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Disk memory systems store data either magnetically using hard disks or optically using CDs, DVDs, or Blu-ray discs. Hard disks can store much larger amounts of data than floppy disks and use spinning magnetic platters and flying read/write heads rather than direct contact. Data on all disk types is organized into tracks and sectors for efficient storage and retrieval. Common interfaces for hard disks have transitioned from early standards like ST-506 to more advanced interfaces like IDE, SCSI, and now SATA.

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Chetan Kandpal
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
61 views

Dms PDF

Disk memory systems store data either magnetically using hard disks or optically using CDs, DVDs, or Blu-ray discs. Hard disks can store much larger amounts of data than floppy disks and use spinning magnetic platters and flying read/write heads rather than direct contact. Data on all disk types is organized into tracks and sectors for efficient storage and retrieval. Common interfaces for hard disks have transitioned from early standards like ST-506 to more advanced interfaces like IDE, SCSI, and now SATA.

Uploaded by

Chetan Kandpal
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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13–4 DISK MEMORY SYSTEMS

• Disk memory is used to store long-term data.


• Many types of disk storage systems are available and
they use magnetic media.
– except optical disk memory that stores data
on a plastic disk
• Optical disk memory is either:
– CD-ROM (compact disk/read only memory)
which read, but never written
– WORM (write once/read mostly), read most of
the time, but can be written once by a laser
• Optical disk memory that can be read and written
many times is becoming available.
– there is still a limitation on the number of write
operations allowed
• The latest optical disk technology is called DVD
(digital-versatile disk).
– also available in high-resolution versions for
video and data storage as Blu-ray (50G) or
HD-DVD (30G)
Floppy Disk Memory
• The floppy, or flexible disk was once the most
common and basic form of disk memory.
– the floppy is beginning to vanish and may disappear
shortly in favor of the USB pen drive
• Floppy disk magnetic recording media have been
made available in three sizes:
– 8 standard
– 51/4 mini-floppy
– 31/2 micro-floppy.
• All disks have several things in common.
• They are all organized so that data are stored in
tracks and sectors.
– a track is a concentric ring of data stored on
the surface of a disk
– a sector is a common subdivision of a track
designed to hold a reasonable amount of data
• In many systems, a sector holds either 512
or 1024 bytes of data.
– size of a sector can vary from 128 bytes to the length
of one entire track
Figure 13–18 The format of a 51/4 mini-floppy disk.
– the index hole is so
the system can find
the start of a track and
first sector (00)
– tracks are numbered
from track 00, the
outermost track,
toward the center
– sectors are often
numbered from sector
00 on the outermost
track
The 5 1/4 Mini-floppy Disk
• The 51/4 floppy is very difficult to find and is used
only with older microcomputer systems.
• The floppy disk is rotated at 300 RPM inside its
semi-rigid plastic jacket.
– the head mechanism in a floppy drive makes physical
contact with the surface of the disk,
which causes wear and damage to the disk
• Most mini-floppy disks are double-sided.
– data are written on the top & bottom surfaces
Figure 13–19 The 51/4 mini-floppy disk.

– a set of tracks called


a cylinder consists
of one top and one
bottom track
– Cylinder 00 consists
of the outermost top and
bottom tracks
– the magnetic recording technique used to store data
on the surface of the disk is called non-return to zero
(NRZ) recording
– with NRZ recording, magnetic flux placed on the
surface of the disk never returns to zero
– arrows show the polarity of the magnetic field stored
on the surface of the disk

Figure 13–20 The non-return to zero (NRZ) recording technique.


– data are stored in the form of MFM (modified
frequency modulation) on modern floppy disks
– each bit time is 2.0 µs wide on a double-density disk
– data are recorded at the rate of 500,000 bits per
second

Figure 13–21 Modified frequency modulation (MFM) used with disk memory.
The 3 1/2 Micro-Floppy Disk
• A much improved version of the mini-floppy disk
described earlier.
• The micro-floppy is packaged in a rigid plastic
jacket that will not bend easily.
– a much greater degree of protection to the disk
• The head door remains closed until the disk is
inserted into the drive.
– once in the drive, the mechanism slides open
the door, exposing the surface of the disk to
the read/write heads
Figure 13–22 The 31/2 micro-floppy disk.
• On the mini-floppy, a piece of tape was placed
over a notch on the side of the
jacket to prevent writing.
– this plastic tape easily became dislodged
inside disk drives, causing problems
• The micro-floppy has an integrated plastic slide
replacing the tape write-protection.
• To write-protect (prevent writing) the micro-
floppy disk, the plastic slide is moved to open the
hole through the disk jacket.
– allows light to strike a sensor that inhibits writing
Pen Drives
• Pen drives, or flash drives use flash memory to
store data.
– a driver treats the pen drive as a floppy with
tracks and sectors, though it really does not
• The FAT system is used for the file structure.
– memory in this type of drive is serial memory
• When connected to the USB bus, the OS
recognizes it and allows data to be
transferred between it and the computer.
Hard Disk Memory
• Hard disk memory has a much larger capacity than
the floppy disk memory.
– often called a fixed disk because it is not removable like
the floppy disk
• A hard disk is also often called a rigid disk.
– the term Winchester drive is also used, but
less commonly today
• Common, low-cost (less than $1 per gigabyte)
sizes are presently 20G bytes to 500G bytes.
– sizes approaching 1 T (tera) bytes are available
• The hard disk memory uses a flying head to store
and read data.
• A flying head, which is very small and light, does
not touch the surface of the disk.
– it flies above the surface on a film of air that is carried
with the surface of the disk as it spins
• The hard disk typically spins at 3000 to 15,000
RPM, many times faster than a floppy.
– higher rotational speed allows the head to fly
just over the top of the surface of the disk
• There is no wear on the hard disk’s surface.
• Problems can arise because of flying heads.
– if power is interrupted or the drive is jarred, the head
can crash onto the disk surface, which
can damage the disk surface or the head
• Some drive manufacturers have included a system
to automatically park the head when power is
interrupted.
– when the heads are parked, they are moved
to a safe landing zone (unused track) when
power is disconnected
• Another difference between a floppy and a hard
drive is the number of heads and disk surfaces.
– a floppy has two heads, one for the upper
surface and one for the lower surface
– the hard drive has up to eight disk surfaces (four
platters), with up to two heads per surface
• Each time a new cylinder is obtained by moving
the head assembly, 16 new tracks
are available under the heads.
• See Figure 13–23.
• Heads are moved from track to track by using
either a stepper motor or a voice coil.
– the stepper motor is slow and noisy; moving the head
assembly requires one step per cylinder
– the voice coil mechanism is quiet and quick; the heads
can be moved many cylinders with one sweeping
motion

• Stepper-motor-type head positioning mechanisms


can become misaligned
– while the voice coil mechanism corrects for
any misalignment
Figure 13–23 A hard disk drive that uses four heads per platter.
• Hard drives often store information in sectors that
are 512 bytes long.
• Data are addressed in clusters of eight or more
sectors, which contain 4096 bytes (or more) on
most hard disk drives.
• All hard drives use today RLL encoding.
RLL Storage
• The term run-length limited (RLL) means the run
of zeros (zeros in a row) is limited.
– a common RLL encoding scheme is RLL 2,7, which
means the run of zeros is always between
two and seven
• An RLL drive often contains 27 tracks instead of
the 18 found on the MFM drive.
• Fig 13–24 is a comparison of MFM & RLL.
– besides holding more information, the RLL drive can be
written and read at a higher rate
Figure 13–24 A comparison of MFM with RLL using data 101001011.
• There are a number of disk drive interfaces in use
today.
– the oldest is the ST-506 interface, which uses either
MFM or RLL data
• Newer standards are in use today.
– which include ESDI, SCSI, and IDE
• The IDE system is becoming the standard hard
disk memory interface.
• The enhanced small disk interface (ESDI) system is
capable of transferring data at
rates approaching 10M bytes per second.
• ST-506 interface approaches 860K bytes/sec.
• The small computer system interface (SCSI) allows
up to seven different disk or other interfaces to be
connected to the computer through same
interface controller.
– SCSI is found in some PC-type computers and also in
the Apple Macintosh system
• An improved version, SCSI-II, has started to
appear in some systems.
– in the future, this interface may be replaced
with IDE in most applications
• One of the most common systems is the
integrated drive electronics (IDE) system.
– incorporates the disk controller in the drive and
attaches to the host system through a small interface
cable
• IDE drives are found in newer IBM PS-2 systems
and many clones.
– even Apple computer systems are starting
to be found with IDE drives
• The IDE interface is also capable of driving other
I/O devices besides the hard disk.
• IDE usually contains at least a 256K- to 8M-byte
cache memory for disk data.
– the cache speeds disk transfers
• Access times for an IDE drive are often less than 8
ms.
– access time for a floppy-disk is about 200 ms
• IDE is also called ATA, an acronym for
AT attachment where “AT” means the Advanced
Technology computer.
• The latest is the serial ATA interface or SATA.
– this interface transfers serial data at 150 MBps
(or 300 MBps for SATA2), faster than IDE
• Not yet released is SATA3, which transfers data at
a rate of 600 MBps.
• The transfer rate is higher because the logic 1
level is no longer 5.0 V. It is now 0.5 V.
– which allows higher data transfer rates because
it takes less time for the signal to rise to 0.5 V than to
5.0 V
Optical Disk Memory
• Optical disk memory is commonly available
in two forms:
– CD-ROM (compact disk/read only memory)
– WORM (write once/read mostly)
• CD-ROM is the lowest cost, but suffers from lack of
speed.
– access times are typically 300 ms or longer
• As systems develop and become more visually
active, use of the CD-ROM drive
will become even more common.
Figure 13–25 The optical CD-ROM memory system.
• The WORM drive sees far more commercial
application than the CD-ROM.
– application is very specialized due to its nature
• WORM is normally used to form an audit trail of
transactions spooled onto the WORM and
retrieved only during an audit.
– one might call the WORM an archiving device
• The advantage of the optical disk is durability.
• About the only way to destroy data on an optical
disk is to break it or deeply scar it.
• The new versatile read/write CD-ROM, called a
DVD, became available in the mid 1990’s.
• New to this technology are the Blu-ray DVD from
Sony Corporation and the HD-DVD
from Toshiba Corporation.
– Blu-ray DVD capacity is 50 GB; HD-DVD, 30 GB
• The big change from older DVDs is a switch from a
red laser to a blue laser.
– a blue laser has a higher frequency, which
means it can read more information per second from
the DVD, hence a high storage density

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