IBM SG24-4576-00 User Manual

Page 33

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It defines an 8-bit interface with a data transfer rate of 5 MBps. SCSI-II is the
second SCSI standard and is defined in ANSI standard X3T9.2/375R REV10K.
It defines extensions to SCSI-I which allow for 16 and 32-bit devices, a 10
MBps transfer rate, and other enhancements discussed below.

Common Command Set

The SCSI standard defines a set of commands which must be interpreted by
all devices that attach to a SCSI bus. This is called the common command
set. Unique devices may implement their own commands, which can be sent
by a device driver and interpreted by the device. The advantage of this
architecture is that the SCSI adapter does not have to change when new
devices with new capabilities are introduced.

Tagged Command Queuing (TCQ)

TCQ is a SCSI-II enhancement. It increases performance in DASD intensive
server environments. With SCSI-I systems, only two commands could be
sent to a fixed disk; the disk would store one while operating on the other.
With TCQ it is possible to send multiple commands to the fixed disk and the
disk stores the commands and executes each command in the sequence that
gives optimal performance.

Scatter/Gather

Scatter/Gather allows devices to transfer data to and from non-contiguous or
scattered areas of system memory and on-board cache independently of the
CPU. This, again, increases CPU overlap. The Scatter/Gather feature allows
for high performance, even in systems that have fragmented memory buffers.

Fast/Wide Devices and Controllers

Fast refers to the doubling of the data transfer rate from the SCSI-I 5 MBps to
10 MBps.

Wide is used in reference to the width of the SCSI parallel bus

between the adapter and the device. Wide generically means wider than the
original 8-bit path defined in SCSI-I. Its use is currently limited to mean
16-bits as 32-bit implementations are not currently available. With a 16-bit
path, the data rate is double that of an 8-bit device.

Fast/Wide refers to

adapters and devices which implement both the fast and wide interfaces
defined above. A fast/wide device has a maximum data transfer rate of 20
MBps.

Note

Wide refers to the width of the bus between the SCSI adapter and the
disk drive or other SCSI device. Do not get this confused with the width
of the host bus interface (for example, a 32-bit MCA or PCI adapter).

Disconnect/Reconnect

Some commands take a relatively long time to complete (for example a seek
command which takes roughly 11 ms). With this feature, the controller can
disconnect from the bus while the device is positioning the heads (seeking).
Then, when the seek is complete and data is ready to be transferred, the
device can arbitrate for the bus and then reconnect with the controller to
transfer the data. This allows a much more efficient use of the available

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NetWare Integration Guide

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