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Seagate Cheetah 15K.5, full of perpendicular goodness with 300 GB space and a mad 15,000 rpm

Seagate Cheetah 15K.5, full of perpendicular goodness with 300 GB space and a mad 15,000 rpm. Chapter Goals. Describe the distinguishing characteristics of primary and secondary storage Describe the devices used to implement primary storage Describe memory allocation schemes

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Seagate Cheetah 15K.5, full of perpendicular goodness with 300 GB space and a mad 15,000 rpm

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  1. Seagate Cheetah 15K.5, full of perpendicular goodness with 300 GB space and a mad 15,000 rpm

  2. Chapter Goals • Describe the distinguishing characteristics of primary and secondary storage • Describe the devices used to implement primary storage • Describe memory allocation schemes • Compare and contrast secondary storage technology alternatives Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  3. Chapter Goals (continued) • Describe factors that determine storage device performance • Choose appropriate secondary storage technologies and devices Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  4. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  5. Storage Devices • Consist of a read/write mechanism and a storage medium • Device controller provides interface • Primary storage devices • Support immediate execution of programs • Secondary storage devices • Provide long-term storage of programs and data Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  6. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  7. Characteristics of Storage Devices • Speed • Volatility • Access method • Portability • Cost and capacity Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  8. Speed • Primary storage speed • Typically faster than secondary storage speed by a factor of 105 or more • Expressed in nanoseconds (billionths of a second) • Secondary storage speed • Expressed in milliseconds (thousandths of a second) • Data transfer rate = 1 second/access time (in seconds) x unit of data transfer (in bytes) Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  9. Volatility • Primary storage devices are generally volatile • Cannot reliably hold data for long periods • Secondary storage devices are generally nonvolatile • Hold data without loss over long periods of time Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  10. Access Method • Serial access (linear) • Random access (direct access) • Parallel access (simultaneous) Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  11. Portability • Removable storage media with standardized formats (e.g., compact disc and tape storage) • Typically results in slower access speeds Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  12. Cost and Capacity • Cost increases: • With improved speed, volatility, or portability • As access method moves from serial to random to parallel access method • Primary storage - expensive (high speed and combination of parallel/random access methods) • Capacity of secondary storage devices is greater than primary storage devices Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  13. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  14. Memory-Storage Hierarchy Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  15. Primary Storage Devices • Critical performance characteristics • Access speed • Data transfer unit size • Must closely match CPU speed and word size to avoid wait states Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  16. Storing Electrical Signals • Directly • By devices such as batteries and capacitors • Trade off between access speed and volatility • Indirectly • Uses energy to alter the state of a device; inverse process regenerates equivalent electrical signal • Modern computers use memory implemented with semiconductors (RAM and NVM) Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  17. Random Access Memory • Characteristics • Microchip implementation using semiconductors • Ability to read and write with equal speed • Random access to stored bytes, words, or larger data units • Basic types • Static RAM (SRAM) – uses transistors • Dynamic RAM (DRAM) – uses transistors and capacitors Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  18. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  19. Random Access Memory • To bridge performance gap between memory and microprocessors • Read-ahead memory access • Synchronous read operations • On-chip memory caches Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  20. Nonvolatile Memory • Random access memory with long-term or permanent data retention • Usually relegated to specialized roles and secondary storage; slower write speeds and limited number of rewrites • Generations of devices (ROM, Erasable Programmable ROM=EPROM, and Electronically EPROM = EEPROM) Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  21. Nonvolatile Memory • Flash RAM (most common NVM) • Competitive with DRAM in capacity and read performance • Relatively slow write speed • Limited number of write cycles • NVM technologies under development • Ferroelectric RAM • Polymer memory Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  22. Memory Packaging • Dual in-line packages (DIPs) • Early RAM and ROM circuits • Single in-line memory module (SIMM) • Standard RAM package in late 1980s • Double in-line memory module (DIMM) • Newer packaging standard • A SIMM with independent electrical contacts on both sides of the module Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  23. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  24. CPU Memory Access • Critical design issues for primary storage devices and processors • Physical organization of memory • Organization of programs and data within memory • Method(s) of referencing specific memory locations Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  25. Physical Memory Organization • Physical memory • Actual number of memory bytes that physically are installed in the machine • Most and least significant bytes • Big endian and little endian • Addressable memory • Highest numbered storage byte that can be represented Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  26. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  27. Memory Allocation and Addressing • Memory allocation • Assignment of specific memory addresses to system software, application programs, and data • Absolute addressing • Indirect addressing (relative addressing) • Offset register Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  28. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  29. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  30. Magnetic Storage • Exploits duality of magnetism and electricity • Converts electrical signals into magnetic charges • Captures magnetic charge on a storage medium • Later regenerates electrical current from stored magnetic charge • Polarity of magnetic charge represents bit values zero and one Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  31. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  32. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  33. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  34. Magnetic Tape • Ribbon of plastic with a coercible (usually metallic oxide) surface coating • Mounts in a tape drive for reading and writing • Relatively slow serial access • Compounds magnetic leakage; wraps upon itself • Susceptible to stretching, friction, temperature variations Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  35. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  36. Magnetic Tape • Two approaches to recording data • Linear recording • Helical scanning • Several formats and standards (e.g., DDS [DAT], AIT, Mammoth, DLT, LTO) Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  37. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  38. Magnetic Disk • Flat, circular platter with metallic coating that is rotated beneath read/write heads • Random access device; read/write head can be moved to any location on the platter • Hard disks and floppy disks • Cost performance leader for general-purposeon-line secondary storage Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  39. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  40. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  41. Average seek time: (average) time required to move from one track to another [Also called track-to-track seek time] Latency: time required for disk to rotate to beginning of correct sector [Also called rotational delay] Transfer time: time required to transfer a block of data to the disk controller buffer Locating a Block of Data Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  42. Disk Access Times • Avg. Seek time (track-to-track seek time) • average time to move from one track to another • Avg. Latency time (rotational delay • average time to rotate to the beginning of the sector • Avg. Latency time = ½ * 1/rotational speed • Transfer time • 1/(# of sectors * rotational speed) • Total Time to access a disk block • Avg. seek time + avg. latency time + avg. transfer time Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  43. Example • Calculate the average access time for a disk rotating at 7,200 rpm, with Avg. Seek time 5 microseconds, and 500 sectors/track. • SOL: Average Access Time =(seek) + (rot. Delay) + (Transfer Time) • Average Access Time =(5 microseconds) + (½) * (1/7,200RPM) + 1/(500* 7,200RPM • =.000005 + ½ * .0001389 (60 sec) + .000000278 (60 sec) • =.000005+.004167+.0000167=.0041887sec….ANS • Which performance value is the most significant? Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  44. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  45. Disk Block Formats Single Data Block Header for Windows disk Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  46. To increase capacity per platter, disk manufacturers divide tracks into zones and vary the sectors per track in each zone. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  47. Optical Mass Storage Devices • Store bit values as variations in light reflection • Higher areal density and longer data life than magnetic storage • Standardized and relatively inexpensive • Uses: read-only storage with low performance requirements, applications with high capacity requirements, and where portability in a standardized format is needed Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  48. Optical storage devices read data by shining laser beam on the disc. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  49. Layout: CD-ROM vs. Standard Disk CD-ROM Hard Disk Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

  50. Systems Architecture, Fifth Edition

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