The document discusses various types of external memory used in computer systems, including magnetic disks, optical disks, magnetic tape, and RAID (redundant array of independent disks). Magnetic disks come in varieties such as hard disks, floppy disks, and removable hard disks. Optical disks discussed include CD-ROM, CD-R/W, DVD, and their uses, capacities, and read/write capabilities. RAID systems provide data redundancy across multiple disks for reliability and performance.
The document discusses various types of external memory including magnetic disk, RAID, removable optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on magnetic disk technology including materials, read/write mechanisms, data organization, and disk formatting. It also describes different RAID levels from 0 to 6 and their characteristics. Finally, it covers optical storage technologies like CD-ROM, CD-R, DVD, and compares their capabilities.
Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer MO-05EriekOrlando
油
Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer Organisasi dan Arsitektur Komputer
The document discusses various types of external memory including magnetic disk, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on technologies such as hard disks, floppy disks, CDs, DVDs, and tape drives. RAID configurations are explained which provide data redundancy across multiple disks.
The document discusses different types of external memory storage technologies including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on how read and write mechanisms work for magnetic disks using conductive coils and magnetic fields. It also describes the organization of data on disks including tracks, sectors, and constant angular velocity to optimize storage capacity and access times. Characteristics of different disk types like removable vs non-removable, fixed vs movable heads, and single vs multiple platters are outlined. Finally, it summarizes optical disk technologies like CD-ROMs and DVDs including capacities, speeds, read mechanisms, and advantages/disadvantages compared to magnetic disks.
This chapter discusses types of external memory including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on disk formatting and organization, read/write mechanisms, disk speed characteristics, and RAID configurations for magnetic disks. Optical disks discussed include CD-ROM, CD-R, DVD, and high definition optical disks. Characteristics of magnetic tape such as Linear Tape-Open (LTO) tape drives are also summarized.
Computer memory can be classified into different types. The main types include semiconductor memory, cache memory, magnetic disks, optical disks, and tape drives. Semiconductor memory includes volatile RAM and non-volatile ROM. Cache memory is high-speed memory placed between the CPU and main memory for faster access. Magnetic disks include hard disks used for permanent storage and floppy disks for removable storage. Optical disks include CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray disks. Tape drives are used for backup storage. RAID (Redundant Array of Independent Disks) utilizes multiple disks for performance, capacity, and reliability.
This document discusses various types of external memory used in computer systems, including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. Magnetic disks are the most commonly used and come in removable and fixed varieties, using magnetic coating and read/write heads. Optical disks like CDs and DVDs provide high capacity storage using lasers to read encoded data pits. While slower than disks, magnetic tape remains useful for backup and archiving due to its very low cost per gigabyte.
Primary memory, also known as main memory or internal memory, is directly accessible to the CPU and holds temporary data during program execution. It includes RAM, ROM, PROM, and EPROM. Secondary memory, also called external memory or auxiliary memory, provides larger storage and retains data when power is removed. Common examples are hard disks, CD-ROMs, magnetic tapes, and flash memory. Secondary memory is organized into files and directories for abstraction and includes additional metadata.
This document discusses various types of external memory used in computer systems, including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on the technology and operation of magnetic disks, including disk formatting, read/write mechanisms, data organization, and different types of RAID configurations. The document also covers optical storage technologies like CD-ROM, DVD, and high-definition optical disks, describing their capacities, formats, and read/write capabilities.
This chapter discusses various types of external memory including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on the technology behind hard disks, floppy disks, CDs, DVDs, Blu-ray disks, tape drives, and RAID systems. The key aspects covered include disk formatting, read/write mechanisms, data organization, seek times, transfer rates, capacities, and the advantages and disadvantages of different external memory types.
This document discusses various types of external memory including magnetic disk, optical storage like CD-ROM and DVD, and magnetic tape. It provides details on the technology behind each type, focusing on magnetic disks. Key topics covered include disk formatting, read/write mechanisms, data organization, disk geometry, seek time, rotational latency, RAID levels 0-6, and characteristics of different optical storage media.
This document discusses various types of external memory including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on disk formatting, read/write mechanisms, data organization, disk geometry, and RAID levels 0-6. Optical disks discussed include CD-ROM, CD-R, CD-RW, DVD, and high definition optical disks. Characteristics and capacities of linear tape-open (LTO) tape drives are also summarized.
Magnetic storage devices like hard drives and floppy disks store data using magnetism on metal platters. Optical storage devices like CDs and DVDs use lasers to read data encoded in pits and lands on plastic discs. Solid state devices store data using physical switches rather than magnetism or lasers. Common storage devices include hard drives for primary storage, floppy disks and flash drives for removable storage, and tapes for backups. Data is organized on disks in tracks and sectors to allow efficient reading and writing.
The document describes different types of storage devices used in computers. It discusses magnetic storage devices like hard drives and floppy disks which use magnets to write binary data to iron oxide coated disks. Optical storage devices like CDs and DVDs are also covered, using lasers to write to disks. Finally, solid state devices are mentioned, which store data physically without moving parts, like flash memory in USB drives and cameras.
These Notes from the class of BS EDUCATION 1st Semester (Spring) Session 2023-2027 Teacher :Ch Naveed Afzal
semester started in march 2023 and end in july 2023
The document discusses different types of computer memory and storage devices. It describes RAM, ROM, PROM, and EPROM as memory devices, and how they differ in terms of volatility and accessibility. For storage, it outlines magnetic devices like hard disks, floppy disks, and tapes, as well as optical disks like CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray. It provides details on the storage capacities and characteristics of each type of memory and storage device.
This document discusses different types of disk storage devices. It begins by defining disk storage as using magnetic, optical, or mechanical methods to record data on rotating disks. The first commercial disk storage device was the IBM 350 in 1956. Disk storage offers advantages like speed of access, control over data, lower cost per unit of data, and reliability compared to other storage methods. The document then describes different types of disk storage devices like hard disk drives, optical storage devices, magnetic tape drives, floppy disks, and portable hard disks. It explains the mechanisms, structures, and characteristics of each type.
The document discusses different types of secondary storage used in computer systems, focusing on magnetic disk storage. It describes diskettes and hard disks, the basic components and technologies used. Diskettes are flexible and store 1.44 MB or less, while hard disks are rigid platters that can store hundreds of gigabytes. Hard disks assemble multiple platters and use read/write heads to access and transfer data via tracks and sectors.
This document provides an introduction to computer hardware components for beginners. It explains that computers have materials, tools, a work area, storage, and units of measurement similar to workshops. The main hardware components discussed are the central processing unit, memory, storage devices like hard disks, floppy disks, CDs, DVDs, and flash drives. Formats and capacities for different storage devices are provided. Disk organization into tracks and sectors is overviewed. Examples of calculating storage capacities of magnetic disks are shown.
The document discusses different types of computer memory including cache memory, RAM, and solid state drives. It explains that cache memory is faster than RAM and stores frequently accessed data from RAM to improve performance. It also describes the components and workings of traditional hard disk drives, comparing factors like latency and transfer rates for different RPM speeds. Solid state drives are also introduced as an alternative to hard drives that have advantages like faster access times but higher costs.
This document discusses database storage systems and file structures. It begins by defining primary, secondary, and tertiary storage devices. It then discusses various memory types like cache, RAM, USB, SSD, magnetic disks, magnetic tapes, and optical disks. The document also covers topics like memory hierarchy, RAID types, file organization methods, file operations, and categories of file operations.
The document discusses various types of storage media including memory, floppy disks, hard disks, CDs, DVDs, tapes, smart cards, microfilm, and microfiche. It compares their storage capacities, how data is stored and accessed, common uses, and life expectancies.
magnetic and optic based storage devicesSarab Singh
油
The document describes different types of storage devices used to store data on computers. It discusses magnetic storage devices like hard drives and floppy disks which use magnets to write binary data to an iron oxide coated disk. Optical storage devices like CDs and DVDs use lasers to read and write data by detecting lands and pits on the disk's surface. The document provides details on how each type of device works, common formats and capacities, as well as newer technologies like recordable CDs and DVDs.
This document discusses different types of storage devices and how they work. It focuses on magnetic storage devices like diskettes and hard disks, which store data by aligning magnetic particles on a surface. Diskettes and hard disks both use magnetic fields to write binary data as 1s and 0s on their surfaces, but hard disks can store much more data and access it faster than diskettes. The document explains how disks are formatted to organize data into tracks and sectors for efficient storage and retrieval.
This document discusses various secondary storage devices, including floppy disks, hard disks, CDs, DVDs, USB drives, and Blu-ray discs. It provides details on the history and evolution of floppy disks, describing their decreasing sizes over time from 8 inches to 3.5 inches. Hard disks are described as using rapidly rotating discs coated with magnetic material to store and retrieve data. CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray discs are all described as optical storage using lasers, with each subsequent technology providing higher storage capacity and data transfer speeds.
This document discusses storage and file structure. It covers physical storage media like magnetic disks, flash memory, and tape storage. It describes how disks are organized into tracks and sectors. RAID systems are discussed which provide redundancy across multiple disks for reliability and use striping for increased performance. Different RAID levels are outlined which provide varying levels of redundancy through techniques like mirroring, parity bits, and error correction codes.
The document summarizes storage technologies and architectures. It discusses the hierarchy of storage technologies from fastest to slowest including RAM, disk, optical, and tape. It describes common disk architectures and trends in disk capacity and density over time. The document also covers RAID levels, file systems, tape storage, optical storage, emerging technologies like MRAM and MEMS, and networked storage architectures.
Primary memory, also known as main memory or internal memory, is directly accessible to the CPU and holds temporary data during program execution. It includes RAM, ROM, PROM, and EPROM. Secondary memory, also called external memory or auxiliary memory, provides larger storage and retains data when power is removed. Common examples are hard disks, CD-ROMs, magnetic tapes, and flash memory. Secondary memory is organized into files and directories for abstraction and includes additional metadata.
This document discusses various types of external memory used in computer systems, including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on the technology and operation of magnetic disks, including disk formatting, read/write mechanisms, data organization, and different types of RAID configurations. The document also covers optical storage technologies like CD-ROM, DVD, and high-definition optical disks, describing their capacities, formats, and read/write capabilities.
This chapter discusses various types of external memory including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on the technology behind hard disks, floppy disks, CDs, DVDs, Blu-ray disks, tape drives, and RAID systems. The key aspects covered include disk formatting, read/write mechanisms, data organization, seek times, transfer rates, capacities, and the advantages and disadvantages of different external memory types.
This document discusses various types of external memory including magnetic disk, optical storage like CD-ROM and DVD, and magnetic tape. It provides details on the technology behind each type, focusing on magnetic disks. Key topics covered include disk formatting, read/write mechanisms, data organization, disk geometry, seek time, rotational latency, RAID levels 0-6, and characteristics of different optical storage media.
This document discusses various types of external memory including magnetic disks, optical disks, and magnetic tape. It provides details on disk formatting, read/write mechanisms, data organization, disk geometry, and RAID levels 0-6. Optical disks discussed include CD-ROM, CD-R, CD-RW, DVD, and high definition optical disks. Characteristics and capacities of linear tape-open (LTO) tape drives are also summarized.
Magnetic storage devices like hard drives and floppy disks store data using magnetism on metal platters. Optical storage devices like CDs and DVDs use lasers to read data encoded in pits and lands on plastic discs. Solid state devices store data using physical switches rather than magnetism or lasers. Common storage devices include hard drives for primary storage, floppy disks and flash drives for removable storage, and tapes for backups. Data is organized on disks in tracks and sectors to allow efficient reading and writing.
The document describes different types of storage devices used in computers. It discusses magnetic storage devices like hard drives and floppy disks which use magnets to write binary data to iron oxide coated disks. Optical storage devices like CDs and DVDs are also covered, using lasers to write to disks. Finally, solid state devices are mentioned, which store data physically without moving parts, like flash memory in USB drives and cameras.
These Notes from the class of BS EDUCATION 1st Semester (Spring) Session 2023-2027 Teacher :Ch Naveed Afzal
semester started in march 2023 and end in july 2023
The document discusses different types of computer memory and storage devices. It describes RAM, ROM, PROM, and EPROM as memory devices, and how they differ in terms of volatility and accessibility. For storage, it outlines magnetic devices like hard disks, floppy disks, and tapes, as well as optical disks like CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray. It provides details on the storage capacities and characteristics of each type of memory and storage device.
This document discusses different types of disk storage devices. It begins by defining disk storage as using magnetic, optical, or mechanical methods to record data on rotating disks. The first commercial disk storage device was the IBM 350 in 1956. Disk storage offers advantages like speed of access, control over data, lower cost per unit of data, and reliability compared to other storage methods. The document then describes different types of disk storage devices like hard disk drives, optical storage devices, magnetic tape drives, floppy disks, and portable hard disks. It explains the mechanisms, structures, and characteristics of each type.
The document discusses different types of secondary storage used in computer systems, focusing on magnetic disk storage. It describes diskettes and hard disks, the basic components and technologies used. Diskettes are flexible and store 1.44 MB or less, while hard disks are rigid platters that can store hundreds of gigabytes. Hard disks assemble multiple platters and use read/write heads to access and transfer data via tracks and sectors.
This document provides an introduction to computer hardware components for beginners. It explains that computers have materials, tools, a work area, storage, and units of measurement similar to workshops. The main hardware components discussed are the central processing unit, memory, storage devices like hard disks, floppy disks, CDs, DVDs, and flash drives. Formats and capacities for different storage devices are provided. Disk organization into tracks and sectors is overviewed. Examples of calculating storage capacities of magnetic disks are shown.
The document discusses different types of computer memory including cache memory, RAM, and solid state drives. It explains that cache memory is faster than RAM and stores frequently accessed data from RAM to improve performance. It also describes the components and workings of traditional hard disk drives, comparing factors like latency and transfer rates for different RPM speeds. Solid state drives are also introduced as an alternative to hard drives that have advantages like faster access times but higher costs.
This document discusses database storage systems and file structures. It begins by defining primary, secondary, and tertiary storage devices. It then discusses various memory types like cache, RAM, USB, SSD, magnetic disks, magnetic tapes, and optical disks. The document also covers topics like memory hierarchy, RAID types, file organization methods, file operations, and categories of file operations.
The document discusses various types of storage media including memory, floppy disks, hard disks, CDs, DVDs, tapes, smart cards, microfilm, and microfiche. It compares their storage capacities, how data is stored and accessed, common uses, and life expectancies.
magnetic and optic based storage devicesSarab Singh
油
The document describes different types of storage devices used to store data on computers. It discusses magnetic storage devices like hard drives and floppy disks which use magnets to write binary data to an iron oxide coated disk. Optical storage devices like CDs and DVDs use lasers to read and write data by detecting lands and pits on the disk's surface. The document provides details on how each type of device works, common formats and capacities, as well as newer technologies like recordable CDs and DVDs.
This document discusses different types of storage devices and how they work. It focuses on magnetic storage devices like diskettes and hard disks, which store data by aligning magnetic particles on a surface. Diskettes and hard disks both use magnetic fields to write binary data as 1s and 0s on their surfaces, but hard disks can store much more data and access it faster than diskettes. The document explains how disks are formatted to organize data into tracks and sectors for efficient storage and retrieval.
This document discusses various secondary storage devices, including floppy disks, hard disks, CDs, DVDs, USB drives, and Blu-ray discs. It provides details on the history and evolution of floppy disks, describing their decreasing sizes over time from 8 inches to 3.5 inches. Hard disks are described as using rapidly rotating discs coated with magnetic material to store and retrieve data. CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray discs are all described as optical storage using lasers, with each subsequent technology providing higher storage capacity and data transfer speeds.
This document discusses storage and file structure. It covers physical storage media like magnetic disks, flash memory, and tape storage. It describes how disks are organized into tracks and sectors. RAID systems are discussed which provide redundancy across multiple disks for reliability and use striping for increased performance. Different RAID levels are outlined which provide varying levels of redundancy through techniques like mirroring, parity bits, and error correction codes.
The document summarizes storage technologies and architectures. It discusses the hierarchy of storage technologies from fastest to slowest including RAM, disk, optical, and tape. It describes common disk architectures and trends in disk capacity and density over time. The document also covers RAID levels, file systems, tape storage, optical storage, emerging technologies like MRAM and MEMS, and networked storage architectures.
The Golden Gate Bridge a structural marvel inspired by mother nature.pptxAkankshaRawat75
油
The Golden Gate Bridge is a 6 lane suspension bridge spans the Golden Gate Strait, connecting the city of San Francisco to Marin County, California.
It provides a vital transportation link between the Pacific Ocean and the San Francisco Bay.
Indian Soil Classification System in Geotechnical EngineeringRajani Vyawahare
油
This PowerPoint presentation provides a comprehensive overview of the Indian Soil Classification System, widely used in geotechnical engineering for identifying and categorizing soils based on their properties. It covers essential aspects such as particle size distribution, sieve analysis, and Atterberg consistency limits, which play a crucial role in determining soil behavior for construction and foundation design. The presentation explains the classification of soil based on particle size, including gravel, sand, silt, and clay, and details the sieve analysis experiment used to determine grain size distribution. Additionally, it explores the Atterberg consistency limits, such as the liquid limit, plastic limit, and shrinkage limit, along with a plasticity chart to assess soil plasticity and its impact on engineering applications. Furthermore, it discusses the Indian Standard Soil Classification (IS 1498:1970) and its significance in construction, along with a comparison to the Unified Soil Classification System (USCS). With detailed explanations, graphs, charts, and practical applications, this presentation serves as a valuable resource for students, civil engineers, and researchers in the field of geotechnical engineering.
Preface: The ReGenX Generator innovation operates with a US Patented Frequency Dependent Load Current Delay which delays the creation and storage of created Electromagnetic Field Energy around the exterior of the generator coil. The result is the created and Time Delayed Electromagnetic Field Energy performs any magnitude of Positive Electro-Mechanical Work at infinite efficiency on the generator's Rotating Magnetic Field, increasing its Kinetic Energy and increasing the Kinetic Energy of an EV or ICE Vehicle to any magnitude without requiring any Externally Supplied Input Energy. In Electricity Generation applications the ReGenX Generator innovation now allows all electricity to be generated at infinite efficiency requiring zero Input Energy, zero Input Energy Cost, while producing zero Greenhouse Gas Emissions, zero Air Pollution and zero Nuclear Waste during the Electricity Generation Phase. In Electric Motor operation the ReGen-X Quantum Motor now allows any magnitude of Work to be performed with zero Electric Input Energy.
Demonstration Protocol: The demonstration protocol involves three prototypes;
1. Protytpe #1, demonstrates the ReGenX Generator's Load Current Time Delay when compared to the instantaneous Load Current Sine Wave for a Conventional Generator Coil.
2. In the Conventional Faraday Generator operation the created Electromagnetic Field Energy performs Negative Work at infinite efficiency and it reduces the Kinetic Energy of the system.
3. The Magnitude of the Negative Work / System Kinetic Energy Reduction (in Joules) is equal to the Magnitude of the created Electromagnetic Field Energy (also in Joules).
4. When the Conventional Faraday Generator is placed On-Load, Negative Work is performed and the speed of the system decreases according to Lenz's Law of Induction.
5. In order to maintain the System Speed and the Electric Power magnitude to the Loads, additional Input Power must be supplied to the Prime Mover and additional Mechanical Input Power must be supplied to the Generator's Drive Shaft.
6. For example, if 100 Watts of Electric Power is delivered to the Load by the Faraday Generator, an additional >100 Watts of Mechanical Input Power must be supplied to the Generator's Drive Shaft by the Prime Mover.
7. If 1 MW of Electric Power is delivered to the Load by the Faraday Generator, an additional >1 MW Watts of Mechanical Input Power must be supplied to the Generator's Drive Shaft by the Prime Mover.
8. Generally speaking the ratio is 2 Watts of Mechanical Input Power to every 1 Watt of Electric Output Power generated.
9. The increase in Drive Shaft Mechanical Input Power is provided by the Prime Mover and the Input Energy Source which powers the Prime Mover.
10. In the Heins ReGenX Generator operation the created and Time Delayed Electromagnetic Field Energy performs Positive Work at infinite efficiency and it increases the Kinetic Energy of the system.
Integration of Additive Manufacturing (AM) with IoT : A Smart Manufacturing A...ASHISHDESAI85
油
Combining 3D printing with Internet of Things (IoT) enables the creation of smart, connected, and customizable objects that can monitor, control, and optimize their performance, potentially revolutionizing various industries. oT-enabled 3D printers can use sensors to monitor the quality of prints during the printing process. If any defects or deviations from the desired specifications are detected, the printer can adjust its parameters in real time to ensure that the final product meets the required standards.
This PPT covers the index and engineering properties of soil. It includes details on index properties, along with their methods of determination. Various important terms related to soil behavior are explained in detail. The presentation also outlines the experimental procedures for determining soil properties such as water content, specific gravity, plastic limit, and liquid limit, along with the necessary calculations and graph plotting. Additionally, it provides insights to understand the importance of these properties in geotechnical engineering applications.
2. Types of External Memory
Magnetic Disk
RAID
Removable
Optical
CD-ROM
CD-Writable (WORM)
CD-R/W
DVD
Magnetic Tape
3. Magnetic Disk
Metal or plastic disk coated with
magnetizable material (iron oxiderust)
Range of packaging
Floppy
Winchester hard disk
Removable hard disk
4. Data Organization and
Formatting
Concentric rings or tracks
Gaps between tracks
Reduce gap to increase capacity
Same number of bits per track (variable packing
density)
Constant angular velocity
Tracks divided into sectors
Minimum block size is one sector
May have more than one sector per block
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
8. 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
9. Floppy Disk
8, 5.25, 3.5
Small capacity
Up to 1.44Mbyte (2.88M never popular)
Slow
Universal
Cheap
10. 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
11. Winchester Hard Disk (2)
Universal
Cheap
Fastest external storage
Getting larger all the time
Multiple Gigabyte now usual
12. 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?
13. Finding Sectors
Must be able to identify start of track and
sector
Format disk
Additional information not available to user
Marks tracks and sectors
14. Gap1 Id Gap2 Data Gap3 Gap1 Id Gap2 Data Gap3
Track
Sync
Byte
Head Sector CRC Sync
Byte
Data CRC
ST506 format (old!)
Foreground reading
Find others
15. 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)
16. 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)
17. Speed
Seek time
Moving head to correct track
(Rotational) latency
Waiting for data to rotate under head
Access time = Seek + Latency
Transfer rate
18. 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
19. 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
20. 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
21. 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
22. 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
23. 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
24. 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
N.B. DOES NOT MEAN 5 DISKS!!!!!
25. Optical Storage CD-ROM
Originally for audio
650Mbytes giving over 70 minutes audio
Polycarbonate coated with highly reflective
coat, usually aluminum
Data stored as pits
Read by reflecting laser
Constant packing density
Constant linear velocity
26. CD-ROM Drive Speeds
Audio is single speed
Constant linier velocity
1.2 ms-1
Track (spiral) is 5.27km long
Gives 4391 seconds = 73.2 minutes
Other speeds are quoted as multiples
e.g. 24x
The quoted figure is the maximum the drive
can achieve
29. Random Access on
CD-ROM
Difficult
Move head to rough position
Set correct speed
Read address
Adjust to required location
(Yawn!)
30. CD-ROM for & against
Large capacity (?)
Easy to mass produce
Removable
Robust
Expensive for small runs
Slow
Read only
31. Other Optical Storage
CD-Writable
WORM
Now affordable
Compatible with CD-ROM drives
CD-RW
Erasable
Getting cheaper
Mostly CD-ROM drive compatible
32. DVD - whats 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!!!
33. 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
34. 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!
37. Digital Audio Tape (DAT)
Uses rotating head (like video)
High capacity on small tape
4Gbyte uncompressed
8Gbyte compressed
Backup of PC/network servers