interconnects SCSI devices in a daisy-chain fashion. Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual G 11

12 SCSI device A host adapter or a target controller that can be attached to the SCSI bus. SCSI ID The bit-significant representation of the SCSI address referring to one of eight (or one of sixteen) data lines. sector, data A physical section of space along a track on the disk, or, the data that is stored in that section. Certain hard disks have data sectors that are a maximum of 524 data bytes long, plus several additional bytes for error detection and correction codes. Not to be confused with servo sectors. seek A movement of the disk read/write head in or out to locate a specific track. segmented cache buffer A cache buffer that is organized into multiple track lines. Segmenting the cache allows track data to be saved in separate segments when the head is switched rather than having to erase the entire cache. Segmenting the cache enables command reordering on a more efficient track-basis rather than on a command-basis. sense data Information returned to an initiator regarding error conditions in the drive. servo sector time The time (in µsec) between reading one servo header (or spoke ) and reading the next header. servo spoke data In embedded servo technology, digital and quadrature analog servo data is written (embedded) in multiple headers (or spokes ) on each track on the data-recording area of each disk surface. The digital portion of the spoke data are read and used to locate the correct track, spoke, and head number. The quadrature analog signal portion is detected and used by a servo feedback control loop to precisely position the head on the track center. servo surface A separate disk surface containing only positioning and disk timing information but no data. This surface is used with dedicated servo systems and is generally thought to be obsolete technology. settle time The interval between when a track-to-track movement of the head stops and when the residual vibration and movement dies down to a level sufficient for reliable reading or writing. See also Bus Settle Time. shock rating A durability measurement for hard drives (expressed in Gs) of how much shock or sudden movement a disk can sustain without damage. G 12 Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual

13 signal assertion The act of driving a signal to the true (logical-one) state. An asserted signal on the SCSI bus is a low voltage resulting from driving a transistor ON. signal negation The act of driving a signal to the false (0) state, or allowing the cable terminators to bias the signal to the false state by placing the data driver in the high impedance (off) condition. A negated signal on the SCSI bus is a high voltage resulting from all OR-tied transistors being OFF. signal release The act of allowing the cable terminators to bias the signal to the false state by placing the bus driver in the high impedance (off) condition. single-ended termination One of two methods for terminating the SCSI bus, characterized by signal values that conform to the ANSI-defined levels for SCSI implementation. Typically used for short cable runs. See also differential termination. skew To shift sector addresses when switching tracks or cylinders to create a slight overlap under the read/write heads. The overlap works to delay the arrival of the next (in sequence) sector from arriving under the selected head until the track or cylinder switch has been done. Skewing minimizes latency time (increasing data throughput) when data on the drive is accessed sequentially. S.M.A.R.T. Self-Monitoring and Analysis Reporting Technology. The continual monitoring of the drive s operating condition with reports sent to the host computer. Similar to Quantum s EWS (Early Warning System) used in some drives. spindle The center shaft of the disk upon which the drive s platters are mounted. Usually contains an integral dc brushless motor. sputter A type of coating process used to apply the magnetic coating to high-performance disks. In sputtering, the disks are placed in a vacuum chamber and the coating is vaporized and deposited on the disks. The resulting surface is hard, smooth, and capable of storing data at high density. status One byte of information sent from a target to an initiator upon completion of each command. substrate The material the disk platter is made of beneath the magnetic coating. Hard disks are generally made of an aluminum-magnesium alloy or glass, while the substrate of flexible diskettes is usually mylar. Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual G 13

14 surface The top or bottom side of a disk, which is coated with the magnetic material for recording data. On some drives, one surface may be reserved for positioning servo information. This servo technique is now replaced with the more efficient imbedded servo technology. See servo data. synchronous data transfer Data transfer that allows transfer of multiple blocks of data between request or acknowledgment signals, since request and acknowledgment signals need not be sent before and after each block. This method is faster than asynchronous data transfer. target An SCSI device that performs an operation requested by an initiator. target routine An I/O process directed to a target and not to a logical unit. thin film A type of coating used for disk surfaces and read/write heads. Thin-film surfaces allow more bits to be stored per disk. Thin-film heads allow closer flying heights. third-stroke seek A method of evaluating the power requirements of a hard drive. It involves monitoring drive current while seeking to a selected track, waiting for 1/2 a revolution, then seeking to a track that is 1/3 of the total actuator stroke from the first. The seek/wait cycle is usually repeated three times. TPI Abbreviation for tracks per inch. The number of tracks or cylinders that are written in each inch of travel across a disk surface. track One of many concentric magnetic circle patterns on a disk surface that contain data. See cylinder. track density How closely the tracks are packed on a disk surface, specified in tracks per inch (TPI). track-to-track seek time The time required for the read/write heads to move to an adjacent track. transfer rate The rate at which the disk sends and receives data from the controller. true Refers to the logical-one (or asserted ) state of a binary number. See also, signal assertion. G 14 Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual

15 unformatted capacity The total number of bytes of data that can be put on a disk drive. Formatting the disk requires approximately 20% of this space to record servo data, addresses, boundary definitions, and timing information. After formatting, user data can be stored on the remaining disk space, known as the formatted capacity. voice coil A type of motor used to move the disk read/write heads to the desired track. A voice coil actuator works like a loudspeaker. A coil is suspended in a magnetic field. A servocontrolled current in the coil generates an electromagnetic force that moves the coil. The moving coil moves the actuator with its attached heads to the desired position on the disk. See also rotary actuator. wide SCSI SCSI protocol permits wide data transfers of 16 or 32 bits. wide data transfer Data transfer that allows information transfer across 16 (or future 32) bits. Faster than standard 8-bit data transfer. write The operation of recording or storing data on a magnetic or other media. See also, read. Atlas II XP32275/XP34550/XP39100 SCSI Hard Disk Drives Product Manual G 15

Chapter 9: Peripheral Devices: Magnetic Disks

Chapter 9: Peripheral Devices: Magnetic Disks Chapter 9: Peripheral Devices: Magnetic Disks Basic Disk Operation Performance Parameters and History of Improvement Example disks RAID (Redundant Arrays of Inexpensive Disks) Improving Reliability Improving

More information

HARD DRIVE CHARACTERISTICS REFRESHER

HARD DRIVE CHARACTERISTICS REFRESHER The read/write head of a hard drive only detects changes in the magnetic polarity of the material passing beneath it, not the direction of the polarity. Writes are performed by sending current either one

More information

With respect to the way of data access we can classify memories as:

With respect to the way of data access we can classify memories as: Memory Classification With respect to the way of data access we can classify memories as: - random access memories (RAM), - sequentially accessible memory (SAM), - direct access memory (DAM), - contents

More information

Floppy Drive & Hard Drive

Floppy Drive & Hard Drive Overview Floppy Drive & Hard Drive In this chapter, you will learn to Learn how the organization of data on floppy drives and hard drives is similar Explain how hard drives work Identify and explain the

More information

Chapter 8 Memory Units

Chapter 8 Memory Units Chapter 8 Memory Units Contents: I. Introduction Basic units of Measurement II. RAM,ROM,PROM,EPROM Storage versus Memory III. Auxiliary Storage Devices-Magnetic Tape, Hard Disk, Floppy Disk IV.Optical

More information

William Stallings Computer Organization and Architecture 7 th Edition. Chapter 6 External Memory

William Stallings Computer Organization and Architecture 7 th Edition. Chapter 6 External Memory William Stallings Computer Organization and Architecture 7 th Edition Chapter 6 External Memory Types of External Memory Magnetic Disk RAID Removable Optical CD-ROM CD-Recordable (CD-R) CD-R/W DVD Magnetic

More information

File System & Device Drive. Overview of Mass Storage Structure. Moving head Disk Mechanism. HDD Pictures 11/13/2014. CS341: Operating System

File System & Device Drive. Overview of Mass Storage Structure. Moving head Disk Mechanism. HDD Pictures 11/13/2014. CS341: Operating System CS341: Operating System Lect 36: 1 st Nov 2014 Dr. A. Sahu Dept of Comp. Sc. & Engg. Indian Institute of Technology Guwahati File System & Device Drive Mass Storage Disk Structure Disk Arm Scheduling RAID

More information

Performance. Storage capacity. Software support. Reliability

Performance. Storage capacity. Software support. Reliability HARD DISK DRIVES Performance Storage capacity Software support Reliability Why we call it as. Hard disk Fixed disk Winchester disk Hard Disk Drive Components Disk platter Read/Write head Head arm/head

More information

Price/performance Modern Memory Hierarchy

Price/performance Modern Memory Hierarchy Lecture 21: Storage Administration Take QUIZ 15 over P&H 6.1-4, 6.8-9 before 11:59pm today Project: Cache Simulator, Due April 29, 2010 NEW OFFICE HOUR TIME: Tuesday 1-2, McKinley Last Time Exam discussion

More information

Introduction Disks RAID Tertiary storage. Mass Storage. CMSC 412, University of Maryland. Guest lecturer: David Hovemeyer.

Introduction Disks RAID Tertiary storage. Mass Storage. CMSC 412, University of Maryland. Guest lecturer: David Hovemeyer. Guest lecturer: David Hovemeyer November 15, 2004 The memory hierarchy Red = Level Access time Capacity Features Registers nanoseconds 100s of bytes fixed Cache nanoseconds 1-2 MB fixed RAM nanoseconds

More information

Computer Systems Structure Input/Output

Computer Systems Structure Input/Output Computer Systems Structure Input/Output Peripherals Computer Central Processing Unit Main Memory Computer Systems Interconnection Communication lines Input Output Ward 1 Ward 2 Examples of I/O Devices

More information

ibm Product summary Ultrastar 73LZX Ultra 160 SCSI IBM storage products

ibm Product summary Ultrastar 73LZX Ultra 160 SCSI IBM storage products ibm Product summary Ultrastar 73LZX Ultra 160 SCSI Models: IC35L009UWD210 IC35L009UCD210 IC35L018UWD210 IC35L018UCD210 IC35L036UWD210 IC35L036UCD210 IC35L073UWD210 IC35L073UCD210 Introduction Applications

More information

Chapter 11 I/O Management and Disk Scheduling

Chapter 11 I/O Management and Disk Scheduling Operating Systems: Internals and Design Principles, 6/E William Stallings Chapter 11 I/O Management and Disk Scheduling Dave Bremer Otago Polytechnic, NZ 2008, Prentice Hall I/O Devices Roadmap Organization

More information

Logical Operations. Control Unit. Contents. Arithmetic Operations. Objectives. The Central Processing Unit: Arithmetic / Logic Unit.

Logical Operations. Control Unit. Contents. Arithmetic Operations. Objectives. The Central Processing Unit: Arithmetic / Logic Unit. Objectives The Central Processing Unit: What Goes on Inside the Computer Chapter 4 Identify the components of the central processing unit and how they work together and interact with memory Describe how

More information

Devices and Device Controllers

Devices and Device Controllers I/O 1 Devices and Device Controllers network interface graphics adapter secondary storage (disks, tape) and storage controllers serial (e.g., mouse, keyboard) sound co-processors... I/O 2 Bus Architecture

More information

Main Memory & Backing Store. Main memory backing storage devices

Main Memory & Backing Store. Main memory backing storage devices Main Memory & Backing Store Main memory backing storage devices 1 Introduction computers store programs & data in two different ways: nmain memory ntemporarily stores programs & data that are being processed

More information

Discovering Computers 2011. Living in a Digital World

Discovering Computers 2011. Living in a Digital World Discovering Computers 2011 Living in a Digital World Objectives Overview Differentiate among various styles of system units on desktop computers, notebook computers, and mobile devices Identify chips,

More information

Chapter 4 System Unit Components. Discovering Computers 2012. Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World

Chapter 4 System Unit Components. Discovering Computers 2012. Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Chapter 4 System Unit Components Discovering Computers 2012 Your Interactive Guide to the Digital World Objectives Overview Differentiate among various styles of system units on desktop computers, notebook

More information

CSCA0102 IT & Business Applications. Foundation in Business Information Technology School of Engineering & Computing Sciences FTMS College Global

CSCA0102 IT & Business Applications. Foundation in Business Information Technology School of Engineering & Computing Sciences FTMS College Global CSCA0102 IT & Business Applications Foundation in Business Information Technology School of Engineering & Computing Sciences FTMS College Global Chapter 2 Data Storage Concepts System Unit The system unit

More information

Computer Systems Structure Main Memory Organization

Computer Systems Structure Main Memory Organization Computer Systems Structure Main Memory Organization Peripherals Computer Central Processing Unit Main Memory Computer Systems Interconnection Communication lines Input Output Ward 1 Ward 2 Storage/Memory

More information

Management Challenge. Managing Hardware Assets. Central Processing Unit. What is a Computer System?

Management Challenge. Managing Hardware Assets. Central Processing Unit. What is a Computer System? Management Challenge Managing Hardware Assets What computer processing and storage capability does our organization need to handle its information and business transactions? What arrangement of computers

More information

Chapter 6. Inside the System Unit. What You Will Learn... Computers Are Your Future. What You Will Learn... Describing Hardware Performance

Chapter 6. Inside the System Unit. What You Will Learn... Computers Are Your Future. What You Will Learn... Describing Hardware Performance What You Will Learn... Computers Are Your Future Chapter 6 Understand how computers represent data Understand the measurements used to describe data transfer rates and data storage capacity List the components

More information

William Stallings Computer Organization and Architecture 8 th Edition. External Memory

William Stallings Computer Organization and Architecture 8 th Edition. External Memory William Stallings Computer Organization and Architecture 8 th Edition Chapter 6 External Memory Types of External Memory Magnetic Disk RAID Removable Optical CD-ROM CD-Recordable (CD-R) CD-R/W DVD Magnetic

More information

Secondary Storage. Any modern computer system will incorporate (at least) two levels of storage: magnetic disk/optical devices/tape systems

Secondary Storage. Any modern computer system will incorporate (at least) two levels of storage: magnetic disk/optical devices/tape systems 1 Any modern computer system will incorporate (at least) two levels of storage: primary storage: typical capacity cost per MB $3. typical access time burst transfer rate?? secondary storage: typical capacity

More information

Read this before starting!

Read this before starting! Points missed: Student's Name: Total score: /100 points East Tennessee State University Department of Computer and Information Sciences CSCI 4717 Computer Architecture TEST 2 for Fall Semester, 2006 Section

More information

Disk Geometry: How Data is Organized on a Hard Disk Drive

Disk Geometry: How Data is Organized on a Hard Disk Drive Disk Geometry: How Data is Organized on a Hard Disk Drive The surface of the drive platter is organized with coordinates, much like a map. Data is stored in concentric tracks on the surfaces of each platter.

More information

Enterprise-class versus Desktopclass

Enterprise-class versus Desktopclass Enterprise-class versus Desktopclass Hard Drives April, 2008 Enterprise Platforms and Services Division - Marketing Revision History Date Revision Number April, 2008 1.0 Initial Release Modifications Disclaimers

More information

Chapter 10: Mass-Storage Systems

Chapter 10: Mass-Storage Systems Chapter 10: Mass-Storage Systems Physical structure of secondary storage devices and its effects on the uses of the devices Performance characteristics of mass-storage devices Disk scheduling algorithms

More information

A Computer Glossary. For the New York Farm Viability Institute Computer Training Courses

A Computer Glossary. For the New York Farm Viability Institute Computer Training Courses A Computer Glossary For the New York Farm Viability Institute Computer Training Courses 2006 GLOSSARY This Glossary is primarily applicable to DOS- and Windows-based machines and applications. Address:

More information

13.1 Characteristics of the Memory Hierarchy

13.1 Characteristics of the Memory Hierarchy CHAPTER THIRTEEN Memory Hierarchy 13.1 Characteristics of the Memory Hierarchy We've discussed the organization and operation of RAM, but RAM is only one level of the group of components used to store

More information

Data Storage - I: Memory Hierarchies & Disks

Data Storage - I: Memory Hierarchies & Disks Data Storage - I: Memory Hierarchies & Disks W7-C, Spring 2005 Updated by M. Naci Akkøk, 27.02.2004 and 23.02.2005, based upon slides by Pål Halvorsen, 11.3.2002. Contains slides from: Hector Garcia-Molina,

More information

Difference between Enterprise SATA HDDs and Desktop HDDs. Difference between Enterprise Class HDD & Desktop HDD

Difference between Enterprise SATA HDDs and Desktop HDDs. Difference between Enterprise Class HDD & Desktop HDD In order to fulfil the operational needs, different web hosting providers offer different models of hard drives. While some web hosts provide Enterprise HDDs, which although comparatively expensive, offer

More information

Intel RAID Controllers

Intel RAID Controllers Intel RAID Controllers Best Practices White Paper April, 2008 Enterprise Platforms and Services Division - Marketing Revision History Date Revision Number April, 2008 1.0 Initial release. Modifications

More information

Chapter 7. Disk subsystem

Chapter 7. Disk subsystem Chapter 7. Disk subsystem Ultimately, all data must be retrieved from and stored to disk. Disk accesses are usually measured in milliseconds, whereas memory and PCI bus operations are measured in nanoseconds

More information

TECHNOLOGY BRIEF. Compaq RAID on a Chip Technology EXECUTIVE SUMMARY CONTENTS

TECHNOLOGY BRIEF. Compaq RAID on a Chip Technology EXECUTIVE SUMMARY CONTENTS TECHNOLOGY BRIEF August 1999 Compaq Computer Corporation Prepared by ISSD Technology Communications CONTENTS Executive Summary 1 Introduction 3 Subsystem Technology 3 Processor 3 SCSI Chip4 PCI Bridge

More information

CHAPTER 2: HARDWARE BASICS: INSIDE THE BOX

CHAPTER 2: HARDWARE BASICS: INSIDE THE BOX CHAPTER 2: HARDWARE BASICS: INSIDE THE BOX Multiple Choice: 1. Processing information involves: A. accepting information from the outside world. B. communication with another computer. C. performing arithmetic

More information

1 Storage Devices Summary

1 Storage Devices Summary Chapter 1 Storage Devices Summary Dependability is vital Suitable measures Latency how long to the first bit arrives Bandwidth/throughput how fast does stuff come through after the latency period Obvious

More information

Mass Storage Structure

Mass Storage Structure Mass Storage Structure 12 CHAPTER Practice Exercises 12.1 The accelerating seek described in Exercise 12.3 is typical of hard-disk drives. By contrast, floppy disks (and many hard disks manufactured before

More information

Storage in Database Systems. CMPSCI 445 Fall 2010

Storage in Database Systems. CMPSCI 445 Fall 2010 Storage in Database Systems CMPSCI 445 Fall 2010 1 Storage Topics Architecture and Overview Disks Buffer management Files of records 2 DBMS Architecture Query Parser Query Rewriter Query Optimizer Query

More information

COMPUTER HARDWARE. Input- Output and Communication Memory Systems

COMPUTER HARDWARE. Input- Output and Communication Memory Systems COMPUTER HARDWARE Input- Output and Communication Memory Systems Computer I/O I/O devices commonly found in Computer systems Keyboards Displays Printers Magnetic Drives Compact disk read only memory (CD-ROM)

More information

DELL RAID PRIMER DELL PERC RAID CONTROLLERS. Joe H. Trickey III. Dell Storage RAID Product Marketing. John Seward. Dell Storage RAID Engineering

DELL RAID PRIMER DELL PERC RAID CONTROLLERS. Joe H. Trickey III. Dell Storage RAID Product Marketing. John Seward. Dell Storage RAID Engineering DELL RAID PRIMER DELL PERC RAID CONTROLLERS Joe H. Trickey III Dell Storage RAID Product Marketing John Seward Dell Storage RAID Engineering http://www.dell.com/content/topics/topic.aspx/global/products/pvaul/top

More information

Chapter 12: Mass-Storage Systems

Chapter 12: Mass-Storage Systems Chapter 12: Mass-Storage Systems Chapter 12: Mass-Storage Systems Overview of Mass Storage Structure Disk Structure Disk Attachment Disk Scheduling Disk Management Swap-Space Management RAID Structure

More information

Computers. Hardware. The Central Processing Unit (CPU) CMPT 125: Lecture 1: Understanding the Computer

Computers. Hardware. The Central Processing Unit (CPU) CMPT 125: Lecture 1: Understanding the Computer Computers CMPT 125: Lecture 1: Understanding the Computer Tamara Smyth, [email protected] School of Computing Science, Simon Fraser University January 3, 2009 A computer performs 2 basic functions: 1.

More information

Storing Data: Disks and Files. Disks and Files. Why Not Store Everything in Main Memory? Chapter 7

Storing Data: Disks and Files. Disks and Files. Why Not Store Everything in Main Memory? Chapter 7 Storing : Disks and Files Chapter 7 Yea, from the table of my memory I ll wipe away all trivial fond records. -- Shakespeare, Hamlet base Management Systems 3ed, R. Ramakrishnan and J. Gehrke 1 Disks and

More information

Introduction to I/O and Disk Management

Introduction to I/O and Disk Management Introduction to I/O and Disk Management 1 Secondary Storage Management Disks just like memory, only different Why have disks? Memory is small. Disks are large. Short term storage for memory contents (e.g.,

More information

Chapter 6. 6.1 Introduction. Storage and Other I/O Topics. p. 570( 頁 585) Fig. 6.1. I/O devices can be characterized by. I/O bus connections

Chapter 6. 6.1 Introduction. Storage and Other I/O Topics. p. 570( 頁 585) Fig. 6.1. I/O devices can be characterized by. I/O bus connections Chapter 6 Storage and Other I/O Topics 6.1 Introduction I/O devices can be characterized by Behavior: input, output, storage Partner: human or machine Data rate: bytes/sec, transfers/sec I/O bus connections

More information

Chapter 2: Computer-System Structures. Computer System Operation Storage Structure Storage Hierarchy Hardware Protection General System Architecture

Chapter 2: Computer-System Structures. Computer System Operation Storage Structure Storage Hierarchy Hardware Protection General System Architecture Chapter 2: Computer-System Structures Computer System Operation Storage Structure Storage Hierarchy Hardware Protection General System Architecture Operating System Concepts 2.1 Computer-System Architecture

More information

COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING - Microprocessor Systems - Mitchell Aaron Thornton

COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING - Microprocessor Systems - Mitchell Aaron Thornton MICROPROCESSOR SYSTEMS Mitchell Aaron Thornton, Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Mississippi State University, PO Box 9571, Mississippi State, MS, 39762-9571, United States. Keywords:

More information

Lesson Plan. Preparation

Lesson Plan. Preparation Lesson Plan Course Title: Computer Maintenance Session Title: Hard Drives Lesson Duration: 90 Minutes Performance Objective: Upon completion of this assignment, the student will be able to recognize a

More information

Communicating with devices

Communicating with devices Introduction to I/O Where does the data for our CPU and memory come from or go to? Computers communicate with the outside world via I/O devices. Input devices supply computers with data to operate on.

More information

COS 318: Operating Systems. Storage Devices. Kai Li Computer Science Department Princeton University. (http://www.cs.princeton.edu/courses/cos318/)

COS 318: Operating Systems. Storage Devices. Kai Li Computer Science Department Princeton University. (http://www.cs.princeton.edu/courses/cos318/) COS 318: Operating Systems Storage Devices Kai Li Computer Science Department Princeton University (http://www.cs.princeton.edu/courses/cos318/) Today s Topics Magnetic disks Magnetic disk performance

More information

Writing Assignment #2 due Today (5:00pm) - Post on your CSC101 webpage - Ask if you have questions! Lab #2 Today. Quiz #1 Tomorrow (Lectures 1-7)

Writing Assignment #2 due Today (5:00pm) - Post on your CSC101 webpage - Ask if you have questions! Lab #2 Today. Quiz #1 Tomorrow (Lectures 1-7) Overview of Computer Science CSC 101 Summer 2011 Main Memory vs. Auxiliary Storage Lecture 7 July 14, 2011 Announcements Writing Assignment #2 due Today (5:00pm) - Post on your CSC101 webpage - Ask if

More information

Platter. Track. Index Mark. Disk Storage. PHY 406F - Microprocessor Interfacing Techniques

Platter. Track. Index Mark. Disk Storage. PHY 406F - Microprocessor Interfacing Techniques Platter PHY 406F - icroprocessor Interfacing Techniques Disk Storage The major "permanent" storage medium for computers is, at present, generally magnetic media in the form of either magnetic tape or disks.

More information

Chapter 12: Secondary-Storage Structure

Chapter 12: Secondary-Storage Structure Chapter 12: Secondary-Storage Structure Chapter 12: Secondary-Storage Structure Overview of Mass Storage Structure Disk Structure Disk Attachment Disk Scheduling Disk Management Swap-Space Management RAID

More information

Disks and RAID. Profs. Bracy and Van Renesse. based on slides by Prof. Sirer

Disks and RAID. Profs. Bracy and Van Renesse. based on slides by Prof. Sirer Disks and RAID Profs. Bracy and Van Renesse based on slides by Prof. Sirer 50 Years Old! 13th September 1956 The IBM RAMAC 350 Stored less than 5 MByte Reading from a Disk Must specify: cylinder # (distance

More information

TEST CHAPTERS 1 & 2 OPERATING SYSTEMS

TEST CHAPTERS 1 & 2 OPERATING SYSTEMS TEST CHAPTERS 1 & 2 OPERATING SYSTEMS True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. 1. Changes that you make in virtual machines do not affect your physical computer. 2. The size of a bus

More information

Copyright 2007 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant B. Navathe. Slide 13-1

Copyright 2007 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant B. Navathe. Slide 13-1 Slide 13-1 Chapter 13 Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing Chapter Outline Disk Storage Devices Files of Records Operations on Files Unordered Files Ordered Files Hashed Files Dynamic and Extendible

More information

CS 464/564 Introduction to Database Management System Instructor: Abdullah Mueen

CS 464/564 Introduction to Database Management System Instructor: Abdullah Mueen CS 464/564 Introduction to Database Management System Instructor: Abdullah Mueen LECTURE 14: DATA STORAGE AND REPRESENTATION Data Storage Memory Hierarchy Disks Fields, Records, Blocks Variable-length

More information

Two main categories of storage technology used today are magnetic storage and optical storage.

Two main categories of storage technology used today are magnetic storage and optical storage. Types of Storage Devices Physical components or materials on which data is stored are called storage media. Hardware components that read/write to storage media are called storage devices. Two main categories

More information

Data Storage - II: Efficient Usage & Errors

Data Storage - II: Efficient Usage & Errors Data Storage - II: Efficient Usage & Errors Week 10, Spring 2005 Updated by M. Naci Akkøk, 27.02.2004, 03.03.2005 based upon slides by Pål Halvorsen, 12.3.2002. Contains slides from: Hector Garcia-Molina

More information

Choosing the Right NAND Flash Memory Technology

Choosing the Right NAND Flash Memory Technology Choosing the Right NAND Flash Memory Technology A Basic Introduction to NAND Flash Offerings Dean Klein Vice President of System Memory Development Micron Technology, Inc. Executive Summary A 75% increase

More information

Sistemas Operativos: Input/Output Disks

Sistemas Operativos: Input/Output Disks Sistemas Operativos: Input/Output Disks Pedro F. Souto ([email protected]) April 28, 2012 Topics Magnetic Disks RAID Solid State Disks Topics Magnetic Disks RAID Solid State Disks Magnetic Disk Construction

More information

Operating System Concepts. Operating System 資 訊 工 程 學 系 袁 賢 銘 老 師

Operating System Concepts. Operating System 資 訊 工 程 學 系 袁 賢 銘 老 師 Lecture 6: Secondary Storage Systems Moving-head Disk Mechanism 6.2 Overview of Mass-Storage Structure Magnetic disks provide bulk of secondary storage of modern computers Drives rotate at 60 to 200 times

More information

ELECTRONIC DOCUMENT IMAGING

ELECTRONIC DOCUMENT IMAGING AIIM: Association for Information and Image Management. Trade association and professional society for the micrographics, optical disk and electronic image management markets. Algorithm: Prescribed set

More information

SAN Conceptual and Design Basics

SAN Conceptual and Design Basics TECHNICAL NOTE VMware Infrastructure 3 SAN Conceptual and Design Basics VMware ESX Server can be used in conjunction with a SAN (storage area network), a specialized high speed network that connects computer

More information

Performance Characteristics of VMFS and RDM VMware ESX Server 3.0.1

Performance Characteristics of VMFS and RDM VMware ESX Server 3.0.1 Performance Study Performance Characteristics of and RDM VMware ESX Server 3.0.1 VMware ESX Server offers three choices for managing disk access in a virtual machine VMware Virtual Machine File System

More information

Enterprise-class versus Desktop-class Hard Drives

Enterprise-class versus Desktop-class Hard Drives Enterprise-class versus Desktop-class Hard Drives A document providing a comparison between enterprise-class and desktop-class hard drives Rev 2.0 April 2016 Intel Server Boards and Systems

More information

A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, 7e. Chapter 1 Introducing Hardware

A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, 7e. Chapter 1 Introducing Hardware A+ Guide to Managing and Maintaining Your PC, 7e Chapter 1 Introducing Hardware Objectives Learn that a computer requires both hardware and software to work Learn about the many different hardware components

More information

Data Storage and Backup. Sanjay Goel School of Business University at Albany, SUNY

Data Storage and Backup. Sanjay Goel School of Business University at Albany, SUNY Data Storage and Backup Sanjay Goel School of Business University at Albany, SUNY Data Backup 2 Data Backup Why? Files can be accidentally deleted Mission-critical data can become corrupt. Natural disasters

More information

The Bus (PCI and PCI-Express)

The Bus (PCI and PCI-Express) 4 Jan, 2008 The Bus (PCI and PCI-Express) The CPU, memory, disks, and all the other devices in a computer have to be able to communicate and exchange data. The technology that connects them is called the

More information

IDE/ATA Interface. Objectives. IDE Interface. IDE Interface

IDE/ATA Interface. Objectives. IDE Interface. IDE Interface Objectives IDE/ATA Interface In this part, you will -Learn about each of the ATA standards -Identify the ATA connector and cable -Learn how to set jumpers for master, slave and cable select configurations

More information

Types Of Storage Device

Types Of Storage Device Types Of Storage Device by AA A POG D EE SRM U Outline Categorizing Storage Devices Magnetic Storage Devices Optical Storage Devices Categorizing Storage Devices Storage devices hold data, even when the

More information

760 Veterans Circle, Warminster, PA 18974 215-956-1200. Technical Proposal. Submitted by: ACT/Technico 760 Veterans Circle Warminster, PA 18974.

760 Veterans Circle, Warminster, PA 18974 215-956-1200. Technical Proposal. Submitted by: ACT/Technico 760 Veterans Circle Warminster, PA 18974. 760 Veterans Circle, Warminster, PA 18974 215-956-1200 Technical Proposal Submitted by: ACT/Technico 760 Veterans Circle Warminster, PA 18974 for Conduction Cooled NAS Revision 4/3/07 CC/RAIDStor: Conduction

More information

Q & A From Hitachi Data Systems WebTech Presentation:

Q & A From Hitachi Data Systems WebTech Presentation: Q & A From Hitachi Data Systems WebTech Presentation: RAID Concepts 1. Is the chunk size the same for all Hitachi Data Systems storage systems, i.e., Adaptable Modular Systems, Network Storage Controller,

More information

Chapter 3: Computer Hardware Components: CPU, Memory, and I/O

Chapter 3: Computer Hardware Components: CPU, Memory, and I/O Chapter 3: Computer Hardware Components: CPU, Memory, and I/O What is the typical configuration of a computer sold today? The Computer Continuum 1-1 Computer Hardware Components In this chapter: How did

More information

Outline. mass storage hash functions. logical key values nested tables. storing information between executions using DBM files

Outline. mass storage hash functions. logical key values nested tables. storing information between executions using DBM files Outline 1 Files and Databases mass storage hash functions 2 Dictionaries logical key values nested tables 3 Persistent Data storing information between executions using DBM files 4 Rule Based Programming

More information

Optimizing LTO Backup Performance

Optimizing LTO Backup Performance Optimizing LTO Backup Performance July 19, 2011 Written by: Ash McCarty Contributors: Cedrick Burton Bob Dawson Vang Nguyen Richard Snook Table of Contents 1.0 Introduction... 3 2.0 Host System Configuration...

More information

Record Storage and Primary File Organization

Record Storage and Primary File Organization Record Storage and Primary File Organization 1 C H A P T E R 4 Contents Introduction Secondary Storage Devices Buffering of Blocks Placing File Records on Disk Operations on Files Files of Unordered Records

More information

Definition of RAID Levels

Definition of RAID Levels RAID The basic idea of RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks) is to combine multiple inexpensive disk drives into an array of disk drives to obtain performance, capacity and reliability that exceeds

More information

CS 6290 I/O and Storage. Milos Prvulovic

CS 6290 I/O and Storage. Milos Prvulovic CS 6290 I/O and Storage Milos Prvulovic Storage Systems I/O performance (bandwidth, latency) Bandwidth improving, but not as fast as CPU Latency improving very slowly Consequently, by Amdahl s Law: fraction

More information

The Central Processing Unit:

The Central Processing Unit: The Central Processing Unit: What Goes on Inside the Computer Chapter 4 Objectives Identify the components of the central processing unit and how they work together and interact with memory Describe how

More information

Chapter 13. Chapter Outline. Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing

Chapter 13. Chapter Outline. Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing Chapter 13 Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing Copyright 2007 Ramez Elmasri and Shamkant B. Navathe Chapter Outline Disk Storage Devices Files of Records Operations on Files Unordered Files

More information

1 Computer hardware. Peripheral Bus device "B" Peripheral device. controller. Memory. Central Processing Unit (CPU)

1 Computer hardware. Peripheral Bus device B Peripheral device. controller. Memory. Central Processing Unit (CPU) 1 1 Computer hardware Most computers are organized as shown in Figure 1.1. A computer contains several major subsystems --- such as the Central Processing Unit (CPU), memory, and peripheral device controllers.

More information

Spacecraft Computer Systems. Colonel John E. Keesee

Spacecraft Computer Systems. Colonel John E. Keesee Spacecraft Computer Systems Colonel John E. Keesee Overview Spacecraft data processing requires microcomputers and interfaces that are functionally similar to desktop systems However, space systems require:

More information

Chapter 13 Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing.

Chapter 13 Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing. Chapter 13 Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing. Copyright 2004 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter Outline Disk Storage Devices Files of Records Operations on Files Unordered Files Ordered Files

More information

HP Smart Array Controllers and basic RAID performance factors

HP Smart Array Controllers and basic RAID performance factors Technical white paper HP Smart Array Controllers and basic RAID performance factors Technology brief Table of contents Abstract 2 Benefits of drive arrays 2 Factors that affect performance 2 HP Smart Array

More information

Chapter 13. Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing

Chapter 13. Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing Chapter 13 Disk Storage, Basic File Structures, and Hashing Chapter Outline Disk Storage Devices Files of Records Operations on Files Unordered Files Ordered Files Hashed Files Dynamic and Extendible Hashing

More information

Security & Chip Card ICs SLE 44R35S / Mifare

Security & Chip Card ICs SLE 44R35S / Mifare Security & Chip Card ICs SLE 44R35S / Mifare Intelligent 1 Kbyte EEPROM with Interface for Contactless Transmission, Security Logic and Anticollision according to the MIFARE -System Short Product Info

More information

Chapter 2 Data Storage

Chapter 2 Data Storage Chapter 2 22 CHAPTER 2. DATA STORAGE 2.1. THE MEMORY HIERARCHY 23 26 CHAPTER 2. DATA STORAGE main memory, yet is essentially random-access, with relatively small differences Figure 2.4: A typical

More information

COS 318: Operating Systems. Storage Devices. Kai Li and Andy Bavier Computer Science Department Princeton University

COS 318: Operating Systems. Storage Devices. Kai Li and Andy Bavier Computer Science Department Princeton University COS 318: Operating Systems Storage Devices Kai Li and Andy Bavier Computer Science Department Princeton University http://www.cs.princeton.edu/courses/archive/fall13/cos318/ Today s Topics! Magnetic disks!

More information

CSCA0201 FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTING. Chapter 5 Storage Devices

CSCA0201 FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTING. Chapter 5 Storage Devices CSCA0201 FUNDAMENTALS OF COMPUTING Chapter 5 Storage Devices 1 1. Computer Data Storage 2. Types of Storage 3. Storage Device Features 4. Other Examples of Storage Device 2 Storage Devices A storage device

More information

Technical Note. Micron NAND Flash Controller via Xilinx Spartan -3 FPGA. Overview. TN-29-06: NAND Flash Controller on Spartan-3 Overview

Technical Note. Micron NAND Flash Controller via Xilinx Spartan -3 FPGA. Overview. TN-29-06: NAND Flash Controller on Spartan-3 Overview Technical Note TN-29-06: NAND Flash Controller on Spartan-3 Overview Micron NAND Flash Controller via Xilinx Spartan -3 FPGA Overview As mobile product capabilities continue to expand, so does the demand

More information

NAND Flash FAQ. Eureka Technology. apn5_87. NAND Flash FAQ

NAND Flash FAQ. Eureka Technology. apn5_87. NAND Flash FAQ What is NAND Flash? What is the major difference between NAND Flash and other Memory? Structural differences between NAND Flash and NOR Flash What does NAND Flash controller do? How to send command to

More information

Eureka Technology. Understanding SD, SDIO and MMC Interface. by Eureka Technology Inc. May 26th, 2011. Copyright (C) All Rights Reserved

Eureka Technology. Understanding SD, SDIO and MMC Interface. by Eureka Technology Inc. May 26th, 2011. Copyright (C) All Rights Reserved Understanding SD, SDIO and MMC Interface by Eureka Technology Inc. May 26th, 2011 Copyright (C) All Rights Reserved Copyright by Eureka Technology Inc. All Rights Reserved Introduction This white paper

More information

Module 2. Embedded Processors and Memory. Version 2 EE IIT, Kharagpur 1

Module 2. Embedded Processors and Memory. Version 2 EE IIT, Kharagpur 1 Module 2 Embedded Processors and Memory Version 2 EE IIT, Kharagpur 1 Lesson 5 Memory-I Version 2 EE IIT, Kharagpur 2 Instructional Objectives After going through this lesson the student would Pre-Requisite

More information

The Motherboard Chapter #5

The Motherboard Chapter #5 The Motherboard Chapter #5 Amy Hissom Key Terms Advanced Transfer Cache (ATC) A type of L2 cache contained within the Pentium processor housing that is embedded on the same core processor die as the CPU

More information

A New Chapter for System Designs Using NAND Flash Memory

A New Chapter for System Designs Using NAND Flash Memory A New Chapter for System Designs Using Memory Jim Cooke Senior Technical Marketing Manager Micron Technology, Inc December 27, 2010 Trends and Complexities trends have been on the rise since was first

More information

Computer-System Architecture

Computer-System Architecture Chapter 2: Computer-System Structures Computer System Operation I/O Structure Storage Structure Storage Hierarchy Hardware Protection General System Architecture 2.1 Computer-System Architecture 2.2 Computer-System

More information

CPS104 Computer Organization and Programming Lecture 18: Input-Output. Robert Wagner

CPS104 Computer Organization and Programming Lecture 18: Input-Output. Robert Wagner CPS104 Computer Organization and Programming Lecture 18: Input-Output Robert Wagner cps 104 I/O.1 RW Fall 2000 Outline of Today s Lecture The I/O system Magnetic Disk Tape Buses DMA cps 104 I/O.2 RW Fall

More information