William Stallings Computer Organization and Architecture 6 Edition External Memory
William Stallings Computer Organization and Architecture 6 Edition External Memory
Computer Organization
and Architecture
6th Edition
Chapter 6
External Memory
1
Magnetic Disk
• Disk substrate coated with magnetizable
material (iron oxide…rust)
• Substrate used to be aluminium
• Now glass
—Improved surface uniformity
– Increases reliability
—Reduction in surface defects
– Reduced read/write errors
—Lower flight heights (See later)
—Better stiffness
—Better shock/damage resistance
2
Inductive Write MR Read
3
Disk Data Layout
Disk Velocity
• Bit near centre of rotating disk passes fixed
point slower than bit on outside of disk
• Increase spacing between bits in different tracks
• Rotate disk at constant angular velocity (CAV)
—Gives pie shaped sectors and concentric tracks
—Individual tracks and sectors addressable
—Move head to given track and wait for given sector
—Waste of space on outer tracks
– Lower data density
• Can use zones to increase capacity
—Each zone has fixed bits per track
—More complex circuitry
4
Disk Layout Methods Diagram
Finding Sectors
• Must be able to identify start of track and sector
• Format disk
—Additional information not available to user
—Marks tracks and sectors
5
ST506 format (old!)
Sync Sync
Byte Track Head Sector CRC Data CRC
Byte
• Foreground reading
—Find others
Characteristics
• Fixed (rare) or movable head
• Removable or fixed
• Single or double (usually) sided
• Single or multiple platter
• Head mechanism
—Contact (Floppy)
—Fixed gap
—Flying (Winchester)
6
Fixed/Movable Head Disk
• Fixed head
—One read write head per track
—Heads mounted on fixed ridged arm
• Movable head
—One read write head per side
—Mounted on a movable arm
Removable or Not
• Removable disk
—Can be removed from drive and replaced with
another disk
—Provides unlimited storage capacity
—Easy data transfer between systems
• Nonremovable disk
—Permanently mounted in the drive
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Multiple Platter
• One head per side
• Heads are joined and aligned
• Aligned tracks on each platter form cylinders
• Data is striped by cylinder
—reduces head movement
—Increases speed (transfer rate)
Multiple Platters
8
Cylinders
Floppy Disk
• 8”, 5.25”, 3.5”
• Small capacity
—Up to 1.44Mbyte (2.88M never popular)
• Slow
• Universal
• Cheap
• Obsolete?
9
Winchester Hard Disk (1)
• Developed by IBM in Winchester (USA)
• Sealed unit
• One or more platters (disks)
• Heads fly on boundary layer of air as disk spins
• Very small head to disk gap
• Getting more robust
10
Removable Hard Disk
• ZIP
—Cheap
—Very common
—Only 100M
• JAZ
—Not cheap
—1G
• L-120 (a: drive)
—Also reads 3.5” floppy
—Becoming more popular?
• All obsoleted by CD-R and CD-R/W?
Speed
• Seek time
—Moving head to correct track
• (Rotational) latency
—Waiting for data to rotate under head
• Access time = Seek + Latency
• Transfer rate
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Timing of Disk I/O Transfer
RAID
• Redundant Array of Independent Disks
• Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks
• 6 levels in common use
• Not a hierarchy
• Set of physical disks viewed as single logical
drive by O/S
• Data distributed across physical drives
• Can use redundant capacity to store parity
information
12
RAID 0
• No redundancy
• Data striped across all disks
• Round Robin striping
• Increase speed
—Multiple data requests probably not on same disk
—Disks seek in parallel
—A set of data is likely to be striped across multiple
disks
RAID 1
• Mirrored Disks
• Data is striped across disks
• 2 copies of each stripe on separate disks
• Read from either
• Write to both
• Recovery is simple
—Swap faulty disk & re-mirror
—No down time
• Expensive
13
RAID 2
• Disks are synchronized
• Very small stripes
—Often single byte/word
• Error correction calculated across corresponding
bits on disks
• Multiple parity disks store Hamming code error
correction in corresponding positions
• Lots of redundancy
—Expensive
—Not used
RAID 3
• Similar to RAID 2
• Only one redundant disk, no matter how large
the array
• Simple parity bit for each set of corresponding
bits
• Data on failed drive can be reconstructed from
surviving data and parity info
• Very high transfer rates
14
RAID 4
• Each disk operates independently
• Good for high I/O request rate
• Large stripes
• Bit by bit parity calculated across stripes on
each disk
• Parity stored on parity disk
RAID 5
• Like RAID 4
• Parity striped across all disks
• Round robin allocation for parity stripe
• Avoids RAID 4 bottleneck at parity disk
• Commonly used in network servers
15
RAID 6
• Two parity calculations
• Stored in separate blocks on different disks
• User requirement of N disks needs N+2
• High data availability
—Three disks need to fail for data loss
—Significant write penalty
RAID 0, 1, 2
16
RAID 3 & 4
RAID 5 & 6
17
Data Mapping For RAID 0
18
CD Operation
19
CD-ROM Format
Random Access on
CD-ROM
• Difficult
• Move head to rough position
• Set correct speed
• Read address
• Adjust to required location
• (Yawn!)
20
CD-ROM for & against
• Large capacity (?)
• Easy to mass produce
• Removable
• Robust
21
DVD - what’s in a name?
• Digital Video Disk
—Used to indicate a player for movies
– Only plays video disks
• Digital Versatile Disk
—Used to indicate a computer drive
– Will read computer disks and play video disks
• Dogs Veritable Dinner
• Officially - nothing!!!
DVD - technology
• Multi-layer
• Very high capacity (4.7G per layer)
• Full length movie on single disk
—Using MPEG compression
• Finally standardized (honest!)
• Movies carry regional coding
• Players only play correct region films
• Can be “fixed”
22
DVD – Writable
• Loads of trouble with standards
• First generation DVD drives may not read first
generation DVD-W disks
• First generation DVD drives may not read CD-
RW disks
• Wait for it to settle down before buying!
CD and DVD
23
Magnetic Tape
• Serial access
• Slow
• Very cheap
• Backup and archive
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