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A+ Guide To Managing & Maintaining Your PC, 8th Edition: Supporting Hard Drives

HDD

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
65 views29 pages

A+ Guide To Managing & Maintaining Your PC, 8th Edition: Supporting Hard Drives

HDD

Uploaded by

Xavvv Savellano
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 29

9/22/2016

A+ Guide to Managing & Maintaining


Your PC, 8th Edition

Chapter 6
Supporting Hard Drives

Objectives

• Learn about the technologies used inside a hard


drive and how a computer communicates with a
hard drive
• Learn how to select and install a hard drive
• Learn about tape drives and floppy drives

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Hard Drive Technologies and Interface


Standards
• Hard disk drive (HDD) or hard drive sizes
– 2.5" size for laptop computers
– 3.5" size for desktops
– 1.8" size for low-end laptops, other equipment

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Technologies Used Inside a Hard Drive


• Solid state drive (SSD) or solid state device (SSD)
– No moving parts
– Built using nonvolatile flash memory stored on
EEPROM (Electronically Erasable Programmable
Read Only Memory) chips
– Memory in an SSD is called NAND flash memory
– Lifespan is based on the number of write operations
to the drive
– Expensive technology, but faster, more reliable, last
longer, and use less power than magnetic drives

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Technologies Used Inside a Hard Drive


• Magnetic hard drive
– One, two, or more platters, or disks
• Stacked together, spinning in unison inside a sealed
metal housing
– Firmware controls data reading, writing and
motherboard communication
– Read/write heads are controlled by an actuator
– Data is organized in concentric circles, called tracks
• Tracks are divided into segments called sectors
– Most current drives use 4096-byte sectors
• Hybrid hard drives use both technologies
– Operating system must support it
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Figure 6-2 Solid-state drives by Toshiba

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Figure 6-3 Inside a magnetic hard drive

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Figure 6-4 A hard drive or floppy disk is divided into tracks and
sectors; several sectors make one cluster

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Technologies Used Inside a Hard Drive

• Low-level formatting – sector markings are written to


the hard drive at the factory
– Not the same as high-level formatting performed for
Operating System installation
• Firmware, BIOS and OS use logical block
addressing (LBA) to address all hard drive sectors
– Size of each sector + total number of sectors
determine drive capacity
• S.M.A.R.T – Self-Monitoring Analysis ad Reporting
Technology
– Used to predict when a drive is likely to fail
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Interface Standards Used By a Hard


Drive
• Current internal hard drives methods
– Parallel ATA (PATA) and Serial ATA (SATA)
• External hard drive methods
– External SATA (eSATA), SCSI, FireWire, USB, Fibre
Channel

Figure 6-5 Timeline of interface standards used by internal drives

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Interface Standards Used by a Hard


Drive
• Interface standards define data speeds and transfer
methods with a computer system
– Also define types of cables and connectors
• Standards
– Developed by Technical Committee T13
– Published by American National Standards Institute
(ANSI)

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Table 5-1 Summary of ATA interface standards for storage devices

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Parallel ATA or EIDE Drive Standards


• Parallel ATA or EIDE drive standards or Integrated
Drive Electronics (IDE)
– Allows one or two IDE connectors on a motherboard
• Each use 40-pin data cable
– Advanced Technology Attachment Packet Interface
• Required by optical drives (e.g., CD or DVD)
• Types of PATA ribbon cables
– Older cable
• 40 pins and 40 wires
– 80-conductor IDE cable
• 40 pins and 80 wires
– Maximum recommended length of either is 18”
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Figure 6-9 In comparing the 80-conductor cable to the 40-conductor cable, note they are
about the same width, but the 80-conductor cable has many more and finer wires

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Parallel ATA or EIDE Drive Standards


• Transferring data between hard drive and memory
– Direct memory access (DMA) transfer mode
• Transfers data directly from drive to memory without
involving the CPU
• Seven DMA modes
– Programmed Input/Output (PIO) transfer mode
• Involves the CPU, slower than DMA mode
• Five PIO modes used by hard drives
– Ultra DMA
• Data transferred twice for each clock beat, at the
beginning and again at the end

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Parallel ATA or EIDE Drive Standards

• Startup BIOS
– Autodetects drive and selects fastest mode that drive
and BIOS support
• Independent Device Timing
– Motherboard chipset feature
– Supported by most chipsets today
– Allows two hard drives to share same parallel ATA
cable but use different standards
– Allows two drives to run at different speeds as long as
motherboard supports them

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Serial ATA Standards


• Serial ATA standards
– Developed by a consortium of manufacturers
• Serial ATA International Organization (SATA-IO)
– Uses serial data path rather than traditional parallel
data path
– Advantages
• Faster than PATA interfaces and used by all drive types
• Multiple connectors are easy to configure
• Supports hot-swapping (hot-plugging)
– Connect and disconnect drive while system is running
• Internal cable length: up 1 meter
• Cable does not hinder airflow (narrower than PATA)
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Figure 6-12 A SATA data cable and SATA power cable

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Table 5-2 SATA Standards

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Serial ATA Standards

• Serial ATA standards (cont’d.)


– Motherboard or expansion card can provide external
SATA (eSATA) ports for external drives
– External SATA (eSATA)
• eSATA drives use special external shielded serial ATA
cable up to 2 meters long
– Purchasing considerations
• SATA standards for the drive and motherboard need to
match for optimum speed
• If no match, system runs at the slower speed

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SCSI Technology
• Small Computer System Interface standards
– Used primarily in servers
– Support either 7 or 15 devices (standard dependent)
– Provides better performance than ATA standards
• SCSI subsystem
– SCSI controller types: embedded or host adapter
– Host adapter supports internal and external devices
– Daisy chain: combination of host adapter and devices
– Each device on bus assigned SCSI ID (0 - 15)
– A physical device can embed multiple logical devices
• Assigned a Logical Unit Number (LUN)
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Figure 6-15 Using a SCSI bus, a SCSI host adapter card can support
internal and external SCSI devices

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SCSI Technology
• Terminating resistor
– Plugged into last device at end of the chain
– Reduces electrical noise or interference on the cable
• Categories of SCSI Standards
– 8-bit (narrow SCSI)
• Uses 50-pin SCSI connector (A cable) or 25-pin SCSI
connector that looks like a parallel port (DB-25)
– 16-bit (wide SCSI)
• Uses 68-pin SCSI connector (P cable)

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SCSI Technology
• Various SCSI versions
– SCSI-1, SCSI-2, and SCSI-3
• Also known as regular SCSI, Fast SCSI, Ultra SCSI
• Serial attached SCSI (SAS)
– Allows for more than 15 devices on single chain
– Uses smaller, longer, round cables
– Uses smaller hard drive form factors, larger capacities
– Compatible with serial ATA

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Figure 6-18 The most popular SCSI connectors are 50-pin, A-cable connectors
For narrow SCSI and 68-pin, P-cable connectors for wide SCSI
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How to Select and Install Hard Drives

• Topics covered
– Selecting a hard drive
– Installation details for SATA drive, IDE drive
– How to install hard drive in a bay too wide for drive
– How to set up a RAID system

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Selecting a Hard Drive

• Hard drive must match OS and motherboard


– Need to know what standards the motherboard or
controller card providing the drive interface can use
– Consult documentation for the board or card
• BIOS uses autodetection to prepare the device
– Drive capacity and configuration selected
– Best possible ATA standard becomes part of
configuration

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Selecting a Hard Drive

• Considerations:
– Drive capacity
• Today’s desktop hard drives range from 60 GB – 2 TB
– Spindle speed
• Most common is 7200 RPM
• The higher the RPMs, the faster the drive
– Interface standard
• Use standards the motherboard supports
– Cache or buffer size
• Ranges from 2 MB to 64 MB

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Steps to Install a Serial ATA Drive

• Some SATA drives have two power connectors


– Choose only one to use
– Never install two power cords at the same time
• If you have a SATA drive and a PATA connector (or
vice versa)
– Purchase an adapter to make the drive fit the
motherboard connection
– Can also purchase a SATA and/or PATA controller
card

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Steps to Install a Serial ATA Drive

• Step 1: Know your starting point


– How is your system configured?
– Is everything working properly?
– Write down what you know about the system
• Step 2: Read the documentation and prepare your
work area
– Read all installation instructions first
– Visualize all the steps
– Protect against ESD and avoid working on carpet

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Steps to Install a Serial ATA Drive

• Step 2: Read the documentation and prepare your


work area (cont’d)
– Handle the drive carefully
– Do not touch any exposed circuitry
– Drain static electricity from the package and from your
body by touching metal for at least 2 seconds
– Do not place the drive on the computer case or on a
metal table

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Steps to Install a Serial ATA Drive

• Step 3: Install the drive


– Turn off the computer and unplug it
– Decide which bay will hold the drive
– Slide drive in the bay and secure it (use two screws
on both sides)
– Use correct motherboard serial ATA connector
– Connect a 15-pin SATA or 5-pin Molex power
connector from the power supply to the drive
– Check all connections and power up the system
– Verify drive recognized correctly via BIOS setup

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Steps to Install a Serial ATA Drive

• Now ready to prepare the hard drive for first use


– Boot from Windows setup CD or DVD
• Follow directions on the screen to install Windows on
the new drive
– If installing a second hard drive with Windows
installed on first drive use Windows Disk
Management utility to partition and format the second
drive

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Steps to Install a Serial ATA Drive

• Installing a drive in a removable bay


– Unplug the cage fan from its power source
– Turn handle on each locking device counterclockwise
to remove it
– Slide the bay to the front and out of the case
– Insert hard drive in the bay
• Use two screws on each side to anchor the drive in the
bay
– Slide the bay back into the case
– Reinstall the locking pins

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Figure 6-30 The removable bay Figure 6-31 Install the hard drive in the
has a fan in front and is anchored bay using two screws on each side of the
to the case with locking pins drive

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Steps to Configure and Install a Parallel


ATA Drive
• Configurations for four EIDE devices in a system:
– Primary IDE channel, master device
– Primary IDE channel, slave device
– Secondary IDE channel, master device
– Secondary IDE channel, slave device

Figure 6-35 A motherboard supporting PATA has two IDE channels;


each can support a master and slave drive using a single EIDE cable

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Steps to Configure and Install a Parallel


ATA Drive
• Master or slave designations are made by:
– Setting jumpers or DIP switches
– Use special cable-select data cable
– Color-coded connectors
• Blue end connects to motherboard; black end connects
to drive

Figure 6-36 80-conductor cable connectors are color-coded

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Steps to Configure and Install a Parallel


ATA Drive
• Motherboard color-coding
– Primary channel connector: blue
– Secondary channel connector: black
– Ensures ATA/66/100/133 hard drive installed on the
primary IDE channel

Figure 6-37 The primary IDE channel connector is often color-coded as blue

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Steps to Configure and Install a Parallel


ATA Drive
• Step 1: Open case, decide how to configure drives
• Step 2: Set the jumpers on the drive

Figure 6-38 A PATA drive most


likely will have diagrams of jumper
settings for master and slave
options printed on the drive housing

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Table 5-4 Jumper settings on a parallel ATA hard drive

Figure 6-39 Jumper settings on a hard drive and their meanings

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Steps to Configure and Install a Parallel


ATA Drive
• Step 3: Mount the drive in the bay
– Decide whether to connect data cable before or after
inserting bay inside the computer case
• Then install drive in bay and connect the cable in
whichever order works best
– Connect data cable to IDE connector on motherboard
– Install a power connection to each drive
– Before replacing case cover verify installation

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Setting Up Hardware RAID

• RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks)


– Also: Redundant Array of Independent Disks
– A technology that configures two or more hard drives
to work together as an array of drives
• Why use RAID?
– To improve fault tolerance by writing two copies of it,
each to a different hard drive
– To improve performance by writing data to two or
more hard drives to that a single drive is not
excessively used

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Types of RAID

• Spanning – sometimes called JBOD (just a bunch of


disks)
– Uses two hard drives to hold a single Windows
volume
– When one drive is full, data is written to second drive
• RAID 0 – uses two or more physical disks
– Writes to physical disks evenly across all disks so that
no one disk receives all activity
– Windows calls RAID 0 a striped volume

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Types of RAID

• RAID 1: Mirroring
– Duplicates data on one drive to another drive and is
used for fault tolerance (mirrored volume)
• RAID 5: uses three or more drives
– Stripes data across drives and uses parity checking
– Data is not duplicated
• RAID 10: RAID 1+0 (pronounced RAID one zero)
– Combination of RAID 1 and RAID 0
– Takes at least 4 disks

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How to Implement Hardware RAID

• Hardware implementation
– Hardware RAID controller or RAID controller card
• Motherboard does the work, Windows unaware of
hardware RAID implementation
• Software implementation uses operating system
• Best RAID performance
– All hard drives in an array should be identical in
brand, size, speed, other features
• If Windows installed on a RAID hard drive RAID
must be implemented before Windows installed

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Figure 6-45 RAID controller card


provides four SATA internal
connectors

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How to Implement Hardware Raid


• General directions to install RAID 5 array using
three matching SATA drives
– Install drives in the computer case and connect each
to motherboard
– Boot system and enter BIOS setup
• Verify drives recognized, select option to configure
SATA, and select RAID
– Reboot the system
• Press Ctrl and I to enter the RAID configuration utility
– Select option 1 to “Create RAID Volume”
• Select RAID 5 (Parity), stripe size value, volume size
• Create volume
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Figure 6-47 Configure SATA ports on Figure 6-48 BIOS utility to configure a RAID
the motherboard to enable RAID array

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Figure 6-49 Make your choices for the RAID array

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About Tape Drives and Floppy Drives

• Tape drives can use a SATA, PATA, or SCSI


interface
• As a technician, you may be called on to support old
floppy drives
• Both tape drives and floppy drives are covered in
this section

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Installing Tape Drives and Selecting


Tape Media
• Tapes drives – an inexpensive way of backing up a
hard drive
• WORM (write once read many) – assures data
written will not be deleted or overwritten
• Disadvantage: data is stored by sequential access
– To read data from anywhere on the tape, you must
start at the beginning of the tape and read until you
find the data you want
– Slow and inconvenient

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Installing Tape Drives and Selecting


Tape Media
• Two kinds of tapes:
– Full-sized data cartridges
– Minicartridges
• More popular because their drives can fit into a
standard 3-inch drive bay of a PC case
• When selecting a tape drive, consider:
– How many and what type of cartridges the drive can
use
– How it interfaces with the computer
• External drives can connect to a computer using a
USB, FireWire, SCSI, SAS, or eSATA port
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Installing a Floppy Drive

• Floppy disk drive (FDD)


– 3 ½” floppy disk format
– Holds only 1.44 MB of data
– Floppy drive subsystem
• Floppy drive, ribbon cable, power cable, connections
• Today’s floppy drive cables have a connector at each
end to accommodate a single drive
• Older cables have an extra connector or two in the
middle of the cable for a second floppy drive

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Installing a Floppy Drive


• Install the drive in a bay as you would a hard drive
• Connect floppy drive data cable and power cord to
motherboard
– If you connect the cable the wrong way, the drive light
will stay lit and will not work
– Be sure the end of the cable with the twist connects to
the drive and the other end to the motherboard
• Replace cover, turn on computer, and enter BIOS
setup to verify installation

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Summary

• A hard disk drive (HDD) comes in 3.5” for desktop


and 2.5” for laptops
• A hard drive can be magnetic, solid-state, or hybrid
• Most hard drives use the ATA interface standards
• Two ATA categories are parallel ATA and serial ATA
• S.M.A.R.T is a self-monitoring technology whereby
the BIOS monitors the health of a hard drive
• SCSI interface standards include narrow and wide
SCSI and can use a variety of cables and
connectors
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Summary
• When selecting a hard drive, consider storage
capacity, technology, spindle speed, interface
standard, and buffer size
• SATA drives require no configuration and are
installed using a power cord and a data cable
• PATA drives require you to set a jumper to
determine if the drive will be the single drive, master,
or slave on a single cable
• RAID technology uses an array of hard drives to
provide fault tolerance and/or improvement in
performance

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Summary

• Hardware RAID is implemented using the


motherboard BIOS or a RAID controller card
• Software RAID is implemented in Windows
• Tape drives are an inexpensive way to back up an
entire hard drive or portions of it
• Today’s floppy disks are 3.5” high-density disks that
hold 1.44 MB of data
• After a floppy disk drive is installed, you must
configure the drive in BIOS setup

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