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DISK STORAGE

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Title: Slide 1 Author: Nagy Last modified by: David W. Embley Created Date: 10/27/2006 1:25:44 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: DISK STORAGE


1
DISK STORAGE
  • IBM 305 RAMAC, 1956
  • 5 MB on 50 24-inch disks
  • 9 Kbits/s transfer rate

Before 1956, computers had core memory,
multi-track mag tape, and drums.
2
Installed size of office suites and disk capacity
3
Disk jargon
  • Latency seek time (to get to track) plus
  • wait tune (lthalf a revolution) 2-200 ms
  • Transfer rate MB/sec without arm movement
  • hundreds of MB/s
  • Platter One or two recording surfaces
  • RPM Revolutions per minute (thousands)
  • Capacity Gigabytes
  • Track density
  • Linear (or recording) density

4
Data is recorded on thin layer of magnetic
material
flying read and write head
Al Hoagland gns former boss
Max today 333 GB per platter 120 MB/s
transfer rate 15,000 rpm (2 ms latency)
5
Removable Winchester disk drive
  • IBM 30MB 3340
  • 1973
  • Heads and platters
  • encased in a
  • sealed unit

6
36 GB 10,000 RPM, 10-platter disk (IBM)
lt1 cent per MB Storage cost 1 million percent
less than 20 years ago (67 per year) All the
heads are mounted on the same assembly, and move
together.
7
Longitudinal vs. Perspendicular recording
8
Recording Head
9
Flying read/write head (air bearing slider)
HGAHead Gimbal Assembly
http//www.hitachigst.com/tech/techlib.nsf/techdoc
s/AE7AEDB327B2E21186256D330078799B/file/Femto_whi
te_paper_FINAL_082505.pdf
10
Recording density (Gb/ in2 against year)
Compound Annual Growth Rate
11
Kryders Law growth of hard drive capacity
12
Working of hard disk
  • Working of hard disk

13
Nomenclature
14
DISK GEOMETRY
  • Tracks and cylinders
  • Formatting marks the beginning and end of
    512-byte sectors
  • (it takes up to 20
  • of capacity)
  • (there are far more tracks than shown)

15
Platter size
  • Platter diameters
  • 5.12 old PCs
  • 3.74 current PCs
  • 3.00 10,000 rpm drives
  • 2.50 15,000 rpm drives 34MB Microdrive
  • 1.80 PC card
  • 1.30 obsolete PCMCIA
  • 1.00 CompactFlash (cameras, pocket-PCs, )

16
Windows disk organization
  • Boot Master Record (including Partition Table)
  • track (cylinder) 0, side (head) 0, sector 1
  • loads the operating system
  • File Allocation Table (FAT)
  • manages free clusters
  • Root Folder (directories)
  • Data Area

17
Fundamental Principles
  • Tape, drum and disk storage are based on
    Faradays Law change in magnetic field induces
    voltage
  • Magnetic disk is a direct-access block-storage
    device.(large capacity, fast transfer, long
    latency( O/S exploits these characteristics)
  • Each bit consists of a few hundred magnetic
    grains.
  • Access time limited by mechanical motion (head
    travel to track and rotational speed)
  • Periphery of disk must not break the sound
    barrier.
  • Recording density limited by distance to R/W
    head.Heads fly a few nanometers above surface.
  • Sooner or later, solid-state storage will win out.
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