Disk

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Hard Disks

Low-level format- organizes both sides of each


platter into tracks and sectors to define where items
will be stored on the disk.
Partitioning: divide hard disk into separate areas
called partitions; each partition functions as if it
were a separate hard disk drive.
High-level format defines the file allocation table
(FAT) for each partition, which is a table of
information used to locate files on the disk.

Storage Systems
Hard Drives
2 Types: SCSI and IDE
IDE drives originally developed as alternative to more expensive SCSI
drives.
Modern versions called EIDE drives.
Support up to 4 multigigabyte drives.
If you want more devices, use SCSI or USB
Low-level formatted at the factory

Low Level Formatting


Low level format scans disk for defects and
sets aside sectors with defects so they are not
used for data.
IDE drives should never be low level
formatted by a user or technician. Only high
level format necessary.

Installing IDE/EIDE drives


IDE supports TWO drives in a system
one master (boot disk) and one slave
set master and slave using jumpers

EIDE supports FOUR drives per system


2 drives on each of 2 cables
only one master, all others are slaves

IDE and EIDE drives both use 40-pin ribbon


cable aligned to pin 1

Hard Drive

Floppies
Two sizes
3.5 inch
5.25 inch

3.5 inch holds 1.44 MB for High density and 750 KB


for Double Density
Connected with 34 pin ribbon cable
Two Floppy Drives possible
Has twist in cable to distinguish A drive from B drive

SCSI
Pronounced Scuzzy
Small Computer Systems Interface
For wide range of peripheral devices, including hard
disks, tape drives, optical drives, CD-ROMs and disk
arrays.
8 devices can connect to a daisy chain
This chain must be terminated at both ends
Each device on chain is assigned unique device ID
number that is determined by jumpers or DIP switches

Installing and configuring SCSI

SCSI bus supports 8 devices


There are eight SCSI IDs numbered 0 through 7
ID 7 is always reserved for the SCSI host adapter
SCSI hard disk, if used as a boot drive, is assigned
SCSI ID 0
If you have both IDE and SCSI hard drive, IDE
drive should be boot drive

Types of SCSIs
SCSI 1- 5 MB transfer rate, Centronics 50 pin
or DB 25, has 8 bit bus
SCSI 2 -also SCSI Fast Wide, includes 16 bit
bus , called Wide SCSI, and twice as fast
transfer rate
SCSI 3- Includes Ultra SCSI, Wide Ultra
SCSI, and Ultra 2 SCSI, 16 bit bus with up to
80 MBps transfer rate

RAID
Redundant Array of Independent Disks
Category of disk drives that employs 2 or more
drives in combination for fault tolerance (error
recovery)
3 on test will be:
RAID 0, RAID 1, RAID 5

RAID continued
RAID 0- Striped disk without parity
RAID 3- Parallel transfer with parity
RAID 5- Data striping with parity

How Data is Organized on Disk


Tracks circular areas of the disk
Length of a track one circumference of disk
Over 1000 on a hard disk
Data first written to outer most track
Sectors Divides tracks sections
On a floppy 9 sectors exits
Cylinders Logical groupings of the the same track on each disk surface in a disk unit
Clusters Groups of sectors used by operating system
64 sectors in one cluster

Tracks and sectors


Can store
512 bytes

Sector =
small arc
of track

Track=
concentric
circle

Interleaving
Allows the read/write head to use the rotation
of the disk to its advantage
One sector is written to and the disk skips to
several sectors down

Formatting
Low level formatting done at factory
Builds the File Allocation Table (FAT)
Physically scans the disk media for defects

Remember FAT is always located at Track 0


High level formatting is automatically done
during installation of operating system

Operating System File Systems

DOS uses FAT


Windows 3.x uses Virtual FAT
Win 95 uses VFAT and FAT32
Win NT uses NTFS

Partitioning
FDISK command is used
Divides hard drive into logical subdivisions
which are seen by the operating system as
separate logical hard disks.
Hard drives divided into primary and extended
partitions. The primary partition boots the
system. Can have up to 4 primary partitions

Partitioning
Extended can be divided up to 23 times on disk.
Partitioning disks improves disk efficiency through
reduced cluster size.
In DOS, Win 3x and early versions of Win 95 a hard
disk over 2 GB must be divided into smaller partitions
Now Win 95 and Win 98 can create a primary partition
of up to 8 GB
Following partition, the first sector on cylinder 0
reserved for master boot record

Disk compression
Reduce amount of space taken up by files by
substituting codes for repeating patterns of data
To access data on compressed disk, must load
disk compression utility into RAM first
This disk compression utility works between
OS and disk controller to intercept requests and
compress or decompress files- the result is
slower disk access

Backing up data
Archival: full backup- contains everything from
the hard disk
Incremental: contains only files that have been
modified since last (previous) backup
Differential: backs up all the data modified
since last full backup
Copy backup: copy duplicate of file, directory,
or disk to another disk

CD ROM
Capacity of 650 MB
Transfer speeds of around 24X speed
X refers to the transfer speed in the first CD ROM,
which was 150 K

CD is the slowest device on PC


When installing to IDE system must be
configured as slave
WORM and EO

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