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- FINDTYPE.DOC
-
- Companion document file for FINDTYPE.EXE version 1.1
-
- The FINDTYPE.EXE program is designed to aid in the integration of
- a Seagate disc drive into an AT compatible computer system.
-
- This program is designed to benefit those without an extensive
- technical background as well as those more experienced systems
- integrators.
-
- ---------------------------------------
-
- DISCLAIMER
-
- This software is provided, as-is, without warranty of any kind,
- either expressed or implied, including, but not limited to, the
- implied warranties of merchantability and fitness for a particular
- purpose. In no event shall Seagate Technology, Inc., be held liable
- for any loss of profit or any other commercial damage, including but
- not limited to special, incidental, or other damages.
-
- Seagate Technology, Inc., retains all rights to the FINDTYPE Program
- but does grant the right to make unlimited, unaltered copies of the
- FINDTYPE program provided there is no charge to the users.
-
- The three files you should have found within FINDT110.ZIP are:
-
- FINDTYPE.EXE the executable program
- FINDTYPE.DOC the accompaying document file
- DRIVETYP.TXT a short text file essay on drive types settings
-
- Thank you for your interest in Seagate Technology, Inc.'s FINDTYPE
- software. Please submit your comments and suggestions to the
- following address:
-
- Seagate Technology, Inc.
- P. O. Box 66360
- Att: Technical Support
- Scotts Valley, Ca. 95067-0360
-
- For Seagate Technical Support Bulletin Board:
- (408)438-8771 [300-9600 HST, MNP 3/5, N-8-1]
-
- ---------------------------------------
- Swift, Elite, Sabre, MacWren, Wren Runner, Zone Bit Recording,
- ZBR, FSD, RSD and FINDTYPE are trademarks of Seagate Technology,
- Inc.
-
- Seagate, Seagate Technology, Wren and the Seagate logo are
- registered trademarks of Seagate Technology, Inc.
-
- IBM PC/XT/AT, and PC-DOS are registered trademarks of
- International Business Machines Corporation.
-
- MS-DOS is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corporation.
-
- DISK MANAGER is a registered trademark of ONTRACK Computer
- Systems, Inc.
-
-
- All registered trademarks and unregistered trademarks are the
- sole property of their respective companies.
-
- ====================================================================
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
-
-
- The purpose of this program is to allow a systems integrator to
- install a Seagate disc drive into any AT type computer. The
- program reads the system BIOS to determine which drive types are
- supported. If an exact match is found, the program will display
- the correct type so that this information may be used in the
- computer's setup program (SEE EXAMPLE 1).
-
- If an exact match is not found, the program will scan the BIOS
- and select a drive type which will most efficiently use the
- capacity of the drive being installed. It will also calculate the
- percentage of utilization with the selected drive type (see
- EXAMPLE 2). The precompensation start track and reduced write
- current start track are also compared and if an exact match
- cannot be found, the closest one will be selected.
-
- Some BIOS will support a custom or user defined drive type. This
- allows the user to input the number of cylinders, heads and
- sectors. This CUSTOM drive type may be used when the closest type
- supported by the BIOS gives less than 100% utilization of the
- drive. The program has the ability to scan the BIOS for support
- of CUSTOM drive type. If that support is detected, you will be
- prompted to that effect. However, refer to the documentation for
- your computer to verify that support and for drive parameter
- entry instructions (SEE EXAMPLE 3).
-
- When installing AT interface (IDE) drives with more than 1024
- cylinders, using a BIOS that supports a custom drive type, the
- program can calculate the optimum standard parameters for the
- drive being installed. This is accomplished by typing "CUSTOM" on
- the command line after "FINDTYPE" then the Seagate drive model
- number (SEE EXAMPLE 4).
-
- If you are installing a drive which is not supported by the BIOS,
- and the BIOS does not support the CUSTOM or USER DEFINED drive
- type, (SEE EXAMPLE 5) you have four options:
-
- 1. Use a controller with a ROM Bios on-board that will support
- the interface being used.
-
- 2. Replace the BIOS with one that supports the drive or that
- supports a CUSTOM drive type.
-
- 3. Use a third party software package, such as Disk Manager, to
- install the drive.
-
- 4. Use the closest drive type which is supported by your BIOS and
- achieve only partial utilization of the capacity of the drive.
-
-
- There are also options which allow the printing of the system
- BIOS drive tables (SEE EXAMPLE 6) and a list of parameters for
- Seagate drives (SEE EXAMPLE 7).
-
- =======================================================
-
- =======================================================
-
- EXAMPLE 1:
-
- THIS IS AN EXAMPLE WHERE THE DRIVE BEING INSTALLED (ST124) IS
- SUPPORTED BY THE BIOS OF THE SYSTEM (TYPE 6).
-
-
- COMMAND LINE INPUT = FINDTYPE ST124 <RETURN>
-
- FINDTYPE.EXE ver 1.1
- (C)opyright 1990 by Seagate Technology, Inc.
-
-
- Search Drive Parameters
- model cyls heads precomp LZ sects Meg lba's
- ST124 615 4 -1 670 17 20 41820
-
-
- Type # Best Choice
- 6 615 4 -1 615 17 20 41820
-
- ______________________________________________
- Total Logical Blocks not accessible = 0
- Total bytes not accessible = 0
-
- NOTE: 100.00% utilized 0.00% not accessible
-
- YOU MUST VERIFY THE DRIVE TYPE NUMBER AND PARAMETERS!
- When entering your drive type, double check the parameters, if
- they do not match, search the next, or previous type for the
- suggested parameters.
-
-
- EXAMPLE 2:
-
- IN THIS EXAMPLE, THE PROGRAM DOES NOT FIND AN EXACT MATCH FOR THE
- ST213 DRIVE BEING INSTALLED. THE PROGRAM SCANS ALL THE DRIVE
- TYPES AND DETERMINES THAT THE TYPE 24 IS THE CLOSEST MATCH. BY
- USING THIS TYPE ALL BUT 102 LOGICAL BLOCKS (SECTORS) ARE
- UTILIZED.
-
-
- COMMAND LINE INPUT = FINDTYPE ST213 <RETURN>
-
-
- FINDTYPE.EXE ver 1.1
- (C)opyright 1990 by Seagate Technology, Inc.
-
-
- Search Drive Parameters
- model cyls heads precomp LZ sects Meg lba's
- ST213 615 2 300 670 17 10 20910
-
-
- Type # Best Choice
- 24 612 2 -1 611 17 10 20808
-
- ______________________________________________
- Total Logical Blocks not accessible = 102
- Total bytes not accessible = 52224
-
- NOTE: 99.51% utilized 0.49% not accessible
-
- YOU MUST VERIFY THE DRIVE TYPE NUMBER AND PARAMETERS!
- When entering your drive type, check the parameters, if they do
- not match, search the next, or previous type for the suggested
- parameters. If the capacity obtained with the use of this drive
- type is not acceptable, you may want to utilize a third party
- drive installation program, such as Disk Manager.
-
-
- EXAMPLE 3:
- IN THIS EXAMPLE, THE PROGRAM DOES NOT FIND AN EXACT MATCH FOR THE
- ST238 DRIVE BEING INSTALLED. THE PROGRAM SCANS ALL THE DRIVE
- TYPES AND DETERMINES THAT THE TYPE 6 IS THE CLOSEST MATCH. BY
- USING THIS TYPE 34.62% OF THE DRIVE WILL BE WASTED. BUT, THE
- PROGRAM HAS DETECTED THAT THE BIOS SUPPORTS THE CUSTOM OR USER
- DEFINED DRIVE TYPE AND HAS PROMPTED THE OPERATOR TO VERIFY THAT
- SUPPORT AND USE THAT OPTION. (SEE EXAMPLE 4 FOR USING THE CUSTOM
- ARGUMENT ON THE COMMAND LINE).
-
-
- COMMAND LINE INPUT = FINDTYPE ST238 <RETURN>
-
-
- FINDTYPE.EXE ver 1.1
- (C)opyright 1990 by Seagate Technology, Inc.
-
-
- Search Drive Parameters
- model cyls heads precomp LZ sects Meg lba's
- ST238 615 4 -1 670 26 31 63960
-
-
- Type # Best Choice
- 6 615 4 -1 615 17 20 41820
-
- ______________________________________________
- Total Logical Blocks not accessible = 22140
- Total bytes not accessible =11335680
-
- NOTE: 65.38% utilized 34.62% not accessible
-
- YOU MUST VERIFY THE DRIVE TYPE NUMBER AND PARAMETERS!
- When entering your drive type, check the parameters, if they do
- not match, search the next, or previous type for the suggested
- parameters. If the capacity obtained with the use of this drive
- type is not acceptable, you may want to utilize a third party
- drive installation program, such as Disk Manager.
-
- ***** Custom or User Defined Type Detected ******
-
- ** if verified, use of a custom type would yield maximum capacity
- ** RLL controllers usually provide drive type support for drives
- with non-standard physical parameters (e.g. # sectors >17).
- Please see your interface card manufacturer's manual for further
- info. To use the controller board's BIOS you usually set the
- cpu's BIOS to drive type 1.
-
-
- EXAMPLE 4:
- INSTALLING AN IDE DRIVE WITH MORE THAN 1024 CYLINDERS USING THE
- CUSTOM OPTION.
-
-
- COMMAND LINE INPUT = FINDTYPE CUSTOM ST1126a <RETURN>
-
-
- FINDTYPE.EXE ver 1.1
- (C)opyright 1990 by Seagate Technology, Inc.
-
-
- Search Drive Parameters
- model cyls heads precomp LZ sects Meg lba's
- ST1126a 1072 7 -1 1072 29 106 217616
-
-
- Custom Type Parameters
- custom 536 14 -1 536 29 106 217616
-
- ______________________________________________
- Total Logical Blocks not accessible = 0
- Total bytes not accessible = 0
-
- NOTE: 100.00% utilized 0.00% not accessible
-
- See your computer's setup instructions to enter the above drive
- parameters as a Custom or User Defined drive type. IDE OR AT DRIVES
- DO NOT! REQUIRE A CUSTOMER LOW LEVEL FORMAT!
- If LOW LEVEL formatted, bad sector mapping information will be lost!
-
-
- EXAMPLE 5:
- INSTALLING A DRIVE WHICH HAS NO CLOSE MATCH IN THE BIOS TABLE.
-
- COMMAND LINE INPUT = FINDTYPE ST1111e <RETURN>
-
-
- FINDTYPE.EXE ver 1.1
- (C)opyright 1990 by Seagate Technology, Inc.
-
-
- Search Drive Parameters
- model cyls heads precomp LZ sects Meg lba's
- ST1111e 1072 5 -1 1072 36 94 192960
-
-
- Type # Best Choice
- 27 1024 5 -1 1023 17 42 87040
-
- ______________________________________________________
- Total Logical Blocks not accessible = 105920
- Total bytes not accessible = 54231040
-
- NOTE: 45.11% utilized 54.89% not accessible
-
- YOU MUST VERIFY THE DRIVE TYPE NUMBER AND PARAMETERS!
- When entering your drive type, check the parameters, if they do
- not match, search the next, or previous type for the suggested
- parameters. If the capacity obtained with this drive type is not
- acceptable, you may want to utilize a third party drive
- installation program, such as Disk Manager.
-
- ESDI controllers usually provide logical translation schemes
- where total capacity can be obtained with non-standard physical
- parameters (e.g. # cylinders > 1024). Please see your interface
- card manufacturer's manual! To use the controller board's BIOS
- you must set the cpu's BIOS drive type to 1.
-
-
- EXAMPLE 6:
-
- PRINTING THE LIST OF DRIVE PARAMETERS SUPPORTED BY THE SYSTEM BIOS
- FINDTYPE T or t PRINTS TO THE SCREEN
- FINDTYPE PT or pt PRINTS TO THE PRINTER
-
-
- COMMAND LINE INPUT = FINDTYPE PT <RETURN>
-
-
- FINDTYPE.EXE ver 1.1
- (C)opyright 1990 by Seagate Technology, Inc.
-
-
- BIOS drive Types
-
- Drive Write Landing Total
- Type cyls heads precomp Zone sectors Meg Sectors
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
- 1 306 4 128 305 17 10.7 20808
- 2 615 4 300 615 17 21.4 41820
- 3 615 6 300 615 17 32.1 62730
- 4 940 8 512 940 17 65.5 127840
- 5 940 6 512 940 17 49.1 95880
- . . . . . . . .
- . . . . . . . .
- . . . . . . . .
- 47 699 7 256 700 17 41 83131
-
-
- EXAMPLE 7:
-
- PRINTING THE LIST OF SEAGATE DRIVES
- FINDTYPE D or d PRINTS TO THE SCREEN
- FINDTYPE PD or pd PRINTS TO THE PRINTER
-
-
-
-
- COMMAND LINE INPUT = FINDTYPE PD <RETURN>
-
-
- FINDTYPE.EXE ver 1.1
- (C)opyright 1990 by Seagate Technology, Inc.
-
- Seagate Drives
-
-
- Seagate Imprimis Write Landing Total
- model # model # cyls heads precomp Zone sectors Meg sectors
-
- ST124 615 4 -1 670 17 21.4 41820
- ST125 615 4 -1 615 17 21.4 41820
- ST125-1 615 4 -1 615 17 21.4 41820
- ST125a 404 4 -1 404 26 21.5 42016
- ST125n 407 4 -1 615 26 21.7 42328
- . . . . . . . .
- . . . . . . . .
- . . . . . . . .
- ST41200n 94601-12g 1931 15 -1 1931 71* 1052.9 2056515
-
- Note: Some SCSI Drives use Zone Bit Recording, therefore the
- Sector per track value is an average and is rounded down to the
- next lower integer.
-
-
- -------------------------------------------------
-
- SEAGATE TECHNOLOGY, INC.
- Technical Support Bulletin Board
- 408/438-8771 [300-9600 HST, MNP 3/5, N-8-1]
-
-
-
- GLOSSARY of DRIVE and COMPUTER TERMS
-
-
-
- ACCESS
- Refers to the process of obtaining data from, or placing data
- into a disc storage device, register, or RAM. (i.e. accessing a
- memory location).
-
-
- ACCESS TIME
- Time required to perform an ACCESS. Usages, e.g.: 1) seek to
- location on a disc, 2) amount of time to read or write to a
- memory location, 3) the time to position to the correct location
- in a disc drive and carry out a read or write operation. ACCESS
- TIME is often defined as the time from the leading edge of the
- first step pulse received to SEEK COMPLETE (including settling).
-
- ACTUATOR
- See HEAD POSITIONER. The two basic types of actuators are
- steppers and voice coils. Open-loop steppers generally cannot
- achieve tracks per inch (TPI) as high as the closed-loop system
- because of the lack of feedback on track positioning accuracy. In
- open-loop stepper drives mechanical tolerances are one of the
- most significant factors in limiting TPI enhancement.
-
- ADDRESS
- (physical) A specific location in memory where a unit record,
- or sector, of data is stored. To return to the same area on the
- disc, each area is given a unique address consisting of three
- components: cylinder, sector, and head. CYLINDER ADDRESSING is
- accomplished by assigning numbers to the disc's surface
- concentric circles (cylinders). The cylinder number specifies the
- radial address component of the data area. SECTOR ADDRESSING is
- accomplished by numbering the data records (sectors) from an
- index that defines the reference angular position of the discs.
- Index records are then counted by reading their ADDRESS MARKS.
- Finally, HEAD ADDRESSING is accomplished by vertically numbering
- the disc surfaces, usually starting with the bottom-most disc
- data surface. For example, the controller might send the binary
- equivalent of the decimal number 610150 to instruct the drive to
- access data at cylinder 610, sector 15, and head 0.
-
- ADDRESS MARK
- Two byte address at the beginning of both the ID field and
- the data field of the track format. The first byte is the "A1"
- data pattern, the second byte is used to specify either an ID
- field or a data field.
-
- ADJUSTABLE INTERLEAVE
- Interleaving permits access to more than one memory module,
- e.g., if one memory module contains odd-numbered address and
- another even-numbered address, they can both be accessed
- simultaneously for storage. If the interleave is adjustable, the
- user may select which ranges or areas are to be accessed each
- time.
-
- ANSI
- American National Standards Institute
-
- APPLICATION PROGRAM
- A sequence of programmed instructions that tell the computer
- how to perform an end use task (i.e. accounting, word processing
- or other work for the computer system user). To use a program, it
- must first be loaded into MAIN MEMORY from some AUXILIARY MEMORY
- such as a floppy diskette or hard disk.
-
- AREAL DENSITY
- Bit density (bits per inch, or BPI) multiplied by track
- density (tracks per inch, or TPI), or bits per square inch of the
- disc surface. Bit density is measured around a track
- (circumferential on the disc), and track density is radially
- measured.
-
- ASCII
- American Standard for Coded Information Interchange.
-
- ASME
- American Society of Mechanical Engineers
-
- ASYNCHRONOUS DATA
- Data sent usually in parallel mode without a clock pulse.
- Time intervals between transmitted bits may be of unequal
- lengths.
-
- AT INTERFACE DISK DRIVE INTERFACE ON THE IBM PC-AT
- COMPUTER AND COMPATIBLES. SOMETIMES CALLED
- THE IDE (INTEGRATED DRIVE ELECTRONICS)
- INTERFACE
-
- AUTOMATIC BACK UP OF FILES
- This gives a user the security to make changes to a file
- without worrying about accidently destroying it; there is always
- another copy. One weakness of this method is that files take up
- twice the room on a disc.
-
- AUXILIARY MEMORY
- Memory other than main memory; generally a mass storage
- subsystem, it can include disc drives, backup tape drives,
- controllers and buffer memory. Typically, AUXILIARY MEMORY is
- non-volatile.
-
- AUXILIARY STORAGE DEVICE
- Devices, generally magnetic tape and magnetic disk, on which
- data can be stored for use by computer programs. Also known as
- secondary storage.
-
- AVERAGE ACCESS TIME
- The average track access time, calculated from the end of the
- CONTROLLER commands to access a drive, to drive "seek complete"
- time averaged over all possible track locations at the start of
- ACCESS, and over all possible data track ADDRESSES. Typically,
- the minimum average access time including carriage settling for
- open loop actuators is less than 85 ms and for voice coil disc
- drives is less than 40 ms. As technology improves these times
- will continue to decrease.
-
- AZIMUTH
- The angular distance in the horizontal plane, usually
- measured as an angle from true track location.
-
- BACKUP DEVICE
- Disc or tape drive used with a fixed Winchester disc drive to
- make copies of files or other data for off line storage,
- distribution or protection against accidental data deletion from
- the Winchester drive, or against drive failure.
-
- BACKUP FILE
- File copies made on another removable media device (disc,
- tape or sometimes a remote hard dsic system) and kept to ensure
- recovery of data lost due to equipment failure, human errors,
- updates, disasters and the like.
-
- BAUD RATE
- A variable unit of data transmission speed equal to one bit
- per second.
-
-
- BCAI BYTE COUNT AFTER INDEX. USED IN DEFECT
- MAPPING TO INDICATE THE POSITION OF DEFECTS
- WITH RELATION TO INDEX.
-
- BDOS
- The Basic Disk Operating System (BDOS) controls the
- organization of data on a disk. BDOS is usually pronounced
- "B-DOS".
-
- BIDIRECTIONAL BUS
- A bus that may carry information in either direction but not
- in both simultaneously.
-
- BINARY
- A number system like the decimal numbers, but using 2 as its
- base and having only the two digits 0 (zero) and 1 (one). It is
- used in computers because digital logic can only determine one of
- two states - "OFF" and "ON." Digital data is equivalent to a
- binary number.
-
- BIOS
- (BASIC INPUT OUTPUT SYSTEM) A collection of information
- (firmware) that controls communication between the Central
- Processor and its peripherals.
-
- BIT
- The smallest unit of data. Consists of a single binary digit
- that can take the value of 0 or 1.
-
- BIT CELL LENGTH
- Physical dimension of the bit cell in direction of recording
- along the disc circumference of a track.
-
- BIT CELL TIME
- The time required to pass one bit of information between the
- controller and the drive. Cell time is the inverse of the drive's
- data rate; nominally 200 nsec for 5 Mhz drives.
-
- BIT DENSITY
- Expressed as "BPI" (for bits per inch), bit density defines
- how many bits can be written onto one inch of a track on a disc
- surface. It is usually specified for "worst case", which is the
- inner track. Data is the densest in the inner tracks where track
- circumferences are the smallest.
-
- BIT JITTER
- The time difference between the leading edge of read and the
- center of the data window.
-
- BIT SHIFT
- A data recording effect, which results when adjacent 1's
- written on magnetic discs repel each other. The "worst case" is
- at the inner cylinder where bits are closest together. BIT SHIFT
- is also called pulse crowding.
-
- BLOCK
- A group of BYTES handled, stored and accessed as a logical
- data unit, such as an individual file record. Typically, one
- block of data is stored as one physical sector of data on a disc
- drive.
-
- BOOT
- (Short for bootstrap). Transfer of a disc operating system
- program from storage on diskette or hard disc drive to computer's
- working memory.
-
- BUFFER
- A temporary data storage area that compensates for a
- difference in data transfer rates and/or data processing rates
- between sender and receiver.
-
- BUFFERED SEEK
- A feature of the ST412 INTERFACE. In buffered mode head
- motion is postponed until a string of step pulses can be sent to
- the drive. These pulses represent the number of tracks that the
- head is to be stepped over and are sent much faster than the
- heads can move. The pulses are saved or buffered then the optimum
- head movement to the correct track is performed.
-
- BUS
- A length of parallel conductors that forms a major
- interconnection route between the computer system CPU and its
- peripheral subsystems. Depending on its design, a bus may carry
- data to and from peripheral's addresses, power, and other related
- signals.
-
- BYTE
- A sequence of adjacent BINARY digits or BITS considered as a
- unit, 8 bits in length. One byte is sufficient to define all the
- alphanumeric characters. There are 8 BITS in 1 BYTE. The storage
- capacity of a disc drive is commonly measured in MEGABYTES, which
- is the total number of bits storable, divided by eight million.
-
- CACHE MEMORY
- Cache Memory allows the system to load bytes of data from the
- hard disc to memory. The system may then refer to memory for
- information instead of going back to the hard disc, thereby
- increasing the processing speed.
-
- CAPACITY
- Amount of memory (measured in megabytes) which can be stored
- in a disc drive. Usually given as formatted (see FORMAT
- OPERATION).
-
- CARRIAGE ASSEMBLY
- Assembly which holds read/write heads and roller bearings. It
- is used to position the heads radially by the actuator, in order
- to access a track of data.
-
- CENTRAL PROCESSOR UNIT
- (CPU). The heart of the computer system that executes
- programmed instructions. It includes the arithmetic logic unit
- (ALU) for performing all math and logic operations, a control
- section for interpreting and executing instructions, fast main
- memory for temporary (VOLATILE) storage of an application program
- and its data.
-
- CHARACTER
- An information symbol used to denote a number, letter, symbol
- or punctuation mark stored by a computer. In a computer a
- character can be represented in one (1) byte or eight (8) bits of
- data. There are 256 different one-byte binary numbers, sufficient
- for 26 lower case alphas, 26 upper case alphas, 10 decimal
- digits, control codes and error checks.
-
- CHIP
- An integrated circuit fabricated on a chip of silicon or
- other semiconductor material, e.g., a CHIP is an integrated
- circuit, a microprocessor, memory device, or a digital logic
- device.
-
- CLOCK RATE
- The rate at which bits or words are transferred between
- internal elements of a computer or to another computer.
-
- CLOSED LOOP
- A control system consisting of one or more feedback control
- loops in which functions of the controlled signals are combined
- with functions of the command to maintain prescribed
- relationships between the commands and the controlled signals.
-
- This control technique allows the head actuator system to
- detect and correct off-track errors. The actual head position is
- monitored and compared to the ideal track position, by reference
- information either recorded on a dedicated servo surface, or
- embedded in the inter-sector gaps. A position error is used to
- produce a correction signal (FEEDBACK) to the actuator to correct
- the error. See TRACK FOLLOWING SERVO.
-
- CLUSTER SIZE
- Purely an operating system function or term describing the
- number of sectors that the operating system allocates each time
- disc space is needed.
-
- CODE
- A set of unambiguous rules specifying the way which digital
- data is represented physically, as magnetized bits, on a disc
- drive. One of the objectives of coding is to add timing data for
- use in data reading. See DATA SEPARATOR, MFM and RLL.
-
- COERCIVITY
- A measurement in units of orsteads of the amount of magnetic
- energy to switch or "coerce" the flux change (di-pole) in the
- magnetic recording media.
-
- COMMAND
- 1) An instruction sent by the central processor unit (CPU) to
- a controller for execution. 2) English-like commands entered
- by users to select computer programs or functions. 3) A CPU
- command, which is a single instruction such as "add two binary
- numbers" or "output a byte to the display screen."
-
- CONSOLE
- (also called CRT or Terminal) A device from which a computer
- can be operated; often includes a monitor and keyboard.
-
- CONTROLLER
- A controller is a printed circuit board required to interpret
- data access commands from host computer (via a BUS), and send
- track seeking, read/write, and other control signals to a disc
- drive. The computer is free to perform other tasks until the
- controller signals DATA READY for transfer via the CPU BUS.
-
- CORE
- Originally a computer's main memory was made of ferrite rings
- (CORES) that could be magnetized to contain one bit of data each.
- CORE MEMORY is synonymous with MAIN MEMORY. Main memory today is
- fabricated from CHIPS.
-
- CPU
- See CENTRAL PROCESSOR UNIT
-
- CRASH
- A malfunction in the computer hardware or software, usually
- causing loss of data.
-
- CYCLIC-REDUNDANCY-CHECK
- (CRC). Used to verify data block integrity. In a typical
- scheme, 2 CRC bytes are added to each user data block. The 2
- bytes are computed from the user data, by digital logical chips.
- The mathematical model is polynomials with binary coefficients.
- When reading back data, the CRC bytes are read and compared to
- new CRC bytes computed from the read back block to detect a read
- error. The read back error check process is mathematically
- equivalent to dividing the read block, including its CRC, by a
- binomial polynomial. If the division remainder is zero, the data
- is error free.
-
- CYLINDER
- The cylindrical surface formed by identical track numbers on
- vertically stacked discs. At any location of the head positioning
- arm, all tracks under all heads are the cylinder. Cylinder number
- is one of the three address components required to find a
- specific ADDRESS, the other two being head number and sector
- number.
-
- DAISY CHAIN
- A way of connecting multiple drives to one controller. The
- controller drive select signal is routed serially through the
- drives, and is intercepted by the drive whose number matches. The
- disc drives have switches or jumpers on them which allow the user
- to select the drive number desired.
-
- DATA
- Information processed by a computer, stored in memory, or fed
- into a computer.
-
- DATA ACCESS
- When the controller has specified all three components of the
- sector address to the drive, the ID field of the sector brought
- under the head by the drive is read and compared with the address
- of the target sector. A match enables access to the data field of
- the sector.
-
- DATA ADDRESS
- To return to the same area on the disc, each area is given a
- unique address consisting of the three components: cylinder, head
- and sector. HORIZONTAL: accomplished by assigning numbers to the
- concentric circles (cylinders) mapped out by the heads as the
- positioning arm is stepped radially across the surface, starting
- with 0 for the outermost circle. By specifying the cylinder
- number the controller specifies a horizontal or radial address
- component of the data area. ROTATIONAL: once a head and cylinder
- have been addressed, the desired sector around the selected track
- of the selected surface is found by counting address marks from
- the index pulse of the track. Remember that each track starts
- with an index pulse and each sector starts with an address mark.
- VERTICAL: assume a disc pack with six surfaces, each with its own
- read/write head, vertical addressing is accomplished by assigning
- the numbers 00 through XX to the heads, in consecutive order. By
- specifying the head number, the controller specifies the vertical
- address component of the data area.
-
- DATA BASE
- An organized collection of data stored in DISC FILES, often
- shared by multiple users., e.g., the Official Airline Guide,
- which contains up-to-date schedules for all airlines.
-
- DATA BASE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM
- (DBMS) Application program used to manage, access and update
- files in a data base.
-
- DATA ENCODING
- To use a code such as GCR, MFM, RLL, NZR, etc. to represent
- characters for memory storage.
-
- DATA FIELD
- The portion of a sector used to store the user's DIGITAL
- data. Other fields in each sector include ID, SYNC and CRC which
- are used to locate the correct data field.
-
- DATA SEPARATOR
- Controller circuitry takes the CODED playback pulses and uses
- the timing information added by the CODE during the write process
- to reconstruct the original user data record. See NRZ, MFM, and
- RLL.
-
- DATA TRACK
- Any of the circular tracks magnetized by the recording head
- during data storage.
-
- DATA TRANSFER RATE
- (DTR). Speed at which bits are sent: In a disc storage
- system, the communication is between CPU and controller, plus
- controller and the disc drive. Typical units are bits per second
- (BPS), or bytes per second, e.g., ST506/412 INTERFACE allows 5
- Mbits/sec. transfer rate.
-
- DECREASE THE FLYING HEIGHT
- Since the head core is closer to the media surface, the lines
- of flux magnetize a smaller area. Thus, more bits can be recorded
- in a given distance, and higher BPI (bits per inch) is
- achievable.
-
- DEDICATED SERVO SYSTEM
- A complete disc surface is dedicated for servo data.
-
- DEFAULT
- A particular value of a variable which is used by a computer
- unless specifically changed, usually via an entry made through a
- software program.
-
- DENSITY
- Generally, bit recording density. SEE AREAL, BIT and STORAGE
- DENSITY.
-
- DIGITAL
- Any system that processes digital binary signals having only
- the values of a 1 or 0. An example of a non-digital signal is an
- analog signal which continuously varies, e.g., TV or audio.
-
- DIGITAL MAGNETIC RECORDING
- See MAGNETIC RECORDING
-
- DIRECT ACCESS
- Generally refers to an AUXILIARY MEMORY device, having all
- data on-line. E.G., a tape drive without a tape mounted is not
- direct access, but a WINCHESTER DRIVE is direct access.
-
- DIRECTORY
- A special disc storage area (usually cylinder zero) that is
- read by a computer operating system to determine the ADDRESSES of
- the data records that form a DISC FILE.
-
- DISC FILE
- A file of user data, e.g. the company employee list, with all
- names and information. The data in the file is stored in a set of
- disc SECTORS (records).
-
- DISC OPERATING SYSTEM
- (DOS). A computer program which continuously runs and
- mediates between the computer user and the APPLICATION PROGRAM,
- and allows access to disc data by DISC FILE names.
-
- DISC PACK
- A number of metal discs packaged in a canister for removal
- from the disc drive. WINCHESTER DRIVES do not have disc packs.
-
- DISC/PLATTER
- For rigid discs, a flat, circular aluminum disc substrate,
- coated on both sides with a magnetic substance (iron oxide or
- thin film metal media) for non-VOLATILE data storage. The
- substrate may consist of metal, plastic, or even glass. Surfaces
- of discs are usually lubricated to minimize wear during drive
- start-up or power down.
-
- DISC STORAGE
- Auxiliary memory system containing disc drives.
-
- DISKETTE
- A floppy disc. A plastic (mylar) substrate, coated with
- magnetic iron oxide, enclosed in a protective jacket.
-
- DOS DISC OPERATING SYSTEM. A COMPUTER PROGRAM
- WHICH RUNS CONTINUOUSLY AND MEDIATES BETWEEN
- THE COMPUTER USER AND THE APPLICATION
- PROGRAM AND ALLOWS ACCESS TO THE DISC DATA
- BY DISC FILE NAMES.
-
-
- DRIVE
- A computer memory device with moving storage MEDIA (disc or
- tape).
-
- DRIVE SELECT
- An ADDRESS component that selects among a string of drives
- attached to a disc controller. In the ST 506/412 interface
- standard, a drive's select code is physically set in the drive to
- a value between 0 and 3. When the controller activates one of the
- four drive select code lines in the J1 cable, the selected drive
- is enabled to respond to access commands from the controller.
-
- DRIVE TYPE A NUMBER REPRESENTING A STANDARD
- CONFIGURATION OF PHYSICAL PARAMETERS
- (CYLINDERS, HEADS, AND SECTORS) OF A
- PARTICULAR TYPE OF DISC DRIVE. EACH AT SYSTEM
- BIOS CONTAINS A LIST OF DRIVE TYPES THAT THE
- SYSTEM CONSIDERS "STANDARD TYPES". THESE
- TYPES ARE NOT NECESSARILY THE SAME FROM ONE
- BIOS TO THE NEXT. THAT IS, DRIVE TYPE 25 ON
- ONE BIOS MAY REPRESENT A DRIVE THAT HAS 615
- CYLINDERS, 4 DATA HEADS, AND 17 SECTORS PER
- TRACK, WHILE TYPE 25 ON ANOTHER BIOS COULD
- BE TOTALLY DIFFERENT.
-
- DROP-IN/DROP-OUT
- Types of disc media defects usually caused by a pin-hole in
- the disc coating. If the coating is interrupted, the magnetic
- flux between medium and head is zero. A large interruption will
- induce two extraneous pulses, one at the beginning and one at the
- end of the pin-hole (2 DROP-INs). A small coating interruption
- will result in no playback from a recorded bit (a DROP-OUT).
-
- DRUM
- An early form of rotating magnetic storage, utilizing a
- rotating cylindrical drum and a multiplicity of heads (one per
- track). Discs stack more compactly than drums.
-
- ECC
- ERROR CORRECTION CODE: The ECC hardware in the controller
- used to interface the drive to the system can typically correct a
- single burst error of 11 bits or less. This maximum error burst
- correction length is function of the controller. With some
- controllers the user is allowed to the select this length. The
- most common selection is 11.
-
- ELECTRO-STATIC DISCHARGE
- (ESD) An integrated circuit (CHIP) failure mechanism. Since
- the circuitry of CHIPs are microscopic in size, they can be
- damaged or destroyed by small static discharges. People handling
- electronic equipment should always ground themselves before
- touching the equipment. Electronic equipment should always be
- handled by the chassis or frame. Components, printed circuit
- board edge connectors should never be touched.
-
- EMBEDDED SERVO SYSTEM
- Servo data is embedded or superimposed along with data on
- every cylinder.
-
- ERASE
- To remove previously recorded data from magnetic storage
- media.
-
- ERROR
- See HARD ERROR and SOFT ERROR.
-
- ESDI
- ENHANCED SMALL DEVICE INTERFACE. A set of specifications for
- the drives. See also SCSI.
-
- EXECUTE
- To perform a data processing operation described by an
- instruction or a program in a computer.
-
- FCI
- (FLUX CHANGES PER INCH): Synonymous with FRPI (flux reversals
- per inch). In MFM recording 1 FCI equals 1 BPI (bit per inch). In
- RLL encoding schemes, 1 FCI generally equals 1.5 BPI.
-
- FEEDBACK
- A closed-loop control system, using the head-to-track
- positioning signal (from the servo head) to modify the HEAD
- POSITIONER signal (to correctly position the head on the track).
-
- FETCH
- A CPU read operation from MAIN MEMORY and its related data
- transfer operations.
-
- FIELDS
- 1. SOFTWARE: Storage units grouped together to make a record
- are considered to be a field; e.g., a record might be a company's
- address; a field in the record might be the company's ZIP code.
-
- FILE
- See DISC FILE. 1. SOFTWARE: A file consists of a group of
- logically related records that, in turn, are made up of groups of
- logically related fields.
-
- FILE ALLOCATION TABLE
- FAT: What the operating systems uses to keep track of which
- clusters are allocated to which files and which are available for
- use. FAT is usually stored on Track-0.
-
- FILE NAME
- Each file has a name, just like the name on the tab of a file
- folder. When you want DOS to find a file, you give DOS the file
- name.
-
- FIRMWARE
- A computer program written into a storage medium which cannot
- be accidentally erased, e.g., ROM. It can also refer to devices
- containing such programs.
-
- FIXED DISC
- A disc drive with discs that cannot be removed from the drive
- by the user, e.g., WINCHESTER DISC DRIVE.
-
- FLOPPY DISC
- A flexible plastic disc coated with magnetic media and
- packaged in a stiff envelope. Comes in 8-inch, 5-1/4-inch, and
- various sub-4 inch sizes. FLOPPY DISCS generally exhibit slow
- ACCESS TIME and smaller CAPACITY compared to WINCHESTER DRIVES,
- but feature removable diskettes.
-
- FLUX CHANGE
- Location on the data track, where the direction of
- magnetization reverses in order to define a 1 or 0 bit.
-
- FLUX CHANGES PER INCH
- (FCI). Linear recording density defined as the number of flux
- changes per inch of data track.
-
- FM
- Frequency modulation CODE scheme, superceded by MFM, which is
- being superceded by RLL.
-
- FORMAT
- The purpose of a format is to record "header" data that
- organize the tracks into sequential sectors on the disc surfaces.
- This information is never altered during normal read/write
- operations. Header information identifies the sector number and
- also contains the head and cylinder ADDRESS in order to detect an
- ADDRESS ACCESS error.
-
- FORMATTED CAPACITY
- Actual capacity available to store user data. The formatted
- capacity is the gross capacity, less the capacity taken up by the
- overhead data used in formatting the discs. While the unformatted
- size may be 24 M bytes, only 20 M bytes of storage may actually
- be available to the user after formatting.
-
- FPI
- (flux changes per inch), also FRPI, the number of Flux
- Reversals per inch.
-
- FRICTION
- Resistance to relative motion between two bodies in contact;
- e.g., there is sliding friction between head and disc during
- drive power up/down.
-
- FULL HEIGHT DRIVE
- Winchester 5-1/4" drive which fits in the same space as full
- height mini-floppy drive (called the full-height form factor).
-
- G
- A G is a unit of force applied to a body at rest equal to the
- force exerted on it by gravity. Hard disc drive shock
- specifications are usually called out in Gs. A shock
- specification of 40 Gs non-operating means that a drive will not
- suffer any permanent damage if subjected to a 40 G shock. This is
- roughly equivalent to a drop of the drive to a hard surface from
- a distance of 1 inch.
-
- GAP
- 1. FORMAT: Part of the disc format. Allows mechanical
- compensations (e.g. spindle motor rotational speed variations)
- without the last sector on a track overwriting the first sector.
- 2. HEAD: An interruption in the permeable head material, usually
- a glass bonding material with high permeability, allowing the
- flux fields to exit the head structure to write / read data bits
- in the form of flux changes on the recording media.
-
- GAP LENGTH
- Narrowing the head gap length achieves higher bit density
- because the lines of force magnetize a smaller area where writing
- data in the form of flux changes on the recording media.
-
- GAP WIDTH
- The narrower the gap width, the closer the tracks can be
- placed. Closer track placement results in higher TPI.
-
- GCR
- GROUP CODE ENCODING. Data encoding method.
-
- GUARD BAND
- 1. Non-recorded band between adjacent data tracks, 2. For
- closed loop servo drives, extra servo tracks outside the data
- band preventing the Carriage Assembly from running into the crash
- stop.
-
- HALF HIGH DRIVE
- A Winchester drive which fits in one half of the space of a
- full height mini-floppy drive.
-
- HARD DISC DRIVE
- Commonly called rigid disc drives, or Winchester disc drives.
- An electromechanical device that can read rigid discs. Though
- similar to floppy disc drives, the hard discs have higher bit
- density and multiple read/write surfaces.
-
- HARD ERROR
- An error that occurs repeatedly at the same location on a
- disc surface. Hard errors are caused by imperfections in the disc
- surface, called media defects. When formatting hard disc drives,
- hard error locations, if known, should be spared out so that data
- ia not written to these locations. Most drives come with a hard
- error map listing the locations of any hard errors by head,
- cylinder and BFI (bytes from index - or how many bytes from the
- beginning of the cylinder).
-
- HARD ERROR MAP
- Also called defect map, bad spot map, media map. Media
- defects are avoided by deleting the defective sectors from system
- use, or assigning an alternative track (accomplished during
- format operation). The defects are found during formatting, and
- their locations are stored on a special DOS file on the disc,
- usually on cylinder 0.
-
- HARD SECTOR MODE
- A HARDWARE CONTROLLED CONVENTION DEFINING A FIXED
- NUMBER OF SECTORS PER TRACK IN ANY SPECIFIED ZONE
- HARDWARE
- Computer equipment (as opposed to the computer progrms and
- software).
-
- HDA
- HEAD/DISK ASSEMBLY: A sealed Winchester assembly including
- discs, heads, filter and actuator assembly.
-
- HEAD
- An electromagnetic device that can write (record), read
- (playback), or erase data on magnetic media. There are three
- types: Head Type BPI TPI Areal density Monolithic 8000 450 3.6 X
- 10 to 6th Composition 12000 1000 12 X 10 to 6th Thin-film 25000
- 1500 37.5 X 10 to 6th
-
- HEAD CRASH
- A head landing occurs when the disc drive is turned on or
- off. This function normally does not damage the disc as the disc
- has a very thin lubricant on it. A head crash occurs when the
- head and disc damage each other during landing, handling or
- because a contaminant particle gets between them. Head crash is a
- catastrophic failure condition and causes permanent damage and
- loss of data.
-
- HEAD LANDING AND TAKEOFF
- In Winchester drives, the head is in contact with the platter
- when the drive is not powered. During the power up cycle, the
- disc begins rotation and an "air bearing" is established as the
- disc spins up to full RPM (rotations per minute). This air
- bearing prevents any mechanical contact between head and disc.
-
- HEAD LANDING ZONE
- An area of the disc set aside for takeoff and landing of the
- Winchester heads when the drive is turned on and off.
-
- HEAD POSITIONER
- Also known as the ACTUATOR, a mechanism that moves the
- CARRIAGE ASSEMBLY to the cylinder being accessed.
-
- HEAD SLAP
- Similar to a head crash but occurs while the drive is turned
- off. It usually occurs during mishandling or shipping. Head slap
- can cause permanent damage to a hard disc drive. See HEAD CRASH.
-
- HEXIDECIMAL
- (HEX) A number system based on sixteen, using digits 0
- through 9 and letters A through F to represent each digit of the
- number. (A = 10, B = 11, C = 12, D = 13, E = 14, F = 15).
-
- ID FIELD
- The address portion of a sector. The ID field is written
- during the Format operation. It includes the cylinder, head, and
- sector number of the current sector. This address information is
- compared by the disc controller with the desired head, cylinder,
- and sector number before a read or write operation is allowed.
-
- IMAGE-BACKUP MODE
- Used with streaming tape, image-backup mode records an exact
- copy of the disc, including unused sectors and bad tracks.
-
- INDEX
- (PULSE): The Index Pulse is the starting point for each disc
- track. The index pulse provides initial synchronization for
- sector addressing on each individual track.
-
- INDEX TIME
- The time interval between similar edges of the index pulse,
- which measures the time for the disc to make one revolution. This
- information is used by a disc drive to verify correct rotational
- speed of the media.
-
- INPUT
- 1. Data entered into the computer to be processed. 2. User
- commands or queries.
-
- INPUT/OUTPUT
- The process of entering data into or removing data from a
- computer system.
-
- INTELLIGENT PERIPHERAL
- A peripheral device that contains a processor or
- microprocessor to enable it to interpret and execute commands,
- thus relieving the computer for other tasks.
-
- INTERFACE
- The protocol data transmitters, data receivers, logic and
- wiring that link one piece of computer equipment to another, such
- as a disc drive to a controller or a controller to a system bus.
- Protocol means a set of rules for operating the physical
- interface, e.g., don't read or write before SEEK COMPLETE is
- true.
-
- INTERFACE STANDARD
- The interface specifications agreed to by various
- manufacturers to promote industry-wide interchangeability of
- products such as disc drives and controllers. An interface
- standard generally reduces product costs, allows buyers to
- purchase from more than one source, and allows faster market
- acceptance of new products. (See ST-506/412, SCSI, ESDI)
-
- INTERLEAVE FACTOR
- The ratio of physical disc sectors skipped for every sector
- actually written.
-
- INTERLEAVING
- The interleave value tells the controller where the next
- logical sector is located in relation to the current sector. For
- example, an interleave value of one (1) specifies that the next
- logical sector is physically the next sector on the track.
- Interleave of two (2) specifies every other physical sector,
- three (3) every third sector and so on. Interleaving is used to
- improve the system throughout based on overhead time of the host
- software, the disc drive and the controller; e.g., if an
- APPLICATION PROGRAM is processing sequential logical records of a
- DISC FILE in a CPU time of more than one second but less than
- two, then an interleave factor of 3 will prevent wasting an
- entire disc revolution between ACCESSES.
-
- INTERRUPT
- A signal, usually from a peripheral device to a CPU, to
- signify that a commanded operation has been completed or cannot
- be completed.
-
- I/O PROCESSOR
- Intelligent processor or controller that handles the
- input/output operations of a computer.
-
- KILOBYTE
- (KBYTE). 1) 1024 bytes (two to the tenth power); 2) 1000
- bytes; 1024 bytes is the normal definition.
-
- LAN
- Local Area Network
-
- LANDING ZONE
- The landing zone is where the read/write head sits when it is
- not active. If the system features a dedicated landing zone, the
- head will rest on the same track each time.
-
- LATENCY
- (ROTATIONAL) The time for the disc to rotate the accessed
- sector under the head for read or write. On the average, latency
- is the time for half of a disc revolution.
-
- LOGIC
- Electronic circuitry that switches on and off ("1" and "0")
- to perform digital operations.
-
- LOOKUP
- The action of obtaining and displaying data in a file.
-
- LOW LEVEL FORMAT
- The first step in preparing a drive to store information
- after physical installation is complete. The process sets up the
- "handshake" between the drive and the controller. In an XT
- system, the low level format is usually done using DOS's debug
- utility. In an AT system, AT advanced diagnostics is typically
- used. Other third party software may also be used to do low level
- format on both XTs and ATs.
-
- LUN
- Logical Unit Number
-
- MAGNETIC MEDIA
- A disc or tape with a surface layer containing particles of
- metal, or metallic oxides that can be magnetized in different
- directions to represent bits of data, sounds or other
- information.
-
- MAGNETIC RECORDING
- The use of a head, recording head, recording media (tape or
- disc), and associated electronic circuitry for storing data or
- sound or video.
-
- MAINFRAME COMPUTER
- A large computer generally found in data processing centers.
- See MINICOMPUTER AND MICROCOMPUTER.
-
- MAIN MEMORY
- Random-access memory used by the CPU for storing program
- instructions and data currently being processed by those
- instructions. See RANDOM-ACCESS MEMORY.
-
- MEAN TIME BEFORE FAILURE
- (MTBF). The average time before a failure will occur. This
- is not a warranty measurement. MTBF is a calculation taking into
- consideration the MTBF of each component in a system and is the
- statistical average operation time between the start of a unit's
- lifetime and its time of a failure. After a product has been in
- the field for a few years, the MTBF can become a field proven
- statistic.
-
- MEAN TIME TO REPAIR
- (MTTR) The average time to repair a given unit. Limited to a
- qualified technician with proper equipment.
-
- MEDIA
- The magnetic layers of a disc or tape. See DISC/PLATTER.
-
- MEDIA DEFECT
- A media defect can cause a considerable reduction of the read
- signal (missing pulse or DROP-OUT), or create an extra pulse
- (DROP-IN). See HARD ERROR MAP.
-
- MEGABYTE
- One million bytes (exactly 1,000,000 bytes). Abbreviation: MB
- or Mbyte.
-
- MEMORY
- Any device or storage system capable of storing and
- retrieving information. See also STORAGE DEFINITIONS.
-
- MICROCOMPUTER
- A computer whose central processor unit (CPU) is manufactured
- as a chip or a small number of chips. Personal computers are
- examples of microcomputers.
-
- MICROINCH
- One-millionth of an inch.
-
- MICROSECOND
- One-millionth of a second.
-
- MILLISECOND
- (Msec) One-thousandth of a second.
-
- MINICOMPUTER
- A computer midway in size and processing power between a
- MICROCOMPUTER and a MAINFRAME COMPUTER.
-
- MINI-SLIDER HEADS
- Manganese/Zinc Ferrite Winchester heads. Smaller, lighter
- heads with stiffer load arms than standard Winchester heads. They
- allow smaller flying heights, and therefore higher bit and track
- density, if they are made with smaller and narrower gaps.
-
- MINI WINCHESTER
- A Winchester disc drive with 5-1/4 or 3-1/2 inch diameter
- discs.
-
- MNEUMONIC
- A shortened code for a longer term.
-
- MODIFIED FREQUENCY MODULATION
- (MFM). A method of recording digital data, using a particular
- CODE to get the flux reversal times from the data pattern. MFM
- recording is self-clocking because the CODE guarantees timing
- information for the playback process. The controller is thus able
- to synchronize directly from the data. This method has a maximum
- of one bit of data with each flux reversal. (See NRZ, RLL).
-
- MULTIPROCESSOR
- A computer containing two or more processors.
-
- MULTITASKING
- The ability of a computer system to execute more than one
- program or program task at a time.
-
- MULTIUSER
- The ability of a computer system to execute programs for more
- than one user at a time.
-
- NOISE
- Extraneous electronic signals that interfere with information
- signals (similar to radio static or TV interference). Sources of
- noise in computers can be power supplies, ground loops, radio
- interference, cable routing, etc.
-
- NRZ
- NON-RETURN TO ZERO 1) User digital data bits; 2) A method of
- magnetic recording of digital data in which a flux reversal
- denotes a one bit, and no flux reversal a zero bit, NRZ recording
- requires an accompanying synchronization clock to define each
- cell time unlike MFM or RLL recording). No Seagate drives use NRZ
- recording methods.
-
- OFF LINE
- Processing or peripheral operations performed while not
- connected to the system CPU via the system BUS.
-
- OPEN COLLECTOR
- A type of output structure found in certain bipolar logic
- families. The device has a transistor that enables it to output
- to a low voltage level only. When the device is inactive, an
- external resistor holds the device output at a high voltage
- level.
-
- OPERATING SYSTEM
- An operating system is a program which acts as an interface
- between the user of a computer and the computer hardware. The
- purpose of the operating system is to provide an environment in
- which a user may run programs. The goal of the operating system
- is to enable the user to conveniently use the computer's
- resources such as the CPU, memory, storage devices and printers.
-
- OUTPUT
- Processing data being transferred out of the computer system
- to peripherals (i.e. disc, printer, etc.). This includes
- responses to user commands or queries.
-
- PARITY
- A computer data checking method using an extra bit in which
- the total number of binary 1's (or 0's) in a byte is always odd
- or always even; thus, in an odd parity scheme, every byte has
- eight bits of data and one parity bit. If using odd parity and
- the number of 1 bits comprising the byte of data is not odd, the
- 9th or parity bit is set to 1 to create the odd parity. In this
- way, a byte of data can be checked for accurate transmission by
- simply counting the bits for an odd parity indication. If the
- count is ever even, an error is indicated.
-
- PARKING
- Parking the disc drive heads means the recording heads are
- moved so that they are not over the platter's data area. Many
- drives have an auto-park feature where the heads are
- automatically parked when power to the drive is shut off. Other
- drives require the user to run some kind of parking software to
- park the heads.
-
- PARTITIONING
- Method for dividing an area on disc drive for use by more
- than one disc operating system or for dividing large disc drives
- into areas which the File Allocation Table (FAT) can deal with
- when in use. The current IBM DOS maximum partition size is 32 MB
- for the XT and AT. This limit can be overridden using
- partitioning software written expressly for this purpose.
-
- PATH
- The DOS term "path" has three definitions and each definition
- involves directories. A PATH may be defined as: 1) the names of
- the chain of directories leading to a file; 2) the complete file
- or directory name; 3) a DOS command.
-
- PERIPHERAL EQUIPMENT
- Auxiliary memory, displays, printers, disc drives, and other
- equipment usually attached to computer systems' CPU by
- controllers and cables (they are often packaged together in a
- desktop computer).
-
- PLATED THIN FILM DISCS
- Magnetic disc memory media having its surface plated with a
- thin coating of a metallic alloy instead of being coated with
- oxide.
-
- PLATTER
- The round magnetic disc surfaces used for read/write
- operations in a hard disc system.
-
- POLLING
- A technique that discerns which of several devices on a
- connection is trying to get the processor's attention.
-
- PRECOMPENSATION
- Applied to write data by the controller in order to partially
- alleviate bit shift which causes adjacent 1's written on magnetic
- media physically to move apart. When adjacent 1's are sensed by
- the controller, precompensation is used to write them closer
- together on the disc, thus fighting the repelling effect caused
- by the recording. Precompensation is only required on some oxide
- media drives.
-
- PREVENTIVE MAINTENANCE
- A method of doing a scheduled routine observation or
- exchanging a part, prior to a breakdown of a piece of equipment.
-
- PRINTED CIRCUIT BOARD
- (PCB) The circuit board with the chips attached to a drive.
-
- PROCESSING
- (DATA PROCESSING) The process of computer handling,
- manipulating, and modifying data such as arithmetic calculation,
- file lookup and updating, or word processing.
-
- PROGRAM
- A sequence of instructions stored in memory and executed by a
- processor or microprocessor. See also APPLICATIONS PROGRAMS.
-
- PROTOCOL
- A set of conventions governing the format of messages to be
- exchanged within a communications system.
-
- RADIAL
- A way of connecting multiple drives to one controller. In
- radial operation, all output signals are active even if the drive
- is not selected. Also see DAISY CHAIN.
-
- RAM DISC
- A DOS operation, where part of the computer's random access
- memory is used to simulate a disk drive. The RAM disc and its
- contents will disappear if power is lost or DOS MAIN MEMORY is
- restarted. RAM is far faster (microseconds ACCESS TIME) than
- discs (milliseconds), so APPLICATIONS PROGRAMS which access the
- disk run faster.
-
- RANDOM ACCESS MEMORY
- (RAM) Memory where any location can be read from or written
- to in a random order. Random access memory usually refers to
- volatile memory where the contents are lost when power is
- removed. The user addressable memory of a computer is random
- access memory.
-
- READ
- To access a storage location and obtain previously recorded
- data.
-
- RECALIBRATE
- Return to Track Zero. A common disc drive function in which
- the heads are returned to track 0 (outermost track).
-
- RECORD
- 1. Software. A record is a single unit made up of logically
- related fields.
-
- REDUCED WRITE CURRENT
- A signal input (to some older drives) which decreases the
- amplitude of the write current at the actual drive head. Normally
- this signal is specified to be used during inner track write
- operations to lessen the effect of adjacent bit "crowding." Most
- drives today provide this internally and do not require
- controller intervention.
-
- REDUCED WRITECURRENT
- TO MINIMIZE THE EFFECTS OF PEAK SHIFT, ON
- SOME DRIVES, THE MAGNITUDE OF THE WRITE
- CURRENT IS REDUCED ON SOME OF THE INNERMOST
- TRACKS. WHEN INSTALLING A DRIVE IN A
- SYSTEM, THE NUMBER REQUESTED IS THE FIRST
- TRACK NUMBER TO BEGIN THE AREA OF REDUCED
- WRITE CURRENT. THAT TRACK AND ALL SUBSEQUENT
- TRACKS WILL BE WRITTEN WITH REDUCED WRITE
- CURRENT.
-
- RESOLUTION
- With regards to magnetic recording, the band width (or
- frequency response) of the recording heads.
-
- RLL
- (RUN LENGTH LIMITED CODE). 1) A method of recording digital
- data, whereby the combinations of flux reversals are
- coded/decoded to allow greater than one (1) bit of information
- per flux reversal. This compaction of information increases data
- capacity by approximately 50 percent; 2) a scheme of encoding
- designed to operate with the ST412 interface at a dial transfer
- rate of 7.5 megabit/sec. The technical name of the specific RLL
- CODE used is "two, seven".
-
- ROM
- (READ ONLY MEMORY) A chip that can be programmed once with
- bits of information. This chip retains this information even if
- the power is turned off. When this information is programmed into
- the ROM, it is called burning the ROM.
-
- ROTATIONAL SPEED
- The speed at which the media spins. On a 5-1/4 or 3-1/2"
- Winchester drive it is usually 3600 rpm.
-
- SCSI
- Small Computer Systems Interface. The current "high end"
- CPU-to-drive interface.
-
- SECTOR
- A sector is a section of a track whose size is determined by
- formatting. When used as an address component, sector and
- location refer to the sequence number of the sector around the
- track. Typically, one sector stores one user record of data.
- Drives typically are formatted from 17 to 26 sectors per track.
- Determining how many sectors per track to use depends on the
- system type, the controller capabilities and the drive encoding
- method and interface.
-
- SECTOR-SLIP
- Sector-slip allows any sector with a defect to be mapped and
- bypassed. The next contiguous sector is given that sector
- address.
-
- SEEK
- The radial movement of the heads to a specified track
- address.
-
- SEEK COMPLETE
- An ST506 interface signal from drive to controller which
- indicates that read/write heads have settled on the desired track
- and completed the seek.
-
- SEQUENTIAL ACCESS
- Writing or reading data in a sequential order, such as
- reading data blocks stored one after the other on magnetic tape
- (the opposite of random access).
-
- SERVO TRACK
- A prerecorded reference track on the dedicated servo surface
- of a closed-loop disc drive. All data track positions are
- compared to their corresponding servo track to determine
- "off-track/on-track" position.
-
- SERVO TRACK INFORMATION WRITTEN ON THE SERVO SURFACE
- THAT THE ELECTRONICS OF THE DRIVE USES TO
- POSITION THE HEADS OVER THE CORRECT DATA
- TRACK. THIS INFORMATION IS WRITTEN ON THE
- DRIVE BY THE SERVO TRACK WRITER.
-
- SETUP PROGRAM USED BY AT TYPE COMPUTERS TO STORE
- CONFIGURATION IN CMOS. THIS PROGRAM IS
- SOMETIMES FOUND IN THE SYSTEM BIOS AND CAN
- BE ACCESSED FROM THE KEYBOARD. ON OTHER
- SYSTEMS, THE PROGRAM IS ON A DISKETTE.
-
- SILICON
- Semiconductor substrate material generally used to
- manufacture micro- processors and other integrated circuit chips.
-
- SKEWING
- Some low-level formatting routines may ask for a Head and/or
- Cylinder Skew value. The value will represent the number of
- sectors being skewed to compensate for head switching time of the
- drive and/or track-to-track seek time allowing continuous
- read/write operation without losing disk revolutions.
-
- SMD
- SURFACE MOUNTED DEVICE. A CHIP in a smaller integrated
- surface package, without connection leads.
-
- SOFT ERROR
- A bit error during playback which can be corrected by
- repeated attempts to read.
-
- SOFT SECTOR MODE
- A CONVENTION, DEFINED BY SOFTWARE, OF SETTING A
- VARIABLE NUMBERS OF SECTORS PER TRACK IN DIRECT
- RELATIONSHIP TO THE DRIVE'S FCI RATING IN REGARDS
- TO THE AREA OF MEDIA THAT PASSES BENEATH THE
- HEAD. THIS SCHEMA TAKES ADVANTAGE OF THE FACT
- THAT, IN ACTUAL SURFACE AREA, THE OUTERMOST
- TRACKS ARE LONGER THAN THE INNERMOST.
-
- SOFTWARE
- APPLICATION PROGRAMS, disc operating systems and other
- programs (as opposed to HARDWARE). The instructions or programs,
- usually stored on floppy or hard discs, which are used to direct
- the operations of a computer, or other hardware.
-
- SOFTWARE PATCH
- Software modification which allows or adds functions not
- otherwise available using the standard software program.
-
- SPINDLE
- The rotating hub structure to which the discs are attached.
-
- SPINDLE MOTOR
- The spindle motor is the electro-mechanical part of the disc
- drive that rotates the platters.
-
- ST-506/ST-412 INTERFACE
- One of several industry standard interfaces between a hard
- disc and hard disc controller. In the ST-506/ST-412 interface,
- the "intellegence" is on the controller rather than the drive.
- SEE INTERFACE STANDARD, ESDI AND SCSI.
-
- STEP
- An increment or decrement of the head positioning arm to move
- the heads in or out, respectively, one track from their current
- position. In buffered mode (open loop drives), the head motion is
- postponed until the last of a string of step pulses has been
- received.
-
- STEPPER MOTOR
- The stepper motor is the electro-mechanical part of the disc
- drive that positions the heads by step pulse on the tracks of the
- disc to read and write data.
-
- STEP PULSE
- The pulse sent from the controller to the stepper motor on
- the step interface signal line to initiate a step operation.
-
- STEP TIME
- The time required by the drive to step the heads from the
- current cylinder position to a target cylinder.
-
- STORAGE CAPACITY
- Amount of data that can be stored in a memory, usually
- specified in kilobytes (KB) for main memory and floppy disc
- drives and megabytes (MB) for hard disc and tape drives.
-
- STORAGE DENSITY
- Usually refers to recording density (BPI, TPI, or their
- product, AREAL DENSITY).
-
- STORAGE LOCATION
- A memory location, identified by an ADDRESS, where
- information is to be read or written.
-
- STORAGE MODULE DRIVE
- (SMD). Storage module drive interface. An interface, used in
- larger disc drives, e.g., 14" drives.
-
- SYNCHRONOUS DATA
- Data sent, usually in serial mode, with a clock pulse.
-
- TAPE DRIVE
- A sequential access memory device whose magnetic media is
- tape in a cassette, reel or continuous loop.
-
- THIN FILM HEADS
- A read/write head whose read/write element is deposited using
- integrated circuit techniques rather than being manually
- fabricated by grinding ferrite and hand winding coils.
-
- TPI
- Tracks per inch.
-
- TRACK
- The radial position of the heads over the disc surface. A
- track is the circular ring traced over the disc surface by a head
- as the disc rotates under the heads.
-
- TRACK ACCESS TIME
- See AVERAGE ACCESS TIME.
-
- TRACK DENSITY
- See TPI.
-
- TRACK FOLLOWING SERVO
- A closed-loop positioner control system that continuously
- corrects the position of the disc drive's heads by utilizing a
- reference track and a feedback loop in the head positioning
- system. See also CLOSED LOOP.
-
- TRACK PITCH
- Distance from centerline to centerline of adjacent tracks
- (TPI divided into 1.0).
-
- TRACKS PER INCH
- Track density, number of tracks per inch.
-
- TRACK WIDTH
- Width of data track. Also called core width of Read/Write
- Head.
-
- TRACK ZERO
- Track zero is the outermost data track on a disc drive. In
- the ST 506 INTERFACE, the interface signal denotes that the heads
- are positioned at the outermost cylinder.
-
- TRACK ZERO DETECTOR
- An obsolete technology that RECALIBRATES by sensing when
- infrared beams between a LED and infrared sensitive
- photo-transistor are blocked by the track zero interrupter (TZI).
-
- TUNNEL ERASE
- An erase scheme where both sides of the recorded data is
- erased when writing data to eliminate track to track
- interference. This is primarily used on floppy disk drives.
-
- UNFORMATTED
- (Capacity) Drive byte capacity before formatting. Maximum
- capacity of a disc drive before formatting = (bits per track) x
- number of heads x # of cylinders. See MEGABYTE.
-
- UPGRADE PATH
- Generally, with disc products, a family having multiple
- products with varying capacities such that the system storage
- capacity can increase with changing application requirements
- simply using a different disc drive within the product family.
-
- VERIFICATION
- This feature lets the computer go back and read what it just
- wrote to disc to ensure the data was written correctly.
-
- VOICE COIL MOTOR
- An electro-magnetic positioning motor in the rigid disk drive
- similar to that used in audio speakers. A wire coil is placed in
- a stationary magnetic field. When current is passed through the
- coil, the resultant flux causes the coil to move. In a disc
- drive, the CARRIAGE ASSEMBLY is attached to the voice coil motor.
- Either a straight line (linear) or circular (rotary) design may
- be employed to position the heads on the disc's surface.
-
- VOLATILE
- Memory that will be erased if power is lost. Typically, MAIN
- MEMORY is volatile, and AUXILIARY MEMORY is non-volatile and can
- be used for permanent (but changeable at will) storage of
- programs and data.
-
- WAN
- Wide Area Network
-
- WEDGE SERVO SYSTEM
- A certain part of each CYLINDER contains servo positioning
- data. Gap spacing between each sector contains servo data to
- maintain position on that cylinder.
-
- WINCHESTER DRIVE
- A disc drive with a Winchester head and non-removable (fixed)
- discs sealed in a contaminant-free housing.
-
- WORD
- Number of bits processed in parallel (in a single operation)
- by a CPU. Standard word lengths are 8, 16, 32, and 64 (1, 2, 4 or
- 8 bytes).
-
- WRITE
- To access a storage location and store data on the magnetic
- surface.
-
- WRITE CURRENT
- The optimum HEAD write current necessary to saturate the
- magnetic media in a cell location.
-
- WRITE FAULT
- Disc drive interface signal to the controller used to inhibit
- further writing when a condition exists in the drive which, if
- not detected, would cause improper writing on the disc.
-
- XSMD
- Extended storage module drive interface.
-
- ZBR (Zone Bit Recording)
- Trademark of Seagate Technology. A media optimization
- technique where the number of sectors per track is dependent upon
- the cylinder circumference. E.G. tracks on the outside cylinders
- have more sectors per track than the inside cylinders. The ZBR
- format is only done at the factory. These drives should not be
- low-level formatted by the end-user.
-
-
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