Maxtor QUICKVIEW 300 User Manual

Page 62

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Breaking the 137GB Storage Barrier

Quickview 300

80/100/120/160/200/250/300GB PATA

A-3

A.1.2

Solving the 137 Gigabyte Capacity Barrier

As described earlier, the issue causing the 137-gigabyte barrier is the 28-

bit addressing method of the original ATA specification. A change to

expand this method was required to provide more address bits for the

interface, allowing significant growth for many years to come. A critical

issue in expanding the addressing capability was maintaining

compatibility with the existing installed base of products.

The new ATA standard, ATA/ATAPI-6, resolves this issue by increasing

the maximum number of bits used for addressing from 28 to 48. This

solution increases the maximum capacity of an ATA device to 144

petabytes while maintaining compatibility with current ATA products.

A.1.3

How is the Extension Implemented?

The 48-bit Address feature set provides a method to address devices with

capacities up to approximately 144 petabytes by increasing the number

of bits used to specify logical block addresses (LBAs) from 28 to 48.

The

feature set also provides a method to increase the number of sectors that

can be transferred by a single command from 256 to 65,536 by

increasing the number of bits specifying sector count to 16 bits.

New commands specific to this feature set have been defined so that

devices can implement the new feature set in addition to previously

defined commands. Devices implementing the 48-bit Address feature set

commands will also implement commands that use 28-bit addressing in

order to maintain interoperability with older system components. In

addition, 8-bit and 48-bit commands may be intermixed.

The 48-bit Address feature set operates in LBA addressing only. Support

of the 48-bit Address feature set is indicated in the IDENTIFY DEVICE

response data. In a device implementing the 48-bit Address feature set,

the registers used for addressing are, in fact, a two-byte

deep FIFO. Each

time one of these registers is written, the new content written is placed

into the “most recently written” location and the previous content of the

register is moved to “previous content” location. A host may read the

“previous content” of the registers by first setting a bit in the Device

Control register to 1 and then reading the desired register.

A.1.4

What Do the Drives Need to Meet the Spec?

The challenge to drive manufacturers is to develop and implement new

interface chips on drives that can accept and decode the new 48-bit

addressing scheme. Many functions of decoding the commands sent to

and from the drive are automated in the silicon of the drive interface

ASIC, and this is where drive manufacturers must update their designs.

Maxtor is the leader in development efforts and is the first to deliver a

product with the capacity and drive technology to deliver greater than

137 gigabytes of capacity.

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