CH06 External Memory
CH06 External Memory
William Stallings
Computer Organization
and Architecture
9th Edition
+ Chapter 6
External Memory
+
Magnetic Disk
A disk is a circular platter constructed of nonmagnetic material,
called the substrate, coated with a magnetizable material
Traditionally the substrate has been an aluminium or aluminium alloy
material
Recently glass substrates have been introduced
and Write
named the head
• In many systems there are two heads, a read head
and a write head
Mechanisms
• During a read or write operation the head is
stationary while the platter rotates beneath it
+ magnetic field
Cylinders
+
+ Disk
The head mechanism provides a
classification of disks into three Classification
types
The narrower the head, the closer Designed to operate closer to the
it must be to the platter surface to disk’s surface than conventional
function rigid disk heads, thus allowing
greater data density
A narrower head means
narrower tracks and therefore Is actually an aerodynamic foil that
greater data density rests lightly on the platter’s surface
when the disk is motionless
The closer the head is to the disk The air pressure generated by a
the greater the risk of error from
spinning disk is enough to make
impurities or imperfections the foil rise above the surface
Typical Hard Disk Parameters
Access time
+
Disk Performance Parameters
When the disk drive is operating the disk is rotating at constant speed
To read or write the head must be positioned at the desired track and at the beginning of the
desired sector on the track
Track selection involves moving the head in a movable-head system or electronically selecting one head
on a fixed-head system
Once the track is selected, the disk controller waits until the appropriate sector rotates to line up with the
head
Seek time
On a movable–head system, the time it takes to position the head at the track
Access time
The sum of the seek time and the rotational delay
The time it takes to get into position to read or write
Transfer time
Once the head is in position, the read or write operation is then performed as the sector moves under the
head
This is the data transfer portion of the operation
+ Consists of 7 levels
Instead of an error correcting code, a In the event of a disk failure, all of the data
are still available in what is referred to as
simple parity bit is computed for the
reduced mode
set of individual bits in the same
position on all of the data disks Return to full operation requires that the
failed disk be replaced and the entire
Can achieve very high data transfer contents of the failed disk be regenerated on
rates the new disk
In a transaction-oriented environment
performance suffers
+ Raid 4
RAID
Level 4
Characteristics Performance
Memory
+
Figure 6.10
Flash Memory Operation
Solid State Drive (SSD)
Durability
Longer lifespan
Production:
The disk is formed from a resin such as polycarbonate
Digitally recorded information is imprinted as a series of microscopic pits on the
surface of the polycarbonate
This is done with a finely focused, high intensity laser to create a master disk
The master is used, in turn, to make a die to stamp out copies onto polycarbonate
The pitted surface is then coated with a highly reflective surface, usually
aluminum or gold
This shiny surface is protected against dust and scratches by a top
coat of clear acrylic
Finally a label can be silkscreened onto the acrylic
+
CD Operation
+
CD-ROM Block Format
+
CD-ROM is appropriate for the distribution of large CD-ROM
amounts of data to a large number of users
Serial recording
Data are laid out as a sequence of bits along each track
Data are read and written in contiguous blocks called physical records
Magnetic Tape
Features
+
Table 6.7
LTO Tape Drives
+ Summary
External Memory
Chapter 6
RAID
Magnetic disk
RAID level 0
Magnetic read and write
mechanisms RAID level 1
Data organization and formatting RAID level 2
Physical characteristics RAID level 3
Disk performance parameters RAID level 4
RAID level 5
Solid state drives
RAID level 6
Flash memory
SSD compared to HDD Optical memory
SSD organization Compact disk
Practical issues Digital versatile disk
Magnetic tape High-definition optical disks
+ Key terms Chapter 6
6.3
6.4
6.5
6.6
6.8
6.10