Dell N5694 User Guide - Page 47
RAID 0, RAID 1, SCSI Bus, SCSI Device, SCSI ID, Single-Ended, SureLINK, Ultra SCSI
View all Dell N5694 manuals
Add to My Manuals
Save this manual to your list of manuals |
Page 47 highlights
RAID RAID 0 RAID 1 SCSI Bus SCSI Device SCSI ID Single-Ended SCSI SureLINK Ultra SCSI Redundant Array of Independent Disks. An array of multiple independent hard disk drives that yields better performance than a Single Large Expensive Disk (SLED). A RAID disk subsystem improves I/O performance on a server using only a single drive. The RAID array appears to the host server as a single storage unit. I/O is expedited because several disks can be accessed simultaneously. Provides block "striping" across multiple drives, yielding higher performance than is possible with individual drives. This level does not provide any redundancy. Drives are paired and mirrored. All data is 100 percent duplicated on a drive of equivalent size. A host adapter and one or more SCSI devices connected by cables in a linear configuration. The host adapter may exist anywhere on the bus, allowing connection of both internal and external SCSI devices. A system may have more than one SCSI bus by using a multichannel host adapter or by using multiple host adapters. Any device that conforms to the SCSI standard and is attached to the SCSI bus by a SCSI cable. This includes SCSI host adapters, SCSI disk drives, SCSI CD-ROM drives, and so on. An identifier that addresses specific devices on the SCSI bus and determines device selection when multiple devices contend for ownership of the SCSI bus. Wide SCSI buses support SCSI IDs 0-15, and narrow SCSI buses support SCSI IDs 0-7. A device gains ownership of the bus according to the priority of its SCSI ID. The order of priority, from highest to lowest, is: 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, 2, 1, 0, 15, 14, 13, 12, 11, 10, 9, 8. The host adapter is usually set to the highest priority SCSI ID, which is SCSI ID 7. A hardware specification for connecting SCSI devices. It references each SCSI signal to a common ground. In contrast, differential SCSI uses a separate ground for each signal. The domain validation method developed and used by LSI Logic. SureLINK Domain Validation provides three levels of integrity checking: Basic (level 1), Enhanced (level 2), and Margined (level 3). A standard for SCSI data transfers. It allows a transfer rate of up to 20 Mbytes/s over an 8-bit SCSI bus and up to 40 Mbytes/s over a 16-bit SCSI bus. Glossary of Terms Version 2.2 Copyright © 2002-2004 by LSI Logic Corporation. All rights reserved. A-3